
Bbc
Nicole Kolster/BBC WorldBBC News from the White House
In a poor neighborhood in Venezuela, Maracay, the 24 -year -old Francisco José García Casique was waiting for him on Saturday.
It has been 18 months since he moved to the United States to start a new life, but she is now illegally deported to the United States with Caracas, the capital of Venezuela. They spoke that morning just before he left.
Myrelis Casique López recalled: She wanted him home.
But he did not arrive. And on Sunday, Casique was shocked to meet his son 1,430 miles (2,300 km) from El Salvador, not the United States or Venezuela.
The video showed the 238 Venezuelanians sent by the US authority to the Terrorism ConcEMENT Center or an infamous large -scale Dale. She saw men with hair and shaved shaved hands and feet, and saw her strongly escorted by armed security forces.
The Trump administration said that all deporters were members of the Tren de Aragua gang found on the White House’s cross. The strong multinational crime group, which Trump recently declared foreign terrorist organizations, was accused of prostitution, drug smuggling and murder in home and major cities.

Casique told the BBC that the official name list was not disclosed, but the son was convinced that he was one of the prisoners.
She said, “He is that person.” She was sitting, bowing her head, and a tattoo on her arms. “I know his characteristics.”
She also claims that he is innocent.
US immigration officials said that prisoners were “carefully judged” and were verified as a gang before flying to El Salvador. They investigated them using evidence collected during surveillance, police meetings, or testimonies of victims.
Stephen Miller, the White House Deputy Director, said on Wednesday that “our mission is to send terrorists before others are raped or killed.”
Many deports do not have a US crime record, but US immigration and tariff execution (ICE) officials have been recognized in the court document. And they were expelled in accordance with the last called law during the exhibition period that did not need to be prosecuted for crime.
According to the Trump administration, people with criminal records include immigrants arrested for murder, pentanil trafficking, kidnapping for family invasion and operating gang prostitutes.
Nicole Kolster/BBC World
Nicole Kolster/BBC WorldIn the case of Garcia, his mother insists that his son was involved in criminal acts. He left Venezuela in 2019 and left Venezuela first to Peru, looking for a new opportunity with overlapping economic, political and social crises, she said. He illegally crossed to the United States in September 2023.
His mother has not seen him for six years.
“He does not belong to the criminal organization of the United States or Venezuela. He is not a crime,” Casique said. “He was a barber.”
“Unfortunately, he has a tattoo,” he added. He was convinced that the rose and name of his family decorated his body was led to his detention and deportation. That is the way she and other families recognize him in the photographs of the depellers in El Salvador.

Some other families believe that depilies have been identified by the Trend Ara Gua gang because of tattoos.
Casipue shed tears in Mara Kay, mentioning the image in prison, and shed tears. “I don’t want it … he was not qualified to move there.”
The 29 -year -old Mervin Yamarte’s mother also identified his son in the video.
She spoke to the BBC in her house in the Los Pescadores region of Venezuela Maracaibo.
Like Casique, she denies that her son has been involved in cruel gangs. He left his hometown and traveled to the United States through the Darién Gap. Andy Javier Perozo, 30; And Rinko Rincón, 39.
The BBC talks with family and friends or who. He said he found four men in the video in El Salvador prison.
Yamarte’s mother said her son worked at the Tortilla factory and sometimes worked for a 12 -hour shift. On Sunday, he played soccer with his friends who shared their homes in Texas Dallas.
“He is a good and noble young man. There is a mistake,” she said.
‘We are scared’
President Trump broke the law in 1798, an alien law in 1798.
Despite the guarantee that the deport of the US government was carefully psychologically, the action had a cold effect on many Venezuela and Venezuelan Americans, and feared that more Venezuelans could be accused and expelled quickly without charges or conviction.
Adelys Ferro, an executive of the advocacy group Venezuelan-American Caucus, said, “We are afraid.” We want all single members of TDA to pay for crime. But we don’t know what the standard is. “
“They live in an uncertain time,” she said. “They have been here for a few years, even who have to make a decision, and even those with documents.”
Ferro’s concern was reversed by Venezuela, an immigrant lawyer and military veteran based in Florida.
Many of his customers are in Miami. The suburbs, including Doral, were sometimes given the monicerr “Doralzuela” for Venezuela’s large population.
“The majority of Venezuela in the United States are trying to do the right thing. They are afraid to go back to their country,” De La Vega told the BBC. “The main interest for me is how they identify these members. The standard is very low.”
Many Venezuelan residents in the United States, especially South Florida, have supported Trump extensively, and Trump has been extensively supported by Trump, who has taken a hard stance on President Venezuela’s left -wing government.
In February, however, the Trump administration terminated the temporary protection status (TPS) for the Venezuelans, which protected many in the deportation. The program is officially terminated on April 7 and can affect nearly 350,000 Venezuelan people living in the United States.
“Trump’s speech was always strong during the campaign, especially during the campaign.” “I think people don’t expect all of this.”
Daniel Campo, a Pennsylvanian citizen from Venezuela, said American citizens and enthusiastic Trump supporters in Pennsylvania have a concern about the expellation of El Salvador and the end of TPS while maintaining a firm state of the president’s support.
“I hope they will be more careful when they attack Tren de Aragua, especially El Salvador prison.”
At the end of the TPS, he was a 25 -year -old Venezuelan man who was a 25 -year -old Venezuelan man, and was asked to be confirmed only by Yilber who arrived in the United States in 2022 after a long and dangerous journey through Central America and Mexico.
He is in the United States now, but I’m not sure what’s coming next.
“I left Venezuela due to oppression and anxiety. There is a gang in my neighborhood in Karacas,” he said. “I don’t know what’s going to happen now.”










