FILE - In this July 13, 2016 file photo, Laurie Holt holds a photograph of her son Josh Holt at her home, in Riverton, Utah. A 7-year-old Venezuelan girl has finally made it to the United States after a long fight to take her away from the turbulent South American nation where her jailed mother and American boyfriend work to recover their freedom. The jailed couple decided the girl, Nathalia Carrasco, would be better off in Utah with Holt's parents than in the shortage-stricken Venezuela. She was living with her grandmother. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)

FILE - In this July 13, 2016 file photo, Laurie Holt holds a photograph of her son Josh Holt at her home, in Riverton, Utah. A 7-year-old Venezuelan girl has finally made it to the United States after a long fight to take her away from the turbulent South American nation where her jailed mother and American boyfriend work to recover their freedom. The jailed couple decided the girl, Nathalia Carrasco, would be better off in Utah with Holt's parents than in the shortage-stricken Venezuela. She was living with her grandmother. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A 7-year-old Venezuelan girl has made it to the United States after a long fight to take her away from the turbulent South American nation where her jailed mother and the mom’s American husband are fighting for their freedom.

The couple, Joshua Holt of Utah and Thamara Candelo of Venezuela, made the difficult decision that the girl would be better off in Utah with Holt’s parents than in Venezuela, which has been stricken by severe shortages of food and medicine.

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U.S. authorities say Holt and Candelo were arrested by Venezuelan police in June 2016 under trumped-up weapons charges. They are trying to get them released, though the Holts are still awaiting news on when the trial will begin.

The girl, Nathalia Carrasco, is Candelo’s daughter from a previous marriage, and her father died a year ago. She had been living with her grandmother in a government housing project in the hills outside Caracas.

Laurie Holt said Wednesday that she and her husband picked up Nathalia on Saturday night at the airport in Miami in an emotional first meeting and brought her to their home outside Salt Lake City on Sunday.

“I was crying even before she walked to me. She just had the biggest grin on her face, and I couldn’t wait to just hold her,” Holt said. “It’s like a part of Josh is here. She brought a smile to my face for the first time in a long, long time.”

She said she had begun to lose hope after a year of seeking permission to bring the girl to Utah. While they waited for Venezuela’s child welfare agency to grant approval, Holt and Nathalia would text each other regularly using emoticons on the WhatsApp messaging service. In the U.S., Holt is the girl’s legal guardian.

Communication is challenging because the Holts don’t speak Spanish and Nathalia is just learning English, so they rely on an online translating app and family members and a lawyer who speak Spanish.

“She’s had us in stitches all the time,” Holt said. “She makes fun of us saying things she knows we won’t understand.”

They have been to the mall to get some clothes and toys; Nathalia loves items from the movie “Frozen” and My Little Pony stuffed animals. She’s also had a doctor’s checkup that determined she’s in good health. Her first day at school was Wednesday.

Holt dreams of the day her son and his wife can be reunited with Nathalia and all of them can live together in Utah. She said Nathalia had been visiting the couple in jail once a week for last 20 months.

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“Even if he’s not her biological father, I know she adores him and calls him papi,” Holt said.

Venezuela authorities allege Joshua Holt used his wife’s apartment to stockpile weapons and have linked him to unspecified attempts by the U.S. to undermine President Nicolas Maduro’s rule amid deep economic and political turbulence. Holt’s family says an assault rifle and a grenade found in the apartment were planted.

The case has become a major thorn in relations between the U.S. and Venezuela, which were already tense from previous U.S. administrations. The Trump administration has slapped sanctions on dozens of senior Venezuelan officials with the goal of weakening Maduro’s grip on power.

The new top U.S. diplomat in Venezuela, Todd Robinson, has ratcheted up the pressure, calling it a “tragedy” that Holt has been imprisoned. The diplomat said he is holding Venezuelan Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza personally responsible if anything happens to Holt in jail.

U.S. Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah also has been working for Holt’s freedom. His office on Wednesday released a photo of Holt taken last Friday during a consular visit. He’s holding a letter that Hatch sent him, including words of encouragement and imploring Holt not to give up.

“I ask that you stand strong in your faith as we continue to pray on your behalf,” Hatch wrote. “I am confident that this dark chapter will close and you will soon be reunited with your family.”

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Goodman reported from Bogota, Colombia.