Pompeo says Venezuela's Maduro is a "true threat" to the U.S.
The secretary state's comments came on the same day Vice President Pence called on the United Nations to revoke the credentials of Maduro's representatives
Watch CBS News
Camilo Montoya-Galvez is the Immigration Correspondent at CBS News, where his reporting is featured across multiple programs and platforms, including national broadcast shows, CBS News 24/7, CBSNews.com and the organization's social media accounts.
Montoya-Galvez has received numerous awards for his groundbreaking and in-depth reporting on immigration, including a national Emmy Award, the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award and several New York Emmy Awards.
Over several years, he has built one of the leading and most trusted national sources of immigration news, filing breaking news pieces, as well as exclusive reports and in-depth feature stories on the impact of major policy changes.
Montoya-Galvez was the first reporter to obtain and publish the names of the Venezuelan deportees sent by the U.S. to a notorious mega-prison in El Salvador, with little to no due process. Using that list, he co-produced a "60 Minutes" report that found most of the deported men did not have apparent criminal records, despite the administration's claims that they were all dangerous criminals and gang members. Montoya-Galvez was also the first journalist to interview Jennifer Vasquez Sura, the wife of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was wrongfully deported to El Salvador and imprisoned at the CECOT prison.
In 2025 alone, Montoya Galvez broke dozens of other exclusive stories. He disclosed the internal Trump administration plan to revoke the legal status of hundreds of thousands of migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela; landed the first national network sit-down interviews with the current heads of ICE and Border Patrol; and obtained government data showing that illegal crossings along the U.S.-Mexico border in fiscal year 2025 plummeted to the lowest level since 1970 amid Trump's crackdown.
Montoya Galvez's North Star is to cover immigration with nuance and fairness, in a nonpartisan, comprehensive and compelling way that respects the dignity of those at the center of this story
Before joining CBS News, Montoya-Galvez spent over two years as an investigative unit producer and assignment desk editor at Telemundo's television station in New York City. His work at Telemundo earned three New York Emmy Awards. Earlier, he was the founding editor of After the Final Whistle, an online bilingual publication featuring stories that highlight soccer's role in contemporary society.
Montoya-Galvez was born in Cali, Colombia's third-largest city, and raised in New Jersey. He earned a bachelor's degree in Media and Journalism Studies and Spanish from Rutgers University.
The secretary state's comments came on the same day Vice President Pence called on the United Nations to revoke the credentials of Maduro's representatives
The Massachusetts Democrat is one of a small group of candidates in the crowded Democratic primary field to do so
While some migrant families were separated during the Obama administration, there was no policy of systematically separating children from their parents
U.S. immigration authorities apprehended approximately 53,000 families and nearly 9,000 unaccompanied minors along the U.S.-Mexico border in March
"Separation disproportionately results in us getting babies, toddlers and young children," Cmdr. Jonathan White told lawmakers Tuesday
The 38-year-old California Congressman is one of the youngest candidates to join the crowded Democratic primary field
The 38-year-old San Francisco area lawmaker is one of President Trump's most outspoken critics in Congress
The policy, which the administration was expanding, required certain non-Mexican migrants to wait in Mexico while their asylum cases were processed in the U.S.
"We are in part responsible for what has happened there," said Rep. Norma Torres, the only member of Congress born in Central America
The president has been frustrated by an unprecedented flow of migrant families from Central American heading to the U.S.-Mexico border
The latest 2020 Democrat to join the presidential race said his party is "going backwards" and needs to unite around issues like single-payer healthcare
The White House economic adviser said people should take President Trump's threat to shut down the border "quite seriously"
The president's personal lawyer lambasted House Judiciary Committee Democrats who are demanding the full report as "rabid people that hate Trump"
The New York Democrat denounced Attorney General William Barr as a "bias defender" and "agent" of President Trump
Cohen's lawyers said their client was able to access a hard drive with information that could have "significant value" to congressional investigators