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Showing posts with label embezzlement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label embezzlement. Show all posts

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Corruption is Everywhere > Even when wives are involved in France and Spain

 

French court confirms ex-PM Fillon's

conviction in 'fake jobs' scandal


France's Court of Cassation on Wednesday confirmed the conviction of former premier François Fillon in a fake jobs scandal that wrecked his 2017 presidential bid but ordered a new trial for his sentencing.



Fillon, 70, was sentenced on appeal on May 9, 2022 to four years' jail, three years of which were suspended, and a fine of 375,000 euros ($400,000). A new sentencing trial will take place in coming months at the Paris court of appeal.

The conservative politician was found guilty of providing a fake parliamentary assistant job to his wife, Penelope Fillon, that saw her paid millions of euros in public funds.

She was given a suspended two-year prison sentence for embezzlement at the 2022 appeal trial, and ordered to pay the same fine as her husband.

Both were also ordered to repay 800,000 euros to the lower-house National Assembly, which reimbursed Penelope Fillon for the job as her husband's assistant. 

Under French sentencing guidelines, it is unlikely that Fillon will spend any time behind bars, and can be ordered instead to wear an ankle-bracelet.

The couple has always insisted that Penelope Fillon had done genuine constituency work.

(AFP)

============================================================================================




Spain’s PM considers resigning amid

wife’s legal probe: ‘Is it all worth it?’





Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Wednesday he would step back from public duties “for a few days” to decide whether he wants to continue leading the government after a court launched a business corruption probe into his wife’s private dealings.

Sanchez, who last year secured another term for his Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) as leader of a minority coalition government, said he would announce his decision on Monday, April 29.

“I need to pause and think,” he wrote in a letter shared on his X account. “At this point, I have to ask myself: is it all worth it? I honestly don’t know… whether I should continue to lead the government or renounce this honor.”

“I will cancel my public agenda for a few days in order to reflect and decide which path to take.”

For more on this story please go to "The court investigating Gomez"

=======================================================


Saturday, December 16, 2023

Corruption is Everywhere > Cardinal Imprisoned in Vatican for Embezzlement


Lest you think embezzlement in the Vatican is an unusual event, you should read David Yallop's

"In God's Name"



Cardinal is convicted of embezzlement

in Vatican financial trial


A Vatican tribunal on Saturday convicted a cardinal of embezzlement and sentenced him to 5 ½ years in prison in one of several verdicts handed down in a complicated financial trial that aired the city state’s dirty laundry and tested its justice system.



Cardinal Angelo Becciu, the first cardinal ever prosecuted by the Vatican criminal court, was absolved of several other charges and his nine co-defendants received a mixed outcome of some guilty verdicts and many acquittals of the nearly 50 charges brought against them during a 2 ½ year trial.

Becciu’s lawyer, Fabio Viglione, said he respected the sentence but would appeal.

Prosecutor Alessandro Diddi said the outcome “showed we were correct.”

The trial focused on the Vatican secretariat of state’s 350 million euro investment in developing a former Harrod’s warehouse into luxury apartments. Prosecutors alleged Vatican monsignors and brokers fleeced the Holy See of tens of millions of euros in fees and commissions and then extorted the Holy See for 15 million euros to cede control of the building.

Becciu was accused of embezzlement-related charges in two tangents of the London deal and faced up to seven years in prison.

In the end, he was convicted of embezzlement stemming from the original Vatican investment of 200 million euros into a fund that invested in the London property. The tribunal determined canon law prohibited using church assets in such a speculative investment.

He was also convicted of embezzlement for his 125,000 euro donation of Vatican money to a charity run by his brother in Sardinia and of using Vatican money to pay an intelligence analyst who in turn was convicted of using the money for herself.

The trial had raised questions about the rule of law in the city state and Francis’ power as absolute monarch, given that he wields supreme legislative, executive and judicial authority and had exercised it in ways the defense says jeopardized a fair trial.

The defense attorneys did praise Judge Giuseppe Pignatone's even-handedness and said they were able to present their arguments amply. But they lamented the Vatican’s outdated procedural norms gave prosecutors enormous leeway to withhold evidence and otherwise pursue their investigation nearly unimpeded.

