What's known about detainees from Colorado who were sent to El Salvador
Immigration advocates in Colorado say they have identified about 12 immigrants in Colorado whom they believe federal authorities have removed to the notorious CECOT prison in El Salvador.
Some details of their cases are uncertain, because immigration authorities, both in court proceedings and through public communication, have largely refused to release information about enforcement activities.
But lawyers and community groups working on behalf of the immigrants — through contact with family members, media coverage, videos from CECOT, and scant clues from federal sources — have constructed the best available profile of people who vanished from Colorado.
As Colorado Newsline previously reported, Tim Macdonald, legal director of the ACLU of Colorado, in April first revealed in federal court in Denver that at least 11 people had been removed from Colorado to the brutal prison in El Salvador. The ACLU represents two Venezuelan nationals, as well as a larger class of immigrants, who are being held at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility in Aurora and fear deportation under the Alien Enemies Act, an 18th century wartime law invoked by President Donald Trump to hasten deportations.
The Colorado case is one of several throughout the country that challenges the Trump administration's hyper-aggressive pursuit of mass deportations as unconstitutional, affording detainees little to no due process.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Attorney Laura Lunn, director of advocacy and litigation at Westminster-based Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network, which has worked on the federal case of the Venezuelan detainees and others in Colorado, told Newsline this week that immigration advocates think there are 'about a dozen' people the U.S. removed from Colorado to CECOT under the Alien Enemies Act.
'In some instances, we were in touch with their loved ones, who said, 'We saw our loved one on the news, and he is in CECOT,'' Lunn said.
Numerous images and videos have emerged from the prison since March 15, when American officials, in possible violation of a court order, flew 238 migrants from the U.S. to be incarcerated in El Salvador. The roughly dozen immigrants transferred from Colorado to CECOT are believed to have been on one of three March 15 flights, Lunn said.
Newsline requested responses to a set of specific questions for this story from a spokesperson for ICE Denver. The spokesperson referred questions to a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, who did not respond.
The Western region branch of the American Friends Service Committee helped to confirm, largely through interaction with family members, about six of the Colorado-to-CECOT detainees, Jennifer Piper, the region's program director, said. They are Venezuelan men roughly between 19 and 25 years old. There is no indication any of the roughly 12 individuals from Colorado were legal residents or citizens of the U.S., but they were removed from the country before they could present facts on their own behalf, Lunn noted.
For some family members, the first indication a loved one had been transported to El Salvador was the release by CBS News of a list of detainees who were on the March 15 flights.
So, you know, you're talking two months, more than 60 days that you have no idea if your loved one is alive, dead, in El Salvador, disappeared into the immigration system in Guantanamo. No idea.
– Jennifer Piper, Western region director of the American Friends Service Committee
One Colorado detainee's mother whom Piper works with spotted her son in a video from CECOT just this month.
'She finally was able to see her kid's face, when they went walking down the halls,' Piper said. 'So, you know, you're talking two months, more than 60 days that you have no idea if your loved one is alive, dead, in El Salvador, disappeared into the immigration system in Guantanamo. No idea.'
Some details on at least three Colorado-to-El Salvador detainees have been reported through government and media sources. They include Jose Eduardo Moran-Garcia, Yohendry Jerez-Hernandez and Nixon Perez. Jerez-Hernandez and Perez appear on the CBS list. Sources for this story declined to give the names of other individuals they're working with.
Colorado and Aurora became a focus of Trump's plan for mass deportations as he campaigned for reelection last year, including during a rally in Aurora in October. Local and federal authorities in recent months have undertaken several operations against immigrants on the Front Range. They include the September arrests of four men in connection with a shooting at an apartment on Nome Street in Aurora, a raid on a 'makeshift nightclub' in Adams County in January, a coordinated set of operations at residences in Denver and Aurora in February, and a raid on a 'makeshift nightclub' in Colorado Springs last month.
At least some of the detainees sent from Colorado to CECOT were rounded up during these actions, Piper said, adding, 'Not a single person was convicted of a crime.'
Trump administration officials often allege that some detainees in Colorado and elsewhere have ties to the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua.
