Hatzhielyy Pérez has been linked multiple times with Diosdado Cabello, one of the most influential leaders of chavismo in Venezuela. According to various sources, Hatziely has maintained a very luxurious lifestyle, largely financed by Cabello, a prominent figure of the revolution in her native Venezuela, despite his wife Marleny Contreras boasting about their relationship.
Pérez has capitalized on her privileged situation to make significant investments and operates a production company alongside her partner Valentín Velázquez. While others, like Tareck El Aissami, are known for having several “mafia dolls,” Diosdado Cabello seems to focus his resources on a single partner, Hatziely Pérez, providing her with an exceptional standard of living.
VVperiodistas_ revealed on X on August 4, 2024, that “Hatziely Pérez, Diosdado Cabello’s partner. Hatziely enjoys a very expensive lifestyle and unlike Marleny Contreras, she can travel the world with the money given to her by Lieutenant Cabello. She has taken advantage of her situation and made her investments, including a café at the VidaMed clinic and a production company with her partner Valentín Velázquez.
Here is Hatziely Pérez, Diosdado Cabello’s partner. Hatziely enjoys a very expensive lifestyle, and unlike Marleny Contreras, she can travel the world with the money provided by Lieutenant Cabello. She has seized her moment and has made her investments, including… pic.twitter.com/H1FNgiXaXZ
— VVperiodistas (@VVperiodistas_) August 5, 2024
Reactions on X about Hatzhielly Pérez and her relationship with Diosdado Cabello
https://twitter.com/andressEduardo/status/1820305755993518384
So it turns out that the little blonde Danielita has her stepmother, haha pic.twitter.com/ll0lYcNKsK
— Eduardo Sabbach (@esabbach) August 5, 2024
And the freeloader Valentín Velázquez is writing to Diosdado to ask for more money for the preparation pic.twitter.com/njrAbafswB
— UR Libre (@freeUR_vzla) August 5, 2024
Charges and Rewards
Since 2020, the Department of Justice has accused Nicolás Maduro and Diosdado Cabello, his regime’s second-in-command, of turning Venezuela into a narco-state that supports terrorism by allying with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia to export tons of cocaine to the United States.
The charges, announced by Attorney General William Barr during a video conference, also include 13 other high-ranking officials from the regime and come with a reward of $15 million for information leading to Maduro’s capture. Simultaneously, U.S. authorities also filed separate charges against the President of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice of the regime, Maikel Moreno, who is accused of accepting bribes in corruption schemes linked to the state-owned oil company Petróleos de Venezuela, as well as against Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López for his involvement in drug trafficking operations.