U.S. Deportation Policy and Maduro’s New York Case Shift Status for Venezuelans
Venezuelans face deportations as U.S. ends TPS and restricts asylum to pre-entry applicants; Maduro pleads not guilty in New York, next scheduled hearing March 17.

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Overview
U.S. deportation flights continue returning Venezuelan migrants despite the arrest of President Nicolás Maduro; advocates warn of legal and humanitarian concerns and potential international scrutiny.
Policy confines refugee and asylum applications to pre-entry processing, effectively barring most Venezuelans who arrive in the United States from filing post-arrival protection claims.
Nicolás Maduro and his wife pleaded not guilty in New York to narco-terrorism and cocaine importation charges; a judge set the next court date for March 17.
The administration plans to end TPS for Venezuelans after the Supreme Court allowed termination in 2025, risking deportations amid ongoing legal battles and migration uncertainty.
Officials proposed changes to work visas and border technology without an implementation timeline; other developments include an agent hotel-cancellation dispute and NEWSMAX's reported audience growth.
Analysis
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