NEW YORK — A Honduran accountant testified Tuesday that he fled Honduras because he felt his life was in danger after witnessing two meetings in which an alleged drug trafficker paid bribes to now- President Juan Orlando Hernández in 2013.
In both meetings, the subject was “protection and receiving drugs,” said José Sánchez, a pseudonym used for his protection. At one Hernández was given $10,000 and at another the amount was $15,000, the accountant said.
The accountant said he was afraid to enter the office where he saw Hernández meeting with a drug trafficker. “I was seeing the candidate for the presidency meeting with a drug trafficker,” he said.
That alleged drug trafficker was Geovanny Fuentes Ramírez, whose New York trial is in its second week. Hernández’s name has come up repeatedly in the trial as U.S. prosecutors continue to argue that his political rise was fueled by drug traffickers.
The accountant testified that in addition to the two payments he witnesses, Hernández arrived various times to the company in a helicopter to receive monthly payments of 250,000 lempiras, about $10,000. They payments were for his campaign, the accountant said.
Hernández won his first term as president in 2013 and took office in January 2014. Prior to that he had been the president of Honduras’ congress.
Hernández has not been charged and has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.
Fuentes Ramírez was arrested in March 2020 in Florida. He is charged with drug trafficking and arms possession.
During the accountant’s testimony, the phone line that allows those outside the court for reasons of the pandemic to listen in on the proceedings was cut at prosecutors’ request. They feared someone could recognize his voice.
The man had been the accountant for Graneros Nacionales, a rice business that was used to launder drug proceeds.
On Monday, convicted drug trafficker Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga, former leader of the Cachiros cartel, testified that Fuentes Ramírez had told him in jail that he had photographs and videos of Hernández being present when drugs were received from Colombia to airports in Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula.
Last week, Rivera Maradiaga testified that he paid Hernández $250,000 for protection from arrest in 2012 when the politician was the leader of Honduras’ congress.