Andrea Tornielli, the Vatican's editorial director, said the verdicts showed the defense had ample space to present their case and that the defense rights were respected. 

“The outcome of this trial tells us that the judges of the tribunal, as is right, acted with full independence based on documentary proofs and witnesses, not pre-confectioned theories," he wrote in an editorial in Vatican News.

Prosecutors had sought prison terms from three to 13 years and damages of over 400 million euros to try to recover the estimated 200 million euros they say the Holy See lost in the bad deals. 

In the end, the tribunal acquitted many of the suspects of many of the biggest charges, including fraud, corruption and money-laundering, determining in many cases that the crimes simply didn't exist. 

But it nevertheless ordered the confiscation of 166 million euros from them and payment of civil damages to Vatican offices of 200 million euros. One defendant, Becciu's former secretary Monsignor Mauro Carlino, was acquitted entirely.

The trial was initially seen as a sign of Francis' financial reforms and willingness to crack down on alleged financial misdeeds in the Vatican. But it had something of a reputational boomerang for the Holy See, with revelations of vendettas, espionage and even ransom payments to Islamic militants.

Much of the London case rested on the passage of the property from one London broker, Raffaele Mincione, to another in late 2018. Prosecutors allege the second broker, Gianluigi Torzi, hoodwinked the Vatican by maneuvering to secure full control of the building that he relinquished only when the Vatican paid him off 15 million euros.

For Vatican prosecutors, that amounted to extortion. For the defense — and a British judge who rejected Vatican requests to seize Torzi’s assets — it was a negotiated exit from a legally binding contract. 

In the end, the tribunal convicted Torzi of several charges, including extortion, and sentenced him to six years in prison. Mincione was convicted of embezzlement for the original London investment but was absolved of, among other things, of inflating the cost of the building when the Vatican bought into it.

It wasn't clear where the suspects would serve their time, if the convictions are upheld on appeal. The Vatican has a jail, but Torzi's whereabouts weren't immediately known and it wasn't clear how or whether other countries would extradite the defendants to serve any sentence.

The former heads of the Vatican financial intelligence agency, Tommaso di Ruzza and Rene Bruelhart, were absolved of the main charge of abuse of office. They were convicted only of failing to report a suspicious transaction involving Torzi to prosecutors and fined 1,750 euros apiece.

They had argued they couldn’t tip off Vatican prosecutors to the transaction because they had initiated their own cross-border financial intelligence-gathering operation into Torzi after Francis asked them to help the secretariat of state get possession of the property.

A Vatican official, Fabrizio Tirabassi, was convicted of extortion along with Torzi and a money-laundering charge. The Vatican’s long-time financial adviser, Enrico Crasso was convicted of several charges including embezzlement and sentenced to seven years in prison.

The original London investigation spawned two other tangents that involved the star defendant, Becciu, once one of Francis’ top advisers and himself considered a papal contender.

Prosecutors accused Becciu of embezzlement for sending 125,000 euros in Vatican money to a Sardinian charity run by his brother. Becciu argued that the local bishop requested the money to build a bakery to employ at-risk youths and that the money remained in the diocesan coffers.

The tribunal acknowledged the charitable ends of the donation but convicted him of embezzlement, given his brother's role.

Becciu was also accused of paying a Sardinian woman, Cecilia Marogna, for her intelligence services. Prosecutors traced some 575,000 euros in wire transfers from the Vatican to a Slovenian front company owned by Marogna and said she used the money to buy luxury goods and fund vacations.

Becciu said he thought the money was going to pay a British security firm to negotiate the release of Gloria Narvaez, a Colombian nun taken hostage by Islamic militants in Mali in 2017.

He said Francis authorized up to 1 million euros to liberate the nun, an astonishing claim that the Vatican was willing to make ransom payment to al-Qaida-linked militants.

(AP) 

Cardinal Angelo Becciu

Saturday, November 4, 2023

Corruption is Everywhere > FTX Crypto Exchange; Guatemalan judge shuts down government; Brazil calls in Military to fight crime

..

When brilliant minds lack a moral compass...



