Chαvez and the Cash-Filled Suitcase
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Argentina's
President
Cristina
Fernandez de
Kirchner and
Venezuela's
President Hugo
Chavez applaud
after signing
bilateral
accords in
Miraflores
Palace in
Caracas.
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CARACAS (By Tim Padgett,
Time) September 3, 2008 Sitting in a Florida steakhouse a year
ago this month, millionaire Venezuelan oilman Frank Duran allegedly
gave his friend Guido Antonini Wilson a dark warning. "A moment
might come," Duran said, "when nobody can save Antonini's skin."
Antonini, a Venezuelan
businessman with U.S. citizenship, was indeed in a jam. A month
earlier, he'd arrived in Buenos Aires on a chartered flight with
Argentine energy officials and executives of Venezuela's state-run
oil company, Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA). Argentine customs
agents then caught him with a suitcase stuffed with $800,000 in
cash. Antonini was allowed to return to the U.S. but it seemed the
entire hemisphere wanted to know if he'd been carrying the money for
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez as some sort of bribe for the
Argentine government.
Today, however, it's
Duran whose legal skin that needs saving. Last December he and four
other men, three Venezuelans and an Uruguayan, were charged in Miami
with failing to register as foreign government agents. U.S.
prosecutors say the men, at the behest of "high-level" Venezuelan
government officials, cajoled and even threatened Antonini to keep
mum about the real purpose of all that cash: an illegal contribution
from Venezuela to the presidential campaign of then Argentine
Senator and First Lady Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, a Chavez
ally. One of the men, Moises Maionica, pleaded guilty in January;
one is at large and another Carlos Kauffman, a close Duran pal
pleaded guilty in March, leaving Duran all but alone to face trial
in Miami that began this week.
Both backers and
critics of Chavez say the radical left-wing Venezuelan President is
tacitly on trial himself. It's no secret that Chavez, who controls
the hemisphere's largest oil reserves, lavishes billions of dollars
in foreign aid on allies to promote his anti-U.S. Bolivarian
Revolution. Foes have long groused that his largesse can also be as
shadowy as the covert U.S. operations Chavez accuses agencies like
the CIA of perpetrating. They contend that he has funneled cash to
leftist candidates in presidential races from Bolivia to Mexico, and
that he has helped fund Marxist guerrillas like the FARC in
Colombia. Chavez has just as adamantly denied those charges, as have
his supposed beneficiaries.
It wasn't until
Antonini's luggage was opened in 2007 and until Colombian
authorities claimed last spring that seized guerrilla laptops
revealed Chavez payments of as much as $300 million to the FARC
that alleged evidence of Caracas' covert dealings had ever surfaced.
The top prosecutor on the Antonini case, Assistant U.S. Attorney
Thomas Mulvihill, has said in hearings that conversations recorded
by an FBI wire that Antonini wore prove the suitcase money "was
meant for the campaign of Cristina [Fernandez]." And according to
court documents filed this summer, Kauffman is expected to testify
they were told by high-level Venezuelan officials that Chavez was
personally involved in the alleged suitcase affair and its
aftermath.
One question Chavez
supporters ask is why Fernandez would even need his cash when she
held a more than 20-point lead in voter polls leading up to last
October's election, which she won handily. When the campaign
contribution allegation was made shortly after her inauguration, she
took it as a Yanqui affront to her own government and angrily called
the case a "garbage operation." The Casa Rosada, the Argentine
presidential palace, insists instead that the U.S. should extradite
Antonini to Argentina.
Indeed, the acid
relationship between Chavez and the U.S. has also thrown the Bush
Administration's motives into doubt. Thomas Shannon, U.S. assistant
secretary of state for western hemisphere affairs, has insisted the
indictments stem purely from "a judicial process" and not politics.
Venezuela and defense lawyers claim otherwise. Chavez, who accuses
the White House of backing a failed 2002 coup against him, calls the
case "part of the U.S. empire's plan" to smear him. Duran's
attorney, Edward Shohat, argues that the statute at play acting,
or conspiring to act, as a foreign agent without permission has
been used only when espionage or a threat to U.S. security was
involved. "The U.S. has no security interest in this matter," he
says. "This case is political."
If this does turn out
to be a kind of Watergate for Chavez, it will have started under
similarly clumsy circumstances. Antonini, 46, now claims the
suitcase wasn't his that he was carrying it for another Venezuelan
passenger on the Cessna Citation that landed in the wee hours of
Aug. 4, 2007, at Buenos Aires' Aeroparque Jorge Newberry and that
he wasn't aware of its contents. But Maria del Lujan Telpuk, the
agent who stopped Antonini inside Newberry's VIP sector, says he
became visibly nervous when she asked him to open the bag. "I had to
insist," says Telpuk, who recalls the dollar bills "literally
spilling out" when Antonini unzipped it. Telpuk, 28, has since
parlayed her new fame and good looks onto the cover of the Argentine
edition of Playboy magazine holding a suitcase beneath the
caption "Corruption Undressed."
One of the Cessna's
passengers claims that two days later Antonini joined them at a
reception in the Casa Rosada. Argentine officials dispute that.
Either way, Antonini returned home to Key Biscayne, Florida, scared
enough to cooperate with FBI agents. For the next four months they
monitored his meetings and calls with Duran, 40; Kauffman, 35, a
Venezuelan partner of Duran's in oil products and drilling equipment
firms; Maionica, 36, a Venezuelan lawyer; Antonio Jose Canchica, 37,
an agent of the Venezuelan intelligence service, DISIP; and Rodolfo
Wanseele, 40, an Uruguayan and Canchica's driver. Maionica and
Kauffman face a maximum five years each in prison; Canchica is at
large; and Duran and Wanseele, who have pleaded not guilty and are
set to go on trial on Tuesday, face a maximum 10 years each.
Court documents allege
Maionica confided he was "brought into the conspiracy by a
high-level official of DISIP." They say Kauffman and Duran who own
ritzy Florida homes, enjoy racing Ferraris and are part of what
Venezuelans call the revolution's "Boli-bourgeoisie" issued thinly
veiled threats. They warned that "foreign government authorities
would pursue Antonini" if he talked, and that it was in his
children's best interest that he have "no problems" with Venezuela.
At one cloak-and-dagger gathering, Canchica, using the name
"Christian," allegedly told Antonini that PDVSA (the Venezuelan oil
corporation) and the Chavez government would make his legal problems
vanish.
Mulvihill claims to
have 41 audio recordings and eight videotapes to play at trial; and
the Maionica and Kauffman guilty pleas suggest that evidence may be
as potent as he suggests. Then again, Duran and Wanseele might be
risking a trial partly because they know Mulvihill also charged
Fidel Castro in the late 1980s with aiding Colombian drug
traffickers, an accusation that was never proven. Either way, Chavez
and the U.S. may both face more scrutiny this month than either
bargained for.