On March 15, the Trump administration loaded more than 200 men onto three planes bound for El Salvador, where they were to be locked in its notorious CECOT prison. A video of the men being marched, head-down, into police vehicles and into the facility ricocheted around the world, a symbol of the United States’ position on immigrants it accuses of having gang ties.But not seen by the camera were eight women who were also on the planes but never got off. Shortly after they landed, according to court filings, El Salvador apparently refused to take them. So they were shipped back, to be locked up again on American soil.Now, for the first time, two of those women are speaking out in an interview with NBC News, describing the chaos they say they witnessed during the Trump administration’s deportation efforts and how, they allege, Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials deceived them about where they were being taken.“We were lied to,” said one of the women, Heymar Padilla Moyetones, 24. “They told us we were going to Venezuela, and it turns out that, no. When we arrived at our destination, that’s when they told us we were in El Salvador.”Trump administration officials have said all of the people it has sent to El Salvador were Venezuelans who were carefully vetted and had clear ties to Tren de Aragua, a gang from Venezuela that the administration has designated a terrorist organization.But the vetting process apparently did not include determining whether El Salvador would accept female detainees.Moyetones said ICE officials kept her on the aircraft. “They didn’t let us leave. They told us that we were going back, that we were coming back here,” she said.The incident is the latest example of the haphazard nature of the flights to El Salvador. In a separate case, the government has acknowledged it erred in sending Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man married to a U.S. citizen, on those same planes despite a court order that blocked his being deported to El Salvador because of the likelihood he would be targeted by gangs there. Family members say and court records show the administration relied on tattoos to identify gang members, even though experts say that method is unreliable. The administration has not acknowledged the women’s situation.This account is based on an interview with Moyetones and another woman who was flown to El Salvador, Scarleth Rodriguez, both of whom spoke to NBC News from the cell they share in a detention center in Laredo, Texas. The women have quickly grown close to each other, bonded by their shared experience. They and their cellmates crowded around a video tablet in their cell for the interview, fixing one another’s hair and clothing, giggling about how shy they felt and occasionally encouraging one another to keep describing what had happened to them.Moyetones and Rodriguez both deny that they are associated with Tren de Aragua and deny that they are criminals.“I came with a lot of dreams,” Moyetones said. Since she was a child, she said, the United States had been the country where she wanted “to make a life.” She ultimately came about a year ago, with her son, then an infant, to give him a better future. “We thought that perhaps the treatment from people in this country would be different toward us,” she said, but after what happened with the flights, she is sad and disappointed with the United States and just wants to be deported back to her home country, Venezuela. But her son, now 2 years old, is in the care of a relative, and she does not know whether they will be reunited. “I am very afraid, because I have always been with my son,” she said. “I have always looked after my son, but I don’t know. I wouldn’t know what to tell you.”Their account of eight women being mistakenly taken to El Salvador and men on the flights declaring their innocence stands in contrast to the Trump administration’s claims of certainty about the fairness of the deportations. Senior members of the administration have said there is no need for judges to review the cases of those sent to El Salvador before their deportations. And they have dismissed questions from the media about their vetting process. The recollections of Moyetones and Rodriguez are also consistent with an affidavit that a woman identified only as “S.Z.F.R.” filed in a case that has turned into a constitutional showdown over the legality of sending people in the United States to prison in another country without full due process and whether the administration ignored an order from Judge James Boasberg, the chief judge of U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, not to take the immigrants to El Salvador.Lee Gelernt, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union who is the lead attorney arguing on behalf of the plaintiffs in the case before Boasberg, said what happened to the women and to Garcia, the man deported from Maryland, shows that the government is making mistakes when it chooses whom to send to the prison in El Salvador.“It just shows how little process there is and how little due diligence,” Gelernt said. “Whoever heard of sending someone potentially for a life sentence in El Salvador without giving them any due process?”NBC News sent a list of questions about this article to the Department of Homeland Security, under which ICE falls. In response, a DHS spokesperson said in a statement, “As these matters are claimed under privilege and state secrets in ongoing litigation, we will not comment on them at this time.” The Salvadoran government has not commented.
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