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US judge denies bail to ex-Peru president in corruption case

Sep 12, 2019 | 2:49 PM

SAN FRANCISCO — A U.S. judge in San Francisco denied bail to former Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo in an extradition hearing Thursday that ended with an emotional outburst by his wife who had to be dragged out of the courtroom after she started shouting at prosecutors.

Magistrate Judge Thomas S. Hixson denied bail for the second time to Toledo who is wanted in his native country in a corruption scandal.

“Dr. Toledo has not carried the burden of proof to show he is not a risk of flight and so I’ll maintain the detention order,” judge Hixson said.

Shortly after, Toledo’s wife, Eliane Karp, began cursing and shouting at prosecutors they will be “personally responsible for his death” and was dragged by guards out of the courtroom.

“It’s the life of a man, goddam it! You’re killing him!” Karp shouted.

Three days after Toledo’s July 16 arrest on an extradition request at his Menlo Park home, Hixson ordered him held in custody, reasoning that if he fled it “would be a diplomatically significant failure of the United States to live up to its treaty obligations to Peru.”

Toledo has been held in solitary confinement at Santa Rita Jail in Alameda County since his arrest. His attorney, Graham Archer, argued that the former president be released on bail and put on house arrest, saying Toledo’s mental health is deteriorating.

“It’s a shame he has been in there for two months,” Archer said. “The idea that as a country we would present ourselves to the outside world as holding a non-violent, former head of state in solitary confinement during an extradition preceding, I think, that would be diplomatically unacceptable.”

Archer said that Toledo had been aware of the attempt to extradite him since early 2017 and had not tried to flee California, where he lived as a permanent legal resident and where he has a group of longtime friends, including Stanford professors, who are willing to put cash and homes to pay for his bail.

Federal prosecutor Elise LaPunzina said the bond plan presented by his defence and which would be paid by friends “is not adequate at all.”

“Mr. Toledo and his wife are not putting anything forward (for the bond),” La Punzina said.

“We do take issue as to his assets. There are millions of dollars that are unaccounted for,” LaPunzina adding, saying a suitcase with $40,000 in cash was found at the Toledos’ home during his arrest and that the couple paid $6,400 monthly in rent, took frequent trips to Washington and was paying several attorneys. Archer, Toledo’s attorney in the extradition case, is a public federal prosecutor.

In an August hearing, Hixson asked prosecutors to present him with other detention options, saying the situation with Toledo, “it’s not a good one” and could mean “solitary confinement for a number of years.”

LaPunzina said he could be housed in a unit of the jail away from the general population but with other inmates who like him “have to be watched more closely.”

The judge set a new hearing for Oct. 17.

The Peruvian government requested Toledo’s extradition earlier this year to stand trial on charges of influence peddling and money laundering.

The charges stem from allegations that he took $20 million in bribes from Odebrecht, a Brazilian construction company at the centre of Latin America’s biggest corruption scandal.

Toledo, who has denied wrongdoing, was Peru’s president from 2001 to 2006.

He was a visiting scholar at Stanford University as recently as 2017, though the school has said it was an unpaid position.

The Odebrecht scandal also impacted other former presidents in Peru who are under investigation.

In April, former leader Alan García killed himself with a gunshot to his head as officers waited to arrest him in a graft probe linked to the scandal.

Olga R. Rodriguez, The Associated Press