

They were deported to El Salvador's megaprison. What happened inside?
18 snips Sep 2, 2025
Samantha Schmidt, The Post’s Bogotá bureau chief, shares the harrowing story of Roger Molina, a Venezuelan deportee imprisoned in El Salvador's notorious CECOT. The discussion unveils the appalling conditions inside the megaprison where inmates are stripped of legal rights and isolated from the outside world. Schmidt highlights the dire situation faced by Venezuelan migrants, the broader implications of U.S. immigration policies, and the emotional journey of those seeking asylum amidst severe human rights violations.
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Refugee Dream Turned Into Deportation
- Roger Molina was flown from the U.S. to El Salvador unexpectedly and ended up in the notorious CICOT prison.
- He had been vetted and conditionally accepted into a U.S. refugee program before detention and deportation.
CICOT Built As A Legal Black Box
- CICOT was opened as a fortress to hold El Salvador's ‘worst of the worst’ and claims capacity for 40,000 inmates.
- Its emergency-rule framework removes normal legal protections and limits detainees' access to lawyers and due process.
Shackled Flights To Unknown Destinations
- Deportees were shackled, gagged, and kept ignorant of their destination during flights, with at least one man strapped and taped for asking questions.
- Passengers discovered en route they were in Honduras and then El Salvador by clues like Domino's boxes and a Salvadoran flag.