Hundreds of Cubans living in South Florida for years are being quietly deported to Mexico

posted in: All news | 0

Claire Healy and Syra Ortiz-Blanes, Miami Herald

The Trump administration is quietly sending hundreds of Cubans and other immigrants with significant criminal records in buses across the border to Mexico, in an expansion of third-country deportations.

Related Articles


Shutdown leaves gaps in states’ health data as respiratory illness season begins


Trump administration announces another strike on alleged drug-carrying boat, in the Pacific Ocean


One man’s ICE watchdog work in a Chicago suburb


North Carolina adopts new Trump-backed US House districts aimed at gaining a Republican seat


Judge agrees to extend block on Guard deployment in Chicago while awaiting Supreme Court ruling

Although Cuba accepts deportation flights from the U.S., its longtime practice has been to reject deportees who have been convicted of certain crimes. That has left many of the island’s immigrants in limbo for years — unable to return to the island but stripped of their legal status to stay in the United States.

But without legal documentation in Mexico, they are now in a new limbo, and it is unclear what future awaits them. Some told the Miami Herald they have spent weeks searching for work, food and shelter, and sleeping on the street.

The Herald spoke to six men in Mexico and lawyers for six other deportees who say the Department of Homeland Security drove them in buses to the southern border and handed them over to authorities in Mexico. All had been convicted of crimes in the U.S. Some had served prison sentences and had final orders of deportations for years. They said Cuba would not take them back.

The men have serious criminal convictions in the U.S. including drug dealing, domestic violence, theft, armed robbery, child abuse and battery. Some had additional charges for which they weren’t convicted — including in one case attempted murder.

Some said that officials told them they could either get off the bus in Mexico or be sent to an unspecified country in Africa. Others said they were not told where they were heading, and others said Mexican authorities left them near the Guatemala border and told them to “head south” out of Mexico.

Serious offenses

The Herald was able to identify additional men who have also been sent to Mexico — including a 66-year-old man who was charged in Alabama earlier this year for attempted child molestation, and a man who pleaded guilty to aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in Texas. He had attacked two women, including his romantic partner, with a machete.

The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to specific questions about what agreement or policy governed these deportations, or if a new agreement had been reached with Mexico.

“If you come to our country illegally and break our laws, you could end up in CECOT, Eswatini, Ghana, South Sudan, or another third country,” Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in an emailed statement to the Herald. “President Trump and Secretary (Kristi) Noem are not going to allow criminal illegal aliens to remain indefinitely in the U.S.” CECOT is a maximum security prison in El Salvador where the Trump administration sent 238 Venezuelans they accused of being gang members earlier this year. In the case of the men sent to El Salvador, records obtained by ProPublica and the Texas Tribune show that Homeland Security knew most of the men did not have criminal convictions.

A spokesperson for the National Institute of Migration in Mexico did not respond to multiple Herald requests for comment.

During the Biden administration, Mexico accepted up to 30,000 people a month from Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti, and Venezuela the U.S. returned after they had crossed the southwest border. But the federal government has not typically shipped off Cubans living in the U.S. interior and who had arrived through Mexico to its southern neighbor.

It is unclear how many immigrants from third countries have been deported to Mexico from the interior of the U.S. this year. One shelter in Mexico has registered nearly 350 Cubans, the vast majority longtime U.S. residents, since the beginning of the year. On July 11, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said that the U.S. has deported 6,525 people from other countries to Mexico since Trump’s first day in office – but she did not specify if they came from the border or interior of the U.S.

Potential exploitation

Lawyers who spoke with the Herald said that the deportations open migrants up to exploitation from organized crime, kidnappings, and a lack of access to attorneys. The U.S. has also sent Cubans and other immigrants to other countries, including South Sudan, an African nation plunged in political turmoil and armed conflict.

Previously, the U.S. government would generally send people to third countries if their country of birth no longer existed or they were dual nationals. But that’s different from sending a Cuban national to a prison in Eswatini, said immigration attorney Mark Prada. “Very often, these are people with old crimes that have served their sentences and paid their debt to society already,” Prada said. “Sure, they should be able to be deported to their home countries. But if you send them to some third country, including to the other side of the globe, without family or contacts, that’s inhumane.”

Willy Allen is a veteran immigration attorney who has practiced in Miami for nearly four decades. He said he’s never seen Cuban nationals being sent to third countries before.

