US to return $246 million seized from former Coahuila finance minister

US $246 million, seized from a former Coahuila finance minister by United States authorities, will be returned to Mexico, President López Obrador said Wednesday. 

López Obrador announced that the United States Department of Justice informed the Federal Attorney General’s Office on Tuesday that it would send Mexico just over 246.1 million dollars confiscated from Héctor Javier Villarreal Hernández, who served as finance minister in the 2005–11 Coahuila government led by former governor Humberto Moreira. 

Ex-governor of Coahuila Humberto Moreira (left) with former president Enrique Peña Nieto. Moreira was named one of the “10 Most Corrupt Mexicans” by the publication Forbes in 2013 (Moises Pablo Nava/Cuartoscuro).

Villareal was finance minister until 2010, when he became head of Coahuila’s state tax agency. He resigned in August 2011, after he was arrested on charges of corruption as it became clear that Coahuila accumulated a public debt of 35 billion pesos, the largest in state’s history.

Many considered Villarreal to be one of the architects of that debt.

Villarreal was convicted of money laundering offenses in Texas in 2015, charges involving eyebrow-raising money transfers from Mexico to the U.S. during his tenure as a state official. A Texas Observer investigative article published in 2021 cited local court documents showing that Villarreal had been moving larger and larger sums from Mexico into Chase Bank accounts in Texas via cash deposits, eventually using wire transfers to move tens of millions of dollars into eight different Chase accounts.      

But he was released from prison after agreeing to cooperate with U.S. authorities. He testified at the New York trial of former federal security minister Genaro García Luna earlier this year. 

López Obrador said it was not yet clear whether the Department of Justice would send the money to Mexico in one lump sum or in installments. 

The president said he intends to use part of the money to fund the government’s drug addiction prevention campaign

Villarreal also served in the Coahuila government led by Jorge Torres López, who was interim governor in 2011 after Moreira resigned to take up the presidency of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).

Torres was convicted of money laundering charges in the United States and sentenced to a 36-month prison sentence in 2021. 

With reports from El Universal, El Sol de México, Quadratín and Expansión

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Tamul Waterfall dried up

Why did the Huasteca Potosina’s picturesque Tamul Waterfall dry up?

0
State and federal authorities pulled out all the stops to get the Gallinas River flowing again to the waterfall site, including a total ban on upstream extraction for irrigation, but to no avail.

The MND Peso Index™: Is the Mexican peso over or undervalued against the US dollar?

7
The MND Peso Index™ is a new monthly economic indicator developed by Mexico News Daily that measures whether the Mexican peso is overvalued or undervalued against the US dollar.
The Mayab Highway connecting Mérida and Playa del Carmen

Mexico Infrastructure Partners announces plan to invest US $12B across key sectors

1
Bloomberg reported that around $8 billion of the firm's planned investment would go to renewable energy projects, some $2.5 billion would go to highway projects, $1 billion to midstream opportunities and $500 million to digital infrastructure.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity