The US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit overturned this April, the conviction and sentence imposed on former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández.
The court ordered the case to be remanded to District Judge Kevin Castel with clear instructions to dismiss the accusation in full, declaring the proceedings moot following the presidential pardon granted by Donald Trump on December 1, 2025.
Hernández, who governed Honduras between 2014 and 2022, had been extradited in April 2022 and sentenced in June 2024 to 45 years in prison on charges of conspiring to import cocaine into the United States and related firearms offenses.
The federal prosecution alleged that he facilitated the passage of more than 400 tons of cocaine during his term in office, relying primarily on the testimony of convicted drug traffickers.
However, Trump always maintained that Hernández was the victim of a “setup” and “unfair and harsh” treatment by the previous administration—a position that materialized in the full and unconditional pardon issued in December 2025, the same day the former Honduran leader regained his freedom.
The presidential pardon left the pending appeal without legal basis, rendering it “moot.” For that reason, the Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal and ordered the district court’s sentence to be vacated—a step that amounts to erasing the judicial record of the conviction.
Hernández celebrated the victory on his X account with a direct message: “Court of Appeals overturns sentence and conviction, orders Judge Kevin Castel to dismiss the charges.”
RULING BY THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT THAT OVERTURNS THE VERDICT AND CONVICTION AND ORDERS JUDGE KEVIN CASTEL TO DISMISS THE CHARGES AGAINST ME.#innocent #hewillreturn pic.twitter.com/rfJCOBmznQ
— Juan Orlando H. (@JuanOrlandoH) April 9, 2026
I have attached images of the official court document, which clearly states the order to revoke the sentence and remand the case for its total dismissal. His wife, Ana García, confirmed in Tegucigalpa that “the conviction is eliminated in full, the unjustly filed charges have been dismissed. They no longer exist.”
This outcome not only clears Hernández’s name under US law, but also represents a resounding blow to the lawfare practiced by the radical left: using the judicial system as a political weapon against conservative leaders and strategic US allies in the fight against drug trafficking.
During his presidency, Hernández promoted security policies that reduced violence in Honduras and strengthened cooperation with Washington.
The Biden administration, by contrast, prioritized a “narco-state” narrative that has now been dismantled by the US judicial system itself.
Previously we had reported it in Gateway Hispanic: the key role of Roger Stone in delivering Hernández’s letter to Trump that accelerated the presidential pardon.
