Overview
- Villarreal disclosed Monday he holds a valid U.S. visa and has faced no entry limits.
- He said he recently traveled to San Antonio and Laredo, Texas, and took part in United Nations Agenda 2030 events in New York.
- He added that Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office is studying an allegation from a New York office about Sinaloa’s Rubén Rocha Moya and could act if evidence is filed.
- Mexican reports say the United States revoked visas for Rocha and Baja California governor Marina del Pilar Ávila.
- He delivered the remarks after an International Nurses Day ceremony at the state government palace, where he praised vaccination work and said Tamaulipas has reported no measles cases in 2026.