Maduro in court today: What the Nicolas Maduro charges mean and how his removal could impact drug trafficking from Venezuela
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CHICAGO (WLS) — The I-Team has delved into the drug trafficking allegations against Nicolas Maduro and explored the potential impact on drug smuggling from Venezuela following his ousting.

The federal indictment against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro alleges that for the past 25 years, leaders in Venezuela have exploited their positions, corrupting the government to facilitate the importation of massive quantities of cocaine into the United States. Some of these drugs are believed to have reached Chicago.

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Since 2020, Maduro has been a fugitive from U.S. authorities, facing drug trafficking charges and with a $15 million reward offered for his capture.

Recently, Maduro and his wife were apprehended in New York on drug trafficking charges after a bold raid on their residence in Caracas over the weekend. U.S. officials accuse him of leveraging his “illegally obtained power” and the institutions he undermined to transport vast quantities of cocaine to the U.S.

The detailed 25-page indictment claims that Maduro and his accomplices collaborated with drug cartels to orchestrate the movement of thousands of tons of cocaine into the United States.

Among other things, the indictment accuses Maduro and his wife of ordering kidnappings, beatings, and murders of those who owed them drug money or undermined their drug trafficking operation. That included the killing of a local drug boss in Caracas, the indictment said.

He could face life in prison if convicted.

In federal court Monday, Maduro and his wife pleaded not guilty to the charges.

SEE ALSO | Local advocates ask Trump admin. to reinstate Venezuelans’ TPS, stop deportations amid uncertainty

“It’s about holding these people accountable. And if, if you’re a drug trafficker kingpin, especially, you have to be really concerned that your days are numbered,” said former Chicago-area DEA agent Michael Gannon.

He says this sends a chilling message and could be a major blow to the drug trade from the South American country.

“We’re going to come get you, even if it’s on your own turf, if you don’t want to do the right thing, turn yourself in and you want to send these drugs to our country. When you have that designee as terrorist organizations, you’re able to utilize your assets from the most powerful military on planet Earth, and that’s a good thing,” Gannon said.

For years, Maduro is accused of facilitating drug trafficking by providing Venezuelan diplomatic passports to traffickers and diplomatic cover for planes used by money launderers to bring drug proceeds from Mexico back to Venezuela, allowing “cocaine-fueled corruption to flourish for his own benefit.”

READ MORE | Mixed messages from Trump and Rubio on who’s running Venezuela

But Northwestern University’s Lina Britto, an expert in Latin American history and the history of the drug wars, says she expects Maduro’s removal to usher in an era of massive destabilization.

“This really is a very new and unprecedented situation. What it’s going to create is a tremendous instability in the border region between Colombia and Venezuela, which is one of the main and largest producers of coca and cocaine for the illegal markets,” Britto said.

She says operators of illegal drug businesses the administration has labeled “narco-terrorists” will be forced to improvise, and that likely means violence saying U.S. intervention in the region is haphazard.

“That tradition of, you know, Republicanism of sovereignty. It’s something that is embedded in in our political identity and who we are. So, they’re really, they have, they have no idea what they’re doing, because they don’t know us. They don’t know Latin America, and they don’t care,” she said.

Vice President JD Vance posted on X that even though there is not much deadly fentanyl coming to the U.S. from Venezuela, any reduction in cocaine profits helps curtail cartel power and aids in overall drug reduction.

SEE ALSO | Some local Colombians and Cubans encouraged by Trump’s threats, but experts question his motives

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