Los Angeles Times

Former first lady held in Honduras graft inquiry

Investigat­ion focuses on $6.6 million in government funds.

- Associated press

TEGUCIGALP­A, Honduras — Military police searched the home of former Honduran President Porfirio Lobo on Wednesday and arrested his wife as part of a corruption inquiry by an internatio­nal team of investigat­ors.

Police arrived at the Lobo home outside the capital in six vehicles and searched the residence before leaving with former First Lady Rosa Elena Bonilla and her brother-in-law Mauricio Mora. Authoritie­s did not say whether Lobo was present.

The arrest was announced by an anti-corruption mission of the Organizati­on of American States, a team the government agreed to accept after large street protests against graft in 2016.

Investigat­ors for the nongovernm­ental National Anti-Corruption Council have told prosecutor­s that Bonilla deposited $600,000 in government funds into her personal bank account five days before Lobo ended his four-year term in January 2014. They also say she hasn’t accounted for at least $6 million in government funds for her office during Lobo’s administra­tion.

“Today is a great step against impunity,” council director Gabriela Castellano­s said on her Twitter account.

Julio Ramirez, Bonilla’s attorney, told journalist­s that his client “is innocent and I will prove it in the courts.”

Past corruption cases involving public figures have generally ended without conviction­s, and the chief of the OAS mission, Juan Jimenez Mayor, resigned in mid-February, complainin­g of a lack of support from the Honduran government and the OAS.

In December, the mission announced corruption complaints against five Honduran legislator­s who were accused of shifting public money through a charity and into their own accounts. A month later, Congress passed a measure protecting them from prosecutio­n by freezing any civil or criminal action over public spending until auditors have studied such cases for three years.

Jimenez then called that step a “pact of immunity” and said the mission’s investigat­ors had found strong indication­s that at least 30 current and former legislator­s had committed crimes.

Even so, the OAS mission’s investigat­ions led last week to the arrest of three high-ranking military officers accused of illegal associatio­n, false testimony and conspiracy involving a case in which civilians had been detained and tortured. Eight lower-ranking soldiers were previously convicted in the case. They had said they were only following orders.

 ?? Fernando Antonio Associated Press ?? HONDURAN officers escort former First Lady Rosa Elena Bonilla from a police station in Tegucigalp­a. Her attorney told journalist­s that his client “is innocent.”
Fernando Antonio Associated Press HONDURAN officers escort former First Lady Rosa Elena Bonilla from a police station in Tegucigalp­a. Her attorney told journalist­s that his client “is innocent.”

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