'It's really important to understand that those ties have not been proven in any way,' Piper said. 'They haven't been able to provide any proof of that in any of the court documents where they're being sued.'
Some of the removed immigrants faced criminal charges, but they were local, not federal, charges, often filed well after the individuals were initially detained, Piper said.
'No one gets to go to their final court date to argue their case' before removal, Piper said. Some detainees didn't even face local charges and were removed to El Salvador because federal officials said, 'Oh, we didn't like your tattoo,' she said.
Lunn has appeared as a 'friend of the court' during hearings for some of the Colorado detainees believed to be at CECOT. Government attorneys have never acknowledged the detainees were sent to El Salvador, she said.
'I've been doing detained work for people in immigration proceedings now for about 15 years. It is unprecedented for somebody's case to be docketed and for ICE to show up to court and say, 'We don't know where this person is, and we're not at liberty to tell you where they might be,'' Lunn said.
The cases are devoid of typical due process and documentation.
'It would be one thing if there was like a legal basis that the government could point to as to why somebody was placed on one of those planes, but because they provided them no prior notice, because people were taken without the opportunity to review any allegations against them, that means that there really is no paper trail of what allegations existed,' Lunn said. 'We don't even know what the government supposedly alleged in order to invoke the (Alien Enemies Act) against people.'
She rejects the term 'deportation' to describe these cases.
'It's not a deportation, because they don't have a deportation order,' Lunn said. 'It's lawlessness … People were disappeared.'
Earlier this month, U.S. District Court Judge Charlotte Sweeney in Denver issued a preliminary injunction that indefinitely blocks the Trump administration from removing detainees in Colorado under the Alien Enemies Act while the case is pending.
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' viewers question why CBS canceled popular late-night show as Trump celebrates the decision
'I absolutely love that Colbert got fired,' President Trump said Friday morning. Fans, political figures and fellow late-night hosts seemed stunned Thursday night when comedian Stephen Colbert announced that CBS would be ending The Late Show in May 2026, with many questioning what pushed the network and its parent company, Paramount Global, to make the decision. CBS said in a statement that canceling the show was 'purely a financial decision' and 'is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount.' But viewers wondered whether the decision had anything to do with Paramount and its recent settlement with President Trump over his lawsuit against 60 Minutes. On Friday morning, Trump celebrated the decision in a Truth Social post. 'I absolutely love that Colbert' got fired,' he wrote. 'His talent was even less than his ratings. I hear Jimmy Kimmel is next. He has even less talent than Colbert!' Earlier this week, Colbert slammed Paramount's decision to pay Trump $16 million after he filed a defamation lawsuit claiming CBS's 60 Minutes interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris was edited in a way that created 'substantial news distortion calculated to confuse, deceive, and mislead the public.' As part of the settlement, Paramount said it would release the full transcripts of all future 60 Minutes interviews with presidential candidates. In Monday's opening monologue, Colbert said he was 'offended' by Paramount's settlement, and called the payment a 'big fat bribe.' 'I don't know if anything — anything — will repair my trust in this company,' Colbert said. 'But, just taking a stab at it, I'd say $16 million would help.' Days later, Colbert broke the news that The Late Show was canceled and would end in May 2026. The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, which airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET, was the top late-night show in terms of total viewers, LateNighter reported, citing the data analytics company Nielsen. The Late Show also received its eighth Emmy nomination earlier this week. Lawmakers and other media hosts are questioning the timing of Colbert's jokes about the Paramount settlement and his show getting canceled all in one week, especially with other changes that have happened at CBS over the last few months. Since Trump filed the lawsuit in October 2024, Bill Owens, a former 60 Minutes executive producer, and Wendy McMahon, the former head of CBS News, stepped down from their roles, claiming they were concerned their journalistic independence was at risk. After Paramount settled the lawsuit, the Los Angeles Times reported that some CBS employees believed the settlement was influenced by Paramount's pending $8.4 million merger with Skydance Media, which requires the Trump administration's approval. 'I'm not crazy for thinking that this was related to Colbert criticizing the network, am I?' Jemele Hill, podcast host and contributing reporter for The Atlantic, asked on BlueSky. 