One evening in mid-Could, a few of the Venezuelan migrants deported from the US to a jail in El Salvador tried to interrupt the locks on their cells with metallic rails from their beds. It was a futile gesture of insurrection; nobody thought they might escape. Nonetheless, punishment was swift. For six consecutive days, the inmates had been subjected to prolonged beatings, three inmates informed me. On the final day, male guards introduced of their feminine colleagues, who struck the bare prisoners because the male guards recorded movies on their telephones and laughed. The feminine guards would depend to twenty as they administered the beatings, and if the prisoners complained or cried out, they’d begin once more.
Tito Martínez, one of many inmates, recalled {that a} jail nurse was watching. “Hit the piñata,” she cheered.
When the federal government of El Salvador opened the jail complicated generally known as CECOT in 2023, the nation’s safety minister stated the inmates would solely be capable of get out “inside a coffin.” This promise has largely been stored. The Salvadoran human-rights group Cristosal has documented instances of prisoners being transported out of the jail for pressing medical care, however these inmates died quickly after, earlier than anybody might ask them what it was like contained in the jail.
What little is thought about life in CECOT (the Spanish acronym for Terrorism Confinement Heart) comes from the media excursions staged by President Nayib Bukele, which present males crammed into cells with bare-metal bunkbeds stacked to the ceiling like human shelving. In a lot of the movies posted on-line, the boys—some with the facial tattoos of the nation’s gangs—stand in silence. The Salvadoran authorities has inspired CECOT’s terrifying fame, turning the jail right into a museum the place Bukele’s tough-on-gangs ways might be exhibited for the press. However media visits are additionally strictly managed. Interviews with prisoners are uncommon and tightly supervised.
On Friday, for the primary time, a gaggle of prisoners walked out of CECOT’s gates as free males. They had been 252 of the Venezuelans that the Trump administration had deported to El Salvador in March when it alleged—whereas providing little to no proof—that they had been gang members. This month, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro negotiated a prisoner swap with the US, releasing 10 Americans in his custody and dozens of Venezuelan political prisoners. In return, the Venezuelans in El Salvador had been placed on a airplane and despatched to Caracas. They introduced with them detailed accounts of beatings and harsh therapy. (The federal government of El Salvador didn’t reply to a request for remark about their claims.)
4 former prisoners informed me they had been punched, kicked, and struck with golf equipment. They had been lower off from contact with their households, disadvantaged of authorized assist, and taunted by guards. All recalled days spent in a punishment cell generally known as “the island,” a darkish room with no water the place they slept on the ground. These days, the one mild they might see got here from a dim lightbulb within the ceiling that illuminated a cross.
I talked with Keider Alexander Flores over the telephone yesterday, just some hours after Venezuelan cops dropped him off at his mom’s home in Caracas.
Flores informed me that he and his brother left Venezuela in 2023, trekking via the jungles of Panama’s Darién Hole and using buses all the best way to Mexico. They utilized for an appointment to cross into the US legally and arrived in Texas in August. Flores quickly settled in Dallas and began an asylum software, however he didn’t full the method. He discovered work laying carpet. His actual ardour was music: He DJed below the title Keyder Flower. In one in every of his Instagram posts, he flexes his teenage muscle tissues as he performs tracks by a pool.
In December, after a DJ gig at a home get together in Dallas, Flores was using within the passenger seat of a pal’s automobile once they had been pulled over. Flores informed me that they had smoked marijuana, and the police took them to the station. Later he was despatched to ICE detention. At an immigration listening to, the decide informed him that he wouldn’t be capable of return to the US for 10 years, as a result of he had damaged U.S. regulation. When requested what nation he needed to be deported to, Flores stated Venezuela.

Alex Peña / Getty
A soldier stands guard alongside the perimeter at CECOT.

Fabiola Ferrero for The Atlantic
A bracelet Keider made throughout his time in CECOT. It’s the one factor he stored from the jail after his launch.
Whereas in ICE detention, Flores realized that he had been flagged as “an lively member” of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. Federal brokers confirmed as much as interview him, he stated. That they had seen his photos on Instagram and stated his hand alerts appeared suspicious. “I used to be doing a cool signal, however they stated it was a gesture of Tren de Aragua,” Flores informed me. Flores knew about CECOT. He had seen movies on the ICE detention middle in Texas, the place the TV generally confirmed cable information. In mid-March, he known as his brother from detention to say that he was about to get deported to Venezuela; two days later, he was placed on a airplane. ICE guards didn’t let the passengers open the window shades throughout the flight. Flores and his fellow detainees discovered they had been in El Salvador solely after that they had landed.
One other newly launched Venezuelan prisoner I spoke with, Juan José Ramos, informed me he’d entered the US legally, with an appointment for an asylum listening to, and had barely settled down in Utah when ICE brokers stopped his automobile on the best way to Walmart, arresting him with no rationalization. He stated that when the boys arrived at CECOT, they noticed inmates carrying white T-shirts and shorts, heads fully shaved. Ramos requested a Salvadoran guard who these males had been and why they had been crying. The guard replied: “That’s you. All of you’ll find yourself like that. We’ll deal with you all the identical.”
Flores, Ramos, and others I spoke with shared related accounts of what occurred subsequent. The Venezuelans had been taken to a wing of CECOT generally known as Module 8, with 32 cells, and didn’t work together with the remainder of the prisoners. The inmates communicated with each other by way of hand alerts, as a result of once they spoke, they had been overwhelmed. They slept on metallic bunks, typically with out mattresses. Cleaning soap and juice bottles had been luxuries afforded previous to visits by representatives of the Crimson Cross, who got here twice throughout their four-month keep. Generally, the guards gave the prisoners higher meals than ordinary, took photos with their telephones, then took the meals away, Ramos, Flores, and others informed me.
A riot broke out in April, after guards beat one of many inmates to the purpose that he began convulsing, Flores informed me. The incident satisfied the Venezuelans that they needed to do one thing. “In case your pal was being overwhelmed, would you permit him alone as they beat him?” Flores requested me.
Seven of the Venezuelans arrived days after the remaining, deported from Guantánamo, the place a starvation strike had damaged out. They prompt doing the identical at CECOT. Flores, Ramos, and others I spoke with stated each inmate they knew joined the starvation strike, which lasted for a number of days. Some took their protest additional by reducing themselves on the corners of their metallic bunks. They known as {that a} huelga de sangre: “blood strike.”
Three or 4 days after the strike began, two jail administrators got here to barter. The inmates agreed to finish the strike in change for an assurance that the beatings would cease. “They allow us to dwell for some time,” Flores informed me. However in mid-Could, when a couple of inmates refused to have their cells inspected, the guards beat them. That’s when a second riot broke out. The guards responded by capturing the inmates with pellets. Then got here the six days of beatings.
Martínez, 26, informed me he was pulled over whereas driving in El Paso, Texas, in February as a result of his license plate had expired. The officer was able to let him go along with a warning, however requested Martínez to take away his shirt. Martínez had tattoos of Bible verses and the title of his spouse. The officer known as ICE.
Martínez, who fell unwell after the starvation strike, needed to be taken to a clinic, the place a nurse informed him he had suffered severe liver harm. After the beatings, Martínez informed me, some inmates vomited blood, and others couldn’t stroll for days. “In the event that they’re going to kill us, I hope they kill us quickly,” he stated he informed himself.
The guards informed him he would spend the remainder of his life in CECOT. Till early Friday morning, when Martínez was despatched house as abruptly as he’d arrived, he had believed them.
Nick Miroff contributed to this story.