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Kristi Noem Refuses ‘Proof-Of-Life' Request For Gay Makeup Artist Trump Doomed To Salvadoran Hellhole
Kristi Noem Refuses ‘Proof-Of-Life' Request For Gay Makeup Artist Trump Doomed To Salvadoran Hellhole

Yahoo

time14-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Kristi Noem Refuses ‘Proof-Of-Life' Request For Gay Makeup Artist Trump Doomed To Salvadoran Hellhole

The U.S. homeland security secretary on Wednesday refused to confirm whether a gay makeup artist disappeared by the Trump administration to an infamous Salvadoran prison two months ago was even alive. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the man, Andry Hernández Romero, was simply not her problem. Hernández Romero is the one of hundreds of people banished by the United States to the notorious prison camp without charge or trial. 'This individual is in El Salvador, and the appeal would be best made to the president, and to the government, of El Salvador,' Noem told Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) during a hearing of the House Homeland Security Committee. Garcia kept pushing, asking Noem to request a 'proof-of-life' for Hernández Romero from the government of El Salvador. 'This is not under my jurisdiction,' Noem said. Despite Noem's prevaricating, the administration has every ability to check on its detainees in El Salvador's Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo, or CECOT, as President Donald Trump has admitted. The administration made a multimillion-dollar deal with El Salvador to house detainees, and Noem herself has called the foreign prison 'one of the tools in our toolkit' — belying any claim that U.S. detainees, once on Salvadoran soil, are no longer subject to U.S. detention. An ongoing legal battle centers on this concept, known as 'constructive custody': The Trump administration considers the detainees to be in El Salvador's custody; lawyers advocating for the U.S. detainees' rights say they're owed their day in U.S. court. Hernández Romero is one of the more noteddetainees shipped by the Trump administration to CECOT, partly because a photojournalist in El Salvador, Philip Holsinger, identified him specifically, crying and shouting 'I'm innocent' and 'I'm gay' as CECOT guards shaved his head. Pursuing an asylum claim in the United States, Hernández Romero made an appointment to enter the country on the app formerly known as CBP One. He passed a credible fear interview, which should have allowed him to stay in the United States as his asylum case proceeded. (People who cross the U.S.-Mexico border without authorization still have the right to claim asylum, but both former President Joe Biden and Trump have undermined this right.) Still, Hernández Romero was detained once he arrived in the country, and never left detention. Instead, he was accused of being a gang member by the administration, seemingly due to his tattoos, and the assessment of a disgraced former police officer working for a U.S. private prison company. 'He's not in a gang. He's a makeup artist who worked at Miss Venezuela,' his attorney, Lindsay Toczylowski, told The Advocate last month. 'His social media is full of beauty queens. The only crowns he touches are made of rhinestones.' Alongside at least 287 others, Hernández Romero was disappeared by the administration to CECOT, where he has been out of touch from his family and lawyers for two months. Noem's acknowledgement that 'this individual is in El Salvador' is more than most U.S. CECOT detainees get — for hundreds of people expelled to the prison camp from the United States, neither the U.S. nor Salvadoran governments have even acknowledged their detention, in what manyconsider to be 'enforced disappearances' under international law. Historians Are 'Shocked' By What They've Seen Trump Do In Just 100 Days Human Rights Groups File Emergency Petition Over Trump Expulsions To Salvadoran Mega-Prison Top Human Rights Official Rings Alarm Bells About Trump Policy

Meet some of the candidates who will compete in Miss Universe Cuba this year
Meet some of the candidates who will compete in Miss Universe Cuba this year

