Los Angeles Times

Fugitive ex-governor is returned

Mexico takes custody of the once-rising star who became the face of suspected egregious political corruption.

- By Patrick J. McDonnell patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com Cecilia Sanchez of The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

MEXICO CITY — A onetime rising star of Mexico’s ruling party who became the public face of suspected egregious corruption afflicting the country’s political system was extradited Monday from Guatemala to face a wide range of criminal charges.

Javier Duarte, former governor of Veracruz state, had been arrested in April while a fugitive from Mexican justice.

Prosecutor­s charged Duarte with setting up shell companies to divert millions of dollars for himself and his political cronies and for having links to the criminal gangs that have made Veracruz among the country’s most violent states. Illegally obtained funds were used to purchase properties in Mexico, the United States and Spain, prosecutor­s allege.

Authoritie­s have hinted that the pilfering of public money during Duarte’s almost six-year term in Veracruz could reach “historic” levels, perhaps in excess of $3 billion.

Duarte faces up to 55 years in prison if convicted of the various charges facing him, prosecutor­s say. He left office last year six weeks before his gubernator­ial term ended, vowing to defend himself against mounting allegation­s and defiantly declaring that he had not stolen “one cent.” But Duarte went on the run and was a fugitive until detained in April in a Guatemalan mountain resort town.

Several of Duarte’s former colleagues in Veracruz are also facing criminal corruption charges or are on the run.

While in custody in Guatemala, Duarte declared his innocence and was pictured in televised images appearing to smirk during extraditio­n hearings.

The burly Duarte, in handcuffs but shorn of the shaggy beard he sported in Guatemala, was shown on television Monday being led by heavily armed federal officers on the tarmac of the Mexico City airport after emerging from an official jet that transporte­d him from Guatemala City. A police convoy flanked by cameramen on motorbikes later whisked Duarte to the capital’s Reclusorio Norte prison.

His lawyer, Pablo Campusano, told journalist­s who mobbed the attorney’s car that Duarte was “tranquil,” despite the many legal problems he faces.

Duarte’s case has become infamous in a country where a cascading series of official corruption scandals has drawn widespread outrage and become a profound embarrassm­ent for the country’s political class — especially for President Enrique Peña Nieto’s Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party, or PRI.

At least eight former governors, including Duarte, are facing criminal charges or have already been convicted. Most served under the banner of the ruling party, which hopes to hold on to the presidency in next year’s national elections.

The scandals are indicative of what many call runaway corruption. State administra­tions in Mexico are often rife with graft, allowing governors to amass great wealth and dole out patronage to relatives and supporters, critics say.

Duarte, 43, who served as governor of oil-rich Veracruz state from 2000 to 2016, is a former PRI stalwart who was among a number of young ruling-party governors once viewed as the face of a makeover for a party seeking to revamp its tarnished image as a “dinosaur” institutio­n.

Now, Duarte has become the poster boy for kleptocrat­ic governance in Mexico.

The ex-governor’s reported excesses — and the chaotic state of affairs under his leadership in Veracruz, where killings and disappeara­nces have reached alarming levels — were too much for authoritie­s to ignore. Duarte’s unpopulari­ty contribute­d to the ruling party losing control of Veracruz state for the first time in elections last year.

Under Duarte, the state became a place of extreme danger for human rights activists, journalist­s and others. Drug cartels, often working in cahoots with police and local politician­s, fight for territory in a key traffickin­g corridor.

At least 17 journalist­s were killed and three others “disappeare­d” — vanished without a trace — during Duarte’s term as governor, according to the free-press group Articulo 19. The charges against Duarte do not include allegation­s linking him to any killings.

Veracruz Gov. Miguel Angel Yunes of the opposition National Action Party has accused Duarte, his predecesso­r, of leaving the state a looted and crime-ridden mess.

“It is unfortunat­e that someone who left the state in a financial and security crisis is shown laughing saying he is innocent, that he’s a victim and soon he will be free,” Yunes said in a June television interview. “It’s a joke not only on the people of Veracruz, but on all Mexicans.”

 ?? Johan Ordonez AFP/Getty Images ?? JAVIER DUARTE, center, is charged with setting up shell companies to divert millions of dollars for himself and cronies in Veracruz state.
Johan Ordonez AFP/Getty Images JAVIER DUARTE, center, is charged with setting up shell companies to divert millions of dollars for himself and cronies in Veracruz state.

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