Venezuela first lady’s nephews say they thought U.S. arrest was kidnapping

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – Two nephews of Venezuela’s first lady accused of conspiring to import cocaine into the United States say they feared for their lives after being arrested at a Haiti hotel last year as they thought they were being kidnapped due to their political ties.

Franqui Francisco Flores de Freitas, 30, and Efrain Antonio Campo Flores, 29, made that claim in papers filed on Friday in Manhattan federal court as they sought the suppression of statements they made to U.S. authorities after their arrest.

The court filings mark the first time the nephews of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s wife, Cilia Flores, commented substantively on their arrests in November and the U.S. investigation.

In first-person declarations, the men said that during a meeting in a hotel room in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, about 20 heavily armed men with no visible identification entered their room and abducted them.

“Given my familial relationship with senior members of the Venezuelan government, I believed that we were potential targets for an extortionate scheme or other violent attempt at retribution against my family and country,” Campo Flores said.

Only after being placed on an airplane several hours later did anyone identify themselves as being with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration or inform them that they had been charged, they said.