Miami Herald

time10-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Miami Herald

Meet some of the candidates who will compete in Miss Universe Cuba this year

Miss Universe Cuba now has its 20 official candidates who will compete in Hialeah this summer to see who goes to the Miss Universe pageant in Thailand in November. The winner will also receive another title this year: Queen of the 100th Anniversary of the City of Hialeah. Last year, Hialeah hosted the first Miss Universe Cuba contest with Marianela Ancheta winning the crown. The search for the most beautiful Cuban woman began in January, with 250 applicants. Twenty-five finalists were selected, and on Thursday, the finalists were narrowed down to 20 after three in-person auditions, the last held on April 30 at the Intercontinental Hotel in Doral. This year's contestants features a mix of well-known faces and social media darlings. In addition to charm and communication skills, Miss Universe Cuba contestants must either have been born on the island or have one parent that is Cuban. Daughter of a Cuban celebrity in Miss Universe The judges this year included last year's Miss Universe Cuba, Marianela Ancheta; stylist Carlos Sigas; Gallia Vega, a fitness model and candidate for Miss Universe Cuba in 2024; Miguel Ángel García, official makeup artist for Miss Venezuela; Tenay Rodríguez, influencer, businesswoman, and television presenter, who was part of the panel of judges that selected Miss Universe Cuba last year; makeup artist Eugenio Rodríguez; and photographer Michel Milian, who took the photos of Ancheta wearing the Ochún-themed outfit she wore on the preliminary night of the Miss Universe pageant. 'Congratulations to each and every one of you, the new Miss Universe Cuba 2025 candidates,' said Ancheta at the Thursday event, dressed in a black skirt with matching floral details and a white blouse. 'I celebrate and embrace you, because I know what you're feeling today… the nerves, the excitement, the dreams. Cuba deserves to shine, and together we can make its light reach further than ever.' Lina Luaces, daughter of Lili Estefan, host of Univision's El Gordo y la Flaca, and businessman Lorenzo Luaces, was one of the finalists who caused a buzz. Luaces works as a model and has done runway shows in New York Fashion Week and other cities such as her native Miami. 'My mom and I spent weeks preparing for this casting. I'm very excited, and it's an honor because Cuba is part of my roots,' said Luaces, who said she preferred competing to represent Cuba instead of the United States, where she was born. 'I didn't even think about it. I wanted it to be Cuba to honor my family and my roots,' Lina said, according to Hola. 'I have always said I feel more Cuban than American, because that's how I grew up, with the values I have, the food I eat.' Miss Universe candidate criticizes the Cuban regime Another contender is social media star Mia Dio, a gorgeous blonde with one million of followers who come to her for funny content. She recently announced that she was a candidate for the crown in one of her posts. 'I have a confession to make. My name is Mia Angelina Donadio Cancio, and my mother is Cuban. I am currently a preselected candidate for Miss Universe Cuba 2025,' she said, before strongly condemning the Cuban regime for the inequality that plagues the country, especially against women, who lack laws to protect them from violence and femicide. 'I don't want to be the most beautiful woman in the world, but the one who says it the loudest—I want to tell you what is happening in Cuba,' Donadio said in the post. 'It is a communist country, and you would think that means equality, especially for women. Free education, free healthcare, and half of Parliament being made up of women. Does that seem progressive? But this is what they don't show you; there is no national law against gender violence, the government doesn't have a hotline to report these cases, and right now, a very serious situation is happening that no one is talking about. In 2023, at least 83 women died at the hands of their partners or ex-partners,' she denounced in English. Donadio also participated in the Univision pageant show, Nuestra Belleza Latina in 2021. The influencer and comedian, who performs her stand-up routine in English, has Latin American heritage from both parents. Her father, born in Argentina, was a cameraman for Univision for many years. 'He inspired me to start creating content when I was 14,' said Donadio, who addressed Cuban women directly. 'Sisters, visibility is power, and if the Cuban government isn't going to say your names, I will,' she said in a video on her Instagram profile, concluding with the phrase that led Cubans to protest on July 11, 2021, 'Patria y Vida (Homeland and Life.)' Miami mother and businesswoman to compete Indiana Williams is another candidate for the crown. She is a mother and entrepreneur who founded an event planning company more than a decade ago. 'In my skin and in my heart I carry the history, strength, and passion of my homeland. Representing my country at Miss Universe Cuba is not just an honor, it's a mission. It's time to raise our voices, to show that Cuba has beauty, intelligence, elegance, and an unstoppable spirit,' Williams said. 'A new story begins… and I promise to live it with the strength of a woman, the tenderness of a mother, and the fire of a dreamer who never gave up,' she said about her journey to the Miss Universe Cuba finals. Official Miss Universe Cuba Candidates Also included in this group of 20 young women born in Cuba or with Cuban roots are: Anabella Urquiola; Angelica Roque, Ariday Villar, Claudia Ramos, Claudia Fernández, Deneb Morales, Emely Artabe, Glenda Verdecia, Katherine Núñez; Lianet Aguilera Sarmiento; Linnet Mustafat Arcial; Lisbeth Fernández; María Díaz; Romy Alvarez; Sheila Laza; Stefany Parli; and Vanessa García.

