Senator Yunes denies US visa revocation

Senator Miguel Ángel Yunes Márquez denied on April 27 that his US visa has been canceled, following the leak of an audio recording. He claimed the audio is AI-generated and that both he and his father still hold valid visas. Yunes, expelled from PAN for supporting the 2024 judicial reform, promised to provide evidence on his next trip.

Senator Miguel Ángel Yunes Márquez addressed reporters on April 27 regarding rumors of his US visa cancellation. “It makes no sense, I have my visa normally. I just went to the United States in January,” he stated when questioned.

A viral audio on social media features a purported conversation between his father, Miguel Ángel Yunes Linares, former Veracruz governor, and Esteban Moctezuma, former Mexican ambassador to the US. In it, Yunes Linares seeks migration assistance, claiming his visa was revoked and his son's is at risk, even requesting a call to resolve it.

Yunes Márquez dismissed it: “That's crazy, it's artificial intelligence.” He confirmed his father still holds his visa and voiced irritation over the leak. He vowed to document evidence on his next US trip.

Yunes was expelled from PAN for backing the judicial reform pushed by former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador in 2024. There is no official confirmation of visa revocations for officials aligned with the 4T, though similar cases have been reported since last year.

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Senator Enrique Inzunza in the Mexican Senate requesting leave amid controversy
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Senator Enrique Inzunza requests 22-hour leave from Senate

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Morena Senator Enrique Inzunza requested a 22-hour leave to be absent from extraordinary Senate sessions scheduled for May 28 and 29, amid US accusations of alleged links to organized crime.

Foreign Minister Roberto Velasco and governors Alfonso Durazo and Américo Villarreal rejected claims in a Los Angeles Times report about alleged US visa revocations.

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The Morena senator from Sinaloa rejected any ties to foreign authorities and stated he will prove the accusations against him are false.

The United States imposed sanctions on Raymundo Ramos, president of the Committee for Human Rights of Nuevo Laredo, accusing him of working for the Cartel of the Northeast. The U.S. Treasury Department claims Ramos fabricated human rights accusations against Mexican forces to protect cartel members. The measures block any U.S. assets he holds and prohibit Americans from dealing with him.

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Audiencia Nacional judge José Luis Calama has issued a rogatory commission to the United States to authorize the use in trial of messages extracted from Rodolfo Reyes's phone. The data, obtained in 2021, arrived in Spain on 18 March 2026 and were key to charging former prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero with influence trafficking in the Plus Ultra case.

Senator Gerardo Fernández Noroña challenged the United States to publish lists of Mexican politicians with alleged ties to organized crime, following a meeting with President Claudia Sheinbaum and Morena legislators.

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Attorneys for Kilmar Abrego Garcia urged U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw to dismiss human smuggling charges against their client, labeling the Department of Justice's explanations as 'legally irrelevant and patently incredible.' The request follows an evidentiary hearing where government witnesses testified about the case's origins. The prosecution emerged after Abrego Garcia's wrongful deportation and court-ordered return.

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