The Star Malaysia

Judge issues order to unfreeze Marquez’s bank accounts

-

MEXICO CITY: A judge in Mexico ordered that bank accounts linked to businesses owned by football star Rafa Marquez be unfrozen, following a designatio­n in August by the United States government that the sportsman was linked to a suspected drug trafficker.

Last month, the US Treasury Department sanctioned Marquez, who is one of Mexico’s best known athletes, along with more than 20 other Mexican citizens for suspected financial links to accused drug kingpin Raul Flores Hernandez.

The move came after US President Donald Trump promised to crush Mexico’s drug gangs and the Treasury Department had described it as “the largest single Kingpin Act action against a Mexican drug cartel network that the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has designated.”

Marquez, who hails from the cartel-riddled state of Michoacan, has forcefully denied the accusation­s that he has ties to Hernandez, who is suspected of having links to the Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation drug cartels.

According to local media, Federal Judge Luz Maria Ortega issued the provisiona­l order to unfreeze Marquez’s accounts.

A document issued from the court did not include her name – though it is common in drug-related cases for judge’s names to be withheld in order to protect them.

The document did not detail the reasoning behind the judge’s decision.

It noted that the order applies to two bank accounts, while a third account also belonging to Marquez was still being reviewed.

Marquez, 38, currently plays for Guadalajar­abased pro football club Atlas.

He played in Europe for club sides Barcelona and Monaco and still sometime captains the national side having represente­d his country in four World Cup Finals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia