Close-up video footage released exclusively shows Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro being escorted off a U.S. military aircraft in New York, surrounded by federal agents, marking a historic moment in U.S. law enforcement and foreign policy. The footage confirms Maduro’s arrival on January 4, 2026, following a U.S.-led capture operation carried out in Caracas just one day earlier.

Maduro’s transfer to American custody represents a dramatic escalation in accountability for the longtime Venezuelan strongman, who has been under U.S. indictment since 2020. Federal prosecutors accuse Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, of participating in a narco-terrorism conspiracy, including coordinating large-scale cocaine shipments intended for the United States while allegedly using state power to shield criminal networks.

The unsealing of these charges occurred amid renewed pressure from the incoming Trump administration, which has made clear that hostile regimes engaged in criminal activity targeting the American people will no longer be treated as untouchable. U.S. officials have long maintained that Maduro’s regime operated as a criminal enterprise masquerading as a government, fueling regional instability, mass migration, and widespread corruption throughout Latin America.

The video shows Maduro silent and tightly guarded as he steps onto U.S. soil, a stark contrast to years of defiant rhetoric aimed at Washington. Federal agents quickly escort him away from the aircraft, underscoring both the seriousness of the charges and the high-security nature of the operation.

For critics of Maduro’s rule, the moment is seen as overdue justice. For the Trump administration, it signals a return to decisive action on national security, drug trafficking, and foreign leaders accused of directly harming U.S. interests. With Maduro now in federal custody, the case moves from international standoff to American courtroom, where prosecutors are expected to pursue the charges aggressively.