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Home»LAW & COURT»Maduro Tries to Throw Indignant Tantrum In Court, But the Judge Shut It Down

Maduro Tries to Throw Indignant Tantrum In Court, But the Judge Shut It Down

Frank BrunoJanuary 5, 2026Updated:January 5, 2026 LAW & COURT
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Needless to say, 2026 is off to an absolutely brutal start for former Venezuelan president—alleged drug lord and undeniable dictator—Nicolás Maduro, and his wife and alleged partner in crime, Cilia Flores.

On Monday, the couple’s well-earned misery only deepened. After being slapped Saturday with sweeping federal charges in New York—including narco-terrorism, large-scale cocaine smuggling, and stockpiling machine guns and explosives, along with accusations of conspiring to wage a criminal war against the United States—the former strongman finally had his day in court.

Predictably, during his first court appearance, the disgraced ex-dictator erupted in indignation and proclaimed his innocence. Because of course he did.


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Shackled at the feet and dressed in orange prison garb, Maduro defiantly declared his innocence in Spanish—apparently unaware that performative outrage tends to land a little differently when you’re standing in a U.S. courtroom instead of barking orders from your palace:

I’m the president of the republic of Venezuela. … I am here kidnapped … I was captured at my home in Caracas, Venezuela.

But U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein wasted no time cutting the dictator off:

Let me interfere — there will be a time and a place to go into all of this. Your counsel will be able to make motions. … At this time, I just want to know one thing: Are you Nicolás Maduro Moros?

“I am Nicolás Maduro Moros,” he responded, then appeared to calm down somewhat as the judge read the charges:

Mr. Maduro … is charged in one count of narco-terrorism conspiracy, specifically from 1999 to 2025, he knowingly conspired with others … and intentionally provided something of pecuniary value to a person or organization engaged in terrorism and terrorist activity.

After the judge asked Maduro if he understood the charges, he went off again: “I am innocent. I am not guilty. I am a decent man. I am still president of my country. I am not guilty of anything that is mentioned here.”

Flores, who is also facing several charges, also pleaded not guilty.

But all of this gets better: At one point, Maduro described himself as “a ‘prisoner of war’ and ‘a man of God.'”

Hilariously—at least I thought so—one of Maduro’s lawyers solemnly assured Hellerstein that the former dictator isn’t exactly itching to spring himself from jail. No, no—he’s merely keeping his options open, just in case he decides to ask for bail later. Right.

The idea of bail here is laughable on every conceivable level.

First, Maduro isn’t facing some minor white-collar charge. He’s accused of narco-terrorism, massive international cocaine trafficking, and conspiring against the United States. That alone should end the discussion.

Second, he’s been under indictment for years and successfully dodged capture with the full backing of a regime that turned Venezuela into a cartel state. That’s not just a flight risk—that’s the textbook illustration used in law school exams.

Third, prosecutors allege the Maduros used state resources to move tons of cocaine and arm militias. And now his defense team wants a federal judge in Manhattan to treat him like a misunderstood businessman who just needs a little time to clear things up?

It’s pure performative theater—and not even good theater.

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