Here is the full transcript of investigative journalist Max Blumenthal’s interview on Judging Freedom Podcast with host Judge Andrew Napolitano, January 6, 2026.

Brief Notes: Investigative journalist Max Blumenthal joins Judge Andrew Napolitano to unpack how a network of Trump- and Rubio-aligned operatives and corporate creditors are poised to cash in on Venezuela’s deepest crisis. They trace the years-long campaign of sanctions, lawfare, and asset seizures—from the auction of Venezuelan oil giant CITGO in U.S. courts to the empowerment of opposition figures in Washington’s good graces—that Blumenthal argues amount to a “multi-billion dollar heist” of Venezuela’s resources. The conversation digs into the legal maneuvers, lobbyists, and foreign policy hawks behind this push, the bipartisan consensus enabling it, and what it all means for ordinary Venezuelans facing economic strangulation and the threat of deeper conflict.

Introduction

JUDGE ANDREW NAPOLITANO: Hi, everyone. Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Today is Tuesday, January 6, 2026. Max Blumenthal joins us now.

You know, I don’t think the introduction was hyperbolic at all. This is a dangerous time for domestic freedom when the government can get away with what we just witnessed over the weekend, followed by an indictment, which you have eviscerated in your brilliant and gifted analysis in your Substack column, which I’d basically like to go through today.

I mean, the indictment against Maduro was filled with such gross exaggerations, accusing him of things that he couldn’t possibly have committed because even if he did some of this stuff, he wasn’t in New York at the time.

A Dangerous Precedent for Domestic and International Freedom

MAX BLUMENTHAL: Exactly. And we’re in a dangerous time where we could start seeing U.S. assassinations of heads of state as Israel does. That’s the precedent that’s being set right now. That’s what Trump is threatening. And domestic freedom will be rolled back very rapidly.

As we saw in Grand Rapids, Michigan, yesterday, a protester giving an interview to local news was just whisked away by local police as she was delivering an interview on a public sidewalk, accused of obstructing the space.

So we now head to New York, to the Southern District, where Nicolas Maduro is put on trial in the same courtroom where Honduran former president and convicted narco trafficker Juan Orlando Hernandez was prosecuted and convicted and then pardoned by Donald Trump.

Nicolas Maduro walked in confidently with a badly bruised and battered wife, battered by the U.S.