Gay asylum-seeker's lawyer worries for the makeup artist's safety in Salvadoran ‘hellhole' prison
Gay asylum-seeker's lawyer worries for the makeup artist's safety in Salvadoran ‘hellhole' prison

Yahoo

time22-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Gay asylum-seeker's lawyer worries for the makeup artist's safety in Salvadoran ‘hellhole' prison

The last time anyone spoke to Andry Hernández Romero, he thought he was being put on a plane back to Venezuela. Instead, the 31-year-old gay Venezuelan makeup artist, who came to the United States seeking asylum from political persecution and anti-LGBTQ+ violence, according to his attorney, was forcibly disappeared into one of the world's toughest prisons. Keep up with the latest in + news and politics. Hernández Romero is now believed to be held inside El Salvador's Terrorism Confinement Center, better known as CECOT — a sprawling, brutalist mega-prison that has been compared to a modern gulag or concentration camp. Constructed by President Nayib Bukele to house alleged gang members, CECOT holds tens of thousands of men in isolation, most without trial. Many have not been convicted of any crimes. There is no phone access. No mail. No visits. No light. No end. Related: Gay Venezuelan asylum-seeker 'disappeared' to Salvadoran mega-prison under Trump order, Maddow reveals 'This is one of the most shocking things I could ever imagine happening to a client,' said Lindsay Toczylowski, a 15-year immigration attorney and executive director of Immigrant Defenders Law Center, in an interview with The Advocate. Toczylowski is representing Hernández Romero in court. Andry Hernandez RomeroCourtesy Immigrant Defenders Law Center 'He never left ICE custody,' she said. 'He had no criminal history. And yet they secretly shipped him off to a hellhole, like his life meant nothing.' She said Hernández Romero, a pageant stylist and lifelong theater performer, had never even been arrested. Now she worries he is shackled and starving in a foreign land he had never set foot in before being deported there by the Trump administration under the pretext of national security and based on nothing more than a tattoo. Hernández Romero's journey to CECOT began with a crown — two, in fact. Toczylowski said the tattoos on his wrists, one above his mother's name and one above his father's, were part of a tribute to his family and the Three Kings Day pageants in which he had performed since childhood. But to a disgraced former Milwaukee police officer working for private prison contractor CoreCivic, they looked like gang insignia. Related: Deported gay makeup artist cried for mother in prison, photojournalist says That officer, who had been fired for crashing his car while intoxicated and later hired by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, submitted a report claiming the crowns suggested membership in Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan criminal syndicate that the Trump administration has labeled a foreign terrorist organization. That flimsy accusation, uncorroborated by any credible evidence, became Hernández Romero's ticket to indefinite torture. 'He's not in a gang. He's a makeup artist who worked at Miss Venezuela,' Toczylowski said. 'His social media is full of beauty queens. The only crowns he touches are made of rhinestones.' A prison officer opening a gate at the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) in Tecoluca, in San Vicente, El Salvador on April 4, 2025. Alex Pena/Anadolu via Getty Images Hernández Romero entered the U.S. last year after making an appointment through the Biden administration's CBP One app. The Trump administration has repurposed the app, now called CBP Home, to get undocumented immigrants to self-deport. His attorney says he followed the rules and did everything right. When he arrived, he was detained at the Otay Mesa Detention Center in California, run by CoreCivic. He never once stepped outside a detention facility. He was no danger to Americans, his lawyer says. Related: Bad Wisconsin cop's tattoo claim helped deport gay asylum-seeker to Salvadoran prison hellscape: report Hernández Romero was scheduled for an asylum hearing March 13. But when the hearing came, he didn't appear — not because he skipped court, but because ICE didn't bring him. His lawyers were confused, and then they panicked. By Friday of that week, he was no longer listed in the ICE detainee locator. By Sunday, Bukele posted videos of Venezuelan men being brutally marched off planes in shackles on social media. Hernández Romero's lawyers scanned the footage frame by frame. They saw him. 'He was crying, begging guards, 'I'm gay! I'm a stylist!'' Toczylowski said. 'He was being slapped, his head forcibly shaved. And then he disappeared into the dark.' CECOT is not a prison in any traditional sense. It is a vast fortress of pain. Thousands of men sleep on metal slabs in vast concrete rooms. They are beaten for speaking. They are denied food until they are too weak to resist, Toczylowski said. Their heads are shaved, their identities stripped. They are forbidden from speaking, even to each other. Photojournalist Philip Holsinger, who documented the prison for Time, said Hernández Romero sobbed uncontrollably, praying and calling out for his mother as guards dragged him down a hallway. Hernández Romero's mother learned of his fate only when Toczylowski called to tell her he was in El Salvador. ICE has refused to confirm anything to his attorneys. There is no removal order and no legal paperwork. The Department of Homeland Security and the White House did not respond to The Advocate's requests for comment. The Trump administration claims the Alien Enemies Act — a law passed in 1798 to detain foreign nationals during war — gives it unchecked power to disappear people like Hernández Romero without trial. ICE has since declared it will not facilitate any communication with him or make him available for court appearances, his lawyer said. 