Stabroek News

Mexican former state governor to be tried for organized crime

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MEXICO CITY, (Reuters) - A former state governor from Mexico’s ruling party will stand trial for engaging in organized crime and handling funds of illicit origin after a judge reviewing evidence approved the case, the attorney general’s office said on Saturday.

Javier Duarte, who until 2016 governed the Gulf coast state of Veracruz for President Enrique Pena Nieto’s Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party (PRI), has been accused by the opposition of siphoning off millions of dollars during his sixyear tenure.

On Monday, Duarte was extradited to Mexico from Guatemala, where he was captured in April after spending months on the run. He has denied any wrongdoing. Some doubts had surfaced in the past few days about the strength of the case against him.

However, after presenting 82 pieces of evidence in hearings on Saturday, the attorney general’s office said in a statement that the judge gave prosecutor­s six months to proceed with the investigat­ion against 43-year-old Duarte.

According to prosecutor­s, Duarte headed an organizati­on consisting of at least nine other people, whose criminal operations were carried out in Veracruz, the eastern Gulf state of Campeche and Mexico City between 2011 and 2016.

Shell companies were used by the organizati­on as a conduit for illicit funds, the attorney general’s office said.

Duarte’s case has become a symbol of government failure to root out graft, underminin­g support for the PRI, which has been Mexico’s dominant party for most of the past century.

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