The Trump administration is quietly building a legal case against Venezuelan interim president Delcy Rodriguez including readying a draft criminal indictment, one of several tools it is using to strengthen its leverage with Caracas, according to four people familiar with the matter.
Federal prosecutors have put together possible corruption and money laundering charges, and have communicated to Rodriguez that she is at risk of prosecution unless she continues to comply with Trump’s demands following the U.S. ouster of former Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro in January, the sources said.
Reuters has not seen the charges in written form being prepared against Rodriguez but spoke with four people briefed on the matter. The news agency is the first to report the effort to craft the draft indictment of Rodriguez for alleged money laundering and corruption, which the sources said Rodriguez had been made aware of verbally.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami is preparing the draft charges, the people said, adding that the document has been evolving over the past two months. The probe focuses on Rodriguez’s alleged involvement in laundering of funds from Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA, three of the sources said, and covers activities between 2021 and 2025, two of the sources said.
The Department of Justice declined to comment on the story. After a summary of the report was published on the Reuters World News morning podcast, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche wrote on X, “completely FALSE from @reuters. Not sure how such fake news makes its way to publication.”
In a statement, Reuters said: “We stand by our reporting that the Department of Justice is preparing an indictment against Delcy Rodriguez, the new president of Venezuela.”
The White House and the U.S. State Department did not respond to Reuters’ questions for this story.
Separate from the draft indictment, U.S. officials have presented Rodriguez with a list of at least seven former high-level party officials, associates and their family members that it wants her to arrest or to keep in Venezuela’s custody for potential extradition, four sources said. This was first reported by Spain’s ABC newspaper.
Rodriguez is facing this threat just two months after taking power following a lightning raid by U.S. special forces who captured Maduro and whisked the longtime authoritarian leader away to New York for trial on charges of narcoterrorism and cocaine trafficking. Maduro pleaded not guilty and is being held in New York pending trial.
In public, Trump has heaped praise on Rodriguez for cooperating with the U.S. and hailed Venezuela as “our new friend and partner” in his annual State of the Union address. But the draft indictment is yet another bargaining chip the United States has added as it attempts to compel members of the Venezuelan government, once loyal to Maduro, to carry out its wishes.
The Venezuelan communications ministry, which handles all press queries for the government, did not respond to a detailed list of questions about the potential charges being crafted against Rodriguez.
The drafting of an indictment does not necessarily indicate a case will be presented by a prosecutor to a grand jury, which would then have to find there is probable cause to believe Rodriguez committed a crime. Grand juries meet in secret, and Reuters was unable to determine whether prosecutors had begun presenting any evidence against Rodriguez to a grand jury.
Since the capture of Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, on Jan. 3, Trump has relied on Rodriguez, Maduro’s 56-year-old former vice president, to guarantee stability in Venezuela while he prioritizes U.S. companies’ access to the OPEC nation’s oil reserves.
Flores has also pleaded not guilty to federal charges including drug trafficking.
Other members of Rodriguez’s administration who already have been indicted in the United States include her hard-line Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello, and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino, who are, along with Rodriguez, longtime members of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela, or PSUV, founded by the late Hugo Chávez. Cabello and Padrino, both still in power in post-Maduro Venezuela, have consistently denied wrongdoing.
Many of the individuals whom the U.S. wants Rodriguez to arrest or keep in detention already have indictments in the United States for money laundering, drug trafficking and other crimes, according to four sources familiar with the matter.
Laura Dogu, the newly appointed U.S. envoy to Venezuela, put the request to Rodriguez, the sources told Reuters.
Among the high-profile names given to Rodriguez is Alex Saab, 54, who rose to prominence as a close Maduro ally to become one of the most influential financial operators within the Chavista movement, according to four sources.
Following an Interpol notice requested by the United States, Saab was previously arrested by local authorities in Cabo Verde in 2020 while traveling to Iran on an official mission for the Maduro government.
Extradited to the United States, he faced bribery and money laundering charges for allegedly routing $350 million from a corrupt Venezuelan housing construction scheme through the U.S. financial system, before he was released in 2023 by the Biden administration in a prisoner swap.
Reuters reported Saab was arrested in early February and two sources said he remains detained by Venezuelan intelligence service SEBIN. The U.S. has a new sealed money-laundering indictment against Saab, two of the sources said, but its status is not immediately known.
If extradited, Saab could provide information to U.S. authorities that could bolster their criminal case against Maduro, according to a source briefed on the case.
It is unclear whether Saab, a Colombian who was granted Venezuelan citizenship by Maduro, will be extradited to the United States. Venezuelan law prohibits the extradition of Venezuelan nationals, a barrier for several of the people Washington is seeking.
