Cassie's graphic testimony of 'freak offs' may set the stage for what's to come in Diddy's trialNew Foto - Cassie's graphic testimony of 'freak offs' may set the stage for what's to come in Diddy's trial

On red carpets from Los Angeles to the French Riviera,Sean "Diddy" Combsand theR&B singer Cassieintertwined arms, radiating an attractive and carefree façade for the cameras. But behind closed doors, she said, she "felt trapped." In the first week of testimony in Combs'federal sex trafficking trialin New York, Cassie, whose real name is Casandra Ventura, described over four days on the witness stand a tumultuous relationship with the music impresario that began in her early 20s and lasted on and off for over a decade. As the government's star witness, her responses gave a window into a world centered around paid sexual encounters lasting days and sometimes occurring weekly — known as "freak offs" — that she said she was forced to endure under the threat of physical and psychological abuse. Sign up for the "Diddy on Trial" newsletter for key developments and analysis The "freak offs" were so regular, she said, they "became a job." Much of what Ventura, 38, testified to was graphic, from the sex acts with male escorts to the violence, including the fights with Combs that left her covered in bruises, she said, if she attempted to rebuff a "freak off." A visibly pregnant Ventura also recounted how,she said, Combs rapedher on her living room floor in 2018, which he has denied. But as explicit as the line of questioning was from the prosecution, it was necessary, some legal experts say, because it helped to lay a foundation for the federal government's case in the weeks to come. Ultimately,12 jurors must decidewhether Combs, 55, violated federal laws against racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has vehemently denied all five counts against him, but if found guilty of even one, he couldface a lengthy prison sentence. Rachel Maimin, a former federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York, said a crucial piece of evidence —security videofrom a 2016 assault in a Los Angeles hotel hallway in which Combs, wearing only a white towel, could be seen beating and dragging Ventura — is going to stick in jurors' minds. On the stand, Ventura explained the incident was the result of her trying to leave a "freak off," which sometimes occurred in hotel suites around the world. Ventura "really was able to tell a story from start to finish," Maimin said. "She was able to get into some of the more upsetting and disturbing pieces of the case, including the video of when Combs is beating her. It sets the stage for the rest of the case, where the prosecution is going to have to back up her testimony with all of their evidence." Ventura said it was under the direction of Combs that she would use drugs and have sex with male escorts, some found on Craigslist and paid upward of $6,000. Meanwhile, she said, Combs' security was around constantly to provide supplies, including the drugs, condoms and baby oil. Hanging over their relationship, she said, was the fear that Combs might blackmail her with recorded videos of the sex acts. She panicked, she said, when she was hosting an event in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in 2014 and "someone I was working with said they saw a sexually explicit video of me." She quickly texted Combs, and told jurors that any leaked footage "would put my career in jeopardy" and "could ruin everything I worked for." A year earlier, Ventura said, she was mortified when she saw Combs watching sexually explicit videos of her while they flew home on a commercial flight after having attended the Cannes Film Festival in France. "He pulled up 'freak off' videos on his laptop that I thought were deleted," Ventura testified. "He was showing them with other people around. I said, 'You are embarrassing me.' I was scared. I felt trapped. How do you get out of this situation?" But to stave off his rage, she said, she then arranged a "freak off" within hours of them landing, otherwise, "he said the videos would be released." Mitchell Epner, a former federal prosecutor for the District of New Jersey who nowpractices criminal defensein New York, said Ventura's testimony has been key, because if jurors find her to be credible, she helps the prosecution's case that alleges sex trafficking did occur by means of "force, fraud or coercion." "If she was coerced by violence or threats of violence or blackmail materials into participating in the 'freak offs' over her objections, then the trial is over," Epner said. "Everything else, which will go on for weeks, will not matter if the jury accepts that she was a credible witness, and they believe beyond a reasonable doubt that she was telling the truth when she said I didn't want to do these things, he knew I didn't want to do these things, and the only reason I did them was that I was afraid that he would beat me or that he would release the videos." He added that the way Combs' defense team painted him in their opening statements as a "very flawed individual," prone to violence and jealousy in his relationships, was striking. "It's one of the strangest trials that we've seen because the prosecution and defense agree about so many of the facts," Epner said. During cross-examination, defense lawyer Anna Estevao got Ventura to speak about her love for Combs. Text messages were shown that suggest she knew she had the agency to walk away from him after they fought. Other messages also showed her appearing to be a willing participant in the sexual encounters: "I'm always ready to freak off," she wrote in 2009. "For the defense in the case, the key to the castle is persuading the jury that everything done here was consensual," said Mark Zauderer, a veteran trial and appellate lawyer in New York. Ventura also told Estevao that shesettled her 2023 lawsuitin which she accused Combs of rape and abuse for $20 million, and initially her lawyer asked for $30 million as she had planned to write a book about her relationship with Combs. (Combs did not admit to  wrongdoing in settling the suit.) Zauderer said jurors may see that sum as either Ventura having "vindicated herself" after what she endured or "the defense is trying to cast it as that she was just looking for money." Maimin, the former federal prosecutor, said she still wants to see how prosecutors will further Ventura's testimony to show how Combs allegedly wielded his power andbusiness pursuits— built around Bad Boy Records, which he founded in 1993 — as a "criminal enterprise." In their indictment, prosecutors say Combs "relied on the employees, resources and influence of the multi-faceted business empire that he led and controlled — creating a criminal enterprise whose members and associates engaged in, and attempted to engage in, among other crimes, sex trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice." "I don't know that she got them all the way there," Maimin said of Ventura's testimony. "As a matter of law, it is enough just to have the testimony of one witness," Maimin said, "but given the complexity of the charges against him, including the racketeering conspiracy part, it would be very difficult to say you've proven your case beyond a reasonable doubt without corroborating evidence." Neither the prosecution nor the defense has released full witness lists for the trial, which is expected to last at least eight weeks. Dawn Richard, a former member of the girl group Danity Kane, founded by Combs, took the stand briefly late Friday as the prosecution's next witness and is expected to continue testifying Monday. Richardfiled a lawsuit last yearagainst Combs, alleging he groped, assaulted and imprisoned her, and that she also saw him beating Ventura. A lawyer for Combs called the allegations "manufactured" and said Richard was seeking "a pay day." Other witnesses for the prosecution in the coming days may include Ventura's mother and a personal assistant of Combs. If you or someone you know is facing domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence hotline for help at (800) 799-SAFE (7233), or go towww.thehotline.orgfor more. States often have domestic violence hotlines as well.

