Despite the Trump administration’s effort to conceal their victims’ identities, journalists and researchers have disclosed some biographical detail about some of the people “blown away over vast stretches of ocean.”

Unclassified still from footage of the first airstrike on Sept. 1, 2025. (U.S. Government, Wikimedia Commons)
The 57 confirmed bombings of boats that the Trump administration has carried out so far since last September have shattered families and communities across Latin America, with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and U.S. Southern Command never acknowledging the identities of the at least 192 people they’ve killed, beyond declaring them “narco-terrorists.”
Despite the concerted effort to keep the names and any information about the victims hidden — their identities “blown away over vast stretches of ocean,” as a new report states —20 journalists led by the Latin American Center for Investigative Journalism (CLIP) managed to identify 13 of the men whose killings have been called “murders” by legal experts and rights advocates.
The investigation, titled “Bombed, Without the Right to a Defense,“ was completed despite widespread fears of speaking out about the bombings in the affected communities.
“Some relatives of victims in Venezuela and in Santa Marta, Colombia, say they have received threats, as sources confirmed to journalists in this alliance,” reads the report. “Authorities have remained largely opaque, and the officials willing to talk do so only off the record, wary of dragging their countries into conflict with [U.S. President Donald] Trump.”
Three people named in the report had already been identified publicly in legal complaints —Trinidadians Chad Joseph and Rishi Samaroo, whose families filed a complaint in the U.S. federal court; and Colombian Alejandro Carranza Medina, whose family filed a petition with the US-based Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
The men identified for the first time by CLIP include:
- Juan Carlos Fuentes, a bus driver who told his family he was “going to have to do something risky to see if I can make ends meet” after his bus broke down, and who left behind three children and a grandson;
- Luis Ramón Amundarain, a motorcycle taxi driver and fisherman with a wife and five children;
- Eduard Hidalgo, a fisherman who had been deported from the U.S. in December 2025;
- Jesús Carreño of Venezuela;
- Eduardo Jaime, a “beloved indoor soccer player” in his hometown of Güiria, Venezuela;
- Dushak Milovcic, a student at the National Guard Academy in Venezuela who became involved in drug transporting, starting as “a lookout for smugglers”;
- Ricky Joseph, a well-known fishmerman in Savannes Bay, Saint Lucia, whose family lost contact with him after a bombing on Feb. 13 and who is believed to be one of the victims;
- Pedro Ramón Holguín Holguín, who was registered as a fish and seafood wholesaler in Ecuador;
- Carlos Manuel Rodríguez Solórzano, who was rescued by Costa Rican authorities but died following an attack on his boat;
- Luis Alí Martínez, who had a criminal record for drug trafficking and other crimes;
- Ronald Arregocés of Riohacha, Colombia;
- Adrián Lubo, of Riohacha, Colombia, who was called “a great captain” by a person who knew him; and
- Robert Sánchez, who was traveling with his cousin, Amundarain, when the boat they were on was bombed.
Another man was identified by his nickname, and two unnamed people, including an Ecuadorian man who helped survivor Jonathan Obando escape a bombing and later died, were included in the report.
The journalists and researchers who worked on the report represent CasaMacondo, Verdad Abierta, 360-grados.co, and NGO El Veinte in Colombia; Alianza Rebelde Investiga in Venezuela; the Trinidad and Tobago Guardian; and Airwars in the U.K.
‘Victims Reduced to Anonymity’

