Mansur looking over Duarte right shoulder----From Reforma |
It was August 2016 and wealthy Mexican businessman Moises Mansur Cysneiros was in Vancouver, exploring whether to move his family here for “a different cultural experience.”
He got a call from his Mexican
tax lawyer, Jose Juan Janeiro Rodriguez, urging Mansur to fly to Toronto “to
discuss certain tax matters in person.”
When Mansur arrived in the
Ontario capital, he was surprised to learn that the newly elected governor of
the Mexican state of Veracruz — Miguel Angel Yunes — had flown in on a private
jet for the meeting.
Yunes wanted dirt on his predecessor,
Mansur’s close friend Javier Duarte, who had embezzled millions in state funds,
then pumped it into shell companies that were used to buy luxury properties for
himself.
At the Toronto meeting, Yunes
gave Mansur “handwritten notes, indicating his request for him to cooperate in
bringing down Duarte,” according to a recent Canadian immigration board ruling
obtained by The Vancouver Sun.
“The notes indicated that Yunes
was only interested in Duarte and wanted Duarte to go to jail and that if
(Mansur) cooperated, he would face no issues. Otherwise, Yunes would use all of
his power against him as well.”
After Mansur read the notes,
Yunes took them back, “tore them up and placed the scraps in his pocket.”
Mexican corruption case
reverberates in Vancouver
Three and a half years later,
Duarte has been convicted of money laundering and having criminal associations.
He is serving a nine-year sentence. His tax lawyer has become a prosecution
witness in Mexico. And Mansur is fighting to stay in Vancouver, pleading his
innocence on charges of tax fraud, tax evasion, organized crime and money
laundering based on allegations he was Duarte’s frontman.
Mansur says his life would be
in danger if he returns to his homeland. Or that he could be kidnapped by
corrupt Mexican officials if he moves to Brazil, where he also holds
citizenship.
But an Immigration and Refugee
Board member, Negar Azmudeh, recently ruled that Mansur is not a convention
refugee because of the allegations against him in Mexico.
She accepted arguments by
lawyers for the Minister of Public Safety, who said the charges against Mansur
were so serious that he should not be eligible for refugee status here.
Mansur is alleged to have
assisted Duarte — his buddy since both were in law school — by purchasing
properties on the governor’s behalf. Mansur “managed an extensive portfolio of
companies developing real estate (and) acted as a front or straw man for Duarte
to hide assets acquired through corruption,” the minister’s lawyers argued to
the immigration board.
He even “named Duarte as the
beneficiary of his will and had also given Duarte’s wife Karim a credit card.”
Mansur has filed an appeal of
Azmudeh’s decision, his lawyer Frances Mahon confirmed to the Sun. She said she
was “not aware of any request” by Mexico for her client’s extradition. She also
said Mansur was not available for an interview. He is believed to be in
Vancouver.
A Department of Justice public
affairs officer, Ian McLeod, said he couldn’t comment on whether Mexico wanted
Mansur sent back for trial. “As extradition requests are confidential
state-to-state communications, we cannot confirm or deny the existence of a
request,” McLeod said.
The immigration board ruling
came 19 months after a secret Vancouver hearing at which several Mexican
witnesses flew in and testified on Mansur’s behalf. He, too, took the stand, to
argue that he is a victim of persecution in a country with a long history of
politicians charging and imprisoning their rivals.
The Sun fought for over a year
to gain access to information about Mansur’s refugee claim.
Finally in February 2020,
Azmudeh released her heavily redacted 37-page decision. There are bans on all
the witnesses’ names, with the exception of Mansur’s.
Some of the details in the
ruling read like scenes from the hit Netflix series Narcos: Mexico, laying out
an incredible tale of systemic corruption, clandestine meetings and even
threats.
Veracruz
attorney general sent to Vancouver meeting
About a month after the 2016
Toronto meeting, Mansur heard from his tax lawyer again. He was told Yunes had
sent Veracruz’s attorney general, Jorge Winckler, and another man to Vancouver
to meet Mansur.
Suspended Veracruz Attorney General Jorge Winckler (left) and Veracruz governor Miquel Angel Yunes. JORGE WINCKLER ORTIZ / TWITTER/PNG |
“In that meeting, Mr. Winckler
stated that he was seeing (Mansur) in person on Yunes’s instructions and
renewed Yunes’s demand to sign over his assets in Veracruz to the state and
that he would regret it later if he did not,” the ruling summarized. “He also
advised the claimant that Yunes had video-recorded his meeting.”