Cassie's graphic testimony of 'freak offs' may set the stage for what's to come in Diddy's trial

Cassie's graphic testimony of 'freak offs' may set the stage for what's to come in Diddy's trial On red carpets from Los...
A Look at Sylvester Stallone and Jennifer Flavin's Early Years as the Long-Term Couple Marks Their 28th Wedding AnniversaryNew Foto - A Look at Sylvester Stallone and Jennifer Flavin's Early Years as the Long-Term Couple Marks Their 28th Wedding Anniversary

Ron Galella Collection via Getty Sylvester StalloneandJennifer Flavin's love story goes way back. The pairfirst metby chance while dining at a West Hollywood restaurant in 1988 and sparks immediately flew. "I remember vividly the first time I met Jennifer," Stallone said during an episode of their reality TV show,The Family Stallone. "I was in this dark restaurant, a few people. She came in and,whoa!Something happened. I just felt, like, this jolt, like — 'Oh, did we just have a minor earthquake or something?'" The feeling was mutual, as Flavin confessed, "We just hit it off, it was crazy. We were inseparable all night." However, their 37-year relationship hasn't been without its ups and downs. The couple went their separate ways in 1994, before reconciling and getting married in 1997. Twenty-five years into their union, Flavinfiled a petition "for dissolution of marriage and other relief"from Stallone on Aug. 19, 2022. However, a month later, they called off their divorce and had their family back together. "Let's just say that it was a very tumultuous time," Stallone told theSunday Times. "There was a reawakening of what was more valuable than anything, which is my love for my family. It takes precedence over my work, and that was a hard lesson to learn." As the couple celebrates 28 years of marriage, here's a look back at Sylvester Stallone and Jennifer Flavin's early years. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Stallone and Flavin complement each other in more ways than one. Above, the stylish duo is photographed in coordinated looks as they step out of the Regency Hotel in New York in 1989. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Months after their meeting, the two looked to be in high spirits as they were pictured at Spago in West Hollywood in 1988. Kypros/Getty The cheerful couple brought some color to the streets in this photo from 1989. Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Clearly, Spago was a favorite. Stallone and Flavin wore their date-night best as they were pictured leaving the restaurant. Paul Harris/Getty Sporting darker hair, Jennifer Flavin looked ultra-stylish next to her beau as they hit up the Santa Barbara Polo Club. Jim Smeal/Ron Galella Even while just out and about casually, this duo were showstoppers. The couple rocked matching denim while out in Sunset Plaza in 1991. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Jennifer and Sylvester wore shades of blue at Donna Karan's Fall Collection Fashion Show to Benefit AIDS Project Los Angeles in Sept. 1992. Ron Galella Collection via Getty The two are seen having a good time at the grand opening bash for Planet Hollywood in New York City. James Andanson/Sygma via Getty The couple took a casual stroll on the beach while vacationing in St. Tropez. Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty In 1999, the lovebirds looked chic as ever as they attended the premiere ofDeep Blue Sea. Read the original article onPeople

