Maduro Case To Revive Legal Debate Over Immunity

January 4, 2026 5:11 am

MIAMI (AP) — When Nicolás Maduro appears in a New York courtroom to face U.S. drug charges, he’ll be following a path taken by Panama’s Manuel Noriega, another strongman who was toppled by American forces. As was the case with Noriega, lawyers for Maduro are expected to challenge his arrest by claiming sovereign immunity. That’s a bedrock principal of international and U.S. law. But legal experts say that argument is unlikely to succeed because the U.S. doesn’t recognize Maduro as Venezuela’s legitimate leader. They say courts are likely to allow the prosecution to proceed despite broader constitutional questions about the U.S. military action that led to his capture.