'Also something I've thought about — Trump put pressure on CBS to cancel Colbert.' Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts expressed similar concern over the decision, writing in a post on X, 'CBS canceled Colbert's show just THREE DAYS after Colbert called out CBS parent company Paramount for its $16M settlement with Trump – a deal that looks like bribery.' 'America deserves to know if his show was canceled for political reasons,' Warren concluded. Sen. Adam Schiff, a Democrat from California, who was one of the guests on Thursday's Late Show episode, wrote on X, 'If Paramount and CBS ended the Late Show for political reasons, the public deserves to know.' Fellow late-night hosts say they're 'shocked' Comedians and fellow late-night hosts have been praising Colbert in response to the news. 'Love you Stephen,' Jimmy Kimmel, host of ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live!, wrote on his Instagram Story Thursday night, alongside a clip of Colbert's announcement. 'F*** you and all your Sheldons CBS.' 'I'm just as shocked as everyone,' Jimmy Fallon, who hosts The Tonight Show on NBC, wrote on Instagram. 'Stephen is one of the sharpest, funniest hosts to ever do it. I really thought I'd ride this out with him for years to come.' 'Stephen Colbert is a profoundly good and deeply talented man with a great staff and an excellent show,' said Andy Richter, the comedian who worked as Conan O'Brien's sidekick on three late-night talk shows. Jon Stewart, who hosts Comedy Central's The Daily Show — for which Colbert was a correspondent for eight years — hasn't yet publicly commented on The Late Show's cancellation. But Stewart did mention on Thursday's episode of The Weekly Show podcast that he wasn't sure whether his own negative comments about the Paramount settlement would shut down his late-night show too, since Paramount Global owns Comedy Central. In the July 8 episode of The Daily Show, Stewart slammed the settlement and said networks are now 'being held to a standard that will never be satisfactory to Donald Trump.' Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
2 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Education Department will release some frozen grants supporting after-school and summer programs
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Education Department will release some previously withheld grant money for after-school programs, days after 10 Republican senators sent a letter imploring the Office of Management and Budget to allow the funds to be sent to states. President Donald Trump's administration on July 1 withheld more than $6 billion in federal grants for after-school and summer programs, adult literacy and English language instruction, as part of a review to ensure spending aligned with the White House's priorities. About $1.3 billion of that funding supported after-school programming for children. In a letter sent Wednesday, Republican senators said the withheld money supported programs that had longstanding bipartisan support and were critical to local communities. 'We share your concern about taxpayer money going to fund radical left-wing programs,' the senators wrote. 'However, we do not believe that is happening with these funds.' ____ The Associated Press' education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at Annie Ma, The Associated Press Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Buzz Feed
3 minutes ago
- Buzz Feed
Stephen Colbert Calls Out Donald Trump's Two Sorest Spots
Late Show host Stephen Colbert went after President Donald Trump on Thursday, the same day CBS announced his show is being canceled. And he focused on two issues the president does not like to talk about: his health and his links to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. 'I want to be sensitive about this,' Colbert said on that first topic. 'His skin seems to be falling off.' In one recent appearance, Trump had makeup on his hand, apparently covering up a bruise. The White House said the bruise is because he's 'a man of the people' and is 'shaking hands all day, every day' as well as due to aspirin use. Colbert showed a picture of Trump's makeup-covered hand. 'That's more than concealer,' he said. 'That's fondant. Is his makeup artist the Cake Boss?' CBS / Via But the health talk might be serving as a distraction from another issue haunting the president. 'I'm sure Trump would rather have us talk about his hand than Jeffrey Epstein,' Colbert pointed out. 'That controversy is causing so much trouble for Trump that he recently ordered it to be put in a cell and for the cameras to stop working for three minutes.' That's a reference to the nearly three minutes missing from the surveillance footage near Epstein's prison cell the night he was found dead. Colbert did not address his show's cancellation during the monologue, but did so at another point in the broadcast. While CBS said the decision was 'purely' financial, many have speculated that it was in reality because of his jokes about the president as well as his attacks on CBS parent Paramount for agreeing to pay $16 million to settle a lawsuit with Trump that many consider frivolous. That settlement came amid a pending merger between Paramount and Skydance Media ― one that needs approval from the Federal Communications Commission.