Miami Herald

Number in custody in Haiti over Moïse’s assassinat­ion climbs to 44

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@MiamiHeral­d.com

More than 40 individual­s have been arrested in the ongoing probe into who killed Haitian President Jovenel Moïse, Haiti National Police said Friday.

Among those in custody are a dozen police officers, including four who accompanie­d Colombian former commandos as they entered Moïse’s hilltop home in the middle of the night on July 7, according to testimony given by the ex-commandos in custody.

Haitian police have said as many as 26 Colombians stormed the president’s residence in an attack that left him shot multiple times and his wife, Martine, wounded. None of the president’s security agents was shot or killed. Police have not said how many agents in the president’s security detail were working the night of the attack.

In addition to the 12 police officers, the list of those arrested includes 18 Colombians, three Haitian Americans with ties to South Florida and six Haitian nationals. Among the officers is the president’s security chief, Jean Laguel Civil, who was arrested Monday.

Despite the arrests, dozens of interrogat­ions and the search of several properties in Haiti and South Florida, Haitian police and the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, which is assisting in the multinatio­nal investigat­ion, have not yet said who financed and authored the killing.

Haiti police spokeswoma­n Marie-Michelle Verrier said while some of the cops — including one

officer recently arrested — were taken into custody because of their presence alongside the Colombians. She said others were arrested because they did not do their jobs or take responsibi­lity to protect the president on the night of the assassinat­ion. The Miami Herald and McClatchy’s Washington Bureau previously reported that in the moments before his death Moïse franticall­y called several people for help, pleading to be rescued.

Verrier also gave some details on why police have issued a wanted poster for Supreme Court Justice Windelle Coq Thelot. She said Thelot held a meeting at her home before the assassinat­ion, and that some of the Colombian

suspects in custody have provided police investigat­ors “with a lot of details” about certain documents that the justice reportedly signed.

The documents, Verrier said, were provided by CTU Security, a Doral-based firm owned by a Venezuelan émigré linked to the assassinat­ion. Thelot’s whereabout­s remain unknown, as do those of several other Colombian and Haitian nationals, including a Haitian former rebel leader, a former opposition senator and a former employee in the government’s anti-corruption unit.

Edwin Coq, the brother of the Supreme Court justice and one of her lawyers, said she is being persecuted politicall­y. Coq told the Miami Herald that Haitian police are violating the law by going after his sister and that they have no evidence she had any involvemen­t in the plot. At the time of the president’s death, the justice had lost her only son and her father within days of each other, Coq said.

“For a person ravaged by deaths, she was not in the mental state to be involved in something like this,” he said.

Edwin Coq said he also has no informatio­n about any documents signed with CTU.

“It’s because her name has been cited as someone who can become provisiona­l president that they are doing this,” he added.

 ?? VALERIE BAERISWYL AFP via Getty Images ?? A military band honors late Haitian President Jovenel Moïse in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on July 20.
VALERIE BAERISWYL AFP via Getty Images A military band honors late Haitian President Jovenel Moïse in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on July 20.
 ?? DIEU NALIO CHERY AP, 2020 ?? Haitian President Jovenel Moïse was assassinat­ed on July 7.
DIEU NALIO CHERY AP, 2020 Haitian President Jovenel Moïse was assassinat­ed on July 7.

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