El Dorado News-Times

Ex-Mexican leader accused over funds

-

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s anti-money laundering agency said Thursday it has accused ex-President Enrique Pena Nieto of handling millions of dollars in possibly illegal funds, perhaps a signal from President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador that he is getting serious about his promise to pursue corruption.

It marks the first formal legal accusation­s against Pena Nieto, despite multiple allegation­s about corruption during his 2012-2018 administra­tion. Lopez Obrador made rooting out corruption the main theme of his presidency, but hadn’t yet moved against any of his predecesso­rs.

The criminal complaint filed against Pena Nieto by the government’s Financial Intelligen­ce Unit does not mean prosecutor­s have yet decided to file any formal charges. But the head of the unit, Pablo Gomez, said federal prosecutor­s have received the complaint alleging use of illicit funds and are investigat­ing it.

Gomez said Thursday that two companies run by Pena Nieto’s family had received about $500 million in government contracts while he was president. He did not identify the companies but said they were a sort of distributi­on firm, and the former president was a shareholde­r.

Gomez also said Pena Nieto had received money transfers from a relative, apparently linked to the two companies, for about $1.3 million after leaving office.

Gomez said Pena Nieto’s accounts and those of the companies haven’t been blocked.

Pena Nieto moved to Spain after leaving office.

On Thursday, Pena Nieto wrote in his Twitter account that his money was legally obtained. “I am certain that the appropriat­e authoritie­s will allow me to clear up any questions about my holdings, and to prove their legality through legal channels,” the former president wrote. “I have confidence in legal institutio­ns.”

The former head of Mexico’s state-run oil company under Pena Nieto, Emilio Lozoya, has claimed that Pena Nieto and his right-hand man, then-Treasury Secretary Luis Videgaray, directed him to bribe lawmakers, including five senators, to support controvers­ial energy and other structural reforms in 2013 and 2014.

Videgaray has denied the accusation­s. Neither man faces any charges in that case.

The hands-off approach toward Pena Nieto has fueled speculatio­n that Lopez Obrador had reached some kind of gentleman’s agreement with the ex-president in 2018. In exchange for quickly recognizin­g Lopez Obrador’s presidenti­al victory and allowing him unusual power during the transition period, Pena Nieto purportedl­y would have gained a promise of impunity.

Lopez Obrador has said simply that “revenge isn’t my strong point” and that Mexico should look to the future, not the past.

Yet last year, Lopez Obrador sponsored a national referendum of Mexican voters about whether to prosecute former leaders accused of wrongdoing.

It failed to reach the 40% participat­ion required to make it binding and critics pointed out that the government didn’t need the public’s blessing to prosecute anyone who had committed crimes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States