Parts of the surreptitious
recording, in which Mansur appears to make incriminating statements, were later
broadcast on a popular Mexican television show hosted by journalist Carlos
Loret.
When Mansur testified to the
refugee board in 2018, he said “that Yunes’s actions amount to intimidation and
extortion.”
Yunes’s term ended in December
2018, but Mansur said he was still at risk because the former governor had
already “unleashed a system against him that is no longer limited to Yunes.”
He testified that Winckler, the
attorney general who flew to Vancouver, was still in power and “is interested
in harming the claimant on Yunes’s behalf.”
But since Mansur’s testimony,
Winckler himself has been suspended from office after allegations were made
against him last year. He also proclaimed his innocence and said the charges
were politically motivated.
Both Winckler and his close
friend Yunes are from the conservative National Action Party, or PAN. Mansur’s
jailed friend Duarte, the ex-governor, is with the rival Institutional
Revolutionary Party or PRI, which has been accused of corruption for decades.
When the populist left-wing
National Regeneration Movement (MORENA) candidate, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador,
was elected president in 2018, he promised to tackle corruption. It was the
first time a Mexican president had been elected from a party other than the PAN
or PRI since 1929.
And Mexicans were hopeful there
might finally be a change, according to Stephen Morris, of Rice University’s
Baker Institute of Public Policy.
Morris, who has studied
corruption in Mexico for decades, said from Mexico City that some of that
optimism after Obrador’s election has already faded, with polls showing the
public’s confidence in his anticorruption measures “going back down.”
He said you have to look at the
historical context. Every new Mexican government “promises to fight corruption”
while accusing its predecessor of being corrupt.
“They haul out new reforms and
prosecute some people from the former regime and bring a lot of attention to
what they are doing in fighting corruption,” said Morris, who is currently a
researcher at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.
“Quite often the government
wants quick fixes that you can broadcast and that has a strong media impact.
But in a lot of cases dealing with corruption, it can’t be done that way.”
The further into a new
government’s term, the more the fight against systemic corruption seems to slip
away and the “historic cycle” begins again, Morris said.
Corruption allegations and a Swiss
bank account
One of Mexico’s most
high-profile corruption cases involved Raul Salinas, brother of Carlos Salinas,
a former PRI president. In October 1998, the Swiss government seized $90
million from Raul’s bank account, alleging it was cartel money paid for
protecting drug shipments into the U.S. But Raul was eventually cleared of
“illicit enrichment” charges in 2014.
Morris said that historically
it’s been “difficult to tell whether what the government is doing is valid and
in the name of justice or it’s actually part of the same corruption that they
claim to be fighting.”
“The cases are tremendous going
all the way back to and even before that of Salinas’s brother.”
He said Raul Salinas made the
same claim Mansur is now making: That the case against him consisted of
“politically trumped up charges — or, in current lingo, a hoax — despite the
fact that many of us actually saw displayed some evidence like false passports
and that type of thing.”
(Salinas also won an appeal in
2005 of a murder conviction related to a 1994 hit on his one-time
brother-in-law, a former PRI official.)
Morris said the evidence
against Duarte, involving the embezzlement of more than $7 million U.S. that
was put into fake companies to buy properties in the U.S., Spain and Mexico,
appeared “to be quite strong.”
“There can really be no doubt
here that Duarte and his people were involved in all of this,” Morris said.
“Duarte of course claims that this was all a set-up and a political vendetta.
That’s what they always say.”
During Duarte’s six-year term,
cartel violence was rampant in the Gulf Coast state. And Veracruz became the
most dangerous place in Mexico for journalists. Seventeen were killed there.
Morris said often corrupt
politicians have ties to organized crime because they need the connection to
help them launder cash.
Mansur may have chosen to make
his refugee claim in Canada instead of the U.S. because of some of the recent
high-profile American prosecutions like that of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, head
of the Sinaloa cartel, Morris said.
“Those trials have created the
impression that you don’t want to go to the United States and get tried in the
United States. I think they might see Canada as an easier situation legally in
terms of immigration and in terms of trying to fight the charges,” he said.
Mansur is not the only Mexican
accused of money laundering who has faced the scrutiny of Canadian officials
after landing in Vancouver.
In March 2019, Mexican
businessman Sergio Antonio Reyes Garcia was interrogated by the Canada Border
Services Agency when he arrived at Vancouver International Airport with his
family. The CBSA agent alleged Reyes Garcia and his business partner Manuel Barreiro
had been misusing a B.C. company they formed to move cash from Mexico to a
Swiss bank.
“What connects you to Manuel is
a money-laundering scandal in Mexico,” CBSA agent Rahim Bajwa said to Reyes
Garcia, who claimed the allegations against them were false and politically
motivated.
