One of the more than 200 Venezuelan men whom US President Donald Trump sent to a notorious prison in El Salvador last year, Neiyerver Adrián León Rengel, sued theOne of the more than 200 Venezuelan men whom US President Donald Trump sent to a notorious prison in El Salvador last year, Neiyerver Adrián León Rengel, sued the

'Total hell': Man deported to torture prison over barber tattoo sues Trump admin for $1.3M

2026/03/25 09:43
3 min read
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One of the more than 200 Venezuelan men whom US President Donald Trump sent to a notorious prison in El Salvador last year, Neiyerver Adrián León Rengel, sued the United States of America in a federal court on Tuesday, seeking $1.3 million in damages.

León Rengel entered the United States at a port of entry in June 2023, during the Biden administration, for a pre-scheduled appointment, at which “he underwent screenings and provided his biometrics,” according to the complaint, filed in Washington, DC. He was released and scheduled to appear before an immigration judge in April 2028.

However, the filing details, after Trump returned to office, León Rengel “was wrongly identified as a member of the gang Tren de Aragua (TDA), repeatedly denied due process, falsely imprisoned, intentionally deceived, and—ultimately—illegally sent to El Salvador in blatant violation of a court order.”

León Rengel was sent to El Salvador’s Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT), where Human Rights Watch found deportees were subjected to “systematic torture.”

He told CBS News in Spanish that “there came a point when I thought about hanging myself with the sheet they gave us... It was hell. Total hell.”

As CBS—which eventually aired an investigation into the prison despite interference from editor-in-chief Bari Weiss—reported Tuesday:

DHS told the network that “this illegal alien was deemed a public safety threat as a confirmed associate of the Tren de Aragua gang and processed for removal from the US.” The department declined to provide any evidence to support its claim that he is a TDA member, saying that doing so would “undermine” national security.

León Rengel was ultimately freed from CECOT and returned to Venezuela as part of a prisoner swap last summer. He is the first of the deportees to file such a lawsuit under the Federal Tort Claims Act.

“This case reveals an illegal and morally bereft plan of action at the highest levels of our government to defy a federal court, strip a man of his rights, and hand him over to a foreign government for torture to prove a political point,” said retired Amb. Norm Eisen, co-founder and executive chair of Democracy Defenders Fund, in a statement.

“Adrián Rengel spent four months in abhorrent, inhumane conditions because senior officials chose to flout the rule of law,” he continued. “We are filing suit today to get justice for him. The rule of law applies no matter what the political aims of the administration.”

In addition to Eisen’s group, León Rengel is represented by the law firm Mariziani, Stevens & Gonzalez, with support from the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC).

“What happened to Adrián Rengel is government-sanctioned torture and a failure to recognize his humanity because he happened to be an immigrant. He deserves his day in court,” said LULAC CEO Juan Proaño. “His four months of illegal confinement is the devastating outcome of a system designed to treat Latino immigrants as criminals simply because of where they were born or the color of their skin.”

“Rengel and others were stripped of due process, lied to about where they were being sent, and handed over to a foreign dictatorship to be tortured in America’s name,” Proaño added. “The United States government had the power to stop this, and they chose not to. The court should deliver the justice the executive branch intentionally denied him.”

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