A Look at Sylvester Stallone and Jennifer Flavin's Early Years as the Long-Term Couple Marks Their 28th Wedding Anniversary

A Look at Sylvester Stallone and Jennifer Flavin's Early Years as the Long-Term Couple Marks Their 28th Wedding Anniversary Ron Galella ...
Beyoncé, Blue Ivy Suffer 'Errors Tour' Moment During Cowboy Carter MishapNew Foto - Beyoncé, Blue Ivy Suffer 'Errors Tour' Moment During Cowboy Carter Mishap

Beyoncéand her eldest daughter,Blue Ivy, found themselves entangled in their own version ofthe "Errors Tour"at one of her most recent concerts on her Cowboy Carter and the Rodeo Chitlin' Circuit Tour. The mother-daughter duo, who seem to love performing together onstage, were literally entangled when the superstar's hair got caught in Blue's earring while she performed "PROTECTOR" with her and younger daughterRumi. In a video posted to X, fans praised the 13-year-old's professionalism when she tried to subtly free her mom's locks while keeping up with the choreography of the track before taking her earring out altogether so as not to stop the show. the way blue removed her earring, beyoncé looking behind her to check, & blue confirming? THIS IS PROFESSIONALISM LMAOOO😭😭😭pic.twitter.com/P9MD7tKe6r — 𝗱𝗮𝗻𝗻𝘆🫧💚 (@beyoncegarden)May 16, 2025 From another view, you could hear the 7-year-old's laughter blending in with her mother's vocals as she realized what was happening. Rumi's laugh coming through the mic feed 😭❤️pic.twitter.com/wpTHegdib2 — Yoncé Vocals (@YonceVocals)May 16, 2025 Fans applauded the teen's "quick thinking" to just remove the jewelry rather than wasting time trying to untangle it. "I wouldn't have thought of that I would've panicked, but she stayed calm took her earring out and carried on!" one admitted. "Blue's got professionalism way beyond her age—she's honestly the one keeping the whole Carter empire running at this point," someone else declared. The "Errors Tour" is a phrase coined by Swifties duringTaylor Swift'sEras Tour to describe the series ofonstage mishaps—likewhen she swallowed a bug mid-song,smoothly recovered when her dress was caught, orwhen one of her dancers was almost knocked off stage in high winds—that occurred throughout the tour, which were always handled by those involved without skipping a beat. Related: Taylor Swift Pauses Eras Tour Show to Acknowledge Mistake in Latest 'Errors Tour' Moment

Beyoncé, Blue Ivy Suffer 'Errors Tour' Moment During Cowboy Carter Mishap

Beyoncé, Blue Ivy Suffer 'Errors Tour' Moment During Cowboy Carter Mishap Beyoncéand her eldest daughter,Blue Ivy, found themselves ...
Iran says it will continue nuclear talks with the US, shrugging off Trump's threatsNew Foto - Iran says it will continue nuclear talks with the US, shrugging off Trump's threats

