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Argentina’s former president charged, arrest sought

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Argentina’s former President Cristina Fernandez gets into a car to go to a court hearing in Buenos Aires on Aug. 13. A federal judge indicted Fernandez for corruption and asked for her arrest for allegedly being the head of an illegal association that collected bribes in exchange for public work contracts.

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina >> A federal judge indicted former President Cristina Fernandez today and asked for her arrest for allegedly heading a corruption scheme that collected bribes from business leaders in exchange for public work contracts.

The decision by Judge Claudio Bonadio published by Argentina’s official judicial news agency asked that Fernandez be taken into custody and for authorities to seize about $100 million from the former leader.

Bonadio said Fernandez committed crimes that included “being the boss of an illegal association” and taking bribes between 2003 and 2015. The period includes her two terms as president as well as the presidency of her late husband and predecessor, Nestor Kirchner.

Fernandez denies any wrongdoing. She calls Bonadio “an enemy judge” who she says is working with the administration of conservative President Mauricio Macri to persecute opponents and distract from Argentina’s economic crisis.

Fernandez, 65, is currently a senator, a post that grants her immunity from prosecution. That immunity could be lifted only by a vote of two-thirds of the country’s senators.

The judge also indicted more than 40 former business leaders and former government officials, including ex-Planning Minister Julio de Vido.

“There was a collusion of officials and businessmen who made this scheme work, which took out with rigged proceedings money from the national state to the detriment of education, health, pensioners, which left the people poorer without sewage, services, safe transportation,” Bonadio wrote. “And all of this was done to distribute bribes to corrupt officials.”

More than a dozen people have been arrested in the case. They include business leaders and former officials who served in Fernandez’s 2007-2015 administration.

Known as the “notebooks case,” the investigation is based on a probe by the newspaper La Nacion into alleged corruption over more than a decade during the governments of Fernandez and Kirchner.

It began after authorities received copies of notebooks with detailed information, photographs and video taken by a chauffeur of the planning ministry who is thought to have testified as part of a plea bargain.

Several former business leaders and ex-government officials have also spoken under plea bargains, but the details have not been made public.

Since leaving office in 2015, Fernandez has also been accused of money laundering, possible illegal enrichment and fraud.

Last December, Bonadio asked lawmakers to remove her immunity to allow her arrest on a charge of treason for allegedly covering up the role of Iranians in a 1994 bomb attack on a Jewish center — Argentina’s worst terrorist attack.

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