Nicolas Maduro’s spouse Cilia Flores is seen with bruises and bandages on her face as lawyer claims she suffered ‘vital accidents’ together with rib fracture throughout Caracas arrest
Nicolás Maduro‘s wife Cilia Flores was seen with bruises and bandages on her face as she arrived at a Manhattan court on Monday.
Mark Donnelly, the Texas lawyer representing Venezuela’s ousted first lady, said Flores had suffered ‘significant injuries’ during the couple’s astonishing arrest in Caracas on Saturday by US forces.
He added that Flores’s injuries included a possible rib fracture and bruising.
Mr Donnelly requested for his client – who was photographed with apparent bruising on her right eye during her first appearance in federal court alongside her husband – to undergo a full X-ray to ensure her health while in detainment.
During her arraignment, the 69-year-old had two bandages on her face, one placed above her eye while the other was on her forehead.
She pleaded not guilty to conspiring to send cocaine into the US and other gun and drug-related charges.
Alongside Maduro, she is accused of turning Venezuela into a narco-state and of attempting to flood the US with cocaine.
Asked how she pleaded to the three counts – narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy and weapons offences – Flores responded: ‘Not guilty – completely innocent.’
Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, are seen in handcuffs after landing at a Manhattan helipad as they make their way to a Federal courthouse in New York on January 5, 2026
Cilia Flores was seen with bruises and bandages on her face
Mark Donnelly, the Texas lawyer representing Cilia Flores, said the wife of the ousted dictator Nicolás Maduro suffered ‘significant injuries’
Judge Alvin Hellerstein instructed federal prosecutors to collaborate with Flores’s defence lawyer to ensure she gets the medical treatment that she needs.
Meanwhile, her husband’s lawyer said his client also had health problems that required attention.
The couple face up to life in prison – and potentially the death sentence – if they are convicted of the several charges that US authorities have cited as justification for their lightning raid on Saturday.
Maduro also pleaded not guilty to drug trafficking and other charges at his defiant appearance in a New York court Monday, two days after being snatched by US forces in the stunning operation on his home in Caracas.
Maduro, 63, told a federal judge in Manhattan: ‘I’m innocent. I’m not guilty.’
Smiling as he entered the courtroom and wearing an orange shirt with beige trousers, Maduro spoke softly.
‘I’m president of the Republic of Venezuela and I’m here kidnapped since January 3, Saturday,’ Maduro told the court, speaking in Spanish through an interpreter. ‘I was captured at my home in Caracas, Venezuela.’
The judge ordered both to remain behind bars and set a new hearing date of March 17.
The presidential couple were forcibly taken by US commandos in the early hours of Saturday in airstrikes on the Venezuelan capital backed by warplanes and a heavy naval deployment.
Cilia Flores pleaded not guilty to conspiring to send cocaine into the US and other gun and drug-related charges
Maduro arrives at the Downtown Manhattan Heliport, as he heads towards the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse for an initial appearance to face US federal charges
He faces charges including narco-terrorism, conspiracy, drug trafficking, money laundering
Thousands of people marched through Caracas in support of Maduro as his former deputy, Delcy Rodriguez, was sworn in as interim president.
Venezuela opposition leader Maria Corina Machado slammed Rodriguez, saying she was ‘rejected’ by the Venezuelan people and calling her ‘one of the main architects of torture, persecution, corruption, narcotrafficking’.
Speaking from an undisclosed location to broadcaster Sean Hannity on Fox News in her first public comments since the weekend, Machado added that she plans to return to Venezuela ‘as soon as possible’ after leaving under cover last month to accept her Nobel Peace Prize.
After the raid, Trump declared that the United States was ‘in charge’ in Venezuela and intends to take control of the country’s huge but decrepit oil industry.
The 79-year-old president also dismissed the idea of Caracas having new elections in the next month.
‘We have to fix the country first. You can’t have an election. There’s no way the people could even vote,’ Trump told broadcaster NBC News in an interview aired Monday.
However, US House Speaker and Trump ally Mike Johnson said he thinks an election ‘should happen in short order’ in Venezuela.
Maduro became president in 2013, taking over from his equally hardline socialist predecessor Hugo Chavez.
The United States and European Union say he stayed in power by rigging elections – most recently in 2024 – and imprisoning opponents, while overseeing rampant corruption.
The crisis after a quarter-century of leftist rule now leaves Venezuela’s approximately 30 million people – and the world’s largest proven oil reserves – facing uncertainty.
Trump has said he wants to work with Rodriguez and the rest of Maduro’s former team – provided that they submit to US demands on oil.
And after an initially hostile response, Rodriguez said she is ready for ‘co-operation’.
Brian Naranjo, a former US diplomat in Venezuela before he was expelled by Maduro in 2018, said that he has ‘not been so worried about the future of Venezuela, ever’.
‘There’s a very real possibility that things are going to get much, much worse in Venezuela before they get better,’ he told AFP.
The deputy head of the US mission to Caracas from 2014-2018 pointed at two men who could try and usurp power from Rodriguez: Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello, and her own brother, Jorge Rodriguez, president of Venezuela’s legislature.
‘Delcy had better be sleeping with one eye open right now because right behind her are two men who would be more than happy to cut her throat and take control themselves,’ Naranjo said.
Trump, who has shocked many Americans with his unprecedented moves to accumulate domestic power, also now appears increasingly emboldened in foreign policy.
On Sunday, he said communist Cuba was ‘ready to fall’ and he repeated that Greenland, which is part of US ally Denmark, should be controlled by the United States.
Brian Finucane, of the International Crisis Group, told AFP that Trump ‘seems to be disregarding international law altogether’ in Venezuela and added that US domestic law also appeared to have been broken.
Details of the US operation in Caracas were still emerging Monday, with Havana saying 32 Cubans were killed in the attack.
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said that nearly 200 personnel went into Caracas on the surprise raid.
Some injuries and no deaths were reported by US officials.
