logo
Florida court orders ex-Mexican security chief to pay millions to Mexico

Florida court orders ex-Mexican security chief to pay millions to Mexico

Yahoo23-05-2025

A Florida court has ordered Mexico's former head of public security to pay more than $748m to his home country for his alleged involvement in government corruption.
Thursday's ruling brought to a close a civil case first filed in September 2021 by the Mexican government.
The case centred on Genaro Garcia Luna, who served as Mexico's security chief from 2006 to 2012. Garcia Luna is currently serving more than 38 years in a United States prison for allegedly accepting millions of dollars in bribes from the Sinaloa cartel.
The Mexican government alleges that Garcia Luna also stole millions in taxpayer funds, and it has pledged to seek restitution, namely by filing a legal complaint in Miami, Florida, where it says some of the illegal activity took place.
On Thursday, Judge Lisa Walsh in Miami-Dade County not only required Garcia Luna to pay millions, but she also ordered his wife, Linda Cristina Pereyra, to pay $1.7bn. Altogether, the total neared $2.4bn.
In its initial 2021 complaint, the Mexican government – led at the time by former President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador – accused Garcia Luna, his wife and their co-defendants of having 'concealed funds stolen from the government' and smuggling the money to places like Barbados and the US.
'Under the direction of the Defendant GARCIA LUNA, the funds unlawfully taken from the government of MEXICO were used to build a money-laundering empire,' the complaint wrote.
It alleged those funds were used to finance 'lavish lifestyles' for Garcia Luna and his co-conspirators, including real estate holdings, bank accounts and vintage cars, among them Mustangs from the 1960s and '70s.
Separately, Garcia Luna faced criminal charges for corruption, with US authorities accusing him of pocketing millions while in office for working on behalf of the Sinaloa cartel.
Through his work with Mexico's federal police and as its security chief, US prosecutors say Garcia Luna accessed information that he later used to tip off the Sinaloa cartel, letting them know about investigations and the movements of rival criminal groups.
Garcia Luna was also accused of helping the cartel move its shipments of cocaine to destinations like the US, sometimes using Mexico's federal police as bodyguards – and even allowing cartel members to wear official uniforms.
In exchange, prosecutors say the cartel left money for him in hiding places, one of which was a French restaurant across the street from the US embassy in Mexico City. Some bundles of cash – offered in $100 bills – totalled up to $10,000.
After leaving office in 2012, Garcia Luna moved to the US. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him. His defence lawyers have described him as a successful businessman living in Florida.
But in February 2023, a federal jury in Brooklyn, New York, convicted Garcia Luna on drug-related charges, including international cocaine conspiracy and conspiracy to import cocaine. The following year, in October, he was sentenced to decades in prison.
The Mexican government, however, alleged in its civil lawsuit that Garcia Luna also led a 'government-contracting scheme' that included bid-tampering and striking dubious deals as a form of money laundering.
Those contracts included deals for surveillance and communications equipment. The Associated Press news agency reported that one such contract was falsified, and others were inflated.
Garcia Luna is the highest-level Mexican government official to be convicted in the US.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump promises to hike steel and aluminum tariffs to 50% starting Wednesday. Here's what we know
Trump promises to hike steel and aluminum tariffs to 50% starting Wednesday. Here's what we know

Washington Post

time25 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Trump promises to hike steel and aluminum tariffs to 50% starting Wednesday. Here's what we know

NEW YORK — U.S. President Donald Trump has promised to hike nearly all of his tariffs on foreign steel and aluminum to a punishing 50% on Wednesday, a move that would hammer businesses from automakers to home builders, and likely push up prices for consumers. Foreign-made steel and aluminum is used in household products like soup cans and paper clips as well as big-ticket items like a stainless-steel refrigerators and cars. Economists warn that the latest tariffs will significantly squeeze the wallets of both companies and shoppers alike.

Tracking Trump: Musk calls budget bill ‘disgusting'; tariffs projected to slow GDP growth; Trump is more online than ever; and more
Tracking Trump: Musk calls budget bill ‘disgusting'; tariffs projected to slow GDP growth; Trump is more online than ever; and more

Washington Post

time31 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Tracking Trump: Musk calls budget bill ‘disgusting'; tariffs projected to slow GDP growth; Trump is more online than ever; and more

Elon Musk called the president's budget bill 'disgusting.' A world trade report found tariffs will slow U.S. economic growth. The Justice Department threatened to sue after a trans athlete victory. A judge overruled Trump's denial of hormone treatment to prisoners. Kennedy Center ticket sales have dropped sharply since Trump's takeover. Trump was more online than ever at the start of his second term.

