Tags: u.s. | sanctions | venezuela | nicolas maduro | defense | drug trafficking

US Weighs Letting Venezuela Fund Maduro Defense in Drug Case

Saturday, 25 April 2026 09:15 AM EDT

The United States has agreed to modify its sanctions on Venezuela to allow the South American country's government to pay Nicolas Maduro's defense lawyer, backing off a restriction that had threatened to derail the drug trafficking case against the ousted Venezuelan president, a court filing showed on Friday.

Maduro, 63, and ‌his wife Cilia Flores, 69, were captured from their home in Caracas by U.S. ​special forces on Jan. 3 and brought to New York to face criminal charges including narcoterrorism conspiracy. They have pleaded not guilty and are jailed in Brooklyn pending ⁠trial.

Maduro's lawyer Barry Pollack in February asked Manhattan-based U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein to dismiss the ​case because U.S. sanctions were preventing the Venezuelan government from paying his legal fees.

Pollack said that ⁠prohibition amounted to a violation of Maduro's rights under the U.S. Constitution to the counsel of his choice.

Neither Maduro nor Flores can afford lawyers on their own, and the Venezuelan government is prepared to pay their fees, their lawyers have said.

All ‌criminal defendants in the U.S. have constitutional rights regardless of whether they are U.S. citizens.

Hellerstein ​said in a ‌March 26 court hearing that he did not intend to dismiss the case, but appeared skeptical that the government was justified in blocking the ‌payments.

Prosecutor Kyle Wirshba said in court that the U.S. sanctions blocking the payments were based on legitimate national security and foreign policy interests. Wirshba also said that Hellerstein could not order the ⁠Treasury Department to modify its sanctions because the ‌executive branch, not the judiciary, is ⁠in charge of foreign policy.

Hellerstein noted that the U.S. had relaxed sanctions on Venezuela since Maduro's ouster. Relations between Caracas and Washington ⁠have ⁠improved since Delcy Rodriguez, Maduro's former vice president, began leading Venezuela on an interim basis.

"The defendant is here, Flores is here. They ‌present no further national security threat," said Hellerstein, a judicial appointee of Democrat President Bill Clinton. "The right that's implicated, paramount over other rights, is the right to constitutional counsel."

During his first term in the White House, President Donald Trump ​ramped up sanctions on Venezuela over ‌allegations that Maduro's government was corrupt and undermining democratic institutions. Washington called Maduro's 2018 reelection fraudulent.

Maduro dismissed those accusations, along with allegations of his participation in drug trafficking, as pretextual justifications ​for what he called a U.S. desire to seize control of the South American OPEC nation's vast oil reserves.

© 2026 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.


Newsfront
The United States has agreed to ease sanctions on Venezuela to allow the government to pay Nicolas Maduro's defense lawyer, backing off a restriction that had threatened to disrupt the drug trafficking case, a court filing showed Friday.
u.s., sanctions, venezuela, nicolas maduro, defense, drug trafficking
405
2026-15-25
Saturday, 25 April 2026 09:15 AM
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