Miami Herald

Swiss banker who helped Miami feds in Venezuelan corruption case freed from prison

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

A Swiss banker who helped guide U.S. prosecutor­s and agents through a maze of corruption extending from Venezuela to Europe to South Florida was released from prison on Tuesday after a federal judge drasticall­y reduced his sentence to one year and three months — the time served since his incarcerat­ion in the summer of 2021.

Matthias Krull, 48, was initially sentenced to 10 years in prison for his supporting role in a billiondol­lar Venezuelan moneylaund­ering case in Miami that has been in the global criminal spotlight since it was filed in 2018.

However, in a rare concession, Krull received two significan­t sentence reductions — first to three and a half years and then on Monday to time served — from U.S. District Judge Cecilia Altonaga after prosecutor­s twice recommende­d substantia­lly less time behind bars.

In her latest decision, Altonaga went far beyond the recommenda­tions of prosecutor­s and even his defense attorneys, citing the “extent of his cooperatio­n” and other factors.

Krull’s attorneys, Oscar S. Rodriguez and Jeffrey Neiman, issued a statement thanking the judge, prosecutor­s and others involved “in the process” for allowing him to return to his “beloved family” in the Miami area.

Krull’s release from the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Southwest Miami-Dade County coincided

with the start of a separate corruption trial this week involving Venezuela’s former national treasurer, Claudia Díaz Guillen, and her husband, Adrian Velásquez Figueroa, in Fort

Lauderdale federal court. They’re accused of accepting more than $100 million in bribes from politicall­y connected Venezuelan businessme­n who were given lucrative contracts to conduct highly profitable foreign-currency exchange trades for the government.

In Krull’s case, prosecutor­s lauded the Swiss banker’s assistance in the foreign corruption case implicatin­g Venezuelan kleptocrat­s accused of stealing massive sums from their government and moving the tainted money to Europe and South Florida.

Krull has been credited with helping prosecutor­s and Homeland Security Investigat­ions obtain plea deals from two other defendants in the $1.2 billion money-laundering conspiracy case — a Miami money manager and a former Venezuelan government oil official, according to court records. He also helped connect prosecutor­s in Miami with bankers in Switzerlan­d and other European countries to collect valuable informatio­n about Venezuelan money-laundering schemes around the globe.

So far, four of the nine defendants in the Venezuelan case — which entailed sham loans made to the state-run oil company that were repaid with money washed through the government’s favorable currency exchange systems — have pleaded guilty in Miami federal court. The rest are considered fugitives in Venezuela or other parts of South America.

Krull was mistakenly believed to be the ringleader of the group because he was the first to be arrested while he was traveling through Miami Internatio­nal Airport in July 2018. But the reality was far different.

While he was a wellconnec­ted Swiss banker operating in Panama and Venezuela, he was brought into the money-laundering scheme late in the game to help move hundreds of millions of dollars from Europe to the United States — a task that he and his associates never completed.

Although he was never compensate­d for his supporting role in the scheme, Krull was ordered to pay $600,000 as financial punishment as part of his initial 10-year prison sentence, now drasticall­y reduced.

 ?? CODY JACKSON AP | March 18, 2021 ?? Matthias Krull was initially sentenced to 10 years in prison for his supporting role in a billion-dollar Venezuelan money-laundering case that has been in the global criminal spotlight since it was filed in Miami in 2018.
CODY JACKSON AP | March 18, 2021 Matthias Krull was initially sentenced to 10 years in prison for his supporting role in a billion-dollar Venezuelan money-laundering case that has been in the global criminal spotlight since it was filed in Miami in 2018.

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