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran's president said his country will continue talks with the United States over itsrapidly advancing nuclear programbut will not withdraw from its rights because of U.S. threats. "We are negotiating, and we will negotiate , we are not after war but we do not fear any threat," President Masoud Pezeshkian said during a speech to navy officials broadcast by state television Saturday. "It is not like that they think if they threaten us , we will give up our human right and definite right," Pezeshkian said. "We will not withdraw, we will not easily loose honorable military, scientific, nuclear in all fields." The negotiations have reached the "expert" level, meaning the sides are trying to reach agreement on the details of a possible deal. But a major sticking point remains Iran's enrichment of uranium, which Tehran insists it must be allowed to do and theTrumpadministration increasingly insists the Islamic Republic must give up. PresidentDonald Trumphas repeatedly threatened tounleash airstrikes targeting Iran's programif a deal isn't reached. Iranian officials increasingly warnthey could pursue a nuclear weaponwith their stockpile of uranium enriched to near weapons-grade levels. Earlier on Friday,Trump said Iran received a proposalduring the talks, though he did not elaborate. During histrip to region this week, Trump at nearly every event insisted Iran could not be allowed to obtain a nuclear bomb, something U.S. intelligence agencies assess Tehran is not actively pursuing, though its program is on the cusp of being able to weaponize nuclear material. Mohammad Eslami, the head of Iran's atomic organization, stressed the peaceful nature of the program, saying it is under "continuous" monitoring by the U.N. nuclear watchdog, state TV reported Saturday. "No country is monitored by the agency like us," Eslami said, adding that the agency inspected the country's nuclear facilities more than 450 time in 2024. "Something about 25% of all the agency inspections" in the year. Meanwhile, Israel routinely has threatened to strike Iran's nuclear facilities if it feels threatened, further complicating tensions in the Mideast already spiked bythe Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. In his first reaction to Trump's regional visit, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Trump wasn't truthful when he made claims about creating peace through power. "Trump said that he wanted to use power for peace, he lied. He and the U.S. administration used power for massacre in Gaza, for waging wars in any place they could," Khamenei said Saturday during a meeting with teachers broadcast on state television. The U.S. has provided Israel with 10-ton bombs to "drop on Gaza children, hospitals, houses of people in Lebanon and anywhere else when they can," Khamenei said. Khamenei, who has the final say on all Iranian state matters, reiterated his traditional stance against Israel. "Definitely, the Zionist regime is the spot of corruption, war, rifts. The Zionist regime that is lethal, dangerous, cancerous tumor should be certainly eradicated, and it will be," he said, adding that the U.S. has imposed a pattern on Arab nations under which they cannot endeavor without U.S. support. "Surely this model has failed. With efforts of the regional nations, the U.S. should leave the region, and it will leave," Khamenei said. Iran has long considered the U.S. military presence in the region as a threat on its doorstep, especially after Trumppulled the U.S. out of a 2015 nuclear dealwith Iran in 2018 and reimposed crippling sanctions.

Iran says it will continue nuclear talks with the US, shrugging off Trump's threats

Iran says it will continue nuclear talks with the US, shrugging off Trump's threats TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran's president said his co...
Mistaken ID: Did a gang database error help send the wrong man to a Salvadoran prison?New Foto - Mistaken ID: Did a gang database error help send the wrong man to a Salvadoran prison?