This year, two of Allen’s Cuban clients were deported to Mexico. Both had serious criminal records, he said, and have lived in the United States since at least the early 1980s. They lost their permanent U.S. residencies, but Cuba would not accept them, so they went to annual check-ins with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“I don’t have a problem with people who are delinquents being deported. They lost the right to live here when they committed crimes,” Allen said. “But I believe that if you are going to return them to their country, you have to give them an opportunity to find a country where to go.”

The streets of Villahermosa

Sheinbaum has previously said that irregular immigration in the U.S. should be fixed through reform and not violence or raids and described the criminalization of immigrants as “racist.” In December 2024, she said that she was seeking to minimize deportations of people from other countries to Mexico.

But the deportations of Cubans with criminal records to Mexico raise questions about how closely the administration is working with its southern neighbor to carry out the deportations. Cubans told the Herald that Mexican authorities are receiving them. And during a visit to Mexico last month, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Mexican authorities view irregular migration as a “threat to their own security.”

“It is the closest security cooperation we have ever had, maybe with any country but certainly in the history of U.S.-Mexico relations,” Rubio said.

Katie Blankenship, an attorney representing one of the men who was deported, said that she didn’t know where her client was for over a week, before Michael Borrego Fernandez turned up in Mexico near the Guatemalan border. In 2025, he pleaded guilty to grand theft.

“There’s a huge lack of accountability and visibility and insight, as is the case with all these Trump policies and practices. And it’s inflicting real harm,” Blankenship said.

In the city of Villahermosa, the capital of the state of Tabasco near the border with Guatemala, one shelter for migrants has registered nearly 350 Cubans since Trump assumed office.

Josue Martinez Leal, the spokesperson and deputy coordinator for Albergue Oasis de Paz del Espíritu Santo, said the deported men are older, lived in the U.S. for decades and have children and spouses who are citizens. Among them are older men who have serious medical conditions that the shelter is trying to treat — the first time the shelter has to deal with several of these kinds of cases. He said other shelters across the country are experiencing the same influx.

“Many of them are Peter Pan,” Martinez Leal said, referring to the 1960s program that brought thousands of Cuban children to the United States through the Catholic Church. “That we are getting Cubans is a very new situation.”

Historically, Villahermosa was not a stop along the way to the United States for immigrants traveling northwards, he said. But in 2019, the Trump administration required some asylum seekers to wait for their court hearings in Mexico. Shortly after, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s administration created a migrant detention center in the city.

But this year, Cubans are arriving in a reverse migration back from the United States, sometimes without phones or IDs. Unable to return to the United States or Cuba, many opt to stay in Mexico. That means helping them find permanent housing and work, and legal documentation that the government is not yet providing them.

“It’s an issue that is not getting attention. But it’s the new challenge for the shelters,” said Martinez Leal.

Three Cuban men told the Herald they are sleeping there on the street. They fear being killed by Mexican cartels that prey on immigrants. The Herald has been unable to confirm whether any Cubans the U.S. deported to Mexico have been kidnapped, but migrants experience rampant violence while transiting through the country. In November 2024, ProPublica found that there are mass kidnapping rings in southern Mexico that prey on immigrants and kidnap them for ransom.

“Unfortunately, any immigrant within Mexico’s territory can be a victim of organized crime,” Martinez Leal said.

Manuel Lazaro Suarez Perez, 46, is among those who found themselves in Villahermosa after being deported from the United States. He came to Florida as an infant from Cuba on the Mariel boatlift in 1980.

“My dad’s a political prisoner and a U.S. citizen. My mom’s a permanent resident, all my kids were born (in the United States). I’ve been here all my life,” Suarez Perez said. His youngest daughter just gave birth to a girl.

In a statement to the Herald, McLaughlin called Suarez Perez a “serial criminal” with 30 convictions and said he was ordered removed from the U.S. about 20 years ago. She said that he and the two other Cuban men each had long criminal records.

“Thanks to President Trump and Secretary Noem, these three monsters are out of our country,” she said.

The Herald was unable to verify if Suarez Perez had as many as 30 convictions, but did find criminal cases. He told reporters he was first arrested when he was a minor for drug-related charges. He was later convicted of numerous crimes – from cocaine possession to traffic violations to multiple aggravated-battery charges – and lost his permanent U.S. residence. In 2023, he was charged with attempted arson and attempted murder for allegedly throwing a firework into a mobile home while a family was sleeping. He said he didn’t do it. The case’s disposition is recorded in county records as “no action,” meaning prosecutors opted not to pursue charges.

Suarez Perez had been going to probation check-ins in Miami, but at a check-in in May he was detained. In early September, while at the Krome North Service Processing Center, he was given a document to sign saying he was being transferred to a center in San Diego.

