US prosecutors argue Maduro 'plundered' Venezuelan wealth in court battle over legal fees

Intelligence report synthesized for precision. Verified source updates below.
Detailed Report
Maduro and Flores's attorneys asked the judge to dismiss the narco-terrorism case against the pair because the US has denied them use of the funds due to sanctions in place against the Latin American country.
Prosecutors argued Maduro "plundered" Venezuela's wealth and should not be able to use its money for legal fees.
The 92-year-old Judge Alvin Hellerstein, however, noted that "the right to defence is paramount". He said he would not be dismissing the case over the dispute.
The judge said he would issue a ruling at a later time, including the next court date.
US forces seized Maduro and Flores from their compound in Caracas in a dramatic, night-time raid on 3 January, and brought them to New York to face allegations of weapon and drug offences, which they deny.
On Thursday, wearing green khaki prison jumpsuits, Maduro and his wife sat quietly with several lawyers in-between them as they listened to a translation of the arguments through headphones.
The mood stood in stark contrast to their first court appearance, when Maduro gave a speech lasting several minutes claiming he had been kidnapped and was innocent. That hearing ended with a man yelling at Maduro from the back of the courtroom.
Because the Maduros and the Venezuelan government are subject to US sanctions, they needed to obtain a licence to allow the government to pay their legal fees.
The US Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) initially granted that licence, then revoked it.
Prosecutors argued in court that the Maduros should not be able to access Venezuelan government funds because of national security concerns and claimed they have access to personal funds available to pay for attorneys, which the Maduros deny.
Under US law, Maduro, like every defendant, would be entitled to a court-appointed lawyer if he is unable to afford his own.
Judge Hellerstein appeared to side with Maduro lawyer Barry Pollack's argument that the unusual case against the former leader, taking place in another country, would be overwhelming for a public defender to take on and would hamper the counsel they provide.
Prosecutors, meanwhile, claimed OFAC was not allowing the Maduros to access Venezuelan government funds because of longstanding sanctions the US has had in place during his regime and because the couple had "plundered the wealth of Venezuelans" for their own gain.
Judge Hellerstein questioned that logic, saying that because of the Maduros' capture, that foreign policy situation had changed.
"We are doing business with Venezuela," he said. Since Maduro's arrest, former Vice-President Delcy Rodríguez has taken power and the country said it has resumed diplomatic ties with the US.
He also noted that the "Venezuelan government is willing to pay".
The judge appeared at a loss for how to resolve the issue, since Maduro's legal team was seeking to dismiss the whole case over it.
"What is the relief?" the judge asked both sides several times.
The US has accused Maduro of narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine-importation conspiracy, possession of machine guns and destructive devices, and conspiracy to possess machine guns and destructive devices.
Maduro and his wife have yet to make an application for bail and have been held in Brooklyn's federal Metropolitan Detention Center.
During a cabinet meeting on Thursday in Washington, President Donald Trump said the US was weighing bringing additional cases against Maduro.
He also said Maduro would be given "a fair trial".
Ana Patricia, a 72-year-old retired lawyer, said that despite government censorship, everyone is trying to follow the process.
"They can control what Venezuelan media publish, but not what is published in the international press."
Regarding Maduro's fate, she said she felt a degree of sympathy: "He is a man who had everything but lost it through greed and an inflated ego. I feel sorry for him, because in the end, he is a human being, but I hope he receives a life sentence. He has to pay for his crimes."
"Despite his flaws, he has not been a bad president. He knows he is innocent and he will prove it."
Parra claims that the US government "doesn't even know what to accuse him of".
"They accuse him of drug trafficking, of weapons possession," she said. "And I cannot accept the actions of President Trump in Venezuela, in which so many people died."
The centrally located Peacock Theater in Los Angeles will host the 101st Academy Awards ceremony when it begins streaming on YouTube in 2029.
Is social media addictive? What young adults say.The reactions come after a Los Angeles jury found that Meta and Google intentionally built addictive social media platforms that harm young people's mental health.
Guthrie on missing mother: 'We cannot be at peace without knowing'In her first interview since the disappearance, Savannah Guthrie recounts the moment she learned her mother was missing and wrestles with the idea that her fame may have made her mother a target.
Conflict has spread across the Middle East since the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran on 28 February.
The US television presenter describes the aftermath of her mother's abduction and worries her fame is to blame.


