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Is Trump Focusing On The 'Really Bad Guys?'

Notice: A 'long read' of another individual swept up in the deportation web by the Trump administration, as due process and the rule of law are ignored.


Family says Venezuelan migrant in Lewisville sent to El Salvador mega prison over autism awareness tattoo.

Loved ones say Neri Jose Alvarado Borges told them immigration authorities said the tattoo was evidence he was a member of the Tren de Aragua gang.

By Keenan Willard • Published April 14, 2025 • Updated on April 14, 2025 at 10:25 pm
NBC Universal, Inc.

A Venezuelan asylum seeker living in Lewisville was deported to a mega prison in El Salvador after immigration officials allegedly mistook his autism awareness tattoo for a gang symbol. NBC 5’s Keenan Willard reports on the family’s efforts to bring him home.

NBC 5 has learned an asylum seeker in Lewisville was one of hundreds of Venezuelan immigrants sent to a notorious mega prison in El Salvador last month.

ICE has confirmed the deportation of Neri Jose Alvarado Borges. The man’s friends and family say Borges was told by an immigration official that his autism awareness tattoo was proof he belonged to the Tren de Aragua gang.

For the past nine months, the kitchen of the Latin Market in Lewisville was where you’d find Neri Jose Alvarado Borges.

The Venezuelan migrant found work at the bakery after crossing the border in west Texas.

“Everybody working here knows Neri is a good person, is a good brother, is a good friend,” said Juan Enrique Hernandez, the owner of Latin Market Venezuelan Treats.

In February, Borges was arrested by ICE agents at his apartment complex. Friends told NBC 5 they visited Borges the next day at the Bluebonnet Jail near Abilene, where they learned he had been charged with crossing into the United States illegally.

“And he said, but I have my asylum, I have the asylum here with me,” said Hernandez. “And the people said no, you’re going to jail because you have a tattoo.”

Loved ones said Borges told them immigration authorities said his tattoo was evidence of ties to the Tren de Aragua gang.

The tattoo is a rainbow-colored ribbon made up of puzzle pieces, the symbol for autism awareness, along with the name of Borges’s younger brother, who has autism.

Speaking to NBC 5 in Spanish from Venezuela, Borges’s sister said their family stopped hearing from Borges after March 14.

Days later, they saw his name on a list published by CBS News of 238 Venezuelans deported from the United States to the CECOT mega prison in El Salvador.

NBC News reports the Trump Administration said the men were sent to the notorious prison because of their ties to gangs.

“It’s a crazy decision,” said Hernandez. I don’t know, nobody sees, he’s no criminal, he’s not from the Tren de Aragua.”

The Dallas County Sheriff’s Office told NBC 5 they had no records of Borges being charged with any crime locally.

NBC 5 asked ICE why Borges was deported to El Salvador and what evidence was used in the decision.

“This subject was arrested on Feb. 24, 2025, and processed under Title 8 authority,” an ICE spokesperson responded in a statement. “On March 5, 2025, an Immigration judge issued him a final order of removal.”

An attorney told NBC 5 that Title 8 lays out the guidelines for the government to quickly deport an asylum seeker. Still, they had concerns about the process behind the decision.

“The government is very quiet and hasn’t properly explained why certain people are getting removed if there’s no arrest, no criminal background, nothing found,” said attorney Jaime Barron.

For now, Borges’s family said they were leaning on faith that he would one day be released – and his former boss at the bakery said he was planning to travel to El Salvador himself to do whatever he could.

“I try to help him because I know he’s no criminal,” said Hernandez. “And I need, I need to help, he’s my friend.”

Experts say there is no clear legal avenue to get Borges out of the prison in El Salvador. During a visit to the Oval Office on Monday, the president of El Salvador said he would not release a Maryland man whose return from prison to the US was ordered by a federal judge.
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ArishMell · 70-79, M
Unfortunately for the Maryland resident the USA's judicial system would have no influence on any other nation's. Release would probably have to be negotiated at diplomatic level.

Is El Salvador charging the USA for this "service", perhaps at a higher rate than the prison cost?


A weird side-effect of this Kafka-esque deportation without process is that an English family, living in England, is now worried whether it is safe to proceed with their planned holiday in Miami.

The husband has an elaborate tattoo on his arm, including a clock face showing the date and time of birth of their daughter. The tattooist quite innocently placed a photograph of the tattoo on Facebook, but the American authorities somehow identified the man and thought without evidence that he must be a member of that gang!

I don't know if the wearer had also displayed it on some social-medium so was far easier to find.

He is neither South American nor US American, has committed no crimes at all, but if he visits the USA he would be a foreigner with an elaborate tattoo.... and one listed by the security services.

A historian interviewed by BBC Radio Four for background said the practice among gangs now is not to have tattoos.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow Sorry, I don't know what you mean. The system seems to be deporting people on a whim, whether they have committed crimes or not, to a regime not at all interested in justice.

I realise any who had in fact broken the law, had done so in the USA; but deportation of such people should be to their home countries and only after proper judicial process.

Millions, I take it, of US taxpayers' Dollars?

Well, I'd certainly not visit the US at the moment! The People's Republic of China might be safer. (I even have friends who have holidayed there.)
@ArishMell Exactly. So the minute they arrested him from a legal standpoint at a minimum it was illegal detention or even kidnapping.

This is why the Trump gang claiming the courts have no standing because it is "foreign policy" because they managed to smuggle a prisoner out doesn't make what they did less illegal in the US.


Yep. I believe it was 6 million.

I would not blame you. The US is becoming flyover country overnight for a reason.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow Thank you for explaining it. Not a healthy state at all and I hope you can sort it all out for everyone's sake.

Although it would be easy, and indeed right, to say as a foreigner this is a purely internal US matter, it could have repercussions elsewhere in the world by deterring genuine visitors and by encouraging regimes like Erdogan's in Turkey, and Orban's in Hungary.
Let's pretend it's complicated and that the mainstream ain't no fascists. That's how you keep it going! Good job!
@JSul3 of course. And in the Constitution you find that the government must provide for the public welfare. The UN charter applies directly to the details. You fascists just hate peace and love you some sick and poor people working for y'all's oligarchs. Not complicated.
The fourth amendment already made these renditions illegal.
JSul3 · 70-79
@Roundandroundwego It guarantees due process.

Bring forth charges and prove them in a court of law and have a decision rendered.

That is not happening.
@JSul3 yes. But Americans understand that you're lawlessness is key to your greatness.
Weird how out of like 250 "worst of the worst" only 5 have felony convictions and 90% have no criminal record at all. Huh.
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