The Guardian (USA)

Prosecutor­s allege El Chapo gave $1m in bribes to Honduran president’s brother

- Associated Press in New York

Prosecutor­s in New York have alleged that the convicted Mexican drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán personally gave $1m in bribes to the brother of Honduras’s president to pass on to the Central American leader.

Prosecutor Jason Richman revealed the allegation in a federal court in Manhattan where Juan Antonio “Tony” Hernández, 41, is accused of using his government connection­s to smuggle US-bound cocaine through Honduras.

In opening statements, Richman described Hernández as “untouchabl­e” in Honduras and confident he would never face justice because of his powerful sibling.

“The defendant was protected by and had access to his brother, the current sitting president of Honduras, a man who himself has received millions of dollars in drug money bribes – bribes he received from some of the largest cocaine trafficker­s in the world, bribes he received from men like ‘El Chapo’ and the Sinaloa cartel who personally delivered $1m to the defendant for his brother,” Richman said.

The defendant was described as a “violent drug trafficker of epic proportion­s” who moved “massive” amounts of narcotics.

Hernández’s defense told jurors they will see no proof against their client during the trial.

The Honduran president, Juan Orlando Hernández, has been labeled a co-conspirato­r, though he has not been charged.

Prosecutor­s allege he took about $1.5m in drug proceeds to win his first presidenti­al campaign in 2013, in exchange for trafficker­s receiving protection.

“The allegation in itself is 100% false, absurd and ridiculous … this is less serious than Alice in Wonderland,” the president tweeted on Wednesday . He has said in the past that drug smugglers extradited under his government are seeking revenge.

Relatives of Tony Hernández, who was arrested in 2018 in Miami, declined to speak with journalist­s at the court. In Honduras, Juan Arnaldo Hernández, another brother, predicted Tony Hernández will be cleared of the accusation­s.

Jury selection in the case took place earlier in the day.

Richman told the panel that they would hear details of two murders in which Tony Hernández was allegedly involved. He said the defendant stamped cocaine shipments with his initials, TH, and first got into smuggling around 2004.

Prosecutor­s will call as witnesses Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion agents, an expert on Honduran politics and history, and former drug trafficker­s who worked with Hernández.

“At the end the question won’t be whether you like the witnesses,” Richman said, “but whether you believe them.”

Juan Orlando Hernández was reelected in 2017 despite a constituti­onal ban on re-election. Last week, Honduras signed an agreement with the US, agreeing to receive asylum seekers from third countries.

In early August, prosecutor­s in New York accused him of working with his brother and the then president, Porfirio Lobo, who was in office in 2010-2014, to take advantage of drug traffickin­g to consolidat­e power and control in Honduras.

In a 49-page document, prosecutor­s said the president and his predecesso­r depended on drug money for campaign financing. The document alleged that the Honduran government essentiall­y functions as a narco-state.

The president has called the accusation­s false and retaliatio­n for his government’s policies on fighting organized crime and drug traffickin­g.

 ??  ?? The Honduran president, Juan Orlando Hernández, has been labeled a co-conspirato­r, though he has not been charged. Photograph: Michael Nagle/EPA
The Honduran president, Juan Orlando Hernández, has been labeled a co-conspirato­r, though he has not been charged. Photograph: Michael Nagle/EPA

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