Sam Bankman-Fried found guilty of defrauding customers

of FTX crypto exchange


Former crypto tycoon Sam Bankman-Fried was found guilty Thursday by a New York jury on all seven counts of fraud, embezzlement and criminal conspiracy.

Issued on: 03/11/2023 - 01:55
France24, 1 min

Indicted FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried leaves the United States Courthouse in New York City, July 26, 2023.
© Amr Alfiky, Reuters

The panel reached its decision after five weeks of trial, and Bankman-Fried now faces up to 110 years behind bars. Sentencing will take place at a later date.

The month-long federal trial had been an ordeal for Bankman-Fried after some of his closest associates testified that he was key to all the decisions that saw $8 billion vanish from his FTX trading platform.

Bankman-Fried, 31, was until late last year a poster-boy for the crypto industry and estimated to be worth $26 billion by Fortune magazine, before his empire collapsed spectacularly.

In closing arguments, prosecutors portrayed the defendant as an extremely smart man consumed by greed who knew what he was doing when FTX funds were secretly funneled to his personal hedge fund.

"Find him guilty," US prosecutor Danielle Sassoon told the jury earlier on Thursday. "He was ambitious" and had "the arrogance to think that he could get away with a fraud," she added.

The defence said their client had acted in "good faith" and was overtaken by circumstances and the financial ineptitude of close associates who testified against him to gain leniency from prosecutors.

The star witness in the trial was Bankman-Fried's former associate and on-and-off-again girlfriend Caroline Ellison who told the jury that they had stolen "around $14 billion" from clients of the FTX cryptocurrency trading platform before it collapsed into bankruptcy late last year.

The money was used to prop up Alameda Research, Bankman-Fried's personal hedge fund for which he picked Ellison as CEO.

In November 2022, the FTX empire imploded, unable to cope with massive withdrawal requests from customers panicked to learn that some of FTX's funds had been committed to risky operations by Alameda. That money was used to finance venture capital deals, political contributions as well as swanky real estate in the Bahamas.

It also went toward paying tens of millions of dollars to celebrities, including Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen, to gain their endorsement of FTX, as well as buying the naming rights for the Miami Heat's home arena.

(AFP)

===========================================================================================


Are all Central American countries Narco States?



Guatemalan electoral authority suspends party of President-elect Arevalo


The electoral body in charge of regulating Guatemala’s political groups, known as the Citizen Registry, announced the suspension Thursday of President-elect Bernardo Arevalo’s Seed Movement party.

Issued on: 03/11/2023 - 03:17, 1 min

Guatemalan President-elect Bernardo Arevalo attends a meeting with magistrates of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal at the headquarters of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal in Guatemala City on October 2, 2023. © Johan Ordoñez, AFP


A judge had granted the party’s suspension at the request of the Attorney General’s Office back in July, shortly before Arevalo was declared the second-place finisher in the initial round of voting. But a higher court ruled that the party could not be suspended during the election cycle, which only ended Oct. 31.

Arevalo went on to win a runoff in August and is scheduled to take office in January.

However, since the original judge’s order for the party’s suspension remained pending, the Citizen Registry said Thursday it executed the order.

The Attorney General’s Office has alleged wrongdoing in the way the party collected the necessary signatures to register years earlier. Observers say Attorney General Consuelo Porras is trying to meddle in the election to thwart Arevalo and subvert the will of the people.

Luis Gerardo Ramirez, the registry’s spokesperson, said the party cannot hold assemblies or carry out administrative procedures.

Ramírez also said the party could appeal the registry’s decision to the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, but since the order came from a judge the appeal would need to go through a court.

"The suspension is unprecedented, no criminal judge could suspend a party because it’s illegal," said Samuel Perez, leader of the Seed Movement’s lawmakers in the congress. "The problem is that the judge’s suspension isn’t legal, it’s political."

The U.S. State Department’s Deputy Assistant Secretary for Western Hemisphere Affairs Eric Jacobstein told journalists during a visit to Guatemala Thursday that the party’s suspension was worrisome as an apparent way to interfere to with Arevalo’s transition to office.

It remained to be seen how the order would affect other institutions such as Congress, where Seed Movement lawmakers were supposed to eventually take their seats.

