Ex-Guatemalan President, deputy jailed 16 years for corruption

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GUATEMALA-JUSTICE-CORRUPTION-TRIAL-PEREZ MOLINA

Guatemalan former President (2012-2015) Otto Perez Molina gestures before listening to his sentence during a hearing at the court in Guatemala City on December 7, 2022. - A Guatemalan court is due to rule on December 7 in the trial of former president Otto Perez Molina, a retired general who came to power in 2012 on a promise to end corruption and resigned in September 2015 over customs fraud. The court will also rule on his vice-president Roxana Baldetti, who resigned in April of the same year over the corruption scandal. (Photo by Johan ORDONEZ / AFP)

 

A Guatemalan court on Wednesday sentenced former President Otto Perez to 16 years in prison, finding him guilty of leading a massive customs fraud scheme while in office.

 

Perez, who was forced to resign in 2015, was found guilty of racketeering and fraud targeting the customs system, Judge Irma Valdes said as she read out the sentence.

 

Perez was sentenced to eight years on each count.

 

His former vice president Roxana Baldetti received the same sentence.

 

A United Nations-backed anti-corruption body revealed several scandals in Guatemala before it was shut down in 2019 by then-President Jimmy Morales after it began investigating him.

 

One of its key successes was uncovering a multimillion-dollar scheme to cheat Guatemala’s customs duty system, which ultimately led to Perez’s resignation.

 

Those involved in the scheme – known as “La Linea” (The Line) – received bribes of some $3.5 million, according to investigators, who estimate that Guatemala was defrauded out of almost $10 million in tax revenue.

 

After the sentence was handed down Perez, 72, told reporters, “I truly feel frustrated, I feel disappointed.”

 

He said he would appeal the ruling.

 

Sixteen other people involved in the scam were convicted during the sentencing and 11 others were acquitted.

 

“The ‘La Linea’ case is one of the most symbolic and is a milestone in Guatemalan history,” director of Transparency International’s local chapter, Citizen Action, Edie Cux, told AFP.

 

“It is important that in some way the people of Guatemala have justice and that the case does not go unpunished,” she added.

 

AFP

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