Monday, February 9, 2026
More
    HomeAmericaCBS airs El Salvador prison report pulled from '60 Minutes' in December

    CBS airs El Salvador prison report pulled from ’60 Minutes’ in December

    -

    Jan 18 (Reuters) - CBS broadcast on ​Sunday its "60 Minutes" report on a Salvadoran mega-prison condemned by human rights groups for its harsh conditions, weeks after the network pulled the segment just hours before runtime.

    The report ⁠on the facility housing migrants deported from the United States was postponed from an initial air date of December 21, with CBS saying it required additional reporting and would be broadcast ‍later.

    "CBS News leadership has always been committed to airing the 60 Minutes CECOT piece as soon as it ​was ready," the network said in a statement on Sunday, though the show had mistakenly been streamed on Canada's Global TV app in December.

    Sunday's broadcast added comments from the U.S. Department of ​Homeland Security, details of the criminal records of those deported, and additional reporting on one with tattoos, the network said.

    The United States has sent hundreds of mostly Venezuelan migrants without trial to the facility, known as CECOT.

    "Last year, the Trump administration deported hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador, a country most had no ties to, claiming they were terrorists," ‌CBS said in a program description on the show.

    In a segment of the show, correspondent Sharyn ‌Alfonsi speaks with two Venezuelan men who were later released, and who described conditions in the facility as "brutal and torturous".

    The ​segment on CECOT included accusations of torture inflicted on Venezuelan deportees sent to the prison and raised questions about how the United States characterized them.

    When the report was pulled last month, ‌CBS News Editor in Chief Bari Weiss flagged concerns with "60 Minutes" producers about the segment and asked ⁠for a substantial amount of new material to be added, a CBS employee ‌told Reuters.

    Weiss was picked to lead CBS News ​in October after its parent Paramount Skydance acquired the online publication she founded, the Free Press.

    A former opinion writer for the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal, she was ⁠seen by some analysts as ⁠a contentious choice, since she had never before managed a television newsroom or produced broadcast news ​content.

    (Reporting by Ruchika Khanna in Bengaluru, Lisa Richwine and Dawn Chmielewski in Los Angeles and Marcelo Teixeira in New York; Editing by ‌Sherry Jacob-Phillips, Sergio Non and Clarence Fernandez)

    tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM0I02F-VIEWIMAGE

    Author

    Stay Connected

    1,800FansLike
    259FollowersFollow
    113FollowersFollow
    1,263FollowersFollow
    90,000SubscribersSubscribe

    Related articles

    Latest posts

    Share on Social Media

    spot_img