Opponents of the Seed Movement in Congress already had declared those incoming lawmakers independent, meaning they could not chair committees or hold other leadership positions. A court at the time had ruled that the Congress couldn't deny Seed Movement lawmakers leadership positions on grounds that the party couldn't be suspended during the election cycle.

(AP)




Can Latin America's biggest state avoid being completely taken over by drug lords?



Brazil's army deployed to transport hubs in crackdown

on organised crime


Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said Wednesday he is sending the armed forces to boost security at some of the country's most important airports, ports and international borders as part of a renewed effort to tackle organised crime in Latin America's largest nation. 

Issued on: 02/11/2023 - 01:17; 3 min

Planes sit on the tarmac at Galeao International Airport in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on November 1, 2022.
© Pablo Porciuncula, AFP



The decision comes days after members of a criminal gang set fire to dozens of buses in Rio de Janeiro, apparently in retaliation for the police slaying their leader's nephew.

"We have reached a very serious situation," Lula said at a press conference in Brasilia after signing the decree. "So we have made the decision to have the federal government participate actively, with all its potential, to help state governments, and Brazil itself, to get rid of organised crime."

Brazil will mobilise 3,600 members of the army, navy and air force to increase patrols and monitor the international airports in Rio and Sao Paulo, as well as two maritime ports in Rio and Sao Paulo's Santos port, the busiest in Latin America – and a major export hub for cocaine.

The deployment is part of a government's broader plan that includes increasing the number of federal police forces in Rio, improving cooperation between law enforcement entities and boosting investment in state-of-the-art technology for intelligence gathering.

That is, after they pay for the new busses, I presume.

Attempt to 'suffocate' militias


State and federal authorities have said in recent weeks they want to "suffocate" militias by going after their financial resources.

Rio’s public security problems go back decades, and any federal crackdown on organised crime needs to be supported by a far-reaching plan, the fruits of which might only be seen years from now, according to Rafael Alcadipani, a public security analyst and professor at the Getulio Vargas Foundation, a university in Sao Paulo.

"The federal government is being rushed into this due to previous lack of action," said Alcadipani. "The government is trying, but the chance of this not working is huge ... This is an emergency plan, something being done last minute as though it were a problem that arose just now, but it isn't."

Brazil's Justice Minister Flávio Dino said the measures announced Wednesday are part of a plan being developed since Lula took office on Jan. 1, and the result of months of consultations with police forces, local officials and public security experts.

Recent wave of unrest


The latest wave of unrest in Rio began Oct. 5, when assassins killed three doctors in a beachside bar, mistaking one of them for a member of a militia. The city's powerful militias emerged in the 1990s and were originally made up mainly of former police officers, firefighters and military men who wanted to combat lawlessness in their neighbourhoods. They charged residents for protection and other services, but more recently moved into drug trafficking themselves.

There has since been increased pressure for the state and federal governments in Brazil to come up with a plan and demonstrate they have a handle on public security in the postcard city.

On Oct. 9, days after the doctors were killed, Rio state government deployed hundreds of police officers to three of the city’s sprawling, low-income neighbourhoods.

And on Oct. 23, Rio's police killed Matheus da Silva Rezende, known as Faustao, nephew of a militia's leader and a member himself. In a clear show of defiance, criminals went about setting fire to at least 35 buses.

On Wednesday, federal police in Rio said it had arrested another militia leader and key militia members in Rio das Pedras and Barra da Tijuca, both in Rio state. They also seized several luxurious, bullet-resistant cars, a property and cash.

(AP)



Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Pentagon Diverts the Better Part of a Billion Dollars Meant for Covid19 Response to Military Industrial Complex

Pentagon slammed for turning $1 billion ‘coronavirus fund’ into more military-industrial pork – but what did Congress expect?

Pentagon police conduct a biowarfare preparedness drill © Reuters / Jim Young

The Pentagon has defended its decision to repurpose Covid-19 preparedness funds – meant for pandemic response – to prop up weapons contractors as House Democrats slammed its double-dipping.

