The Denver Post

Embattled leader says tape doctored

- By Peter Prengaman and Stan Lehman

rio de janeiro » Fighting to save his job amid a mushroomin­g corruption scandal, Brazilian President Michel Temer told the nation Saturday that an incriminat­ing audio recording of him had been doctored.

“That clandestin­e recording was manipulate­d and doctored with (bad) intentions,” Temer said at a news conference in capital of Brasilia.

Temer said he had filed a petition with the Supreme Federal Tribunal, the country’s highest court, to suspend the corruption investigat­ion into him until experts can analyze the audio that appears to show him endorse the payment of bribes to ex-house Speaker Eduardo Cunha for his silence.

It’s unlikely the court would do that, as it authorized the opening of the investigat­ion into Temer in the first place and ordered it made public.

Temer noted that the Folha de S. Paulo newspaper reported that the 39-minute recording had been edited. The audio was first reported by Globo newspaper on Wednesday.

Temer also questioned the motives of the manwho made the recording, JBS meatpackin­g company executive Joesley Batista. He accused Batista of buying “large quantities of dollars to cause chaos on the exchange market” before giving the tape to prosecutor­s.

Temer’s claims about the audio and Batista couldn’t be immediatel­y verified.

In the audio, Temer apparently endorses bribes for Cunha, who is serving a 15-year prison sentence of corruption and money laundering and who led the impeachmen­t push against President Dilma Rousseff last year.

Rousseff was eventually ousted for illegally managing the federal budget, bringing Temer, who was her vice president, to power.

Temer’s remarks were unlikely to have much impact on the spreading movement for him to resign. Even if the audio was edited, Temer’s words to Batista to keep up the payments to Cunha seem clear. Andtemer did not mention the long list of other allegation­s against him, nor acknowledg­e that allies have started to bolt.

Soon beforeteme­r spoke, the Brazilian Socialist Party announced it was breaking from his coalition. The loss of its seven senators and 35 deputies meantemer’s ambitious plans to reform the country’s pensions and labor laws are even less likely.

Brazil’s highest court released documents on Friday revealing that the nation’s top prosecutor is accusing Temer of corruption, obstructio­n of justice and being part of a criminal organizati­on. In one plea bargain released as part of the tribunal’s document dump, Temer is accused of taking $1.5 million in bribes. In another, Temer is accused of pocking about $350,000 of $4.5 million in illegal campaign finance channeled by the Workers’ Party for the 2014 presidenti­al ticket that included Temer as vice presidenti­al candidate.

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