It was a weekend of scrambling for lawyers in the criminal defense community and Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s aides before the legal representation for him and his wife, Cilia Flores, became public today, sources say.
CNN spoke to people familiar with the conversations and other lawyers contacted. Each spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the conversations and the fact that none could say they had been retained.
A look at the weekend: As news of Maduro’s dramatic surprise arrest dominated the airwaves this weekend, discussions began late Saturday, continuing through Sunday evening, between “people with indirect relationships with the Venezuelan government” and some of New York’s major criminal defense attorneys according to those same sources.
Questions raised in discussions: Logistics and finance for what will clearly be a long, expensive defense were discussed, said two people with direct knowledge of the conversations.
Who would they be retained by? Would it be the current Venezuelan government or would they be retained personally by Maduro and his wife?
How would the case be financed?
Would the same lawyers or firm be asked to represent both the president and his wife, or, because their interests at trial may conflict, would their defenses be at odds? This happened with the cases against former New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez and his wife.
A case like this could cost $5 million to $10 million to properly defend, legal experts say, given the number of allegations, the volume of discovery evidence, the number of government witnesses to be investigated by defense, and the timeline of the case, which spans more than 20 years.
The retention of a legal team is a big decision in a case where the legal and geopolitical stakes are this high, said Elie Honig, a former assistant US Attorney from the Southern District of New York and CNN Senior Legal Analyst.
“I wouldn’t expect Maduro to be working the phones at the MDC (Metropolitan Detention Center) calling down the list of lawyers making inquiries. This is the kind of thing usually handled by surrogates,” Honig said.
Who was chosen: At today’s hearing, Maduro was represented by Barry Pollack, a well-known lawyer based in Washington, DC. Pollack has previously represented Wikileaks founder Julian Assange in his case against the US government. Maduro’s wife, Celia Flores, was represented by Mark Donnelly, a Houston-based former federal prosecutor.