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Saturday, May 31, 2025

Drug clan leader testifies he bribed Honduran president with $250,000

Drug clan leader testifies he bribed Honduran president with $250,000

A Honduran drug clan leader testified in a New York court on Thursday that he paid Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez $250,000 in bribes to secure government contracts as well as protection from capture and extradition to the United States.
The money, which was paid in 2012 when Hernandez was head of Honduras’ Congress, was delivered in cash to the president’s now-deceased sister, Hilda, a leader of the Los Cachiros drug clan testified in the trial of alleged drug trafficker Geovanny Fuentes Ramirez.

“It was for protection so neither the military nor preventative police would arrest me or my brother in Honduras and so we would not be extradited to the United States,” Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga said.

Hernandez, who is listed as a co-conspirator in the indictment of Fuentes Ramirez, has repeatedly denied any involvement in drug trafficking. Fuentes Ramirez pleaded not guilty on Monday.

Rivera made a deal with the Drug Enforcement Administration in 2013 and turned himself in around two years later after the United States sanctioned shell companies Rivera said he owned.

Rivera said the money paid to Hernandez was also to ensure the government would continue to give contracts for road construction so as “to continue laundering money from drug trafficking.”

He also said that he paid former President Mel Zelaya half a million dollars in 2006 to appoint his cousin to the post of security minister, an appointment that never materialized.

Zelaya denied the allegation.

“Irrefutable proof that I never received a bribe was that I never named a minister from organized crime or under pressure from the U.S. embassy,” he said on Twitter.

In additional new revelations, Rivera said he paid current Vice President and then-presidential candidate Ricardo Alvarez $500,000 in exchange for protection from arrest or extradition. Alvarez had allegedly promised to eliminate the extradition law between the United States and Honduras should he be elected.

“I felt concerned because the DEA and court in New York mentioned myself and my brother and did not mention corrupt drug trafficking politicians we had bribed,” he said. “They did not mention the police and military that worked with us.”
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