The Japan Times - Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail

EUR -
AED 3.995252
AFN 76.638212
ALL 98.797695
AMD 424.290101
ANG 1.955554
AOA 994.72092
ARS 1155.476941
AUD 1.733985
AWG 1.960624
AZN 1.846188
BAM 1.955754
BBD 2.190849
BDT 131.836924
BGN 1.966236
BHD 0.40759
BIF 3215.824969
BMD 1.087725
BND 1.447166
BOB 7.497825
BRL 6.237664
BSD 1.085075
BTN 93.619816
BWP 14.793655
BYN 3.551017
BYR 21319.402583
BZD 2.179549
CAD 1.560809
CDF 3127.207991
CHF 0.961515
CLF 0.026329
CLP 1010.056434
CNY 7.885187
CNH 7.894227
COP 4527.094375
CRC 542.487343
CUC 1.087725
CUP 28.824702
CVE 110.262427
CZK 25.117522
DJF 193.225492
DKK 7.502911
DOP 68.358405
DZD 144.742623
EGP 54.681724
ERN 16.315869
ETB 143.097461
FJD 2.501169
FKP 0.842044
GBP 0.841957
GEL 3.018468
GGP 0.842044
GHS 16.808304
GIP 0.842044
GMD 77.749833
GNF 9439.042233
GTQ 8.37928
GYD 227.319037
HKD 8.454998
HNL 27.884364
HRK 7.577959
HTG 144.750551
HUF 399.573563
IDR 17945.532361
ILS 4.035534
IMP 0.842044
INR 93.540286
IQD 1425.006847
IRR 45687.617725
ISK 144.880284
JEP 0.842044
JMD 170.571432
JOD 0.771151
JPY 162.406531
KES 140.965528
KGS 95.400528
KHR 4351.463943
KMF 493.733737
KPW 978.952159
KRW 1592.337076
KWD 0.335181
KYD 0.89194
KZT 546.914567
LAK 23548.020826
LBP 98145.865432
LKR 322.30796
LRD 216.853849
LSL 19.780941
LTL 3.211768
LVL 0.657953
LYD 5.231952
MAD 10.475088
MDL 19.52404
MGA 5064.077558
MKD 61.69487
MMK 2283.973832
MNT 3787.65303
MOP 8.70889
MRU 43.431918
MUR 49.165622
MVR 16.813221
MWK 1885.443329
MXN 22.011467
MYR 4.808771
MZN 69.160963
NAD 19.780941
NGN 1670.546811
NIO 39.843783
NOK 11.473667
NPR 149.734612
NZD 1.897437
OMR 0.418663
PAB 1.087725
PEN 3.954061
PGK 4.442298
PHP 62.366591
PKR 304.751504
PLN 4.215477
PYG 8702.605765
QAR 3.959246
RON 4.992738
RSD 117.860366
RUB 91.924103
RWF 1531.791887
SAR 4.078878
SBD 9.159813
SCR 16.072117
SDG 651.557993
SEK 11.041009
SGD 1.452459
SHP 0.854781
SLE 24.799561
SLL 22809.04263
SOS 621.595563
SRD 39.777557
STD 22513.703559
SVC 9.517924
SYP 14142.439843
SZL 19.780941
THB 36.715884
TJS 11.882124
TMT 3.807426
TND 3.355119
TOP 2.618489
TRY 41.346143
TTD 7.402448
TWD 35.933771
TZS 2853.093964
UAH 45.320959
UGX 3986.647282
USD 1.087725
UYU 45.936731
UZS 14087.730961
VES 73.654439
VND 27834.808485
VUV 133.411738
WST 3.056277
XAF 658.311649
XAG 0.032927
XAU 0.00036
XCD 2.936919
XDR 0.817592
XOF 658.311649
XPF 119.331742
YER 268.249572
ZAR 19.829057
ZMK 9790.823675
ZMW 31.490275
ZWL 350.246884
  • GSK