The mugshot photo from theTexas Gang Databaseshows a shirtless, bearded man, a star tattoo emblazoned just under each shoulder, next to the name, "GARCIA-CASIQUE, FRANCISCO." Along with the photo is a date of birth, TxGANG ID number and a few lines accusing Garcia Casique of being a member ofTren de Aragua, the violent Venezuelan street gang. Only, the person in the photo is not Garcia Casique. His family and advocates insist Garcia Casique is a clean-shaven 24-year-old Venezuelan barber who was living in Longview, Texas – with no gang affiliations – when Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents swept him up earlier this year and removed him to a prison in El Salvador, along with more than200 other, mostly-Venezuelan migrants. Law enforcement officials admit that the photo was of another suspect and the entry was removed last month from the Texas database, known as TxGANG, when authorities realized the mix-up. More:DOJ memo offers blueprint to Tren de Aragua deportation plan Still, Garcia Casique remains in theTerrorism Confinement Center, the maximum-security prison in El Salvador known by its Spanish acronym CECOT, cut off from the rest of the world. Federal officials maintain that he is connected to Tren de Aragua. "¡Diosmíosanto!" Mirelys Casique, Garcia Casique's mom, exclaimed to USA TODAY from her home in Maracay, Venezuela after seeing the entry. "That's not Francisco and those are not his tattoos." The database entry was part of a slide presentation by Texas law enforcement officials obtained through records requests by American Oversight, a nonpartisan watchdog group, and shared exclusively with USA TODAY. Besides Garcia Casique, two other migrants deported to CECOT appear in the Texas database. Federal authorities said the faulty gang database played no role in removing Garcia Casique. And they insist that they got the right man. "Francisco Javier Garcia Casique removal was not erroneous," Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary for the Department of Homeland Security, said in a statement. "The mistaken photo uploaded to the state database [TxGANG], which the federal government does not maintain, has no bearing on Francisco Garcia Casique's immigration proceedings." Neither the United States nor the Salvadoran government has offered evidence that the migrants flown to the prison are connected to Tren de Aragua, a gang that began in Venezuela's prisons but now operates throughout Latin America. PresidentDonald Trumphas designated the group a terrorist organization and invoked theAlien Enemies Act, which he claims gives him the right to quickly deport its members without judicial review. More:What is Tren de Aragua? What to know about Venezuelan gang targeted by Donald Trump The issue has ascended to the U.S. Supreme Court, as opponents of the policy attempt to derail the president's use of the law, calling it unconstitutional. On Friday, the court continued blocking the administration's use of the 1798 wartime law and directed a lower court to determine what process the government should use to allow migrants time and information to protect their rights. In her statement, McLaughlin reaffirmed Garcia Casique's ties to Tren de Aragua and defended the agency's decision to send him to CECOT, saying he entered the country illegally in 2023 and was ordered deported by a judge last year. "U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers arrested [Garcia Casique] on Feb. 6, in Longview, Texas. He was removed to El Salvador March 15." But the confusion over the wrong photo raises more questions about the speed with which the Trump administration deported individuals to the prison in El Salvador and the lack of judicial review of their cases. "The lack of information and lack of due process is really evident here," said Michelle Brané, executive director of Together and Free, a nonprofit immigrant advocacy group helping Garcia Casique's family obtain legal help, who worked in the Biden administration overseeing family reunification efforts after Trump's first term. She added: "These people were sent to a black hole where we don't know whether they'll ever come out." Garcia Casique, the oldest of four siblings, left Venezuela in 2019 when he was 18 to escape the country's spiraling economy and violence. He worked as a barber in Peru for a few years then set off for the United States, where several of his barber friends had relocated. He arrived at the U.S.-Mexico border in late 2023 near Eagle Pass, Texas, turning himself over to border agents. He was processed and released until his immigration court date. Initially, he was bused from the border to Denver but eventually made his way back to Longview. According to DHS, federal agents at the ICE Dallas office detained him on Feb. 29, 2024, "after being deemed a public safety threat as a confirmed member of the Tren de Aragua gang." His family, however, said Garcia Casique missed an interview with ICE and visited the agency to try to reenter the system when he was detained. As the real Garcia Casique was locked up at an ICE detention facility in Alvarado, Texas, another man, also in federal custody, was interviewed by Dallas Police detectives. It's unclear what the man told detectives, but a gang profile was uploaded into the database with Garcia-Casique's name and the bearded man's photo tying him to Tren de Aragua since he "admitted to strong knowledge" of the gang. But that person, according to Dallas Police, was not Garcia Casique. The identity of the man in the photo remained a mystery to the outside world until USA TODAY sought clarification from federal officials. After repeated requests, McLaughlin, at DHS, identified the bearded man as Juan Jose Calvillo-Castaneda, a Mexican national questioned for potential ties to a Mexican gang. He was removed last year to Mexico, she said. On Apr. 16, 2024, an immigration judge ordered Garcia Casique deported, according to DHS. But he was released under his own supervision with an ankle monitor, since the U.S. at the time didn't have a removal agreement with Venezuela. In his "Order of Supervision" checklist, agents checked the box for "NCIC Check," meaning a national criminal background check on Garcia Casique had not found anything concerning to keep him detained. Meanwhile, Garcia Casique's identifying info with the faulty photo flowed from ICE into the TxGANG database. It would take federal agents thirteen months to realize that the biographical details did not match the true identity of the bearded man. How exactly