A Long-Time Meteorologist Shared A Chilling Example Of How Trump's Budget Cuts Will Hurt Weather Predictions
A Long-Time Meteorologist Shared A Chilling Example Of How Trump's Budget Cuts Will Hurt Weather Predictions

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

A Long-Time Meteorologist Shared A Chilling Example Of How Trump's Budget Cuts Will Hurt Weather Predictions

An Emmy-winning TV meteorologist of over three decades is sounding the alarm on the Trump administration's unprecedented cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ahead of what is expected to be an intense 2025 hurricane season. Florida's John Morales, forecaster at Miami-based news station NBC 6, spoke about the changes Sunday by pointing to the accuracy of a report he was able to give six years ago. Morales played a clip of himself speaking about Hurricane Dorian, which followed the coastline up Florida and along the Southeastern U.S. in 2019. Initially, its movements made it appear like it was on track to smash right into South Florida. 'There is a lot of anxiety out there, because you don't see it turning,' he said at the time. 'It's going to turn,' he said calmly. As the broadcast cut back to a live feed, Morales recalled the confidence he had been able to project back then, despite fears from the community. 'I am here to tell you that I am not sure I can do that this year,' Morales told viewers. Related: A Republican's Response To A "Tax The Rich" Chant At His Town Hall Is Going Viral 'Because of the cuts, the gutting, the sledgehammer attack on science in general,' he went on, 'And I could talk about that for a long, long time, and how that is affecting the U.S. leadership in science over many years, and how we're losing that leadership and this is a multi-generational impact on science in this country.' He added, 'But, specifically, let's talk about the federal government cuts to the national weather service and to NOAA.' President Donald Trump and adviser Elon Musk's efforts to cut federal spending on what they consider 'waste, fraud, and abuse' led the so-called Department of Government Efficiency to eliminate hundreds of NOAA jobs this year, including many within the National Weather Service. Related: "I Am So Torn With What You Are Doing" — 11 Posts From MAGA Business Owners Who Are So Close To Getting It Project 2025 — the blueprint for a second Trump term that he has tried to denounce even as its plans become reality — outlines more extreme disruptions, including the total dismantling of NOAA. 'I think people are nervous and very scared to see what happens next,' a general forecaster at the National Weather Service told HuffPost back in March, after the job cuts, noting that hurricane season picks up in mid-summer. 'Everything people see on TV or hear from The Weather Channel, all that information comes from the National Weather Service,' the employee said. 'We're the ones behind the scenes that you may not see.' The administration did not boost confidence when it emerged that the new head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which handles post-hurricane damage, said Monday that he was not aware the country had a hurricane season. (The agency later said the comment was a joke.) Morales told viewers on Sunday that NWS offices in Central and South Florida were 19% to 39% understaffed, and that there has been a 17% drop in weather balloon launches, resulting in less data. JohnMoralesTV / Via 'And what we're starting to see is that the quality of the forecasts is becoming degraded,' Morales said, adding that hurricane-hunting planes may also be affected. 'With less reconnaissance missions, we may be flying blind, and we may not exactly know how strong a hurricane is before reaching the coastline,' he said. The meteorologist had more to say in a written piece published over the weekend. During an extreme weather event, skeleton staff at the nation's weather agencies might be at risk of making mistakes or overlooking data simply due to exhaustion. 'Am I worried? You bet I am!' he wrote. He provided an example of how such mistakes can have a devastating impact: Hurricane Otis, which made landfall near Acapulco, Mexico, in 2023. The storm had drastically more intense wind speeds than predicted, Morales said, in part because there had not been 'timely reconnaissance data' from hurricane-hunting flights. Morales urged viewers to contact their congressional representatives to demand an end to the cuts. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. Also in In the News: People Can't Believe This "Disgusting" Donald Trump Jr. Post About Joe Biden's Cancer Diagnosis Is Real Also in In the News: Miss USA's 2024 "National Costume" Has Been Revealed, And It's Obviously An Interesting Choice Also in In the News: One Body Language Expert Spotted Something Very Telling When Donald Trump "Held His Own Hand" At His Recent Press Conference

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store