White House video of targeting “Narcoterrorists” just before US bomb killing 11 people. (White House on X)
“It’s a double tragedy — not only because of the unlawful killings, but because the victims are erased, reduced to anonymity,” John Walsh, of the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), told the Latin American Center for Investigative Journalism (CLIP) and the reporting alliance.
The report emphasizes that all of the victims it identified came from poor families and communities. In Uribia, Colombia, where at least two bodies washed ashore after a boat attack, 92 percent of residents “lack adequate education, healthcare, or basic public services.”
“In those conditions, recruiting young men to transport cocaine is easy work—and the pay can be good,” reads the report.
On May 8, at the direction of #SOUTHCOM commander Gen. Francis L. Donovan, Joint Task Force Southern Spear conducted a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel operated by Designated Terrorist Organizations. Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking… pic.twitter.com/YFLQNZufRx
— U.S. Southern Command (@Southcom) May 9, 2026
A boatman in Uribia told CLIP that “most people here aren’t the owners” of vessels or the drugs they carry. “The people who own the cargo are almost always outsiders — even international players.”
María Teresa Ronderos, director and co-founder of the CLIP, told The Guardian the report affirms that despite the administration’s repeated claims that the military is defending “our nation’s interest” and protecting Americans from those who are “trafficking deadly narcotics” like fentanyl and cocaine, “the U.S. is not taking down any Pablo Escobar or Joaquín ‘El Chapo’ Guzmán.”
“Despite the U.S. claim that the strikes are fighting narco-terrorism, what is actually happening is that young people living in extremely precarious conditions, doing whatever work they can to support their families, are being targeted,” Ronderos said.
The boat carrying Fuentes and Amundarain, who had both gone to Trinidad and Tobago to work, was traveling from the Caribbean country to Venezuela, calling into question the claim that the vessel was trafficking drugs.
“Boats carry drugs from South America northwards, not the reverse,” Ronderos told The Guardian.
On Feb. 9, @Southcom reports Joint Task Force Southern Spear conducted a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel in the Eastern Pacific alleged to be engaged in narco-trafficking. Intelligence said it was transiting known drug-trafficking routes. pic.twitter.com/5Mu4lXLNqR
— Daphne Tolis (@daphnetoli) February 10, 2026
Legal experts have emphasized that even in the cases of victims who were involved in the drug trade, the bombings still legally qualify as extrajudicial killings, or even murder.
Trump informed Congress in October that the White House views the U.S. as being in an armed conflict with drug cartels in Latin America, claiming a rationale for carrying out the boat strikes. But no conflict has officially been declared, and rights experts warn that the military has clearly violated international law by targeting the survivors of some of the boat attacks in “double-tap” strikes.
“The deaths of Joseph and Samaroo were clearly extrajudicial killings,” Steven Watt, an attorney with the ACLU who is working on the case brought by the two Trinidiadian families, told CLIP. He added that “the Trump administration’s argument — that a ‘war on drugs’ justifies violent strikes like these — cannot legally excuse the killings.”
Earlier this morning, on President Trump’s orders, I directed a lethal, kinetic strike on a narco-trafficking vessel affiliated with Designated Terrorist Organizations in the USSOUTHCOM area of responsibility. Four male narco-terrorists aboard the vessel were killed in the… pic.twitter.com/QpNPljFcGn
— Secretary of War Pete Hegseth (@SecWar) October 3, 2025
Brian Finucane of the International Crisis Group told CLIP that “the law of war permits violence otherwise prohibited, but only during genuine armed conflict — a threshold the Trump administration has failed to meet, as it has not even identified who the U.S. is supposedly fighting.”
“Beyond that foundational problem, the administration’s suggestion that vaguely defined ‘enablers’ may be targetable raises further concerns that it is violating the rules of its own bogus legal paradigm,” Finucane said.
Ronderos added that “there is no death penalty for cocaine trafficking.”
“So the fact that they were killed without even having the chance to defend themselves is deeply troubling,” she told The Guardian.
In accordance with international and domestic laws, the US has historically treated drug trafficking on the high seas as a criminal offense and has ensured those who are found trying to bring drugs to the US are brought to justice in court.
A spokesperson for U.S. Southern Command told the reporters that the bombings have been “deliberate, lawful, and precise, directed specifically at narco-terrorists and their enablers,” and that the U.S. has “full confidence in the operations and intelligence professionals who inform our missions.”
But the administration has not released any evidence showing the strikes have targeted major drug trafficking operations, and as Common Dreams reported last month, data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection shows little evidence that the strikes are stopping the flow of illicit substances.
“CBP’s seizures of fentanyl at the U.S.-Mexico border had been declining, often sharply, since mid-2023. But since early 2025, the declines stopped,” said Adam Isacson of WOLA at the time. “Halfway into fiscal 2026, seizures are almost exactly half of 2025’s full-year total: a flat trendline.”
Finucane told The Guardian that the boat strikes have never been “a serious counter-drug operation.”
“I think this was in part a military spectacle to give the illusion of the administration doing something ‘macho’ about drugs,” Finucane said.
Walsh said Hegseth and Trump “want to impress the public, to make Americans believe that they, unlike previous governments, are finally ending the terrible problem of drug trafficking.”
“The profound cruelty and indifference with which they order these systematic and intentional killings allows them to project this menacing image of faceless ‘narco-terrorists,’” he added. “In doing so, they shock many Americans while numbing their sense that the US officials responsible for these murders should be held accountable.”
Julia Conley is a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams.
This article is from Common Dreams.

From Trump down to the killer who pushed the button ….. Lock Them Up! Multiple counts of Murder 1
Lock Them Up!
Aint we grand; we murder people at will and make war on a nation that has never attacked us. We kidnap the leader of a foreign country to our south We also support genocide committed by a self-entitled bunch of genocidal scum. And, we blame immigrants for all our problems. I’m so proud…
The Trump regime wants to keep its boat murder victims anonymous, rendering them unpeople. There’s a chilling similarity to Israel’s Zionist regime. Israel is keeping DNA kits out of Gaza — seeking to impose anonymity on Israel’s murder victims there.
In each case, it seems the oppressor nation is using anonymity as a weapon of war. Strippimg victims of their names and personal stories, strips away their humanity in the public’s eye — making it politically easier to commit war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Many of the dead at Hiroshima and Nagasaki were simply vaporized. Leaving at most a shadow they cast on a wall behind them. And I rather doubt that American newspapers of the time carried lists of the names of the human beings who were massacred at Wounded Knee under the Republican administration of Harrison. Mother Earth published the names of workers killed at the Ludlow Massacre, but I’d doubt the big New York papers of the day did in 1914.
Before a massacre can be committed, the targets must be dehumanized. This is maintained after the killings, to maintain popular support. This is nothing new. One might even call it “The American Way”, except that I doubt that it is unique to the Empire of the Free World.
There could be no “terrible problem of drug trafficking” is Americans did not queue up to buy those drugs.
When will the US government launch all-our rocket attacks on the corporations that sell cigarettes and “vapes”? Those kill far more people than any illegal drugs.
The US government has gradually, insidiously, and irresponsibly erased the line between elgal and illegal activity, and between peace, war, and law enforcement.
As a result, under Mr Trump the US government now feels entitled to kill anyone, anywhere, without showing any just cause.