Venezuela frees 6 Americans after meeting between President Maduro and
Trump's envoy
Send a link to a friend
[February 01, 2025]
By REGINA GARCIA CANO and JOSHUA GOODMAN
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Six Americans who had been detained in
Venezuela in recent months were freed by the government of President
Nicolás Maduro after he met Friday with a Trump administration official
tasked with urging the authoritarian leader to take back deported
migrants who have committed crimes in the United States.
U.S. President Donald Trump and his envoy for special missions, Richard
Grenell, announced the release of the six men on social media. The visit
by Grenell came as a shock to many Venezuelans who hoped that Trump
would continue the “maximum pressure” campaign he pursued against Maduro
during his first term.
Grenell’s hours long trip to Venezuela, according to the White House,
was focused on Trump’s efforts to deport Venezuelans back to their home
country, which currently does not accept them, and on the release of the
detained Americans.
“We are wheels up and headed home with these 6 American citizens,”
Grenell posted on X along with a photo showing him and the men aboard an
aircraft. “They just spoke to @realDonaldTrump and they couldn’t stop
thanking him.”

The meeting in Venezuela's capital took place less than a month after
Maduro was sworn in for a third six-year term despite credible evidence
that he lost last year's election. The U.S. government, along with
several other Western nations, does not recognize Maduro's claim to
victory and instead points to tally sheets collected by the opposition
coalition showing that its candidate, Edmundo González, won by a more
than a two-to-one margin.
Venezuelan state television aired footage of Grenell and Maduro speaking
in the Miraflores Palace and said the meeting had been requested by the
U.S. government.
Signing an executive order in the Oval Office on Friday, Trump was asked
if Grenell being filmed meeting with Maduro lent legitimacy to a
government that the Trump White House does not officially recognize.
“No. We want to do something with Venezuela. I’ve been a very big
opponent of Venezuela and Maduro,” Trump responded. “They’ve treated us
not so good, but they’ve treated, more importantly, the Venezuelan
people, very badly."
Maduro, appearing on state television after Grenell had left Venezuela,
said the visit yielded “initial agreements” but did not provide any
details.
“I have seen three U.S. presidents pass before me," Maduro said. "This
is the fourth term, and our message has been one: We want to build
relationships of respect for Venezuela’s sovereignty, for Venezuela’s
democratic life, for international law and for our Latin American
region.”
Some Republicans criticized the visit.
“This is terrible timing," said Elliott Abrams, who served as special
envoy to Venezuela and Iran during the first Trump administration. "A
meeting with Maduro will be used by him to legitimize his rule and show
that the Americans recognize him as president. If the purpose is to
deliver a tough message about migration issues, the president could’ve
done that himself. There was no need to send someone to Caracas.”
The dispute over the election results sparked nationwide protests. More
than 2,200 people were arrested during and after the demonstrations.
Among those detained are as many as 10 Americans who the government has
linked to alleged plots to destabilize the country. Neither the White
House nor Maduro's government immediately released the names of the six
who were freed Friday.
[to top of second column]
|

This photo released by Venezuela's presidential press office shows
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, right, shaking hands with
Richard Grenell, President Donald Trump's special envoy, at
Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, Jan.
31, 2025. Behind is Jorge Rodriguez, president of the National
Assembly. (Venezuela's presidential press office, via AP)

A nonprofit group that had advocated for the release of a detainee
said David Estrella, a 62-yer-old who was last heard from in
September, was among those on their way back to the U.S. Venezuelan
Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello had accused Estrella of being
part of an alleged plot to assassinate Maduro.
The Trump administration has taken a slew of actions to make good on
promises to crack down on illegal immigration and carry out the
largest mass deportation effort in U.S. history.
Those measures include the revocation earlier this week of a Biden
administration decision that would have protected roughly 600,000
people from Venezuela from deportation, putting some at risk of
being removed from the country in about two months.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Friday
that Trump had instructed Grenell to “identify a place and ensure
that repatriation flights" carrying Venezuelans, including members
of the Tren de Aragua criminal organization, "land in Venezuela.”
She said Trump also ordered Grenell to “ensure that all U.S.
detainees in Venezuela are returned home.”
More than 7.7 million Venezuelans have left their home country since
2013, when its economy unraveled and Maduro first took office. Most
settled in Latin America and the Caribbean, but after the pandemic,
migrants increasingly set their sights on the U.S.
Venezuelans’ desire for better living conditions and their rejection
of Maduro are expected to keep pushing people to emigrate.
Ahead of the presidential election last year, a nationwide poll by
Venezuela-based research firm Delphos showed about a quarter of the
population thinking about emigrating if Maduro was re-elected.
Grenell has reached out to Maduro before on Trump’s behalf to secure
the release of imprisoned Americans only to come home empty handed.

In 2020, he traveled with Erik Prince, the founder of controversial
security firm Blackwater, to Mexico City for a secret meeting with a
top Maduro aide. The backchannel talks centered on Maduro’s offer to
swap eight Americans then imprisoned in Venezuela for businessman
Alex Saab, a close ally of the president charged in the U.S. with
money laundering, The Associated Press previously reported.
No deal was struck and Grenell’s demand that Maduro step down was
dismissed by the Venezuelan president’s envoy. Grenell has always
denied he was negotiating a hostage swap.
Later, in December 2023, the Biden administration exchanged Saab for
10 Americans as part of a policy to re-engage Maduro ahead of
presidential elections.
___
Goodman reported from Miami. Associated Press writer Will Weissert
contributed to this report from Washington.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |