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Venezuelan Makeup Artist Returns Home, Describes Torture During El Salvador Detention

Andry Hernández Romero’s story highlights growing alarm over US immigration tactics and alleged abuses in El Salvador’s mega-prison.
Lindsay Toczylowski, whose client Andry José Hernández Romero has not been heard from since his deportation to El Salvador in March, forcefully defended the rule of law in a talk at The Business of Beauty Global Forum.
Lindsay Toczylowski, who represented Andry José Hernández Romero, talks at The Business of Beauty Global Forum. (Amy Sussman)

A makeup artist who became the face of more than 250 Venezuelan migrants deported by the US to El Salvador’s most notorious prison arrived home to his family on Wednesday after what he described as “an encounter with torture and death.”

Andry Hernández Romero, 32, and the other detainees returned to Venezuela on Friday as part of a prisoner exchange, after spending four months in El Salvador’s CECOT prison, where they and the Venezuelan government allege they were beaten, shot with rubber projectiles, held in dark cells, and served rotten food.

“Many of our fellows have wounds from the nightsticks; they have fractured ribs, fractured fingers and toes, marks from the handcuffs, others have marks on their chests, on their face ... from the projectiles,” Hernández told journalists at his home in Capacho, near the Colombian border.

US President Donald Trump invoked the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport the men, who his government accuses of being members of the Tren de Aragua gang, without normal immigration procedures.

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The deportations sparked a legal battle led by civil rights groups. Families and lawyers of many of the men have denied they have gang ties.

Hernández, detained at the US-Mexico border during the Biden administration, had an active asylum case when he was deported to CECOT. His case was widely covered in the media.

Advocates in the US have voiced concerns that Hernandez, who is gay, faces risks in Venezuela due to LGBTQ persecution.

The US alleged Tren de Aragua membership based on his tattoos: crowns on his wrists that read “mom” and “dad.”

Hernández denied the allegation.

In a video broadcast on state television on Monday, Hernández alleged sexual abuse by the guards at CECOT, and Venezuela’s attorney general has said his office will investigate El Salvador President Nayib Bukele over alleged abuses.

Bukele’s office has not responded to requests for comment on the alleged torture.

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson has referred allegations of mistreatment to El Salvador’s government, while the US Department of Homeland Security dismissed the allegations of abuse on Tuesday, calling the men “criminal, illegal gang members.”

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Reuters was not able to immediately confirm the abuse allegations.

Hernández’s parents, Felipe Hernández and Alexi Romero, have been anxiously awaiting his return since Tuesday, when he called to say he was on the way from Caracas, some 820 kilometres (510 miles) away.

Hernández said he was most happy to see them and his brother, but was also touched to find out that friends and family held vigils on his behalf and campaigned for his return.

“It fills me with so much peace, so much comfort, so much tranquility that I was never alone, from day one. There were many people who worried for me,” he said.

By Tathiana Ortiz, Kristina Cooke, Julia Symmes Cobb; Editor: Rod Nickel

Learn more:

Attorney for Deported Makeup Artist: If ‘It Could Happen to Him … It Could Happen to You.’

Lindsay Toczylowski, whose client Andry José Hernández Romero has not been heard from since his deportation to El Salvador in March, forcefully defended the rule of law in a talk at The Business of Beauty Global Forum.

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