The three men were deported on Monday, the day after a federal judge approved a temporary order blocking a possible transfer to Guantanamo Bay.
Venezuelan immigrants are transferred daily from a military base in El Paso, Texas, to Guantanamo as part of President Donald Trump’s immigration repression.
The deported men’s lawyers said they were targeted by false accusations of gang belonging by the US government who could cause them to harm.

“In this case, government accusations of the government that two of the (immigrants) are related to the scandalous band of Tren de Aragua gives rise to serious concerns about the risks of their lives and freedom when they return to Venezuela,” lawyer Jessica Mayors Wosberg at the Center for Constitutional Center The rights told a federal judge.
Immigrant rights groups have filed a separate case requiring access to people sent to Guantanamo Bay without access to legal counsel or communication with relatives.
Millions of desperate people have fled Venezuela against the backdrop of a severe economic and political crisis with President Nicolas Maduro, migrating in other parts of Latin America or the United States.
The Tren de Aragua gang is in a law imprisonment in the central Venezuelan state of Aragua more than a decade ago.