Instead, he said he and others were flown to California and driven to the border.

“They lied to us,” said Suarez Perez.

After four days of driving, Mexican authorities released the men on the side of the road in Tabasco on Sept. 9, in the same clothing they had worn in United States immigration detention, the men told the Herald.

“You’re free,” an officer told them.

Without documentation, shelter, food or funds, Suarez Perez and the two other men said they have spent the weeks since they arrived sleeping on the street, watching as more and more men arrive on buses from the north.

“You can see them lying down under the bridges,” he said.

This story was produced with financial support from the Esserman Family Foundation in partnership with Journalism Funding Partners. The Miami Herald maintains full editorial control of this work.

©2025 Miami Herald. Visit miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

What to stream: Music biopics

posted in: All news | 0

As Scott Cooper’s “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” hits theaters this weekend, much discourse will be spilled about the music biopic as a genre, its form and function, and its ability to mint awards season gold. So this is as good a time as any to regard the music biopic, especially the best ones. So here’s where to stream some of the most iconic music movies to pair with “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere.”

Most comparisons will be drawn to last year’s “A Complete Unknown,” in which Timothée Chalamet starred as a young Bob Dylan in the lead-up to his electrifying Newport Folk Festival performance. Directed by James Mangold, Chalamet was aiming for Oscar greatness, but fell just short. His co-star Monica Barbaro, playing Joan Baez, was also nominated for best supporting actress. Stream it on Hulu.

Austin Butler shot to instant stardom with his channeling of the king of rock ‘n’ roll in Baz Luhrmann’s 2022 film “Elvis,” a dizzying and delirious depiction of Presley’s rise and fall. Butler also earned a nomination for his uncanny, sexy, performance. Rent the film on all digital platforms.

Chadwick Boseman missed on the nomination but certainly made an impression with his incredible performance as James Brown in Tate Taylor’s 2014 film “Get On Up.” Regardless of the film’s quality, Boseman is undeniable as Brown. Stream it on Starz or rent it on other digital platforms.

Taron Egerton as Elton John in “Rocketman.” (David Appleby/Paramount Pictures/TNS)

Rami Malek won Oscar gold for playing Queen frontman Freddie Mercury in the much-maligned “Bohemian Rhapsody” (rent). That 2018 glam-rock movie overshadowed the much better Elton John biopic “Rocketman” directed by Dexter Fletcher. Imagined as a musical fever dream of inner child healing, Taron Egerton shines as John, bringing his own spectacular pipes to the 2019 performance. Give “Rocketman” a chance and rent it on all digital platforms.

While we’re talking British rockers, don’t forget to catch the Robbie Williams biopic “Better Man,” which managed to sidestep accusations of falling prey to biopic tropes by presenting its protagonist as an animated monkey. Somehow, director Michael Gracey makes it work. Stream “Better Man” (2024) on Paramount+ or Prime Video.

Back in 1984, Milos Forman took us back to the first bad boy of the music world, with his 8-time Oscar winning film “Amadeus.” Tom Hulce portrayed the musical prodigy Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart as a petulant, bratty young genius with a distinctive laugh, insatiable appetite and endless talent. F. Murray Abraham won an Oscar for his performance as the jealous rival Salieri. Rent “Amadeus” on all digital platforms.

Also back in the ‘80s, Sissy Spacek won an Oscar playing country star Loretta Lynn in “Coal Miner’s Daughter” (1980) directed by Michael Apted (available for rent), and Lou Diamond Phillips sizzled as 1950s Chicano rocker Ritchie Valens in Luis Valdez’s “La Bamba” (available on Paramount+ or for rent).

The mid-aughts brought back-to-back Oscar winners in musical biopics, first with Jamie Foxx’s turn as Ray Charles in 2004’s “Ray,” directed by Taylor Hackford, and the next year with Mangold’s Johnny and June Carter Cash film, “Walk the Line.” Reese Witherspoon took home an Oscar; Joaquin Phoenix was nominated but lost out to Philip Seymour Hoffman (for his literary biopic, “Capote”). “Ray” and “Walk the Line” are available for rent, and “Ray” is also on Starz.

Those music movies especially influenced the parody movie “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story,” starring John C. Reilly and directed by Jake Kasdan, written by Kasdan and Judd Apatow. Released in 2007, it’s the music biopic (of a fictional character) to end all music biopics, smartly skewering every trope in the book. None are safe. Rent “Walk Hard” on all digital platforms.

