Trump says Venezuela’s Maduro captured
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Maduro to appear in federal court Mon.
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Maduro, Cilia Flores and Venezuelan President
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13mon MSN
A CIA team, steel doors and a fateful phone call: How the U.S. captured Maduro in Venezuela
President Donald Trump approved the strike before Christmas after months of planning, including troops training using a model of Maduro’s compound.
2hon MSN
Maduro’s case will revive a legal debate over immunity for foreign leaders tested in Noriega trial
When Nicolás Maduro appears in a New York courtroom to face U.S. drug charges, he'll be following a path taken by Panama's Manuel Noriega, another strongman who was toppled by American forces.
Trump said Venezuela's interim president Delcy Rodríguez could "pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro" if she "doesn't do what's right".
Maduro will be arraigned on a four-count indictment charging him with leading a 25-year narco-terrorism conspiracy.
The Venezuelan president, who was captured by U.S. forces early Saturday, is awaiting trial in New York City on federal criminal charges.
The secretary of state says the US will retain "multiple levers of leverage" if Venezuela's leaders don't "make the right decisions".
Roger Carstens, told CBS' "60 Minutes" that he doesn't consider Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro a "bloodthirsty drug dealer" based on his experiences.
Some have compared the daring and scope of the Nicolás Maduro capture to the killing of Osama bin Laden in 2011.