Jorge Juan Torres López |
A former Mexican border governor, whose short time in
office was marred by allegations of massive embezzlement, admitted Wednesday in
a Corpus Christi courtroom to laundering money through Texas banks.
Jorge Juan Torres López, 66, served for
most of 2011 as the interim governor of Coahuila, a state that borders Texas
from west of Laredo to the Big Bend. Torres, who owns a home in the Houston
area, is closely associated with Coahuila’s nearly $2 billion debt, dubbed the
megadeuda in the Mexican press.
He’s one of several officials and
businessmen from the state accused by U.S. authorities of laundering through
Texas banks and San Antonio real estate transactions tens of millions of
dollars embezzled from the state or collected as bribes.
On Wednesday, he pleaded guilty to one
count of money laundering conspiracy. Torres joined the hearing in U.S.
District Judge Nelva Gonzales Ramos’s courtroom via video conferencing from the
Aransas County Detention Center, where he’s been held since his extradition
last year. He faces up to 20 years in prison and a $500,000 fine or twice the
value of the money he laundered when he’s sentenced in September, although will
likely receive much less under federal sentencing guidelines.
As part of his plea agreement, Torres
agreed to give up an empty lot in Montgomery County that backs up to the first
hole on the Miller Course at the Bentwater Yacht and Country Club.
In a departure from past plea hearings for
others charged in the investigation, including a businessman who admitted to
bribing Torres, prosecutors didn’t give any details of the former governor’s
crimes.
“After much reflection and time consulting
with his family and attorneys, Mr. Torres Lopez has accepted responsibility for
some of the allegations against him,” Carlos Solis, one of his lawyers, wrote
in an email. “He looks forward to putting this distressing time of his life
behind him and his family sooner rather than later.”
Former Coahuila governor Humberto Moreira
appointed Torres as the state’s secretary of treasury when he took office in
2005. Torres served for two years, leaving in 2007 when he was elected mayor of
Saltillo, the state capital. When Moreira left the governorship with nearly a
year remaining in his term to lead Mexico’s longtime ruling Institutional
Revolutionary Party (PRI), Torres was appointed to replace him.
Torres was governor when in March 2011
members of the Zetas drug cartel launched a bloody cleansing in and around
Piedras Negras, across the Rio Grande from Eagle Pass. Known as the Allende
Massacre after one of the towns where much of the killing took place, the
days-long pogrom is believed to have left hundreds dead.
In a series of trials in Texas federal
courtrooms, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) informants testified that details
of their cooperation was leaked to the Zetas leaders. In response, gang members
rounded up and executed anyone they could find with a connection to the
traitors. One Zetas operative testified in 2016 that payments to top Coahuila
officials, including Moreira, gave the traffickers free reign in the state.
Torres was not named as a recipient of
those bribes. Moreira, who wouldn’t comment for this story and wasn’t charged
in the U.S., has in the past denied taking money from the Zetas, whom he blames
for the murder of his son in 2012.
Solis, Torres’ lawyer, said he “has never
been connected or associated with drug trafficking organizations in any
capacity, any suggestion or insinuation to such is utterly inaccurate.”
News of Coahuila’s massive debt broke
before Torres left office in December 2011. Héctor Javier Villarreal-Hernandez, his
successor as state treasurer, stepped down and later faced criminal charges
amid an investigation into allegations he had taken out loans using the state’s
credit without legislative approval.
Meanwhile, U.S. investigators were looking
into allegations Moreira and other government officials had embezzled hundreds
of millions of dollars from state coffers and transferred much of it to the
U.S.
In 2012, Bexar County and federal
prosecutors seized homes and commercial properties Villarreal’s family members
owned in San Antonio and in the Rio Grande Valley worth nearly $40 million.
In April 2013, Torres agreed to turn
$200,000 over to Hidalgo County prosecutors to settle a civil lawsuit against a
bank account he and his wife had at Inter National Bank in McAllen. Five months
later, federal prosecutors in Corpus Christi seized a $2.76 million account
Torres held in a Bermuda bank.
In a lawsuit to forfeit the property, they
alleged Torres and Villarreal in 2008 met with J.P. Morgan Chase bankers in
McAllen to establish bank accounts, but lied about where their money came from.
Those accounts were used to transfer money from Mexico to the U.S., then
offshore banks, according to the lawsuit. In November 2013, the Corpus Christi
prosecutors indicted Villarreal and Torres on money laundering conspiracy and
bank fraud charges.
Villearreal later turned himself in to
U.S. authorities at an international bridge in El Paso and pleaded guilty to
the Corpus Christi charges as well as additional charges in San Antonio. He’s
free on bond and is awaiting sentencing before a judge in San Antonio.
Mexican officials arrested Torres last
year in the Pacific Coast city of Puerto Vallarta, and in October he agreed to
be extradited to the U.S. to face charges here.
Little information was released during
Wednesday’s hearing, a change from past guilty pleas in prosecutors’
investigation of Coahuila bribery and money laundering. In a 2015 plea
agreement for a media mogul with properties on both sides of the border,
prosecutors identified Moreira as Co-Conspirator 1.
In that document filed in a
San Antonio federal court, they alleged he stole hundreds of millions of
dollars from the state of Coahuila, some of which he used to purchase radio and
television stations in Mexico. In 2009, Moreira, Villarreal and the businessman
met at the Club at Sonterra to discuss the sale of media holdings in Mexico for
nearly $2 million, according to the plea agreement.
In 2017, Luis Carlos Castillo Cervantes, a
Mexican construction magnate and a former shareholder in Inter National Bank,
admitted in a Corpus Christi federal court to paying bribes to Moreira in
exchange for paving contracts.
During that hearing, and the 2013 guilty plea of
one of Castillo’s business associates, prosecutors read lengthy statements
outlying the men’s crimes and naming former Mexican officials whom they
allegedly bribed and helped launder money.
During the 2017 plea, prosecutors
alleged that, at the behest of a business associate, he wired money to a title
company to pay for a house Moreira’s mother-in-law owned in San Antonio’s
Greystone Country Estates subdivision. U.S. authorities seized the home.
Prosecutors also alleged during Castillo’s
plea hearing that Coahuila officials, including Torres, inflated road paving
contracts in exchange for $6.8 million in kickbacks. Castillo helped Torres set
up an account at Inter National bank, then gave him more than $700,000 to
purchase real estate in Montgomery County, near Houston, prosecutors alleged.
Torres laundered more than $2 million through the account, according to
prosecutors. No such information was released Wednesday.
He caused a lot of misery to the Mexican people..but it is a whitecollar crime..he we get a slap on the wrist
ReplyDeletenot him...he wasn't in very long you mean Bert
DeleteScum... Pure scum!!!
ReplyDeleteEvery photo from this post made me nauseous ...
ReplyDeleteThe big man is waiting for them, and I am not referring to the one upstairs.
Lending banks do not give a fuck, States like Coahuila have had legislator made laws that obligate the state's inhabitants to pay their State Debt...that is why there is never due diligence in their lending practices and governors like enrique alfaro in Jaliskatitlan keeps on taking millions and millions of pesos and dollars in loans, and he spends the moneys in payments to defunct corporations owned by himself and his partners in crime.
ReplyDeleteHe's going into the witness program like Henry hill.
ReplyDelete