28 defendants acquitted by Panamanian courts

A Panamanian court acquitted on Friday June 28 the twenty-eight people accused of money laundering in connection with the Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, the epicenter of the international tax evasion scandal. “Panama Papers”.

Read also | Tax evasion: the “Panama Papers” and other “leaks” brought in 450 million euros to France

Judge Baloisa Marquez “released twenty-eight people accused of violating the economic order through money laundering” in the context of the affair of “Panama Papers”, the court said in a statement. Among the acquitted defendants are the founders of the firm, Ramon Fonseca, who died on May 9 in a Panamanian hospital at the age of 71, as well as Jürgen Mossack.

During the trial, the prosecutor in charge of the fight against organized crime, Isis Soto, requested the maximum sentence, twelve years in prison, against MM. Mossack and Fonseca. The judge, however, considered that the evidence collected on the law firm’s servers “did not respect the chain of custody” and did not allow us to establish with “certainty (…) their authenticity and integrity”.

“Furthermore, the judge determined that the remaining evidence was not sufficient and conclusive to determine criminal liability.” of the defendants, specifies the press release. Baloisa Marquez also ordered “the lifting of provisional measures” which weighed on the defendants, according to the same source.

Read also | Closing of the debates in the “Panama Papers” trial

Leaked documents spark massive financial scandal

The case broke in 2016 after the publication of an investigation, known as the “Panama Papers”conducted by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). Drawing on the leak of 11.5 million documents from the Mossack Fonseca investigation, it revealed that heads of state and government, leading politicians and figures from finance, sports and the arts hid properties, businesses, capital and profits from the tax authorities.

Read also | “Panama Papers”: five years later, billions recovered and several convictions

To this end, they created opaque companies, through the Panamanian cabinet, to open bank accounts and create shell companies in several countries, in order to hide money, in some cases coming from illegal activities, according to the consortium’s investigation.

Among the figures mentioned are, among many others, Russian President Vladimir Putin, former heads of government of Iceland Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson, of Pakistan Nawaz Sharif and of the United Kingdom David Cameron (current head of British diplomacy), former Argentine President Mauricio Macri, as well as soccer star Lionel Messi and Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodovar. The scandal led to the closure of the Mossack Fonseca firm and Panama’s image was seriously affected.

The World with AFP

Reuse this content

source site-30