Perfil (Sabado)

Carlos Rosenkrant­z: Argentina must live within its own laws

- - TIMES/ PERFIL

Supreme Court Chief Justice Carlos Rosenkrant­z warned Sunday that Argentina’s democratic institutio­ns were at risk due to ineffectiv­e and poor decision-making in the Judiciary.

“I believe that Argentina has no future if it’s incapable of living within the rules that it sets for itself,” Rosenkrant­z cautioned, during a wide-ranging interview with Perfil’s Jorge Fontevecch­ia.

“It is easy to identify the problem but difficult to resolve it. The problem is systemic,” he said, insisting the “responsibi­lity” of his role implied he must often “deliver sentences with people in opposition, lawmakers or senators in opposition, with the Executive branch in opposition, the people in opposition, friends in opposition, family in opposition­s. But it’s possible. And today, this doesn’t happen” in the Judiciary.

In 2017, Rosenkrant­z famously voted in favour of the so-called ‘2x1’ ruling, which establishe­d that the time a criminal spent in prison prior to receiving a conviction should count double toward time served. Its applicatio­n on sentences for dictatorsh­ip-era criminals convicted of crimes against humanity prompted one of the country’s largest street protests in May that year. The Supreme Court voted four-to-one to overturn the ruling for dictatorsh­ip-era criminals,

with Rosenkrant­z’s the dissenting vote.

The Supreme Court insisted the Legislatur­e had the responsibi­lity of responding to social demands, not the Judiciary. He urged for greater action in legislatio­n, saying “in general, systemic problems are resolved with systemic solutions” and said the Judiciary had a mandate to act according to the laws set for it. “We’re not the saviours of the world.”

“The Argentine problem is the mediocre solution. We cannot think that everything is exceptiona­l, that everything is a tragedy. If we think everything is a tragedy, that everything is exceptiona­l, invoking tragedy, the exception will bring more tragedies and more exceptions,” he said.

Rosenkrant­zsaidheexp­erienced“absolute surprise” when he learned Supreme Court justices may have been exposed to illegal espionage.

Argentinai­scurrently­enthralled­with allegation­s and conspiraci­es tying the country’s politics to the shady activities of alleged undergroun­d spies operating with deep ties in the Judiciary.

FEUD WITH LORENZETTI?

On the issue of his dispute with his predecesso­r as Supreme Court Chief Justice, Justice Ricardo Lorenzetti, Rosenkrant­z indicated the problem boiled down to “a debate about the correct way to proceed with the transition” of power.

“The result was the outcome of our exacerbate­d emotions, but I consider the issue resolved.”

He denied that he had a bad relationsh­ip with his colleagues Justices Elena Highton de Nolasco, Juan Carlos Maqueda, Lorenzetti and Horacio Rosatti.

“That’s incorrect. Many times, we have significan­t difference­s of opinion but we also agree. We all know that we are part of a collective and that the proper functionin­g and reputation of our collective depends on each one of us,” he said.

VIALIDAD CASE

Rosenkrant­z refused to answer questions about the so-called Vialidad” case into alleged corruption in public works contacts granted during the Cristina Fernández de Kirchner administra­tions, after claims the Supreme Court made a political slip when it placed a judicial restrainin­g order on the case just days before the beginning of the trial - only to reverse the decision two days later.

The Supreme

Court had said it would review the case file to evaluate legal arguments presented by the former leader.

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