He said they were targeted
because Barreiro had done business with the PAN presidential candidate, Ricardo
Anaya, who lost the 2018 election to Obrador, the current president.
Image Added to original post |
The agent cancelled Reyes
Garcia’s electronic travel authorization to visit Canada. But the Mexican
national took his case to the Federal Court of Canada and in January won a
judicial review of the CBSA decision. [Chivis Note: read judgment and reasons
using this hyperlink)]
Since Canada removed a visa
requirement for Mexicans to travel here on Dec. 1, 2016, the number of refugee
claimants from the country has skyrocketed.
Immigration and Refugee Board
statistics show that in 2015, there were just 111 Mexicans who made
applications for refugee protection in Canada. In 2019, that had jumped to
5,634 refugee claims from Mexicans, second only to the number of claims made by
Indians.
So far, only 602 of last year’s
claimants have been accepted. Another 1,045 have been rejected, while 672 of
the claims were either abandoned or withdrawn. The rest are outstanding.
RCMP
warned family about a possible threat
In July 2018, when Mansur
testified at his refugee hearing, he recounted a 2017 visit at his Vancouver
home from the RCMP. The officers told him they had received intelligence about
a possible threat to his family and suggested they move out of their home for a
few days.
Though the RCMP “never revealed
the nature of the threat they were facing,” Mansur said he believed it “must
have been related to Yunes.”
But even that disturbing detail
didn’t sway the immigration board’s Azmudeh. She said Mansur was merely
speculating on who was behind the threat.
“There is also insufficient
credible evidence at hand to conclude that Yunes or anyone else in Mexico has
tried to resort to extrajudicial means of intimidating or harming the claimants
in Canada.”
She said it was not ultimately
her role to determine whether Mansur is guilty or innocent of the charges he
faces in Mexico. But she noted that while Mansur has repeatedly proclaimed his
innocence, neither he nor his witnesses provided any documents about the
suspicious land deals that could have exonerated him.
“The complainants did not
present sufficient credible evidence to resolve the obligation but there are
serious reasons for considering that the … land was acquired as a means of a
complex scheme of money laundering,” Azmudeh said. “My duty is limited to find
whether the minister has raised sufficient credible evidence to establish that
there are serious reasons for considering that (Mansur) has committed fraud
and/or money laundering and I find that they have discharged their burden.”
TIMELINE:
Allegations against Moises Mansur Cysneiros
- May
2016: Mexican news site Animal Politico does an exposé on
Veracruz governor Javier Duarte for embezzling millions from his government,
used to set up shell companies to buy real estate. His friend Moises Mansur
Cysneiros was named as an alleged accomplice.
- August
2016: Mansur lands in Vancouver, claiming he wants a new cultural
experience for his family. But a political opponent flies in to pressure him to
turn on Duarte. He later claims refugee status.
- October
2016: Organized crime charges are laid against Duarte and his
alleged accomplices, but he has already fled Mexico on a government helicopter.
Mansur is also eventually charged.
- April
2017: Duarte is arrested in Guatemala and faces an extradition
hearing. He’s sent to Mexico in July 2017 for trial.
- July
2018: Mansur has an in camera refugee hearing in Vancouver that
lasts eight days. He testifies that the charges against him are politically
motivated and that he will be harmed if he returns to Mexico. Lawyers for
Canada’s Public Safety Minister argue that he should be excluded due to money
laundering and organized crime allegations.
- September
2018: Duarte strikes a plea deal and is sentenced to nine years
in jail on two of the counts he faced, money laundering and criminal
association.
- January
2020: An immigration board member rules Mansur is excluded because
of the charges he faces in Mexico. He is appealing and remains in Vancouver.
- February
2020: The immigration board releases a heavily redacted copy of
its decision on Mansur after an application by The Vancouver Sun.
All I can think is The average Mexican should be so pissed of to start Massive riots
ReplyDeletethis has gone one too long
Mexico could have Very high wages for EVERYONE The Best health care in the world The average mexican Indian could be so much more
Billions to Trilliins over the years Stolen from them.
Yes I lnow alot is drug money
but even then The poor avrage street dealer getting pennies on the dollar Sad Opressive
We all Know ALMO in a few yrs will get caught also
What I wonder When will the USA have the first migrant MEXICAN as a President ? not kidding
Mexico will Never Change
its Net work has gotten so big that
it would bring down the stock Market
all over the world
if every ( bad ) guy got caught.
