Honduras
Trial implicating Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández in bribery, drug trafficking begins in New York
According to court documents seen by LPO, between 2004 and 2020 US authorities believe that Fuentes Ramirez and other drug traffickers paid bribes to Honduran public officials- to facilitate the movement of multi-ton loads of cocaine sent from countries including Colombia.

The trial of a Honduran businessman and alleged drug trafficker accused of bribing Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández began in New York City on Monday.

The accused, Geovanny Daniel Fuentes Ramirez, was arrested in Miami more than a year ago ion March 1, 2020.

According to court documents seen by LPO, between 2004 and 2020 US authorities believe that Fuentes Ramirez and other drug traffickers paid bribes to Honduran public officials - including members of the Honduran National Police and the Honduran National Congress - to facilitate the movement of multi-ton loads of cocaine sent from countries including Colombia.

One such politician, former congressman Juan Antonio Hernandez Alvarado - the brother of the President - has already been convicted of drug trafficking, weapons and false statements in relation to the scheme, which imported nearly 200,000 kilograms of cocaine.

We're going to shove the drugs right up the gringo's noses, Hernández is alleged to have told Fuentes during a meeting, court document show.

Additionally, Fuentes Ramirez stands accused of working with others to establish and operate a cocaine laboratory in the Cortés Department of Honduras, where they produced hundreds of kilograms of cocaine each month.

Prosecutors believe that Fuentes Ramirez was involved in at least several acts of violence to protect these operations, including the stabbing death of a Honduran law enforcement official who he believed was investigating the laboratory.

If convicted, Fuentes Ramirez, 51, faces a minimum of 40 years in an American prison.

In February, a new court filing related to the Fuentes Ramirez revealed that Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández himself is also the target of an investigation, alongside other "high-ranking officials" in Honduras.

Although the documents do not reveal when the investigation occurred, they accuse Hernandez - who became president in 2014 - of using the country's security forces and police "to use drug trafficking to help assert power and control in Honduras." In a separate court filing in January, US prosecutors said that Hernández had accepted "millions of dollars" in drug money by 2013, when he was still President of the National Congress.

"We're going to shove the drugs right up the gringo's noses," Hernández is alleged to have told Fuentes during a meeting, court document show. President Hernández has repeatedly denied the accusations.

On Monday, for example, Hernández again denied the US allegations, saying that many cases are based on "lies for vengeance or to reduce sentences and other benefits." He also said that cooperation in the fight against drug trafficking is potentially at risk.

"I will maintain international alliances in the fight against drug trafficking until my last day as President on January 27, 2022," a tweet said. "But if drug traffickers have a magic key to get benefits from the USA for false testimony, the international alliance with Honduras will collapse."

Similarly, in February, the Honduran presidency's official Twitter account said that the claims were "100% false and appear to be based on lies of confessed criminals who seek revenge and to reduce their sentences."

"This, and other opportunistic allegations are contested by the essential fact that during the Hernández administration, coca trafficking through Honduras fall from 87% to 4% from 2013, as recognized by the publications of the Department of State (INCRS) of those years," another message added.

The court case and criminal investigation come at a sensitive time in US-Honduran relations, with the Biden administration planning to invest $4 billion in Central America - including Honduras - to address the root causes that lead people to migrate to the US.

Thousands of Hondurans were part of a caravan that set out for the US in January, with many participants citing corruption, violence and crime as the reasons they left Honduras. President Hernández was re-elected to office in 2017 and is expected to remain in office until 2022. 

Publicar un comentario
Para enviar su comentario debe confirmar que ha leido y aceptado el reglamento de terminos y condiciones de LPO
Comentarios
Los comentarios publicados son de exclusiva responsabilidad de sus autores y las consecuencias derivadas de ellas pueden ser pasibles de las sanciones legales que correspondan. Aquel usuario que incluya en sus mensajes algun comentario violatorio del reglamento de terminos y condiciones será eliminado e inhabilitado para volver a comentar.
Más de English
The LIBRE Initiative Believes Latinos will Define the Future of US Politics

The LIBRE Initiative Believes Latinos will Define the Future of US Politics

Por Lila Abed (Washington DC)
"I think that Governor DeSantis and Senator Marco Rubio will be reelected in 2022,", says Director of Public Affairs at The LIBRE Initiative, César Grajales.
"Democrats should tell authentic stories to reach Latinos"

"Democrats should tell authentic stories to reach Latinos"

Por B. Debusmann (Washington DC)
Junelle Cavero Harnal, a former advisor to Bernie Sanders and Head of Political at H Code, believes that an effort to explain why policies matter to Latino households will help Democrats gain their support
"Latinos were undercounted in the Census," says expert.

"Latinos were undercounted in the Census," says expert.

Por Lila Abed (Washington DC)
"The Arizona legislature is trying to suppress the Latino vote because they see the trends that Latinos continue to gain more numbers and therefore more political clout," Joseph Garcia, Director of Public Affairs and International Relations at Chicanos Por La Causa (CPLC) .
Time to end 'dynastic politics' in the Bronx, council candidate says

Time to end 'dynastic politics' in the Bronx, council candidate says

Por B. Debusmann (Washington DC)
Marcos Sierra says that ending political dynasties from affluent areas of the borough will help attract new Latino and African American voters.
Latino vote 'critical' in Rhode Island, says Secretary of State

Latino vote 'critical' in Rhode Island, says Secretary of State

Por Patricia Guadalupe (Washington DC)
Nellie Margarita Gorbea is the first Latina - man or woman - elected to statewide office in all of New England. If elected, she may now become the first Puerto Rican governor in the United States.
Meet Baltimore's first - and only - Latina city councilperson

Meet Baltimore's first - and only - Latina city councilperson

Por B. Debusmann (Washington DC)
Councilwoman Odette Ramos believes that the city's growing Latino population will become increasingly active in local politics.