DHS wants Venezuelans to go home
Digest more
DHS official Tricia McLaughlin said Nicolas Maduro fueled America’s d*ug crisis, calling his arrest a hopeful moment for Americans and Venezuelans
DHS public affairs assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin discusses the capture of Nicolas Maduro and the Trump administration’s continuing crackdown on illegal immigration on ‘The Big Weekend Show.’
2don MSN
US deportation flights to Venezuela continue despite Nicolas Maduro arrest and government transition
DHS says deportation flights to Venezuela are not paused following Nicolás Maduro’s arrest, as the Trump administration continues removing criminal migrants.
The shift in policy comes as roughly 600,000 Venezuelans face the possibility of deportation if they do not secure an alternative legal status. An estimated 800,000 Venezuelans are currently exiled, according to several reports.
Immigration experts in the United States and Latin America and groups that track Venezuelan prisons said Venezuela has no known policy or practice of sending prisoners to the U.S., and Venezuelan prisons remain overcrowded.
Nicolas Maduro served as president of Venezuela for more than 10 years before he was ousted over the weekend in a United States military operation that captured and brought him to the U.S. to face narco-terrorism charges.
Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, were arraigned Monday on drug trafficking charges, days after U.S. forces seized them from their Caracas home. Both pleaded not guilty.
Seven U.S. service members injured during alleged Venezuela operation to capture Nicolás Maduro, with five service members returned to duty.
Ousted Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife appeared before a judge in New York to face charges related to drug trafficking after the U.S. military attack on Venezuela.
After apparent months of planning, the U.S. strike that resulted in the arrest of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro unfolded swiftly over the weekend, with American forces converging on Caracas to arrest Maduro and his wife.
Nicolás Maduro says he’s Venezuela’s president. The United States contests that. The disagreement could become central to his drug trafficking case, as the