Saab’s U.S.-based lawyer Neil M. Schuster did not respond to detailed questions about whether Saab has been detained, any charges he may be facing or whether he had offered any testimony about Maduro during his previous U.S. detention.
Other names on the list include the media mogul Raul Gorrin, who has also been detained by SEBIN in Venezuela within the past month, according to three sources familiar with the matter.
Gorrin faces multiple federal charges in the U.S., primarily tied to bribery, money laundering, and corruption involving Venezuela’s state oil company, PDVSA.
Gorrin did not respond to emails and a text message seeking comment, nor did his media business Globovisión.
Howard Srebnick, a Miami attorney who has previously represented Gorrin, did not immediately return a request for comment.
TemporarySun314 on
Now suddenly the US realizes, that Maduros number 2 will not be a good person, that will bring true freedom and democracy to Venezuelans…
I guess she did not hand over enough oil, so the US needs a round two with „bringing freedom and democracy“. Im sure maduro had some minister, who while being a ruthless dictator, will be willing to hand over all the oil the US wants.
Royal-Hunter3892 on
Wasn’t she some kind of a communist militant earlier or her father who kidnapped or killed an American businessman a long ago .
One Can’t complain either when US can back and support Ex Al qaeida Ahmad Al shara jolani as Syria’s leader than she is not that big deal .
Hefty_Delay7765 on
When is tRump, the orange thin-skinned pedo president with 34 felony convictions gonna be put on trial for his role in the Epstein files???
SilveryDeath on
So is the US going to kidnap her as well in a few weeks on whatever charges they come up with? Just keep sending spec ops in to kidnap whoever is at the top until they find a yes man/woman in the country?
AwarenessReady3531 on
Isn’t this moron a little busy with something else at the moment?
MentalSky_ on
Now with threats to Cuba. How is the US going to fight 3 wars and a world wide trade war
Isn’t every country being tariffed 10%
Unser_Giftzwerg on
If you guys read the article, they did this to ensure that Rodriguez will comply with their demands in arresting other regime leaders the Trump administration also wants to try. I doubt they plan to actually arrest Rodriguez unless she is unable to come up with the goods.
DeathStar_81 on
This feels like a mafia shakedown. Do what we tell you or you are going to end up like Maduro. Its crazy we are taking out sovereign nations heads of state. Are we the baddies now?
felis_scipio on
I’m pretty sure the plan is to invade Cuba next, then circle back to Venezuela.
Bishopjones2112 on
This is a joke right? The states swoops in and kidnaps the president, doesn’t do anything else and expects shit to get better. But really the country is being run by the VP who was the same as Maduro and now the states is all “why isn’t it working”. Seriously Trump can plan a shit. Literally.
gormhornbori on
… The US literally put her in power because the oil companies liked her better than Maduro. (She actually talked to them.) …
tabrizzi on
She’s not bending low enough?
Joran_Dax on
„We’ll just keep capturing your leaders until you obey“
Eventually Trump’ll take so many Venezuelans hostage that he’ll be forced to deport them under his own twisted logic.
UrineArtist on
> The probe focuses on Rodriguez’s alleged involvement in laundering of funds from Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA
Unless a crime has been committed in the US and proper extradiction process with Venezuela is followed then there is no legality here. You could have 1,000 monkeys with 1,000 typewriters hammering away for 1,000 years and you’ll never be able to produce a legal justification for using your military to illegaly enter a foreign country, kidnap one of their citizens and then imprison them illegally
It’s the same with Maduro, arsehole though he may be.
The only reason the US gets away with behaving like this is because nobody can force countries like China, US and Russia to obey international law.
So why bother with the fucking charade, its fooling nobody who matters, we all know its, „do what I say or we’ll kidnap you.“
joncornelius on
I swear, just a few hours ago, Trump was just sitting next to the German Chancellor talking about how great she’s been.
illini81 on
She thought she made a friend.
AvgChrisEnergy on
Well I’m sure he has concepts of a plan
Imaginary_Try_1408 on
What…are they going to kidnap her too?
KeyanuReaves69 on
I thought Trump was the new self styled president/leader of Venezuela…
Either-Dish3956 on
Time to pay Donald again
AcidaliaPlanitia on
I’m tired, boss.
Dazzling-Leave-7448 on
In other words…the usual mobster behavior
Hot-Philosophy-7671 on
That’s the thing about the mob: you never pay just once.
Time-Industry-1364 on
We desperately need to stop this pedophilic jackass because he’s very quickly making the US the enemy of the entire world, and he’s speed running us to WWIII.
kishorecmgb on
Oh god. How is trump even a billionaire, the guy is so stupid.
