Three Venezuelan migrants — including a baby-faced Tren de Aragua leader — brazenly peddled illegal pistols, shotguns, riles and ghost guns across New York City, prosecutors alleged.
Over 100 people gathered in Midtown Manhattan to protest as Nicolás Maduro clings to power in Venezuela. CBS News New York's Lisa Rozner reports.
New York City has shuttered a sprawling tent complex that housed hundreds of migrant families on a remote former airport in Brooklyn, as it shrinks the emergency shelter system built up in response to a surge from the southern border that has been steadily receding in recent months.
“Unclear is how the world will respond as Venezuela’s crisis deepens.” “The new Trump administration will be tempted to seek a pragmatic détente with the regime,” so: “What little ...
Venezuela on Saturday condemned new sanctions that the U.S., Britain, and the European Union imposed the previous day, when the country swore in President Nicolas Maduro for a third term after a six-month election dispute.
NY Fed Beats Lawsuit by Puerto Rican Bank Over Venezuela-Related Account Cutoff By Jonathan Stempel NEW YORK (Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Wednesday dismissed a Puerto Rican bank's lawsuit ...
The next presidential term in Venezuela is set to begin Friday, when the ruling party-controlled congress hosts a swearing-in ceremony for President Nicolás Maduro, despite serious doubts about t ...
Electoral authorities loyal to the ruling party declared Maduro the winner hours after polls closed on July 28, but unlike in previous presidential elections, they did not provide detailed vote counts.
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Venezuela on Saturday condemned new sanctions that the U.S., Britain, and the European Union imposed the previous day, when the country swore in President Nicolas Maduro ...
Mauricio Pochettino is pushing players to the limit to get them in shape for matches against Venezuela and Costa Rica. Some players haven't played competitive matches since November due to not qualifying for MLS playoffs,
Aware that Trump can close the doors almost immediately, Maria Mostajo, a former Manhattan prosecutor, and Carolyn Setlow, a retired business executive, have been working furiously to settle families in Connecticut through a project they founded in their small town of Washington.