Leslis del Valle Moronta López, former criminal judge, denounced that her daughter, Analy del Valle González Moronta, is placed under the orders of an anti-terrorist court since the crimes charged are not related to that matter. ”This is a process that is full of serious vices,” commented González Moronta.
”First they started a smear campaign against my daughter, presenting her as a mafia member who did not have a law degree,” González Moronta commented in a statement to Últimas Noticias.
In that sense, this newspaper published on December 7, 2025 a clarification from González Moronta recalling that his daughter graduated as a lawyer from the University of Zulia 18 years ago and her Inpreabogado (Lawyer’s Social Welfare Institute) is number 125,785. ”I was amazed when I read the publication made by the Attorney General of the Republic where he reported that ‘the false lawyer Analy González was apprehended to be charged and deprived of liberty by the Public Ministry.’ I think the Prosecutor was misinformed,” said Mrs. González Moronta.
After that, Analy González was detained on Saturday, December 6, 2025 in Maracaibo (Zulia), by the Bolivarian National Guard (GNB), whose officials told the lawyer’s mother that they could not give any information about that procedure “by orders of the Superior Prosecutor of Zulia.”
González Moronta said that, once his daughter was detained, he began to investigate and discovered that the arrest warrant had been issued by Judge Carlos Enrique Liendo Acosta, who is in charge of the Second Special Control Court with Competence in cases Linked to Crimes Associated with Terrorism.
”I am a lawyer, I was a judge and I realize that my daughter’s right to be judged by her natural judges is being violated. With all due respect to Judge Carlos Liendo, the court of which he is in charge is not competent to prosecute my daughter, because the crimes they are charging her with are not contemplated in laws linked to terrorism and also carry a penalty, if convicted, of 2 to 4 years in prison,” commented González Moronta.
Indeed, the arrest warrant (02CT-S-132-25) says that Analy del Valle González Moronta will be prosecuted for the alleged commission of the crimes of boasting or availing of relationships or influences and remuneration or utility, contemplated in the Anti-Corruption Law.
”According to the Venezuelan legal system and the principle of proportionality, these crimes do not entail or justify a preventive deprivation of liberty measure, given that the maximum penalty limit does not exceed the standard established for the exceptional nature of prison. Keeping her behind bars constitutes an illegal and arbitrary early sentence,” González Moronta alleged.
Added to this is that Analy González’s right to defend herself with a lawyer she trusts has been violated, “forcing her to have a public defense that she has not requested,” says her mother.
”I listened carefully to the intervention of President Delcy Rodríguez during the opening of the Judicial Year. She put her finger where it belonged, because she called for the humanization of justice, the eradication of bureaucratism and the guarantee of effective judicial protection. But my daughter’s case represents the complete opposite of what was expressed by the President of the Republic,” González Moronta concluded.
