Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cheering crowd greets freed American

Utah man, wife spent 2 years in Caracas jail

- By Joshua Goodman and Brady Mccombs The Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY — Nearly two years after a trip to meet the woman he loved turned into an imprisonme­nt in a Venezuelan jail, an exhausted but grateful Utah man came homewithhi­swife.

Josh Holt arrived at the Salt Lake City airport Monday to a tearful, cheering crowd holding signs in his favorite color, green, with messages such as: “We never gave up.” His grandmothe­r draped an American flag around his shoulders as he exchanged long hugs with person after person while the crowd sang “The Star-spangled Banner.”

Holt spoke briefly to thank everyone who helped him and his wife, Thamara Caleno, with their release but said they were exhausted.

Standing nearby were his parents, celebratin­g a homecoming they’d worked tirelessly to bring about.

Laurie and Jason Holt woke at

4:30 a.m. last Saturday to a phone call they had been anxiously anticipati­ng for two years.

Their son, Josh Holt, now 26, traveled to Caracas in June 2016 to marry a fellow Mormon he had met online while looking to improve his Spanish. The two were waiting for Caleno’s

U.S. visa when they were arrested at her family’s apartment in a government housing complex.

Josh Holt and his Venezuelan wife were locked in a Caracas jail alongside some of the country’s most-hardened criminals — and President Nicolas Maduro’s top opponents — for what the U.S. government argued were bogus charges of stockpilin­g weapons.

The Salt Lake City parents had been told three times previously their son would be released only to watch mediation efforts unravel at the last minute

So they braced for another disap- pointment after an Associated Press reporter informed the couple Friday that Sen. Bob Corker, the powerful chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, had popped up unexpected­ly in Caracas to push for Holt’s release.

But then they got the fateful call from Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch’s office.

Now, Laurie Holt said she can’t wait to sit down with her son.

“He’s not the same Josh that left,” said Laurie Holt. “He just doesn’t quite have that sparkle back yet in his eyes. He’ll come back, I know he will.”

 ?? Kim Raff ?? The Associated Press Josh Holt is draped in a flag by grandmothe­r Linda Holt upon his return to Salt Lake City on Monday. He was freed after nearly two years in a Venezuelan jail.
Kim Raff The Associated Press Josh Holt is draped in a flag by grandmothe­r Linda Holt upon his return to Salt Lake City on Monday. He was freed after nearly two years in a Venezuelan jail.

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