Luis Alberto Castillo, a father of 1 from Venezuela, entered the US on Jan. 19, sooner or later earlier than Donald Trump grew to become president for a second time period — swept into workplace on a promise to deal with undocumented migrants with a heavy hand.
By Feb. 4, Mr. Castillo was on a airplane to a U.S. Navy base at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba, greatest identified for a detention heart that has lengthy held terrorism suspects accused of launching the deadliest assault on American soil.
That day, the Division of Homeland Safety declared that those that had been transferred to the island represented “the worst of the worst” and have been all members of a Venezuelan felony group, the Tren de Aragua.
However in interview from her dwelling in Colombia, Mr. Castillo’s sister Yajaira Castillo stated her brother was not a gang member to be feared, however reasonably an on a regular basis Venezuelan who had fled his nation due to its financial disaster.
She broke down repeatedly in the course of the dialog, crying as she described her ache and confusion round her brother’s state of affairs.
“My brother isn’t a felony,” she stated. “That is all discrimination and xenophobia, simply because he’s Venezuelan.”
On condition that Mr. Castillo had spent such little time in the US, she questioned how the U.S. authorities may have decided that he was a member of the Tren de Aragua, or was worthy of such harsh therapy.
After he entered the US, officers suspected Mr. Castillo of being a member of the gang due to his tattoos, based on two individuals aware of his case who weren’t approved to debate it publicly.
He didn’t admit to being part of the felony group. Later, officers assessed his tattoos and interviewed him, they usually discovered that he didn’t seem to have ties with the Tren de Aragua, the individuals stated.
In an e-mail, a spokeswoman for the Division of Homeland Safety stated that Mr. Castillo was in the US illegally and had closing deportation orders issued by a federal choose.
“This administration abides by the rule of legislation,” stated the spokeswoman, Tricia McLaughlin. “Throughout additional evaluation, intelligence officers couldn’t definitively decide whether or not the person is or isn’t a confirmed member of TDA,” or Tren de Aragua. “He could very properly be a member of this vicious gang. He is probably not.”
Later, Ms. McLaughlin stated that that they had obtained affirmation that he was a member of the gang, however didn’t present additional proof.
Within the interview, Mr. Castillo’s sister shared a screenshot that indicated that he had not tried to evade authorities when he entered the nation. The picture included particulars of an appointment her brother had secured to current himself on the border to assert asylum on Jan. 19 at 7 a.m.
The Biden administration had arrange a system for migrants to make these claims and enter the US legally by an app referred to as CBP One. Mr. Trump ended this system on Jan. 21.
During the last week, the US authorities has despatched greater than 80 males to Guantánamo Bay as a part of bigger plan by the Trump administration to carry as many as 30,000 migrants on the Naval base. To this point, all of the detainees are believed to be Venezuelans. Some are being held in a jail constructing on the bottom, whereas others are detained at the Migrant Operations Heart, a dormitory-style facility. (Mr. Castillo is being held on the migrant heart, based on D.H.S.)
U.S. troops are constructing a tent camp on the web site in an effort to vastly increase its capability to carry detained migrants.
The Pentagon has described the first few Guantánamo arrivals as “high-threat unlawful aliens” and their detention on the base as “a short lived measure.” However the administration has not launched any particulars proving the boys have felony information or described how officers decided they have been a menace.
Mr. Castillo is believed to be among the many first 10 males who have been despatched there from El Paso, Texas, on Feb. 4, as a result of his sister acknowledged him in {a photograph} of migrants being despatched to Guantánamo that was revealed on social media by Kristi Noem, the brand new head of the Division of Homeland Safety.
The picture, through which Mr. Castillo’s head is bowed low and an officer in camouflage and gloves holds his again, was later shared extensively on social media. Ms. Castillo occurred upon it on TikTok.
The Tren de Aragua, a multinational group born in Venezuela’s Aragua state, has expanded to different components of Latin America and so far as the US.
Mr. Castillo has a Michael Jordan tattoo on his neck, which his sister believes border authorities took as an indication that he was a member of the gang. In one of many final messages he despatched to her earlier than detention, Mr. Castillo stated that he had made it to the border and that officers “handled him badly due to the tattoos,” she stated.
Ronna Rísquez, a Venezuelan investigative journalist who has written a e book concerning the felony group, stated the authorities can be unsuitable to imagine that somebody with a Michael Jordan tattoo is a member.
Some people within the Tren de Aragua may put on the image, she stated, however this has extra to do with the truth that basketball — which might be performed with restricted assets — has turn out to be enormously in style in poorer components of Venezuela over the previous few a long time.
“The eagerness for Michael Jordan, as a result of he’s the final word image of basketball, has been round for generations,” she stated.
Ms. Castillo stated the tattoos have been merely a part of her brother’s look, which regularly included shorts and sneakers and Jordan gear. She shared a previous photograph of him sporting a sweatshirt with the “jumpman” emblem related to Mr. Jordan.
She stated she believed her brother’s affinity for Mr. Jordan had turned him right into a “guinea pig” for the Trump administration’s increasing deportation program.
Like many Venezuelans, Mr. Castillo had left his nation years in the past and was dwelling in Colombia, washing vehicles. His sister stated he was barely scraping by and had left for the US within the hopes of constructing more cash “to present the whole lot to his son, to work and work for his son.”
His journey to the U.S. southern border started in late 2023, she stated. With restricted funds, it took him till January of this 12 months to achieve Texas. There, she stated, he was apprehended by the authorities.
A overview of public police information signifies that Mr. Castillo was not convicted of any crimes whereas in Colombia.
Mr. Castillo is the eighth of 9 siblings; 4 dwell in Colombia and 4 others in Venezuela. He’ll flip 30 on Feb. 23.
The Guantánamo base is greatest identified for its post-9/11 detention facility, operated by the Pentagon. It at the moment holds 15 foreigners as wartime prisoners, individually from the Venezuelans being held there in migrant detention.
Ms. Castillo stated she had identified little about Guantánamo, solely that it was “a high-danger cell for main terrorists” and that after despatched there, prisoners “haven’t any rights, that it’s for the worst criminals.”
All she needed now for her brother, she stated, “is for him to be returned.”
“I don’t need him within the arms of any authorities,” she continued. “What I need is for him to be returned to us.”
Carol Rosenberg contributed reporting from Florida and Simón Posada from Bogotá, Colombia.
