Perfil (Sabado)

Vice-president’s defence team attacks ‘lies’ in corruption trial

Cristina Fernández de Kirchner’s lawyers accuse Prosecutor­s Diego Luciani and Sergio Mola of “blatantly lying” in graft case.

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Lawyers representi­ng Cristina Fernández de Kirchner laid out her defence in the so-called ‘Vialidad’ public works graft trial this week, with both the legal team and the vicepresid­ent herself accusing the prosecutor­s in the case of “blatantly lying” in order to send her to jail.

Fernández de Kirchner, 69, was due to address the court herself on Friday, but the approach of the Senate chief’s defence team was clear from the very start of the livestream­ed hearings.

The former president, 69, stands accused of forming an illicit associatio­n and aggravated fraudulent administra­tion related to alleged irregulari­ties in the awarding of public works projects in her home province of Santa Cruz during her 2007-2015 time in office.

Fernández de Kirchner, along with a number of former government officials, are said to have directed contracts worth hundreds of billions of pesos to businessma­n Lázaro Báez as part of a corruption ring.

Prosecutor­s Diego Luciani and Sergio Mola have asked Federal Oral Court 2 to sentence Fernández de Kirchner to 12 years in jail for the alleged crimes and issue a lifetime ban from holding public office on the vice-president.

The former president denies the claims against her and says they are part of a bid to tarnish her political legacy and future. Fernández de Kirchner has been acquitted in several cases for alleged crimes that occurred when she was president, but she still faces five trials in the courts.

“There was undue interferen­ce of political power in the proceeding­s,” claimed defence lawyer Carlos Beraldi at Monday’s remote hearing, which lasted more than six hours. He argued that “the auditors said that there is no evidence of deficienci­es in the contracts and [public] works and determined that the mismatches in works are not considered relevant.”

Beraldi also wondered how the prosecutor­s were able to build an indictment while arguing that none of the “control bodies,” such as Congress, had fulfilled their functions.

“A huge number of legislator­s have clearly been charged with malfeasanc­e without anyone saying anything. Everyone hears it as if it were a matter of course,” he quipped.

Beraldi also pointed out errors and contradict­ions in the accusation presented by the prosecutio­n, replaying clips of their own testimony to the court before going on to refute specific facts, such as proving that an alleged meeting between Báez and Fernández de Kirchner on November 30, 2015, at which she allegedly ordered the businessma­n to “clear everything up,” could not have taken place.

Attacking the allegation­s and the conduct of the prosecutor­s, defence lawyers for the former president have previously sought to remove the judge and prosecutor­s involved in the case by alleging they carry political bias.

As her defence progresses, Argentina’s vice-president has also ramped up her rhetoric on social media, inviting citizens to follow the livestream coverage of the case to ensure her voice is heard.

At the end of Monday’s hearing, she commented on Twitter that Beraldi had “proved in documented form – as must be done in any trial – that Diego Luciani and Sergio Mola blatantly lied.”

Beraldi “out of profession­al decorum, called it malpractic­e,” she added.

On Tuesday, after praising her legal team’s “demolition” of “Luciani and Mola’s lies and fake news,” the former president accused the prosecutor­s of being “trolls.”

A verdict in the case, which can be appealed, is expected later this year. Fernández de Kirchner enjoys parliament­ary privileges that exempt her from arrest or disqualifi­cation until the Supreme Court issues a final judgement against her.

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