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Former Honduras president Juan Orlando Hernandez (second from right) is escorted towards a plane for his extradition to the US at an air force base in Tegucigalpa in April 2022. Photo: AFP

Ex-Honduras president Juan Orlando Hernandez convicted in US drug trafficking trial

  • The US accused the former leader of abusing his power by accepting millions of dollars in bribes from traffickers to protect their US-bound cocaine shipments
  • Hernandez, 55, faces possible life in prison; his sentence will be determined at a later date

Former Honduras president Juan Orlando Hernandez was found guilty on Friday of drug trafficking conspiracy by a US jury, cementing the one-time US ally’s fall from grace.

Jurors in federal court in Manhattan needed about two days to reach a verdict, following a two-week trial.

Hernandez, 55, faces possible life in prison. US District Judge Kevin Castel will determine his sentence at a later date.

Renato Stabile, a lawyer for Hernandez, said his client plans to appeal the verdict.

Former Honduras president Juan Orlando Hernandez looks down as a courtroom deputy reads the guilty verdict before US District Judge Kevin Castel at Hernandez’s New York trial on Friday. Courtroom sketch: Jane Rosenberg via Reuters

Hernandez led Honduras from 2014 to 2022. During his presidency, the Central American country received more than US$50 million in US anti-narcotics aid, and tens of millions of dollars in security and military aid.

But the US Justice Department said Hernandez abused his power by accepting millions of dollars in bribes from traffickers to protect their US-bound cocaine shipments, and to fuel his rise in Honduran politics.

Hernandez was convicted on three charges: using machine guns to further a cocaine importation conspiracy, conspiring to use machine guns to further that conspiracy, and conspiring to import cocaine into the United States.

“Juan Orlando Hernandez abused his position as President of Honduras to operate the country as a narcostate where violent drug traffickers were allowed to operate with virtual impunity, and the people of Honduras and the United States were forced to suffer the consequences,” US Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement after the verdict.

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Hernandez was arrested and extradited to the United States in April 2022, three months after he left office. He had pleaded not guilty to drug trafficking conspiracy and criminal weapons possession charges.

At the trial, several convicted traffickers testified they had bribed Hernandez.

Prosecutors said Hernandez used drug cash to bribe officials to manipulate voting results in his favour during Honduras’ 2013 and 2017 presidential elections.

Hernandez’s lawyers contended that prosecutors were relying on testimony from criminals who were trying to reduce their own sentences, and get even for Hernandez’s crackdown on cartels.

Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez gestures during a press conference in Tegucigalpa in January 2018. Photo: AFP

Testifying in his own defence on Tuesday, Hernandez denied meeting with or taking bribes from the traffickers, including convicted Mexican kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

“I had a policy against all those people because I could not stand them,” Hernandez said, referring to drug traffickers.

“They did a lot of damage in the country.”

Hernandez has been jailed at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Centre since his extradition.

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