SearcherRC on
Are they just going to continue arresting Venezualan politicians based on – wait for it – Trumped up charges?
anemoGeoPyro on
Things aren’t going as planned in Iran, huh? I’d bet Trump only had one plan and expected it to go 100% as expected
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And people think Trump has a plan for Iran… 🤡
**Paywall workaround**
The Trump administration is quietly building a legal case against Venezuelan interim president Delcy Rodriguez including readying a draft criminal indictment, one of several tools it is using to strengthen its leverage with Caracas, according to four people familiar with the matter.
Federal prosecutors have put together possible corruption and money laundering charges, and have communicated to Rodriguez that she is at risk of prosecution unless she continues to comply with Trump’s demands following the U.S. ouster of former Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro in January, the sources said.
Reuters has not seen the charges in written form being prepared against Rodriguez but spoke with four people briefed on the matter. The news agency is the first to report the effort to craft the draft indictment of Rodriguez for alleged money laundering and corruption, which the sources said Rodriguez had been made aware of verbally.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami is preparing the draft charges, the people said, adding that the document has been evolving over the past two months. The probe focuses on Rodriguez’s alleged involvement in laundering of funds from Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA, three of the sources said, and covers activities between 2021 and 2025, two of the sources said.
The Department of Justice declined to comment on the story. After a summary of the report was published on the Reuters World News morning podcast, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche wrote on X, “completely FALSE from @reuters. Not sure how such fake news makes its way to publication.”
In a statement, Reuters said: “We stand by our reporting that the Department of Justice is preparing an indictment against Delcy Rodriguez, the new president of Venezuela.”
The White House and the U.S. State Department did not respond to Reuters’ questions for this story.
Separate from the draft indictment, U.S. officials have presented Rodriguez with a list of at least seven former high-level party officials, associates and their family members that it wants her to arrest or to keep in Venezuela’s custody for potential extradition, four sources said. This was first reported by Spain’s ABC newspaper.
Rodriguez is facing this threat just two months after taking power following a lightning raid by U.S. special forces who captured Maduro and whisked the longtime authoritarian leader away to New York for trial on charges of narcoterrorism and cocaine trafficking. Maduro pleaded not guilty and is being held in New York pending trial.
In public, Trump has heaped praise on Rodriguez for cooperating with the U.S. and hailed Venezuela as “our new friend and partner” in his annual State of the Union address. But the draft indictment is yet another bargaining chip the United States has added as it attempts to compel members of the Venezuelan government, once loyal to Maduro, to carry out its wishes.
The Venezuelan communications ministry, which handles all press queries for the government, did not respond to a detailed list of questions about the potential charges being crafted against Rodriguez.
The drafting of an indictment does not necessarily indicate a case will be presented by a prosecutor to a grand jury, which would then have to find there is probable cause to believe Rodriguez committed a crime. Grand juries meet in secret, and Reuters was unable to determine whether prosecutors had begun presenting any evidence against Rodriguez to a grand jury.
Since the capture of Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, on Jan. 3, Trump has relied on Rodriguez, Maduro’s 56-year-old former vice president, to guarantee stability in Venezuela while he prioritizes U.S. companies’ access to the OPEC nation’s oil reserves.
Flores has also pleaded not guilty to federal charges including drug trafficking.
Other members of Rodriguez’s administration who already have been indicted in the United States include her hard-line Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello, and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino, who are, along with Rodriguez, longtime members of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela, or PSUV, founded by the late Hugo Chávez. Cabello and Padrino, both still in power in post-Maduro Venezuela, have consistently denied wrongdoing.
Many of the individuals whom the U.S. wants Rodriguez to arrest or keep in detention already have indictments in the United States for money laundering, drug trafficking and other crimes, according to four sources familiar with the matter.
Laura Dogu, the newly appointed U.S. envoy to Venezuela, put the request to Rodriguez, the sources told Reuters.
Among the high-profile names given to Rodriguez is Alex Saab, 54, who rose to prominence as a close Maduro ally to become one of the most influential financial operators within the Chavista movement, according to four sources.
Following an Interpol notice requested by the United States, Saab was previously arrested by local authorities in Cabo Verde in 2020 while traveling to Iran on an official mission for the Maduro government.
Extradited to the United States, he faced bribery and money laundering charges for allegedly routing $350 million from a corrupt Venezuelan housing construction scheme through the U.S. financial system, before he was released in 2023 by the Biden administration in a prisoner swap.