Related Articles


Movie review: ‘Springsteen’ is more character study than biopic


St. Paul native Tommy Brennan makes his first big ‘SNL’ appearance


South St. Paul native Mike Farrell — Capt. B.J. Hunnicutt on ‘M*A*S*H’ — honored for Marine Corps service


‘Black Phone 2’ review: Sequel different from, not better than first flick


Movie review: Hang up on dreadfully boring ‘Black Phone 2’

YouTube steps up its shopping game with help from influencers

posted in: All news | 0

Wendy Lee and Caroline Petrow-Cohen, Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Inside a historic aircraft hangar in Playa Vista, crowds of people gathered on Thursday to browse the latest fashions from handbags to clothing and shoes as they prepared for the holiday shopping season.

Related Articles


Gold prices have tumbled from recent records. What’s behind the losses?


AI can help the environment, even though it uses tremendous energy. Here are 5 ways how


Money-losing companies with colorful histories have pivoted to crypto


Here’s why used EV prices are in line with pre-owned gas-powered cars


USDA is reopening some 2,100 offices to help farmers access $3B in aid despite the ongoing shutdown

These weren’t shoppers or retailer buyers searching for the latest products. Instead, they were YouTube video creators who were being courted by brands from Lowe’s to Shark Beauty to encourage online audiences to buy their products.

Aaron Ramirez, a 22-year-old influencer who focuses on men’s fashion and lifestyle, stood in front of racks of carefully curated shelves of backpacks as he decided which items he would endorse for his 234,000 YouTube subscribers.

“I can make a video about anything that improves my quality of life and add a link to it,” said Ramirez. “I only recommend products that I really use and really like.”

The San Diego resident was among about 300 creators participating in YouTube’s annual benefit for creators dubbed “Holiday House” that helps internet personalities get ready to sell goods during the busy holiday shopping season.

The event — held at the cavernous converted Google offices that once housed Howard Hughes’ famous Spruce Goose plane — underscores YouTube’s desire to be a bigger player in online shopping by leveraging its relationship with creators to promote products in much the same way that rival TikTok does.

YouTube content creators peruse products and film content during YouTube’s Holiday House shopping event at Google Spruce Goose on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, in Playa Vista, California. (Juliana Yamada/Los Angeles Times/TNS)

In August, YouTube introduced new tools to help its creators better promote products they plug in their videos. One feature uses AI to identify the optimal place on the screen to put a shopping link when an influencer mentions a product. If a customer clicks on that link and makes a purchase, the creator gets a commission.

Brands that were once skeptical about influencers have embraced them over time as sales-tracking tools have improved and the fan base of video creators has mushroomed.

“It’s like the people that you saw on television and before that the people that you listened to on radio who became the trusted personalities in your life,” Earnest Pettie, a trends insight lead at YouTube, said in an interview. “Oprah’s Favorite Things was a phenomenon because of how trusted Oprah was, so it really is that same phenomenon, just diffused across the creator ecosystem.”

Despite economic uncertainty and tariffs imposed by the Trump administration, shoppers in the U.S. are expected to spend $253.4 billion online this holiday season, up 5.3% from a year ago, according to data firm Adobe Analytics.

Social media platforms have helped drive some of that growth. The market share of online revenue in purchases guided by social media affiliates and partners, including influencers, is expected to grow 14%, according to Adobe Analytics.

Cost-conscious consumers are doing more research on how they spend their money, including watching influencer recommendations. In fact, nearly 60% of 14- to 24-year-olds who go online say their personal style have been influenced by content they’ve seen on the internet, according to YouTube.

YouTube content creator Diana Extein displays her shoes to her phone camera during YouTube’s Holiday House shopping event at Google Spruce Goose on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, in Playa Vista, California. Extein makes fashion content for women over 40 on her YouTube channel. (Juliana Yamada/Los Angeles Times/TNS)

“It’s more about discovery, understanding where the best deals are, where the best options are,” said Vivek Pandya, director at Adobe Digital Insights. “Many of these users are getting that guidance from their influencers.”

YouTube is one of the top streaming platforms, harnessing 13.1% of viewing time in August on U.S. TV sets, more than rivals Netflix and Amazon Prime Video, according to Nielsen. And shopping-related videos are especially popular among its viewers, with more than 35 billion hours watched each year, according to YouTube.

With YouTube’s shopping feature, viewers can see products, add them to a cart and make purchases directly from the video they’re watching.

Promoting and enabling one-click e-commerce from video has been huge in China, triggering a wave across Asia and the world of livestreaming and recorded shopping videos. Live commerce, also known as live shopping or livestreaming e-commerce, is a potent mix of streaming, chatting and shopping.