'It is terrifying,' Toczylowski said. 'Because we have no idea what is happening to him.' Andry Hernandez RomeroCourtesy Immigrant Defenders Law Center Despite the trauma, Toczylowski and her team are fighting. They've filed court motions. They've contacted elected officials. But the wheels of justice move slowly — too slowly for someone caged in a windowless concrete block, surrounded by armed guards, his future erased. 'Every single day he remains there, his life is at risk,' she said. 'And if anything happens to him, it is on President Trump, Secretary of Homeland Security [Kristi] Noem, and Secretary of State [Marco] Rubio.' Hernández Romero's case, she warned, is not just about one person. 'If they can do this to him, they can do it to anyone,' she said. 'Green card holders. U.S. citizens. Anyone.' In a quiet moment during the interview, Toczylowski reflected on the emotional toll. 'I have not had a case or a situation that has weighed on me like this since we were at the epicenter of the family separation crisis,' she said. 'We were helping kids in shelters who were crying for their parents. I thought that was the most shocking thing I'd ever witnessed in my career. But what has happened to Andry? It tops that.' She paused. 'This is as bad as it gets.' Andry Hernandez RomeroCourtesy Immigrant Defenders Law Center Hernández Romero doesn't know that people are fighting for him. He doesn't know that his theater troupe in Venezuela is staging rallies in his honor, wearing crowns in protest. He doesn't know that, according to Toczylowski, churches in Canada, Spain, and the Netherlands have offered him sanctuary. He doesn't know that dozens of strangers across the U.S. have offered to house him if he ever returns. 'We just want him to know he's not alone,' Toczylowski said. 'He's loved. We're fighting like hell to bring him home.' ImmDef continues to represent Hernández Romero and others like him pro bono. The nonprofit organization accepts financial contributions and urges those who support Hernández Romero to share his story, contact elected officials, and support legal efforts to bring him back. 'We have started representing other people who are also in El Salvador, whose stories we are just learning,' Toczylowski said. 'We obviously do all of this work pro bono. So, if people want to support organizations like us that fight to get due process for people and that provide free lawyers to people, they should. We could certainly use the support." On Saturday, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a temporary pause on further deportations under the Alien Enemies Act. The court's order came after the American Civil Liberties Union filed an emergency appeal on behalf of dozens of men being held in Texas, many of whom were reportedly being bused to airports without notice or hearings. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissented. The court's move signals new scrutiny of Trump's use of executive wartime powers to bypass asylum law. While the justices have not yet ruled on the law's constitutionality, the pause blocks removals 'until further order of this court.' On Monday, four Democratic U.S. lawmakers traveled to El Salvador to investigate the situation for those detained, including to conduct a welfare check on Hernández Romero. U.S. Reps. Yassamin Ansari of Arizona, Robert Garcia of California, Maxwell Frost of Florida, and Maxine Dexter of Oregon sent a letter to Rubio requesting that they or Hernández Romero's lawyers be able to see him. "As a gay man, Mr. Hernández Romero is at particular risk of persecution if deported or imprisoned in El Salvador, a country where LGBTQIA+ people can face 'torture, inhuman or degrading treatment, excessive use of force, illegal and arbitrary arrests and other forms of abuse, much of it committed by public security agents,'" the letter states. Beyond financial support, Toczylowski said Hernández Romero's case needs continued attention. 'We need elected officials — like Sen. [Chris] Van Hollen did — to go to El Salvador and demand answers,' she said. 'And if we're able to get an elected official to go down like Sen. Van Hollen did, and they're able to speak with him, I want him to know how many people — his team here at ImmDef, his family, and so many around the world — are fighting for him so that he doesn't give up hope, so that he doesn't give up the will to survive.' Van Hollen, a Democratic U.S. senator from Maryland, traveled to San Salvador last week to meet with Kilmar Abrego Garcia, another man deported under similar circumstances. Van Hollen confirmed that Abrego Garcia had been held in CECOT for weeks, isolated, taunted, and emotionally traumatized. He was later transferred to a lower-level facility, still in isolation, but reportedly improved. 'He was clearly strengthened by the fact that people were fighting to ensure his rights are protected,' Van Hollen said at a news conference after returning. Toczylowski said she hopes someone will be allowed to speak to Hernández Romero soon and that he will learn he hasn't been forgotten. 'If it were me, I'd want someone to tell my story. I'd want someone to know I was human,' she said. 'If it can happen to Andry — it can happen to a green card holder. It can happen to a U.S. citizen. That should chill us all.'

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