Garcia Casique's info got juxtaposed with Calvillo-Castaneda's photo remains muddled – and hinges on two divergent storylines. Dallas Police said they interviewed Calvillo-Castaneda while he was in ICE custody and were provided incorrect information. But McLaughlin claimed that a Dallas Police detective inadvertently attached the wrong photo to the entry. Either way, someone like Garcia Casique, with no criminal record and who was checking in with ICE, should have never been targeted in the recent raids, said Jason Houser, former ICE chief of staff in the Biden administration, who has been critical of Trump's border policies. The fact that federal authorities last year released him with an ankle monitor shows that Garcia Casique wasn't a public safety or national security threat, Houser said. Garcia Casique was one of dozens of Venezuelans who were easy to locate and swept up by federal agents more focused on a public show of force rather than getting actual criminals off the street, he said. "He literally lost the immigration Russian roulette," Houser said of Garcia Casique. An ICE spokesman declined to say if or how the agency utilizes the Texas gang database but said: "ICE is leveraging all available law enforcement resources to aggressively pursue these aliens to restore law and order in our communities and integrity to our nation's immigration laws." When Garcia Casique was detained by ICE last year, he was questioned about his tattoos, which may have played a role in his detention, Mirelys Casique said. The tattoos, which include several roses, the names of both his grandmothers next to clocks, and a small crown with his mother's name, roused the suspicion of federal agents, she said. Agents may also have questioned Garcia Casique about his home region of Aragua – where Tren de Aragua originated. But neither his tattoos nor home region connected Garcia Casique in any way to Tren de Aragua, his mother said, adding that her son has no criminal record in either the U.S. or Venezuela. "What really determines if someone's a criminal?" Mirelys Casique said. The TxGANG database is a repository for thousands of alleged gang members and suspected criminals. But it's also been criticized for not consistently validating the allegations. A state audit conducted on the database in November found that of the 65,832 names in the system, 7,199 – or nearly 11 percent – had not been validated within five years as required by federal law. Of those, more than 1,200 had not been validated within the last 10 years. The Texas Department of Public Safety runs the database but local law enforcement agencies are responsible for entering the names. A person can be entered into the database without committing a crime and individual agencies are responsible for validating entries. Since an earlier audit in 2022, DPS had improved its system of validating entries, according to the audit. "However, as of November 2024, TxGANG still contained records that were not validated within the federally required timeframes," auditors wrote. Jerry Robinette, former head of the San Antonio office of Homeland Security Investigations under presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, said HSI agents commonly used the TxGANG database for intel on suspected criminal migrants. They also used the database to try to determine which migrants belonged to which gang in order to keep them in separate holding facilities, for their safety, he said. The database was one of several tools used by federal investigators to try to determine gang affiliation, Robinette said. Even if a name appeared in the database, he said, investigators would have to corroborate the information with several other sources. "You want to make sure the information is accurate," Robinette said. "You're talking about deporting someone. There are consequences behind that." After being released by ICE last year, Garcia Casique went back to work cutting hair in Longview. He saved money, moved out of a cramped home he shared with other migrants and into a roomier apartment. Each time he moved, he notified authorities of his new address, his mother said. "He had a normal life, he was working," she said. "He kept saying he had nothing to fear because he wasn't a criminal." Unbeknownst to Garcia Casique, his name and details, next to a stranger's face, were bouncing around the TxGANG database – and drawing the attention of state law enforcement officials. In an email dated Sept. 9, 2024, Freeman Martin, who would later become head of DPS, forwarded a slide presentation titled "Tren de Aragua (TdA) Presentation," to a number of state officials. The 38-page presentation contained photos of at-large Tren de Aragua kingpins and some of the clock, train and star tattoos authorities believed reveal TdA allegiance. Page 18 displayed the entry with Garcia Casique's info along with the bearded suspect's photo. On Feb. 6, ICE agents stormed Garcia Casique's apartment and whisked him away. He was transferred to a federal detention center near Laredo, Texas, not far from the U.S.-Mexico border. Initially, his mother said she wasn't alarmed – she just assumed the agents planned to fulfill his deportation order and return him to his native Venezuela. Garcia Casique even signed an order consenting to be deported to his home country, she said. On the morning of Mar. 15, Garcia Casique called his mom from inside the detention facility to tell her he was told he'd be boarding a flight later that day and would soon rejoin her in Venezuela. He never showed up. The family later discovered an online image of him, head shaven, being paraded into CECOT. Mirelys Casique hasn't spoken to her son since. A few weeks after Garcia Casique's final phone call to his mom, agents with Homeland Security Investigations called the Dallas Police Department to notify officials there that the picture in the TxGANG entry on Garcia Casique did not match ICE photographs taken of him when he was initially detained nor anything in ICE's record on him. The entry was promptly purged from the database. Follow Jervis and Penzenstadler on X: @MrRJervis, @npenzenstadler. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Did mistaken identity land a Venezuelan man in Salvadoran prison

Mistaken ID: Did a gang database error help send the wrong man to a Salvadoran prison?

Mistaken ID: Did a gang database error help send the wrong man to a Salvadoran prison? The mugshot photo from theTexas Gang Databaseshows a ...

 

KOS JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com