While the Department of Defense received $1 billion in March's CARES Act stimulus bill specifically to "prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus," it ultimately diverted most of the windfall to defense contractors, the Washington Post revealed on Tuesday.

The pandemic response fund, created under the aegis of the Defense Production Act, was supposed to be used to produce N95 masks, gloves, and other PPE that was scarce at the time. Instead, it was doled out to mega-corporations like Rolls-Royce, GE Aviation, and ArcelorMittal, as well as to smaller firms making drone technology and a fabric manufacturer whose product is used to make army uniforms. The only thing most recipients had in common was that their work had no immediately apparent connection to coronavirus preparedness.

Department of Defense lawyers justified these acts of creative accounting with the logic that propping up the lucky contractors was an urgent priority to maintain US national security, referencing the fragile military supply chain that has seen single companies monopolize the production of vital proprietary hardware without which the nation's impressive war machine cannot function. Even as social media pondered whether the report described a case of embezzlement, the Pentagon seemed far from ashamed - it has demanded another $11 billion from any stimulus package that makes it out of Congress.

Worse, at least a third of the Pentagon contractors who benefited from the misappropriated pandemic response funds were essentially double-dipping, WaPo revealed, helping themselves to the critically-underfunded Paycheck Protection Program which so many American small businesses outside the defense sector have struggled to access.

House Democrats had already taken a dim view of what the House Committee on Appropriations called a direct violation of the spirit of the CARES Act back in July – though they stopped short of raising a finger to halt it. "The Committee's expectation was that the Department would address the need for PPE industrial capacity rather than execute the funding for the [defense industrial base]," they wrote in a hand-wringing evaluation of the appropriations.

House Armed Services Committee Chair Adam Smith (D-Washington) slammed President Donald Trump's administration for "continu[ing] to exploit the trust of the American people" and spending three times as much on defense contractors as on expanding the country's pandemic defenses in a Tuesday statement after the Post report emerged. However, he did not confirm any plans to actually pursue an investigation, even while acknowledging that the Pentagon's latest $5.3 billion funding request also lacked a "properly detailed" spending plan. 

Others were less circumspect in the wake of the damning expose. Democratic Reps Mark Pocan (Wisconsin) and Barbara Lee (California) have demanded a formal investigation, challenging the legality of the Pentagon's actions.

Missouri House candidate Cori Bush was even more direct: "Defund the Pentagon," she stated on Twitter – an idea that found warm reception among the progressive left.

Democratic Socialist Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who had previously proposed that the Pentagon's budget should be cut by 10 percent, stopped short of saying "I told you so," though some of his colleagues couldn't resist.

Meanwhile, plenty of opposition stalwarts have taken the opportunity to grandstand against Trump. While Massachusetts senator and erstwhile political candidate Elizabeth Warren denounced his "bungled pandemic response" in an emailed statement on the WaPo piece and Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar observed on Twitter that "their corruption knows no bounds," Democratic leaders have done nothing to stop the Pentagon from slurping up nearly two-thirds of every discretionary dollar in the US budget. The US spends more on its military than the next 10 countries combined. 

Even as some fiscal conservatives have finally come around to the notion, once unthinkable in right-wing circles, that the US spends too much money on its military – and others have pointed out that taxpayer-funded bailouts of private companies are literally corporate socialism - US military dominance remains tied in the minds of Washington's bipartisan power elite to sheer brute financial force.

And some people are amazed that Trump would criticize the Pentagon. Deep State is all about money!



Tuesday, May 12, 2020

Corruption is Everywhere - Most Definitely in Communist China - 2 Stories

Chinese Communist Party official charged in
$100M graft case
By Elizabeth Shim

A former Chinese Communist Party official in Shaanxi Province has been accused of bribery and defying orders from President Xi Jinping. File Photo by Stephen Shaver/UPI


(UPI) -- A senior Chinese Communist Party official in Shaanxi Province has been charged with taking $101.3 million in bribes connected to the construction of an illegal resort village in the Qinling Mountains.

Chinese news agency Xinhua reported Tuesday that Zhao Zhengyong, former chief of the Shaanxi Provincial Committee of the Communist Party, was found to have embezzled more than $100 million during his trial at the First Intermediate People's Court of Tianjin Municipality.