YouTube content creator Peja Anne, 15, makes a video with beauty products as her mom Kristin Roeder films during YouTube’s Holiday House shopping event at Google Spruce Goose on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, in Playa Vista, California. (Juliana Yamada/Los Angeles Times/TNS)

The temptation to shop is turbocharged with algorithms like that of TikTok Shop, enticing people to try more channels and products.

More than 500,000 video creators as of July have signed up to be a part of YouTube Shopping, the company said.

Creators who promote products can make money through ads and brand deals, as well as commissions.

YouTube already shares advertising and subscription revenue with its creators and currently does not take a cut from its shopping tools, said Travis Katz, YouTube Shopping vice president.

“For us, it’s really about connecting the dots,” Katz said. “At YouTube we are first and foremost very focused on, how do we make sure that our creators are successful? This gives a new way for creators to monetize.”

Companies like Austin-based BK Beauty, which was founded by YouTube creator Lisa J, said YouTubers have helped drive sales for their products.

“They’ve built these long-term audiences,” said Sophia Monetti, BK Beauty’s senior manager of social commerce and influencer marketing. “A lot of these creators have established channels. They’ve been around for a decade and have just a really engaged community.”

To be sure, YouTube faces a formidable rival in TikTok, which is a leader in the live shopping space (its parent company, Byte Dance, is being sold to an American investor group so that the hugely popular app can keep operating in the U.S.).

Two years ago, the social video company launched TikTok Shop, working with creators and brands on live shopping shows that encourage viewers to buy products. TikTok had 8 million hours of live shopping sessions in 2024.

YouTube says its size and technology create advantages, along with the loyalty its creators build with fans when it comes to product recommendations.

Bridget Dolan, a director of YouTube Shopping Partnerships, said “shopping has been in YouTube’s DNA from Day One” and that the company has been integrating shopping features into its viewing experience.

YouTube content creator Cheraye Lewis poses for a portrait during YouTube’s Holiday House shopping event at Google Spruce Goose on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, in Playa Vista, California. Lewis’ channel focuses on lifestyle and fragrance, and a brand deal with Fenty Beauty helped launch her content to larger audiences. (Juliana Yamada/Los Angeles Times/TNS)

Santa Clarita-based YouTube creator Cheraye Lewis said that YouTube Shopping helped her gain traction and earn a trusting audience through quality recommendations. Lewis, who has 109,000 subscribers on YouTube, makes videos about items such as fragrances and skincare products.

Lewis has been a video creator for eight years and has worked with such companies as Rihanna’s beauty brand Fenty.

“I try to inspire women and men to feel bold and confident through the fragrances that they’re wearing,” Lewis said at the event Thursday. “I give my audience real talk, real authenticity.”

©2025 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Trump administration announces another strike on alleged drug-carrying boat, in the Pacific Ocean

posted in: All news | 0

By KONSTANTIN TOROPIN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. military conducted its eighth strike against an alleged drug vessel, killing two people, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Wednesday.

Related Articles


Shutdown leaves gaps in states’ health data as respiratory illness season begins


Hundreds of Cubans living in South Florida for years are being quietly deported to Mexico


One man’s ICE watchdog work in a Chicago suburb


North Carolina adopts new Trump-backed US House districts aimed at gaining a Republican seat


Judge agrees to extend block on Guard deployment in Chicago while awaiting Supreme Court ruling

The Tuesday night strike occurred in the eastern Pacific Ocean. The seven previous strikes all targeted vessels in the Caribbean. According to Hegseth in a social media post, the strike killed two people, bringing the death toll from all the strikes to at least 34 people.

In a brief video released by Hegseth, a small boat, half-filled with brown packages, is seen moving along the water. Several seconds into the video, the boat explodes and is seen floating motionless on the water in flames.

In his post, Hegseth took the unusual step of equating the alleged drug traffickers to the group behind the Sept. 11, 2001, attack.

“Just as Al Qaeda waged war on our homeland, these cartels are waging war on our border and our people,” Hegseth said, adding “there will be no refuge or forgiveness — only justice.”

President Donald Trump has justified the strikes by asserting that the United States is engaged in an “armed conflict” with drug cartels and is relying on the same legal authority used by President George W. Bush’s administration when it declared a war on terrorism after the Sept. 11 attack.

However, the Trump administration has also sidestepped prosecuting any of the occupants of the alleged drug-running vessels after it returned two survivors of an earlier strike to their home countries of Ecuador and Colombia.

Ecuadorian officials later said that they released the man that was returned to their country, saying that they had no evidence he committed a crime in their country.