Nicolás Maduro heads back to a US court, fighting charges as Venezuela moves on without him

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaks to supporters during an event at the Miraflores Presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela, Feb. 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix,File) 2026-03-26T04:01:41Z NEW YORK (AP) — Former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro returns to a New York courtroom Thursday as he seeks to have his drug trafficking indictment thrown out over a geopolitical dispute over legal fees .
Maduro’s lawyer contends that the U.S. is violating the deposed leader’s constitutional rights by blocking Venezuelan government funds from being used to pay his legal costs.
It’s the first time that Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, will be in court since a January arraignment at which he protested their capture by U.S. military forces and declared: “I am not guilty.
I am a decent man, the constitutional president of my country.” Flores has also pleaded not guilty.
Both remain jailed at a detention center in Brooklyn, and neither has asked to be released on bail.
Judge Alvin Hellerstein has yet to set a trial date, though that could happen at the hearing.
Maduro, 63, and Flores, 69, continue to enjoy some support in Venezuela, with murals and billboards across the capital, Caracas, demanding their return.
But while Maduro’s ruling party remains in power, he has slowly been erased from the government of Delcy Rodríguez, Venezuela’s acting president.
Rodríguez has replaced senior officials including Maduro’s faithful defense minister and attorney general, reorganized agencies, appointed ambassadors and eliminated tenets of the self-proclaimed socialist movement that has ruled Venezuela for more than two decades.
She has even shaken up state television, which had been dominated by Maduro’s hourslong evening appearances.
Rodríguez favors much shorter appearances without the musical acts to which her predecessor often danced.
Venezuela has also reestablished diplomatic relations with the U.S., which in 2019 cut ties with Maduro’s government and recognized the then-head of the National Assembly, a member of the opposition, as the country’s legitimate leader.
The U.S. has eased economic sanctions on Venezuela’s crucial oil industry and also dispatched a chargé d’affaires to Caracas.
But even that may not be enough to spare Maduro and Flores from having to foot their own legal bills.
In a court filing last month, Maduro lawyer Barry Pollack said the U.S.
Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, which administers sanctions,
原文链接: AP News