The bribe linked to Zhao dwarfs the graft case of Xing Yun, a former senior legislator of northern China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. Xing was sentenced to death in 2019 for accepting money and valuables worth $63.9 million.

Zhao, a former senior national legislator, was a leading Communist Party official in Shaanxi Province from 2003 to 2018. Of the $101.3 million he accepted while in office, $41 million "was not received," Chinese prosecutors said Monday.

Zhao reportedly pleaded guilty to taking bribes on Monday. He is being charged with forging ahead with construction projects in the Qinling Mountains, which was reportedly declared a nature reserve six times since May 2014 by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Zhao left office in January 2019 and is believed to have fallen out of favor with Xi for "disobeying orders," according to Chinese state media.

I wonder if he would have been prosecuted had he remained in Xi's favour?

Xi has kept a low profile following the coronavirus pandemic that began in the central Chinese city of Wuhan.

The growing movement among countries for China to apologize and pay reparations is drawing a nationalist response in the country, the South China Morning Post reported Tuesday.

Chinese analysts are warning of trends that exclude China from global cooperation.

"We have every reason to say that an international alliance is forming that excludes China and the Chinese yuan," said Li Yang, director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences' National Institution for Finance and Development, according to the Post.




Luckin Coffee fires CEO, COO amid fraud probe


By Danielle Haynes

(UPI) -- China's rival to Starbucks, Luckin Coffee, announced Tuesday the departure of two senior management officials implicated in a fraud investigation.


The board of directors fired CEO Jenny Zhiya Qian (above) and Chief Operating Officer Jian Liu. Both also resigned from the company's board.

Jinya Guo, senior vice president, was named acting CEO, and Wenbao Cao and Gang Wu, both senior vice presidents, were named to the board as replacements.

The departures come after six other employees who were involved in or had knowledge of the scandal were suspended or placed on leave.

In April, Luckin revealed that Liu fabricated about $310 million in sales in 2019, prompting the company's stock to fall 80 percent.

"The company has been cooperating with and responding to inquiries from regulatory agencies in both the United States and China," Luckin said. "The company will continue to cooperate with the internal investigation and focus on growing its business under the leadership of the board and current senior management."



Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Brazil's High Court Approves Investigation into Bolsonaro - Corruption is Everywhere


By Clyde Hughes

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, shown in Jerusalem on March 31, 2019, is facing an investigation Monday
after being accused of meddling with the federal police. Photo by Heidi Levine/UPI | License Photo

April 28 (UPI) -- The Brazilian Supreme Court Monday approved an investigation into whether controversial President Jair Bolsonaro tried to interfere with the country's federal police.

Justice Minister Sergio Moro accused Bolsonaro Friday of trying to replace the head of federal police, the equivalent to the FBI, with someone more willing to share intelligence and police business with him.

"The president of the republic ... is also subject to the laws, just like any other of the country's citizens," Supreme Court Judge Celso de Mello said Monday. "No one, absolutely no one, is entitled to infringe and show contempt for our country's laws and constitution."

Sergio Moro submitted his resignation last week in protest of this move.

Local media said Bolsonaro's interest in removing the federal police head centered around an investigation involving his son Carlos Bolsonaro and the dissemination of fake news.

"The president emphasized to me, explicitly, more than once, that he wanted someone [to lead the federal police] who was a personal contact, whom he could call, from whom he could get information, intelligence reports," Moro said.

Carlos Bolsonaro and his brother Flavio are also under investigation for embezzlement. Bolsonaro said accusations that he tried to shield his sons from prosecution are unfounded. He said he was also well within the law if he wanted to replace the leader of the federal police.

"The prerogative is mine, and the day I have to submit to any of my subordinates, I cease to be president of the republic," Bolsonaro said last week.

I could live with that!





Wednesday, January 29, 2020

Corruption is Everywhere, Especially in Ukraine and Russia

Ex-president Poroshenko investigated in Ukraine over embezzlement, allegedly stealing US aid

FILE PHOTO: Ukrainian ex-president, Petro Poroshenko. ©  Sputnik

Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau has opened a probe against former president, Petro Poroshenko, who is suspected of abuse of power, embezzlement “on a grand scale” and allegedly stealing US aid funds.

