The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

1 year later, Utah man stuck in Venezuela jail amid unrest

- By Brady Mccombs and Joshua Goodman

RIVERTON, UTAH » The parents of a Utah man imprisoned in Venezuela one year ago as of Friday fear their son will die in a Caracas jail with no relief in sight and growing volatility in the South American country.

Former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson has been brought in by Joshua Holt’s family to pry open negotiatio­ns with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro over a humanitari­an release, something Richardson said could possibly lead to dialogue about other strains between the embattled Maduro and President Donald Trump, who has taken a personal interest in Americans held overseas.

The U.S. government has raised Joshua Holt’s case to the highest levels of the Venezuela government and renewed a call Thursday for his release. State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said that U.S. consular access to Holt is “slow and grudging” and that Venezuela’s refusal to hold a preliminar­y hearing on his case “casts serious doubts” on the reasons he was detained.

Holt, 25, traveled to Venezuela in June 2016 and married Thamara Candelo, a Venezuelan woman he met online while practicing his Spanish. He had planned to spend several months in Caracas with her and her two daughters to secure their visas so they could move with him to the U.S.

Instead, the couple was as arrested at her family’s Caracas apartment by Venezuelan police who alleged Holt was stockpilin­g weapons and suggested he was linked to unspecifie­d attempts by the U.S. government to undermine Maduro’s government.

In an interview at their home Wednesday night in the Salt Lake City suburb of Riverton, Laurie and Jason Holt said their son is only guilty only of being in love and unaware of Venezuela’s political instabilit­y.

Holt is being held in a prison run by Venezuela’s intelligen­ce police and his parents became even more worried about his future after the recent death of U.S. university student Otto Warmbier, who spent 17 months in detention in North Korea for stealing a propaganda poster. Warmbier died days after returning home to Ohio in a coma.

“I don’t think that I’m going to see him again alive,” said Laurie Holt, crying in her kitchen. “That’s my biggest fear after watching what the family with Otto went through.”

Richardson, who has worked for the release of dozens of Americans held abroad, was brought in by the Holt family about eight months ago to try to quietly open a line of communicat­ion with Maduro’s government.

His work complement­s diplomatic efforts by U.S. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and others. Hatch said this week he’s still hopeful the efforts will pay off.

Richardson has met three times with Venezuela’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Rafael Ramirez, to discuss the case as well as with former Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luiz Rodriguez Zapatero, who last year attempted to bring Maduro to the negotiatin­g table with his political opponents. Although Holt was not known to be part of that dialogue effort, one of the Venezuelan opposition’s key demands for talks is freedom for political prisoners.

Richardson, who got to know Maduro when the president served as the late Hugo Chavez’s foreign minister, said he was told through informal channels since the unrest began three months ago that the government was open to him visiting Caracas to make the case for a humanitari­an release.

But he has not yet received a Venezuelan visa. He said he thinks involvemen­t of President Trump might be able to break the stalemate by offering Venezuelan­s a potential channel to discuss other irritants in the relationsh­ip. The countries have not exchanged ambassador­s since 2010.

“His personal interventi­on might prove decisive,” Richardson, referring to Trump, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. “A humanitari­an release could maybe pave way for a dialogue on other issues between the two government­s at time when relations are rock bottom. I can’t guarantee it, but I’ve seen some comments that it might be a path.”

Hopes were high in December of a humanitari­an release of Holt, after Citgo Petroleum Corp., the U.S. affiliate of Venezuela’s stateowned oil company, donated $500,000 to Trump’s inaugural and Maduro was aiming for rapprochem­ent with Trump, who he saw as a common ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

But relations between the two countries have since deteriorat­ed, with Maduro recently telling Trump to get his “dirty hands off Venezuela” and blaming the U.S. for stoking anti-government demonstrat­ions that have left at least 75 people dead and hundreds injured or jailed.

Richardson said what happened to Warmbier show that “time is no longer a neutral factor.”

Laurie Holt said she spends many days crying and battling anxiety and hopelessne­ss as she reads online about Venezuela’s unrest. She said her son has lost so much weight due to multiple medical ailments that he now has a 32-inch (81-centimeter) waist size, down from 40 inches (101 centimeter­s) when he left Utah.

 ?? RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Laurie Holt holds a photo of her son during an interview at their home Wednesday in Riverton, Utah. Still imprisoned after a year, his parents are growing worried their son will die in the Caracas jail with no relief in sight and growing volatility in the South American country.
RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Laurie Holt holds a photo of her son during an interview at their home Wednesday in Riverton, Utah. Still imprisoned after a year, his parents are growing worried their son will die in the Caracas jail with no relief in sight and growing volatility in the South American country.

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