I gotta laugh at sheer balls of Egos these guys have to Lie cheat and steal from the Mass of The all Mexican People
If a Movie was made of a lone Assasin a John Wayne good guy savior of Mexico to be Rid of all Corrupt Officals Etc and turn
Mexico into All Equal state
wonder if a movie of A Good Guy movie would even be recived ?
i thought that all of US presidents were some how migrants from old -achse of evil- europe?
Deletei think US/canadian banks were somehow involed, send him to a US/canadian jail for 50years. seize all his assets outside of mx, incl. family.
DeleteJudge a few to allign thousends.
The corrupt members of FECAL and EPN administrations and prior and governors are seeking impunity for their dirty deeds in Canada, they are not Veracruz reporters or journalists, college students or persecuted Ayotzinapos, I mean disappeared Ayotzinapos.
DeleteCanada should not be lending their ass to these crooks for refuge, that used to be exclusive of the US and england, or las Uropas.
The money stolen from government coffers is incredibly large, but the suffering imposed on the people of Veracruz by La Marrana Duarte and his secretary if public security Arturo bermudez, his state police and their allied zetas and CJNG AND OTHRR SECRET DEATH SQUADS is the biggest problem, they all should hang for it...Brazilian, italian, british, Spanish mafiosos allied with canadians and americans that come to Mexico to do their brand of business like stealing and money laundering or through running for political positions like Ricky Anaya
ReplyDeleteAlias "el canallin", el pinto meade and others, jorge Winkler, and his buddy yunes linares, all corrupt.
--the shrinking rates of AMLO's approval is all propaganda from the mexican rats trying to come back and denise dresser who does not miss EPN as much as her Chayote along with her "boyfriend" el payaso tenebrozo"
--Trust an american in Mexico, John Ackerman, more than Stephen Morris who could be working on a hit job on AMLO, Morena and Mexico.
--Swiss Banks pardon their criminal associates like the Salinas, the US won't, at least not without getting their money first.
WTF you rambling on about: (Swiss) banks are no judges who pass sentence. That's what the judiciary is there for. Loser!
Delete12:06 the Swiss Banks had raul salinas de gortari arrested and confiscated "his money while brother carlos sent their sister to mediate and convince raul to give back "Carlos' money". They judged...
DeleteRaul salinas spent time in mexican prisons until EPN saved his ass helped by FECAL, THEY WERE ALL PARTNERS, THE MILLONS OF DOLLARS STOLEN from Mexico remain safe on US and european banks...
--I hope you get a pay rise from your swiss bank for your passion for them, and make you more of a winner...
Anyone got access to Azmudeh's 'heavily redacted 37-page decision'???
ReplyDelete9 years for Duarte was and always will be Mexico's shame; our judiciary again working against the interests of all that is good about Mexico. The poor children murdered by his associations' passing fake medicine should have been considered a capital offense, and by those countries without the death penalty, Duarte might have been charged with crimes against humanity. But not in Mexico. How is it Mexico that you allowed the Devil and his brigade this leniency? THIS specifically is what WE all here in Mexico should be protesting, but no, our souls are dead, and our countrymen are all cowards.
ReplyDelete@5:21 yes the Mexicans have been scared into submission by a brutal state. The Zapatistas where the last ones that rose and they were duly subdued (with the support from the north) with brutality and cruelty.
DeleteSure it was not as bad as in Guatemala (by the Kaibiles), but it was successful at quelling the voices of the 99%.
Let's not forget Duarte ordering the deaths of journalists, or the fact that Bermudez apparently fed some of his victims to his collection of wild animals. Duarte should be given a fair trial and then eventually...slowly. He turned Veracruz into the biggest clandestine graveyard in Mexico
ReplyDeleteIn 9 years, he still will have millions of dollars to live comfortably. The laughs are on Mexico.
ReplyDelete8:54 Duarte's wife, (who looks more like his husband) lives confortably in Ireland or London, that shows where your tree shade comes from...
DeleteThe thing is, this stuff happens ALL over the 🌎 but the U.S concentrates on MEXICANS way TOO MUCH.. They don't even concentrate on their crooked SYSTEM, I love the U.S but they love messing up the mexican SYSTEM..To much money involved and they want some too is what it is... They could care less about justice.. 💰 💰 💰
ReplyDeleteIf he was broke would they bother with him?
5:42 all the money involved does not travel from pockets of US addicts to pockets of mexican drug traffickers that "work for tips" and weapons unless they do their own business top to bottom.
ReplyDeleteProof is in the pudding, no mexican banks or drug traffickers have been found laundering drug trafficking money and fined BILLIONS AND BILLIONS OF DOLLARS.
refine your search.