Here’s what’s latest on the topic:
- Reports in late April 2026 indicate the U.S. government agreed to relax sanctions so the Venezuelan government could fund Nicolás Maduro’s legal defense in the New York drug-trafficking case. This marked a resolution to a weeks-long dispute over whether Caracas could pay his attorneys without violating sanctions.[2][3][4]
- Earlier coverage noted U.S. prosecutors and Maduro’s team signaling that revised licenses would allow payments to defense lawyers from Venezuelan government funds, under specific conditions, without breaching sanctions rules.[3][2]
- Several outlets summarized that the approval effectively ends the standoff and acknowledges Maduro’s right to counsel, while clarifying that the underlying case remains active and sanctions constraints still apply to the flow of funds.[4][3]
- There were preceding reports (February–March 2026) where Maduro’s lawyer publicly argued the U.S. was blocking government funding for his defense, potentially impacting his constitutional rights; subsequent official steps appeared to address that concern by permitting Venezuelan funds to be used under licensed terms.[5][10]
If you’d like, I can pull the most recent updates from major outlets (e.g., Reuters, Al Jazeera, CBS) and summarize any developments after late April 2026, or track any court rulings that mention the funding arrangement. I can also provide a brief timeline of key events and a simple chart showing the progression of sanctions licenses related to Maduro’s defense funding.
Would you prefer a concise timeline or a visual chart?
Sources
The lawyer for Nicolas Maduro says the U.S. is blocking Venezuela's government from paying for the cost of his legal defense against drug trafficking charges.
www.cbsnews.comDefence lawyers had asked for case to be thrown out, claiming Maduro's rights were violated following US abduction.
www.aljazeera.comThe lawyer for Nicolas Maduro says the U.S. is blocking Venezuela's government from paying for the cost of his legal defense against drug trafficking charges.
www.cbsnews.comThe Treasury Department had denied the country a special license to circumvent sanctions in order to pay for Maduro's lawyer.
www.politico.comThe lawyer for deposed Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro says the United States is blocking funding for the cost of defending himself against drug trafficking charges
www.independent.co.ukThe Venezuela government pays maduro lawyers issue moved into focus after the U. S. said Venezuela can pay for Nicolás Maduro’s defense in a criminal case. The move concerns money for legal representation, not broader relief, and it comes as the case involving Maduro remains active. What the U. S. said U. S. the Venezuelan …
www.el-balad.comMaduro's lawyer had earlier asked a US District judge to dismiss the case because US sanctions were preventing Venezuela from paying his legal fees.
www.ndtv.com