Joshua Holt with his wife Thamara and her daughter Marian Leal, at the airport in Caracas, Venezuela. Photo / AP
A secret backchannel led by a veteran Republican Senate staffer and a flamboyant Venezuelan official nicknamed "Dracula" broke through hostile relations between the two governments to secure the release of American prisoner Joshua Holt.
The Utah man had travelled to the South American country for love and ended up in jail, without a trial, for two years.
A week ago the chances of Holt's long ordeal ending any time soon looked slim.
On the eve of Venezuela's May 20 presidential election, the 26-year-old Utah native appeared in a clandestinely shot video from jail railing against Nicolas Maduro's Government, saying his life had been threatened in a prison riot.
In retaliation, he was branded the CIA's spy boss in Latin America by the head of the ruling socialist party. Hours earlier Maduro expelled the top American diplomat over the refusal of the US to recognise his re-election.
But the arrival in Caracas at the weekend of Senator Bob Corker, (R), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, led to a surprise breakthrough.
Maduro handed over Holt and his wife, Thamara Caleno, to Corker in what his Government said was a goodwill gesture to promote dialogue and mutual respect between the two antagonistic governments.
Holt, 26, travelled to Caracas in June 2016 to marry a fellow Mormon he had met online while looking to improve his Spanish. The couple was waiting for Caleno's US visa when they were arrested at her family's apartment in a government housing complex for what the US considered trumped-up charges of stockpiling an assault rifle and grenades.
Although Corker sealed the deal in a few tense-filled hours in Venezuela's collapsing, crime-filled capital, the push to secure Holt's release began months earlier by Corker's top Latin American policy aide, Caleb McCarry, who both Corker and Senator Orrin Hatch, (R), credited with leading the painstaking, behind-the-scenes negotiations.
McCarry leveraged a 15-year-old relationship with Maduro from their time together on the Boston Group, an informal gathering from across the political spectrum — Democrats, Republicans, socialists and capitalists — from both countries that worked discreetly to repair relations between the two countries following a coup in 2002 against then-President Hugo Chavez.
Relationships formed in the now-defunct group were also instrumental in securing the release of another American accused of spying, documentary filmmaker Tim Tracy, who spent a month in a Venezuelan jail in 2013.
McCarry secretly travelled to Venezuela in February to discuss Holt's imprisonment with Maduro and first lady Cilia Flores. The US Embassy was kept at an arm's length, for fear of derailing the talks, although the initiative was backed by Undersecretary of State Thomas Shannon, who also knew Maduro from his days as political officer in Caracas at the outset of Hugo Chavez's revolution in the 1990s, several senior US officials said.
Holding McCarry's hand throughout the delicate talks was "Dracula" — Rafael Lacava, the Governor of central Carabobo state and a trusted ally of Maduro who also was close to the Boston Group members.
Shortly after McCarry's visit, Lacava travelled to Washington in March to speak with several lawmakers including Hatch, Corker, Senator Jeff Flake, (R), and Congressman Ed Royce, (R).
However, after word of Lacava's visit was leaked by Senator Marco Rubio, (R), the Administration refused to meet Maduro's envoy. Rubio warned that Lacava, who embraces the nickname Dracula for his habits of tweeting and patrolling around his state late at night in a Batmobile-like vehicle, was reportedly involved in money laundering.
Speculation swirled that the Government was demanding an all-but-impossible prisoner exchange for Flores' two nephews, who in 2016 were convicted in New York of drug trafficking, after it was learned that a government-connected Venezuelan tycoon was paying Holt's legal fees as well as those of the men branded "narco-nephews."
At the same time, the Trump Administration was intensifying a campaign to isolate Venezuela's government, sanctioning dozens of officials — including Maduro and Flores — for human rights abuses and drug trafficking while threatening a more crippling ban on oil shipments.
But Rubio, who has Trump's ear on Latin America but only learned of Corker's visit when he landed in Caracas, said that the couple's release "will in no way change US policy towards the dictatorship in Venezuela."
Alfredo Romero, a lawyer who defends some of the opposition activists who were held alongside Holt, said that Maduro may be looking to win over some political sectors in the US to temper Trump's hardline approach toward Venezuela.
"Holt's continued imprisonment was a thorn in the side," he said.
The Government of Cuba was also helpful in pressuring Maduro as well as former Spanish President José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, one official said.
A beaming Lacava could be seen in a video boarding the Venezuelan Government plane that transported Holt to Washington wearing aviator glasses and a dark suit. He walked by the camera shouting "Dracula on the attack!" and flashing a "V for Victory" sign.
In a photograph taken at the airport in Caracas, Holt can be seen standing alongside Lacava holding a Venezuela national soccer team jersey emblazoned with the governor's name.