Correa convicted in bribery case, sentenced in absentia to eight years in prison

Apr 7, 2020 | 4 comments

A national criminal court in Quito has found former President Rafael Correa guilty of corruption, sentencing him to eight years in prison following a trial that he denounced as political persecution.

Former president Rafael Correa

The sentence was handed down in absentia since Correa lives in Europe and refused to return to Ecuador to attend the trial.

Judge Iván León said prosecutors had successfully proved the existence of a “structure of corruption” led by Correa and 19 other government officials and business leaders accused of participating in the bribery scheme with government contractors.

The decision could effectively end any aspirations by Correa to return to politics, as the sentence bars him from running for office for 25 years.

“So much money can’t be hidden easily,” said León, who read the sentence in the closed door, two-hour long sentencing in which judges wore masks and protective gloves as a precaution against the spread of the coronavirus.

“For sure we will win this case at the international level,” Correa wrote on Twitter immediately after the sentencing. “Because this is all a monstrosity.”

The 57-year-old former head of state has been living in his wife’s native Belgium since 2017. Though Ecuadorian authorities demanded his arrest and extradition in an earlier case, the international police agency Interpol refused to honor the warrant, claiming the charges were political, not criminal.

Ecuadorian officials are not expected to request his immediate extradition until the case has made its way through the anticipated appeals process.

Prosecutors state the former president oversaw a plot in which foreign and local businesses made cash payments to his Pais Alliance political party in exchange for lucrative public works contracts. The payments were allegedly made between 2012 and 2016, years that overlap with Correa’s time in the presidency.

Correa led the country from 2007 to 2017, a period of economic stability and growth driven by an oil boom and loans from China that allowed him to expand social programs, build roads, schools and other projects that transformed Ecuador.

Opponents claimed he governed with an iron fist – silencing or punishing critics in the press, opposition and judiciary – and his legacy has grown increasingly tarnished. Supporters respond that he was a strong leader who led Ecuador to the highest level of economic property in its history.

In reading the sentence, León said there was compelling evidence showing that Correa had knowledge of the illegal payments totaling $7.5 million and aimed at promoting his political party’s campaigns.

His vice president, Jorge Glas, already jailed in a separate corruption case, and 16 others were also found guilty of bribery and sentenced to eight years behind bars. Two others received lesser sentences in exchange for their collaboration.

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