Guatemala’s ex-economy minister charged in money-laundering scheme involving Miami companies
MIAMI – Former Guatemala economy minister regularly received backpacks, duffel bags, and briefcases full of dirty money, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida.
At least two Miami companies, a Guatemalan bank, banks in
the U.S. were involved in the $9.5 million money-laundering scheme, according
to FBI Special Agent Paul J. West.
“During holiday season, cash was delivered clandestinely in
boxes of liquor designed to look like holiday gifts,” West said during a
deposition.
Acisclo Valladares, a Guatemalan attorney who studied at
Georgetown University, was sworn in as the Central American country’s economy
minister in 2018.
the 44-year-old son of Guatemala’s ambassador to the United
Kingdom and a father of four, knew the money came from narcotrafficking and
used it to help bribe corrupt politicians in Guatemala, prosecutors said.
Valladares’s demand for bribe cash “was allegedly so great,
he allegedly once remarked to a co-conspirator that politicians must think
money grows on trees,” investigators wrote, also accusing the Miami companies
of laundering money to South America.
“Although Miami serves as a bridge between the United States
and our neighbors to the south, drug traffickers, corrupt officials, and their
dirty money are not welcome in our district,” U.S. Attorney Ariana Fajardo
Orshan said.
FBI and DEA Special Agents worked with foreign partners to
gather evidence against Valladares. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s
Homeland Security Investigations in Miami and Customs and Border Protection in
Miami also worked in the case which involves asset forfeiture.
In January, Guatemala declared him a fugitive over
allegations of public corruption. He lost his immunity when President Alejandro
Giammattei took office. Prosecutors in Guatemala accused him of bribing
the-Vice President Roxana Baldetti, who resigned in 2015.
In February, Valladares released a statement on YouTube
saying he was not going to submit voluntarily to a “perverse show” because he
is innocent. Now in South Florida, Valladares is facing a charge of conspiracy
to commit money laundering.
Comments
Post a Comment