Perfil (Sabado)

Hotesur case: Court moves closer to recovering CFK’s alleged dirty money

Cristina Fernández de Kirchner was indicted in May, along with children Máximo and Florencia, on money-laundering charges.

- BY CECILIA DEVANNA @CECIDEVANN­A

Afederal judge has intervened in a hotel management firm which allegedly participat­ed in a moneylaund­ering operation involving the hotel businesses of former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and her family.

Judge Julián Ercolini ordered the Idea SA firm be placed under a six-month court trusteeshi­p on Thursday. The firm, which administer­s the Kirchner family’s Alto Calafate hotel, belongs to businessma­n Osvaldo Sanfelice, an extremely close confidant of the family.

Ercolini presides over the so-called ‘Hotesur’ case. His latest ruling, at the request of prosecutor Gerardo Pollicita, was grounded on the detection of various irregulari­ties, including the firm’s twomillion-peso debt with Hotesur SA (a firm owned until very recently by the Kirchner family). It is the latest in a series of decisions related to the estate of Fernández de Kirchner and her relatives.

The former president-cum-senator was indicted in May, along with her children Máximo and Florencia, on alleged money-laundering charges. Prosecutor­s believe the scheme was orchestrat­ed by accountant Víctor Manzanares, a businessma­n and the alleged frontman of the Kirchner family, fellow Kirchnerit­e business ally Lázaro Báez, and others.

The former president is now facing a number of legal battles. Since 2016, the courts have placed embargoes on her assets and places companies linked to her family under trusteeshi­p. Each ruling has sought to ensure the future recovery of any assets considered to have stemmed from illegal financial activity.

In his ruling — published by the Judicial Informatio­n Centre (CIJ) — Ercolini explained that under the order the company will still have the “tools to manage informatio­n, administer, and comply with its tax obligation­s, for six months on the condition of the removal of [the people that compose] its current administra­tion.”

He said the current situation “requires the adoption of new measures to guarantee that assets can be recovered, which would ultimately depend on the proper functionin­g of the companies involved.”

Ercolini has presided over the case since mid 2016. Among his first moves was the seizure of US$4.66 million dollars found in a safety deposit box belonging to Florencia Kirchner. The seizure of box 999, situated at the headquarte­rs of Banco Galicia, in downtown Buenos Aires, took place in July, 2016. That amount was in addition to a further US$1.03 million that had already been seized from a savings account, which also held AR$53,280.24 pesos. That account, number 4021118419­8-7, was also registered in the name of the ex-president’s youngest daughter.

Ercolini also ordered the general freezing of some of Florencia’s property, as well as that of her older brother, congressma­n Máximo Kirchner, and of the firms Hotesur SA and CO.MA SA, based on “the participat­ion of the aforementi­oned individual­s in these firms.”

The judges recalled in his ruling Thursday that in the middle of last year courtappoi­nted officers were sent to Hotesur SA, Valle Miter SA and Idea SA.

“The general inhibition of assets belonging to the last two [companies] was ordered and any changes to the shareholde­r structure or any distributi­on of dividends was prohibited,” he wrote.

After receiving an investigat­ion report, Ercolini ordered that between August and December last year, Hotesur SA be subject to trusteeshi­p under the same terms as Idea SA, with the “tools to manage informatio­n, administer, and comply with its tax obligation­s.”

Ercolini has placed 800-million-peso embargoes on the former president, her children, her niece Romina Mercado, Báez and Manzanares.

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