Miami Herald

U.S. sanctions Venezuelan oil man close to Maduro and regime’s opposition leader

- BY ANTONIO MARIA DELGADO AND JAY WEAVER adelgado@elnuevoher­ald.com jweaver@miamiheral­d.com

The federal government Tuesday sanctioned Venezuelan businessma­n Francisco D’Agostino for allegedly helping President Nicolás Maduro’s regime evade a U.S. crackdown on the South American country’s oil exports.

The Department of Treasury sanctions include blocking D’Agostino’s assets in the United States and forbidding anyone in the country from doing business with him or his companies.

Despite his alleged role as a broker for Venezuela’s oil sector controlled by Maduro, D’Agostino is the brother-in-law of a top opposition leader, Henry Ramos Allup, who is seeking to overthrow his government. D’Agostino’s sister, Diana, is married to Allup, a leader of one of the oldest and largest opposition parties in Venezuela, Acción Democrátic­a.

The links between D’Agostino and the Maduro regime and other alleged partners have been used by political adversarie­s to try to discredit Allup.

The Department of Treasury accused D’Agostino of collaborat­ing with jailed Colombian businessma­n Alex Saab, who is awaiting extraditio­n in Cape Verde on money laundering charges in Miami. Together, they and other associates coordinate­d the sale of Venezuelan crude on behalf of Petróleos de Venezuela through a Mexican network, U.S. authoritie­s said.

The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control also sanctioned businessme­n Joaquin Leal Jimenez, Alessandro Bazzoni and Philipp

Paul Vartan Apikian, as well as 14 companies and six ships, for allegedly participat­ing alongside D’Agostino in a network used by Maduro to circumvent continuing U.S. sanctions on Venezuelan oil.

“D’Agostino was designated today for operating in the oil sector of the Venezuelan economy and because he has materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial, material, or technologi­cal support for, or goods or services to or in support of, PDVSA,” The Treasury Department said in a press release.

“D’Agostino, a dual Spanish-Venezuelan citizen, worked with Saab, Leal, and Bazzoni to coordinate the purchase and sale of Venezuelan-origin crude oil on behalf of PdVSA. D’Agostino has been involved in the Venezuelan oil sector since at least 2012 and has partnered with Bazzoni and others on multiple business ventures with PDVSA,” it added.

The U.S. sanctions freeze any assets of the designated persons under U.S. jurisdicti­on and forbid any U.S. person or company from conducting any financial transactio­n with them.

The U.S. Department accused those sanctioned on Tuesday of participat­ing in a Mexican network organized by Saab to help Maduro’s Oil Minister, Tareck El Aissami, evade sanctions against Venezuela’s state-run oil company, PDVSA.

The U.S. had previously sanctioned three individual­s and eight companies from Mexico that formed part of the same oil-brokering network.

At the time, the Treasury Department said that Saab along with his partners had

been operating the clandestin­e network and employed at one point a fraudulent oil-for-food exchange program that never provided food for needy Venezuelan­s.

Saab, who is accused by federal prosecutor­s in Miami of laundering $350 million from embezzled Venezuelan state funds, has been detained since July in Cape Verde where he is fighting U.S. efforts to extradite him.

Saab is the latest fugitive to be arrested in connection with a series of corruption and money-laundering cases filed in the United States that accuse dozens of current and former Venezuelan officials, business people and lawyers of stealing billions of dollars from Venezuela’s government and its state-run oil company, PDVSA.

Over the past five years, Miami prosecutor­s and Homeland Security Investigat­ions have been investigat­ing D’Agostino’s business partners, Alejandro Betancourt and his cousin, Francisco Convit. They were partners with D’Agostino in Derwick Associates, a company that obtained billions of dollars in energy-related contracts from the Venezuelan regime.

Of the three, Convit is the only one who has been indicted in Miami federal court. Betancourt’s lawyers say he has committed no wrongdoing. Convit’s attorney has declined to comment.

It is not clear who is representi­ng D’Agostino in the ongoing federal investigat­ion.

 ??  ?? Venezuelan businessma­n Francisco D’Agostino faces U.S. sanctions for his alleged role in brokering
Venezuela’s oil exports through Mexico.
Venezuelan businessma­n Francisco D’Agostino faces U.S. sanctions for his alleged role in brokering Venezuela’s oil exports through Mexico.

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