Venezuelan Stylist Andry Hernandez Romero Greets Family Members After Returning Home In Capacho Village Tachira State Venezuela
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Gay makeup artist Andry Hernndez Romero describes horrific sexual & physical abuse at CECOT in El Salvador
After 125 days in silence, detained inside an El Salvador concrete fortress built to disappear people, Andry Hernndez Romero is finally home in Venezuela, alleging he was tortured, sexually abused, and denied food while detained under a Trump administration deportation order that erased him from society.It was an encounter with torture and death, Hernndez, 32, told journalists at his family home in Capacho on Wednesday, describing how he and others were beaten, shot with rubber projectiles, and confined in dark cells, before they were suddenly freed on Friday. Many of our fellows have wounds from the nightsticks; they have fractured ribs, fractured fingers and toes, marks from the handcuffs, he said, according to Reuters. Others have marks on their chests, on their face ... from the projectiles.Related: Gay asylum seeker Andry Hernndez Romero remains in danger, advocates warnHernndez was one of more than 250 Venezuelan men expelled under the revived Alien Enemies Act, a wartime-era law that President Donald Trump used to deport people without hearings or asylum screenings. Though he entered the United States legally at the San Diego border, appeared for an appointment the U.S. government gave him, and passed an initial credible fear interview, federal agents cited his tattooscrowns reading mom and dadas alleged proof of membership in the Tren de Aragua gang, something his lawyers continue to deny. He had no criminal record. Venezuelan stylist Andry Hernandez Romero greets family members after returning home in Capacho village, Tachira State, Venezuela, July 2025JOHNNY PARRA/AFP via Getty ImagesIn a televised interview aired on Venezuelan state media Monday, Hernndez alleged sexual abuse by guards. The Venezuelan attorney general has said his office will investigate Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele over the reported torture of Venezuelan nationals, Reuters reports. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security dismissed the abuse claims Tuesday, calling the deported men criminal, illegal gang members, Reuters reports.Related: Gay asylum-seekers lawyer worries for the makeup artists safety in Salvadoran hellhole prisonSpeaking to San Diego ABC affiliate KGTV, Melissa Shepherd, an attorney with the Immigrant Defenders Law Center, said, While were happy that hes no longer in the torture prison, we are worried for his future. Shepherd, who represents Hernndez and other deported men, added, They were physically, verbally, and psychologically tortured.Lindsay Toczylowski, ImmDefs cofounder and CEO, told our sister site The Advocate in a separate interview Monday that Hernndezs case illustrated a really dark foreshadowing of where were going as a country if this is allowed to stand.These are people who were sent with no due process to be tortured, only to then be used as political pawns in a prisoner release that none of us were privy to before it happened, that none of them consented to being a part of, she said.Related: Kristi Noem wont say if gay asylum-seeker deported to El Salvadors hellhole prison is still aliveToczylowski said Hernndez remains in danger in Venezuela, the very country from which he fled persecution. Her team is exploring third-country relocation, but options may be limited by his lack of freedom of movement under the regime of Nicols Maduro.Still, Hernndez said he was moved to learn that people had rallied in support of him during his terrible ordeal. It fills me with so much peace, so much comfort, so much tranquility that I was never alone, from day one, he told Reuters. There were many people who worried for me.
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