MIAMI (AP) 鈥 For more than two years, almost since the time of his arrest on U.S. warrant, Alex Saab has insisted he is a Venezuelan diplomat targeted for his work helping the South American country circumvent American economic sanctions.
Starting Monday, the Colombian-born businessman will get a chance to prove that claim to a federal judge in Miami tasked with weighing evidence that purportedly backs his
A handful of protesters carrying the Venezuelan flag and signs reading 鈥淔ree Alex Saab鈥 Monday stood outside as a large contingent of prosecutors and defense attorneys carrying stacks of binders filed into the Wilke Ferguson federal courthouse in downtown Miami.
Saab, 50, was in the summer of 2020 during a fuel stop in Cape Verde en route to Iran, where he was sent to negotiate oil deals on behalf of President Nicolas Maduro鈥檚 socialist government. The charges: conspiracy to commit money laundering tied to a bribery scheme that allegedly siphoned off $350 million through state contracts to build affordable housing for Venezuela鈥檚 government.
Saab was initially held up as a trophy by the Trump administration, which made no secret of its efforts to oust Maduro, who is himself facing U.S. drug trafficking charges.
But the criminal case has become a major sticking point as the Biden administration seeks to improve relations with the OPEC nation and tap new oil supplies to make up for a loss of exports from Russia following sanctions over its invasion of Ukraine.
At issue are the limits of diplomatic immunity from prosecution, and whether Saab even has a basis under U.S. law to assert that he was a 鈥渟pecial envoy鈥 sent on a secret, humanitarian mission by Maduro to negotiate with Iran鈥檚 Islamic government.
Saab鈥檚 attorney鈥檚 presented as evidence what they claim are diplomatic notes exchanged between Iran and Venezuela discussing what was to be Saab鈥檚 third trip to Iran in a matter of weeks. At the time of his arrest, Saab was also allegedly carrying a sealed letter from Maduro to Iran鈥檚 Supreme Leader seeking his full support for a planned deal to import fuel at a time of long gas lines in Venezuela.
鈥淭his really is one of those cases if it looks like duck, acts like a duck, quacks like a duck then it is a duck,鈥 Jonathan New, one of Saab鈥檚 attorneys, said in an opening statement. 鈥淢r. Saab was and is a special envoy.鈥
But Assistant U.S. Attorney Alex Kramer argued that some of the documents underlying that claim were falsified 鈥渢o provide some sort of credibility to this argument that he was some sort of special envoy.鈥
Those include a diplomatic passport, which Saab wasn't carrying at the time of his arrest and which contains a picture and signature matching another, non-diplomatic passport issued two years earlier.
They also question the authenticity of the Venezuelan government鈥檚 Official Gazette from April 26, 2018 where he was purportedly appointed special envoy by presidential decree. A printed copy of that same edition 鈥 No. 6,373 鈥 held at the U.S. Library of Congress and a digital version on the Venezuelan Supreme Court鈥檚 website contain no mention of his purported appointment.
The tug of war has been further complicated by the revelation that Saab, prior to his arrest, had been signed up as an and had been providing it with information about corruption in Maduro鈥檚 inner circle.
Judge Robert Scola鈥檚 courtroom was packed with mostly supporters of Venezuela鈥檚 government. Also in attendance was a colleague of Eyvin Hernandez, an American attorney with the public defender鈥檚 office in Los Angeles who was taken into custody by Venezuela on its border with Colombia this year and charged with attempting to enter the country illegally.
For month, speculation has been swirling that Saab could walk free as part of some sort of prisoner swap for Hernandez and up to three other Americans detained in Caracas. A similar deal for two nephews of Maduro convicted in New York on drug charges secured the release of seven other Americans detained in Venezuela in October. The Biden administration has insisted that no such negotiations are taking place.
The hearing is expected to last about a week.
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