    -0.1700

    39.24

    -0.43%

  • NGG

    -1.2300

    63.85

    -1.93%

  • SCS

    -0.4200

    10.57

    -3.97%

  • AZN

    -1.5900

    74.93

    -2.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    23.16

    +0.17%

  • RIO

    -0.9300

    61.99

    -1.5%

  • RELX

    0.1200

    50.01

    +0.24%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    10.38

    +0.77%

  • RBGPF

    0.0200

    67.02

    +0.03%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.16

    0%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    12.99

    -0.46%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    22.7

    -1.41%

  • BCC

    -0.9700

    99.46

    -0.98%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    9.73

    +0.31%

  • BP

    -0.2000

    34.55

    -0.58%

  • BTI

    -0.2400

    40.83

    -0.59%

Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail
Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail / Photo: Handout - EL SALVADOR'S PRESIDENCY PRESS OFFICE/AFP/File

Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail

Lawyers and relatives of Venezuelans flown from the United States to a notorious jail in El Salvador believe the men were wrongly labelled gang members and terrorists because of their tattoos.

Text size:

Jhon Chacin, a professional tattoo artist, has images of "a flower, a watch, an owl, skulls" and family members' names etched onto his skin.

Last October, the 35-year-old was arrested at the Mexican border for entering the United States illegally.

Then last weekend, after not hearing from him for several days, shocked family members spotted him in a video of shaved and chained prisoners at a maximum security prison in El Salvador.

He was one of 238 men declared as a member of Venezuela's Tren de Aragua -- a terrorist group under US law -- and deported by US President Donald Trump.

"He doesn't have a criminal record, he'd never been arrested," Chacin's sister Yuliana, who lives in Texas, told AFP.

She is convinced her brother was designated a gang member because of his body art.

At the US detention center, before being deported, "ICE (immigration) agents told him he belonged to a criminal gang because he had a lot of tattoos."

In the western Venezuelan city of Maracaibo, family members of several other deportees denied their loved ones were criminals.

Twenty-three-year-old Edwuar Hernandez Herrera, known to family and friends as Edward, left Venezuela in 2023.

He made a fraught journey across the jungle-filled Darien Gap before reaching the United States, where he was detained.

He has four tattoos -- his mother and daughter's names, an owl on his forearm and ears of corn on his chest, according to his mother Yarelis Herrera.

"These tattoos do not make him a criminal," she told AFP.

Herrera's friend Ringo Rincon, 39, has nine tattoos, including a watch showing the times his son and daughters were born, said his wife Roslyany Camano.

- Due process -

US authorities have provided little public evidence to support claims that all the deportees were members of Tren de Aragua (TdA).

In a court filing, a senior Immigration and Customs Enforcement official admitted "many" of the expelled men had no criminal records, because "they have only been in the United States for a short period of time."

But Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin cited tattoos as evidence against 36-year-old professional soccer player Jerce Reyes Barrios.

"He has tattoos that are consistent with those indicating TdA gang membership. His own social media indicates he is a member of the vicious TdA gang," McLaughlin wrote on X.

She insisted US intelligence assessments "go beyond a single tattoo."

Reyes Barrios's lawyer, Linette Tobin, believes he was accused of gang membership for his tattoo of a crown atop a soccer ball -- a variant on the logo of Real Madrid, his favorite team.

In a letter posted on social media, Tobin said her client had sought asylum in the United States after being tortured for taking part in anti-government demonstrations in Venezuela.

- 'Strong vetting process' -

In September 2024, Texas authorities published a report listing tattoos it said were characteristic of Tren de Aragua membership, including crowns, stars and weapons.

Yet Ronna Risquez, author of a book about Tren de Aragua, said tattoos are not known to be a signifier of gang allegiance in Venezuela -- unlike heavily tattooed members of El Salvador's Mara Salvatrucha.

Trump, who has previously linked tattoos with gang violence, on Friday insisted the men were a "bad group."

"I was told that they went through a very strong vetting process, and that that will also be continuing in El Salvador," he said.

But if anyone was misidentified "we would certainly want to find out" Trump added. "We don't want to make that kind of mistake."

Venezuelan Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello said Thursday the government had hired a law firm in El Salvador to try and secure the migrants' release.

Some eight million Venezuelans are estimated to have fled the country's economic meltdown and increasingly authoritarian rule in the past decade.

An estimated 770,000 Venezuelans live in the United States -- many under a protected status granted to citizens of dangerous countries, which Trump recently revoked.

T.Ikeda--JT