Honduras’ Orlando accused of taking millions in drug bribes
HONDURAN President Juan Orlando Hernandez took millions of dollars in bribes from drug lords including jailed Mexican kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, a US prosecutor said on Wednesday at the opening of his brother’s trial.
T he pre sident ’s brot her, Ju a n Antonio Hernandez – a former Honduran congressman also known as Tony – was arrested at a Miami airport in November 2018 for conspiring to import cocaine into the US, weapons offences and making false statements.
“The defendant was protected by the current president, who has received millions of dollars in bribes from drug traffickers like ‘El Chapo’ Guzman, who personally delivered $1 million to the defendant for his brother,” prosecutor Jason Richman said.
President Hernandez dismissed the accusation as “absurd”.
It “is 100 per cent false, absurd and ridiculous ... t his is less serious t han Alice in Wonderland”, he wrote on Twitter.
Richman said that Tony Hernandez belonged to “a state-sponsored organisation that distributed cocaine for years” in the US, with the goal of making millions of dollars.
Corrupt “mayors, congressmen, military generals [and] police chiefs protected his organisation”, he added.
The charges run to four counts. If convicted, Tony Hernandez faces from five years to life in prison.
The US government alleges that Hernandez, who served as a member of the Honduran Congress from 2014 to 2018, worked from 2004 to 2016 with others in Colombia, Honduras and Mexico to import cocaine into the US via plane, boat and submarine.
The prosecution also says Hernandez was involved in at least two murders of rival drug traffickers in 2011 and 2013.
Some of the cocaine he was transporting was labelled with his initials “TH”, according to US Attorney Geoffrey Berman.
Defence attorney Omar Malone said Hernandez was the target of violent criminals because his brother’s administration had authorised the extradition of drug traffickers to the US.
He also referenced the cordial relationship between Honduras and the US, which saw the country’s president shake hands with his US counterpart Donald Trump at the UN General Assembly in New York.
“The president of Honduras has interacted with the US like any other president of any other country,” Malone said.
Tony Hernandez, 41, wore a blue suit and appeared calm during the selection process of 12 jurors and six alternates. For security reasons, the jurors will only be identified with numbers, as is typical for major drugtrafficking trials.
The judge estimates the trial will last between 10 and 12 working days.
Hernandez’s trial comes after Guzman, the 62-year-old former co-leader of Mexico’s feared Sinaloa drugs cartel, was convicted in February of smuggling hundreds of tonnes of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamines and marijuana into the US.
He has been jailed for life, a sentence he is appealing.
US prosecutors have aggressively pursued current or former Honduran public officials and their relatives over drug-trafficking allegations.
The prosecution also claims that several candidates from Honduras’s ruling National Party accepted campaign funding from Hernandez, including former president Porfirio Lobo and the current president, who was elected first in 2013 and again in contested elections in 2017.
The Manhattan prosecutor’s office filed a motion in August alleging that President Hernandez received at least $1.5 million in drugs money from one of the prosecution’s cooperating witnesses for his first campaign and $40,000 for the second.
President Hernandez and Lobo have both rejected the accusations, and neither has been formally charged by the US judicial system.
After massive demonstrations demanding his resignation, Hernandez told the UN General Assembly last week that a smear campaign was being carried out against him, one led by former drug lords furious for having been extradited to the US – an idea echoed by his brother’s attorney.
The prosecution plans to call as witnesses five former drug lords imprisoned in the US who claim they were Tony Hernandez’s accomplices.
One witness is a former cartel leader who claimed during the 2017 trial of Fabio Lobo, Porfirio Lobo’s son, to have bribed Hernandez during his congressional tenure.
Fabio Lobo was sentenced to 24 years in a US prison for conspiring to smuggle cocaine.