Peru's ex-president Toledo sentenced to over 20 years' imprisonment
UNB
Publish: 22 Oct 2024, 02:50 PM
LIMA,
Oct 22 (AP/UNB) - Peru's former President Alejandro Toledo on Monday was
sentenced to 20 years and six months in prison in a case involving Brazilian
construction giant Odebrecht, which became synonymous with corruption across
Latin America, where it paid millions of dollars in bribes to government
officials and others.
Authorities accused
Toledo of accepting $35 million in bribes from Odebrecht in exchange for
allowing the construction of a highway in the South American country. The
National Superior Court of Specialized Criminal Justice in the capital, Lima,
imposed the sentence after years of legal wrangling, including a dispute over
whether Toledo, who governed Peru from 2001 to 2006, could be extradited from
the United States.
Judge Ines Rojas said
Toledo's victims were Peruvians who "trusted" him as their president.
Rojas explained that in that role, Toledo was "in charge of managing
public finances" and responsible for "protecting and ensuring the
correct" use of resources. Instead, she said, he "defrauded the
state."
She added that Toledo
"had the duty to act with absolute neutrality, protect and preserve the
assets of the state, avoiding their abuse or exploitation," but he did not
do so.
Odebrecht, which built
some of Latin America's most crucial infrastructure projects, admitted to U.S.
authorities in 2016 to having bought government contracts throughout the region
with generous bribes. The investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice spun
probes in several countries, including Mexico, Guatemala and Ecuador.
In Peru, authorities
accused Toledo and three other former presidents of receiving payments from the
construction giant. They alleged Toledo received $35 million from Odebrecht in
exchange for the contract to build 650 kilometers (403 miles) of a highway
linking Brazil with southern Peru. That portion of the highway was initially
estimated to cost $507 million, but Peru ended up paying $1.25 billion.
Rojas at one point read
parts of the testimony from Jorge Barata, a former Odebrecht executive in Peru,
who told prosecutors that the former president called him up to three times
after leaving office to demand that he be paid. Toledo lowered his gaze and
looked at his hands as Rojas read the expletive-laden remarks that Barata
recounted to prosecutors.
Toledo has denied the
accusations against him. His attorney, Roberto Siu, told reporters after the
hearing that they will appeal the sentence.
The former president on
Monday frequently smirked, and at times laughed, particularly when the judge
mentioned multimillion-dollar sums central to the case as well as when she
struggled to read transcripts and other evidence in the case. Throughout the
hearing, he also leaned to his right to speak with his attorney.
In contrast, last week,
he asked the court with a broken voice and his hands together, as if he were
praying, to let him return home citing his age, cancer and heart problems.
Toledo, 78, was first
arrested in 2019 at his home in California, where he had been living since
2016, when he returned to Stanford University, his alma mater, as a visiting
scholar to study education in Latin America. He was initially held in solitary
confinement at a county jail east of San Francisco but was released to house
arrest in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic and his deteriorating mental
health.
He was extradited to
Peru in 2022 after a court of appeals denied a challenge to his extradition and
he surrendered to authorities. He has since remained under preventive
detention.
Rojas said Toledo will
get credit for time served starting in April 2023. He will serve the remainder
of his sentence at a prison on the outskirts of Lima that was built
specifically to house former Peruvian presidents.
Prosecutor Jose Domingo
Perez after the hearing described the sentence as "historic" and said
it shows Peruvians that "crimes and corruption are punished."
Odebrecht rebranded as
Novonor in 2020.
End/UNB/AP/MB