San Francisco Chronicle

Arrest order for ousted chief prosecutor’s husband

- By Fabiola Sanchez Fabiola Sanchez is an Associated Press writer.

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela’s high court issued an arrest order for the ousted chief prosecutor’s husband Thursday after authoritie­s accused him of running a $6 million extortion ring, a ruling promptly denounced by government critics as a move aimed at silencing opponents of President Nicolas Maduro.

The government-stacked Supreme Court also announced it was referring German Ferrer’s case to the new, all-powerful constituti­onal assembly. The assembly was installed in early August at Maduro’s behest following a widely criticized vote, and it is expected to proceed with lifting Ferrer’s immunity from prosecutio­n that comes with legislativ­e office.

Ferrer is a lawmaker formerly aligned with Maduro’s administra­tion who has stood by his wife, Luisa Ortega Diaz, in denouncing the assembly’s creation.

In a written statement to local media, Ferrer denied signing documents that officials are holding up as evidence he opened a bank account in the Bahamas to facilitate transactio­ns.

“This government no longer has any limits or shame,” he wrote.

Tarek William Saab, who was named by the constituti­onal assembly to replace Ortega Diaz as chief prosecutor, said Wednesday that the alleged criminal ring extorted money from people including businessme­n in the nation’s oil industry in return for protecting them from prosecutio­n.

Ruling Socialist Party leader Diosdado Cabello provided prosecutor­s with papers allegedly showing that Ferrer and others opened six bank accounts at the Bahamas branch of a Swiss bank.

In his statement, Ferrer said the documents “don’t pass muster.”

Cabello’s involvemen­t in the case led many to conclude it is politicall­y motivated. Opposition lawmaker Henry Allup questioned the timing of the charges, asking why they appeared so soon after Ferrer broke publicly with Maduro’s government.

“This is a way to intimidate,” he said.

Ferrer and Ortega’s whereabout­s Thursday were not clear. Authoritie­s raided their home the previous day.

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