Reuters reported Saab was arrested in early February and two sources said he remains detained by Venezuelan intelligence service SEBIN. The U.S. has a new sealed money-laundering indictment against Saab, two of the sources said, but its status is not immediately known.
If extradited, Saab could provide information to U.S. authorities that could bolster their criminal case against Maduro, according to a source briefed on the case.
It is unclear whether Saab, a Colombian who was granted Venezuelan citizenship by Maduro, will be extradited to the United States. Venezuelan law prohibits the extradition of Venezuelan nationals, a barrier for several of the people Washington is seeking.
Saab’s U.S.-based lawyer Neil M. Schuster did not respond to detailed questions about whether Saab has been detained, any charges he may be facing or whether he had offered any testimony about Maduro during his previous U.S. detention.
Other names on the list include the media mogul Raul Gorrin, who has also been detained by SEBIN in Venezuela within the past month, according to three sources familiar with the matter.
Gorrin faces multiple federal charges in the U.S., primarily tied to bribery, money laundering, and corruption involving Venezuela’s state oil company, PDVSA.
Gorrin did not respond to emails and a text message seeking comment, nor did his media business Globovisión.
Howard Srebnick, a Miami attorney who has previously represented Gorrin, did not immediately return a request for comment.
Now suddenly the US realizes, that Maduros number 2 will not be a good person, that will bring true freedom and democracy to Venezuelans…
I guess she did not hand over enough oil, so the US needs a round two with „bringing freedom and democracy“. Im sure maduro had some minister, who while being a ruthless dictator, will be willing to hand over all the oil the US wants.
Wasn’t she some kind of a communist militant earlier or her father who kidnapped or killed an American businessman a long ago .
One Can’t complain either when US can back and support Ex Al qaeida Ahmad Al shara jolani as Syria’s leader than she is not that big deal .
When is tRump, the orange thin-skinned pedo president with 34 felony convictions gonna be put on trial for his role in the Epstein files???
So is the US going to kidnap her as well in a few weeks on whatever charges they come up with? Just keep sending spec ops in to kidnap whoever is at the top until they find a yes man/woman in the country?
Isn’t this moron a little busy with something else at the moment?
Now with threats to Cuba. How is the US going to fight 3 wars and a world wide trade war
Isn’t every country being tariffed 10%
If you guys read the article, they did this to ensure that Rodriguez will comply with their demands in arresting other regime leaders the Trump administration also wants to try. I doubt they plan to actually arrest Rodriguez unless she is unable to come up with the goods.
This feels like a mafia shakedown. Do what we tell you or you are going to end up like Maduro. Its crazy we are taking out sovereign nations heads of state. Are we the baddies now?
I’m pretty sure the plan is to invade Cuba next, then circle back to Venezuela.
This is a joke right? The states swoops in and kidnaps the president, doesn’t do anything else and expects shit to get better. But really the country is being run by the VP who was the same as Maduro and now the states is all “why isn’t it working”. Seriously Trump can plan a shit. Literally.
… The US literally put her in power because the oil companies liked her better than Maduro. (She actually talked to them.) …
She’s not bending low enough?
„We’ll just keep capturing your leaders until you obey“
Eventually Trump’ll take so many Venezuelans hostage that he’ll be forced to deport them under his own twisted logic.
> The probe focuses on Rodriguez’s alleged involvement in laundering of funds from Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA
Unless a crime has been committed in the US and proper extradiction process with Venezuela is followed then there is no legality here. You could have 1,000 monkeys with 1,000 typewriters hammering away for 1,000 years and you’ll never be able to produce a legal justification for using your military to illegaly enter a foreign country, kidnap one of their citizens and then imprison them illegally
It’s the same with Maduro, arsehole though he may be.
The only reason the US gets away with behaving like this is because nobody can force countries like China, US and Russia to obey international law.
So why bother with the fucking charade, its fooling nobody who matters, we all know its, „do what I say or we’ll kidnap you.“
I swear, just a few hours ago, Trump was just sitting next to the German Chancellor talking about how great she’s been.
She thought she made a friend.
Well I’m sure he has concepts of a plan
What…are they going to kidnap her too?
I thought Trump was the new self styled president/leader of Venezuela…
Time to pay Donald again
I’m tired, boss.
In other words…the usual mobster behavior
That’s the thing about the mob: you never pay just once.
We desperately need to stop this pedophilic jackass because he’s very quickly making the US the enemy of the entire world, and he’s speed running us to WWIII.
Oh god. How is trump even a billionaire, the guy is so stupid.
Are they just going to continue arresting Venezualan politicians based on – wait for it – Trumped up charges?
Things aren’t going as planned in Iran, huh? I’d bet Trump only had one plan and expected it to go 100% as expected