
Oil tycoon Wilmer Ruperti showed up for a meeting with Venezuela’s intelligence agency last Thursday. A week later, he’s still in custody, one of his lawyers told Semafor.
“We’ve reached out to everybody trying to get proof of life or some support,” Winston & Strawn’s Cari Stinebower said, adding that officials still haven’t conveyed “how he’s being treated or why he’s being detained.”
Ruperti, who arrived at the meeting with a security detail, is a Venezuelan Italian shipping magnate who trades in petroleum coke. His detainment followed interim President Delcy Rodríguez’s decision to elevate the agency’s longtime chief to defense minister.
“The message is that Venezuela is open for business — but detaining businessmen for days on end without any due process or access to counsel is more old regime,” Stinebower said. “This is not law and order and not conducive of a welcoming business environment.”
The State Department and Energy Department did not respond to requests for comment.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
From blowouts to big interiors, ‘Tuscan Mom’ style is Gen Z’s answer to beige burnout - 2
Change Your Physical make-up: Compelling Activities for Muscle Building - 3
Track down the Ideal Weight reduction Methodology for Your Way of life - 4
When fake data is a good thing – how synthetic data trains AI to solve real problems - 5
Israel says it killed armed Hamas 'terrorists' in Gaza
Make your choice for a definitive Christmas getaway destination!
An Aide On Upgrading Your FICO rating
A Texas GOP congressman is retiring. Trump just endorsed his identical twin to replace him.
Banks for High Fixed Store Rates: Augment Your Investment funds
Getting breast implants was a mistake I live with every day. Why I’m sharing my story now, at 70, in pain and afraid.
The Specialty of Compromise: Examples from Reality
Instructions to Plan for Your Teeth Substitution Methodology
Chicago reports first rabies-positive dog in 61 years. What we know.
The year's first meteor shower and supermoon clash in January skies












