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US offers $5 million for top Venezuela judge's arrest

July 22, 2020

The US has imposed new sanctions on Venezuelan Chief Justice Maikel Moreno and offered a bounty of $5 million for his arrest. Washington accuses the judge of taking bribes — charges Moreno says are based on lies.

Maikel Moreno
Image: Getty Images/AFP/F. Parra

The United States on Tuesday announced a $5-million (€4.33-million) reward for information leading to the arrest of Venezuelan Chief Justice Maikel Moreno, accusing him of taking bribes and participating in transnational organized crime.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the judge, an ally of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, had "personally received money or property bribes to influence the outcome of civil and criminal cases in Venezuela," in recent years.

"Moreno Perez received the bribes in exchange for judicial actions" in more than 20 cases and ordered lower court judges to release the accused or dismiss cases, Pompeo said.

Washington also imposed sanctions on Moreno which bar him and his wife from traveling to the US over accusations of his "involvement in significant corruption." He had been on the US Treasury's sanction blacklist since May 2017, but was added to a separate list on Tuesday.

Read moreThe human cost of the US sanctions on Venezuela

Moreno rejects US charges

In response, Moreno said Venezuela's judiciary would not accept "tutelage" from a foreign government. "This is not the first time that the mouthpieces of the North American empire seek to attack me with their clumsy attacks, full of manipulation and lies," he said.

"They will never succeed because the independence and sovereignty of our homeland is not up for discussion," he said.

Moreno was charged with money laundering in March under a round of indictments against Maduro and more than a dozen other Venezuelan officials.

Read moreWhat is going on in Venezuela?

Earlier this year, the Trump administration launched a "maximum pressure" campaign to oust Maduro, charging him as a "narcoterrorist" and offering $15 million for his arrest.

The US, along with dozens of other countries, recognizes opposition leader Juan Guaido as Venezuela's legitimate president.

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adi/nm (AP, AFP, Reuters)

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