Imperial Valley Press

Spanish police arrest former oil executive sought by Mexico

- BY MARÍA VERZA

MEXICO CITY — The former head of Mexico’s state oil company was arrested Wednesday in Spain on a internatio­nal warrant issued by Mexico, authoritie­s said.

Mexican Attorney General Alejandro Gertz Manero told Radio Formula that Emilio Lozoya was arrested in the southern port city of Malaga and that the goal was his extraditio­n to Mexico.

Lozoya was director of Pemex between 2012 and 2016 during the administra­tion of former Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto.

Mexico issued internatio­nal arrest warrants for Lozoya last year as a result of corruption investigat­ions, including into his alleged ties to Odebrecht, the

Brazilian constructi­on company that secured contracts across

Latin America through a network of bribes.

Officials are also investigat­ing Pemex’s purchase of a fertilizer plant in 2015 at an allegedly inflated price.

Lozoya has repeatedly denied wrongdoing.

Gertz said that prosecutor­s had been pursuing multiple investigat­ions against Lozoya for months.

He called it an “iconic case” that was nearly a year in the making with authoritie­s across Europe.

After Gertz confirmed the arrest, Lozoya’s lawyer in Mexico, Javier Coello Trejo, said the news “hit me like a bucket of cold water.”

He told Radio Formula that Lozoya was convinced the investigat­ion was baseless and was open to turning himself in.

He said he hadn’t yet spoken to his client since the arrest.

Gertz did not specify on what charges Lozoya was detained. But the Spanish government said he was wanted in relation to events from 2012 to 2013 and, citing Mexican prosecutor­s, that the government may have been defrauded to the tune an estimated $280 million.

The internatio­nal manhunt for Lozoya began in May 2019 via Interpol. Spanish authoritie­s had informatio­n about him being present in various parts of the country, but his wealth and “internatio­nal ties made locating him difficult,” Spain’s Interior Ministry said in a statement.

He was expected to appear before a judge Thursday in Madrid.

In late 2016, Odebrecht, reached an agreement with American, Brazilian and Swiss justice officials to pay millions of dollars in penalties. As part of that accord, Odebrecht divulged details of bribes across several countries.

It said it paid $10.5 million to officials at Pemex between 2010 and 2014. Lozoya has denied taking bribes.

The scandal grew in late 2017 when a series of videos of statements of former Odebrecht executives were released, including its former Mexico director, Luis de Meneses.

They directly implicated Lozoya, who in 2012 had been a key member of Peña Nieto’s presidenti­al campaign.

While the Odebrecht revelation­s led to a wave of corruption investigat­ions and arrests across Latin America, there had been no arrests in Mexico.

Mexican authoritie­s declared in May 2019 that Lozoya could not hold public positions for 10 years and later the government froze Lozoya’s bank accounts.

Meanwhile, Spanish police arrested Alonso Ancira Elizondo, then-president of Altos Hornos de México also in May 2019.

His extraditio­n case is still before Spain’s National Court. At the time, Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office said Ancira’s arrest was based on allegation­s that he had defrauded Pemex.

Pemex purchased fertilizer business Fertinal from AHMSA for $635 million in 2015, when Lozoya headed Pemex.

Mexico President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has called the fertilizer plant “junk” and said that Pemex overpaid.

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