The case against the ex-president was opened following a complaint by a group of Ukrainian MPs and the nation’s High Anti-Corruption Court demanding the authorities investigate embezzlement and misappropriation of the foreign financial aid at the time of Poroshenko’s term in office, a Ukrainian MP Renat Kuzmin said in a Facebook post.

Kuzmin, a member of the Opposition Platform – For Live party, also published the anti-corruption bureau’s documents, confirming that the case against Poroshenko had been launched. The papers state that the former president and some “unknown people” from his administration are suspected of embezzling “on a grand scale,” subsequent legalization of criminally obtained funds, and abuse of power.

The MP himself said that the investigation would look into the misappropriation of funds provided to Ukraine in the form of international aid, including by the administration of the former US President Barack Obama.

And, no doubt, from Canada which has a large Ukrainian population and has been supporting the country for years.

Poroshenko did not react directly to the accusations against him. Instead, his lawyer told the media that the ex-president plans to file as many as 14 lawsuits seeking moral compensation from Ukraine’s National Bureau of Investigations, the anti-corruption bureau and the police. His lawyer also denounced the investigation against his client as political persecution instigated by the administration of the current president, Volodymyr Zelensky.

The news comes just months after Poroshenko’s ally, Kiev mayor and three-time world boxing champion Vitali Klitschko was also accused of embezzlement and even treason by the anti-corruption bureau.

An oligarch candy-maker, who supported the Maidan coup in 2014, Poroshenko came to power in Ukraine just months after the ousting of President Viktor Yanukovich as the nation was quickly plunging into the abyss of a post-coup crisis. During his presidency, he repeatedly played the nationalist card and used Moscow as a boogeyman to raise support while his achievements in the field of economics and the fight against corruption, which still plagued Ukraine years after the Maidan, were far less impressive.

Eventually, he suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of former comedian Zelensky in the runoff at the presidential elections last year.

This story is courtesy of RT, and as you might have guessed is slanted more than a little. For instance, the nation was already in a crisis largely as a consequence of the spectacular corruption of Viktor Yanukovich. Check out the mansion he built himself before fleeing the country.

Corruption is everywhere in the Ukraine, as it is in Russia and so many other countries. Let's hope and pray that President Zelensky can clean it up without being tempted to jump into the cesspool.




Former Moscow Police officers arrested over framing of
Russian journalist Ivan Golunov

Journalist Ivan Golunov meets media in Moscow © Global Look Press / City News Moskva

By Jonny Tickle

Last summer, his detention on bogus drug charges rocked the world of Russian media, leading to an unprecedented show of journalistic unity.

Now, investigators have detained five ex-police officers who are accused of fabricating the case against Ivan Golunov, a reporter for Riga-based online publication Meduza.

The former members of the Moscow Police's drug trafficking control department are currently being interrogated, according to Svetlana Petrenko, the official representative of Russia's Investigative Committee. The detainees were removed from their posts last July in the immediate fallout from the controversial incident. President Vladimir Putin also dismissed two high-ranking Interior Ministry officials over the case.

Golunov was arrested in June 2019 after police officers claimed to have found the drug mephedrone in his backpack. The reporter claimed the narcotics were planted on him. Five days later, following a national outcry, all charges were dropped.

Earlier this month, Golunov's lawyer Sergey Badamshin revealed that police officially recognized him as a "victim," and on January 20 he was summoned for questioning. Badamshin added that Golunov refused to sign a non-disclosure agreement.

Golunov told newspaper RBK that he was satisfied with the decision to detain the suspects and said he is looking forward to the start of the criminal case. He also explained that he learned about the arrests from media coverage and had no additional information about the identities of the police officers.

Today's detentions were flagged in December, when Putin disclosed during a live press conference that five law enforcement officers were under suspicion.

That's odd. Why were they not 'flagged' in July when they were fired?

The five detainees have been named as former Moscow drug cops Denis Konovalov, Akbar Sergaliev, Roman Feofanov, and Maxim Umetbaev, as well as the former head of the department Igor Lyakhovets.