By Marco Aquino
LIMA (Reuters) -Peruvian former President Alejandro Toledo was convicted of taking bribes from Brazilian development large Odebrecht and sentenced to twenty years and 6 months in jail on Monday.
The decision marks Peru’s first high-profile conviction associated to Brazil’s continent-spanning Lava Jato corruption scandal.
Toledo, a 78-year-old economist who holds a doctorate from Stanford College, ruled the Andean nation between 2001 and 2006.
He was convicted of taking $35 million in bribes from the corporate previously often known as Odebrecht, in line with prosecutors, in change for letting it win a contract to construct the street that now connects Peru’s southern coast with an Amazonian space in western Brazil.
In the course of the year-long trial, Toledo denied the money-laundering and collusion costs.
Odebrecht, now often known as Novonor, was on the middle of Latin America’s largest graft scandal, after admitting in 2016 that it bribed officers in a dozen international locations to safe public works contracts.
Final week, Toledo requested the courtroom to let him serve his sentence at residence as he battles most cancers.
“Please let me heal or die at residence,” he mentioned.
The sentence was introduced in a room arrange in a small Lima jail the place Toledo has been detained since final 12 months.
Former President Pedro Castillo can be being held there as he faces allegations of “rise up” after attempting to dissolve Congress in 2022.
Two different ex-presidents, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski and Ollanta Humala, are additionally being investigated within the Odebrecht case.
Toledo, who famously shined footwear as a toddler, was arrested in the US in 2019 after officers in Peru requested his extradition.
Prosecutors relied on testimony from former Odebrecht government Jorge Barata in addition to Toledo’s ex-collaborator Josef Maiman, who mentioned Toledo obtained bribes.
The previous president signed the contract with Odebrecht for the development of the street, although constructing it came about over two subsequent administrations.