Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04GUATEMALA466
2004-02-26 16:59:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Guatemala
Cable title:  

PRESIDENT BERGER FIRES ATTORNEY GENERAL,

Tags:  PREL PGOV KDEM GT 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 GUATEMALA 000466 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/24/2014
TAGS: PREL PGOV KDEM GT
SUBJECT: PRESIDENT BERGER FIRES ATTORNEY GENERAL,
CONSTITUTIONAL COURT TO RULE


Classified By: PolOff Robert E. Copley for reason 1.5 (b)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 GUATEMALA 000466

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/24/2014
TAGS: PREL PGOV KDEM GT
SUBJECT: PRESIDENT BERGER FIRES ATTORNEY GENERAL,
CONSTITUTIONAL COURT TO RULE


Classified By: PolOff Robert E. Copley for reason 1.5 (b)


1. (U) Summary: President Berger announced on February 24
that he had fired Attorney General Carlos De Leon. The
Constitutional Court has twice issued temporary rulings
upholding Berger, but its final rulings could yet reinstate
De Leon and deal a severe blow to Berger's legal reform
efforts. Media coverage and civil society strongly favor the
President's action. GANA Congressman Juan Luis FLORIDO Solis
has replaced De Leon under some criticism that he lacks
independence from the President. End Summary.

Background
--------------

2. (U) Attorney General Carlos De Leon was chosen by former
President Portillo from a list of six names chosen through a
consultative process. Note: Florido's name was also on the
list. Rumors at the time linked De Leon to a number of
corrupt business deals with the municipality of Mixco (a
Guatemala City suburb) and rigged bids for government
construction contracts that he subsequently subcontracted.
Throughout his tenure, it became increasingly clear that De
Leon was more interested in promoting his image than in
pursuing prosecutions. High profile cases stalled, a series
of prosecutors resigned citing interference by De Leon, and
in early February 2004, De Leon used two million Quetzales
(about $250,000) in scarce resources to host a World Summit
of Attorneys General (which we and most developed countries
did not attend). Tensions between Berger and De Leon have
been building since Berger took office on January 14, 2004.
On February 23, President Berger publicly gave De Leon a
deadline of 24 hours to explain his actions in three cases.
De Leon refused in an equally public manner to comply, citing
his constitutional autonomy within the Executive. Hours
before the deadline, De Leon sought a ruling from the
Constitutional Court vacating Berger's order and reaffirming
the independence of the Attorney General. In record time,
the court refused to issue a stay and Berger announced to the
media that he had fired De Leon. De Leon promptly filed a
new lawsuit claiming his dismissal, which was signed by
Berger and 13 Ministers and was published as a government

accord in the official gazette on February 25, was illegal.
Late February 25, the court again issued a temporary ruling
in favor of Berger, this time unanimously. A third suit by
De Leon was not accepted. Based on these rulings, a judicial
order was issued to prevent De Leon from leaving the country.

But the rulings are not final
--------------

3. (C) The Constitutional Court's rulings are only
temporary, however. Final rulings are expected in about two
weeks. Juan Fransisco Flores Juares, Constitutional Court
Magistrate, told us that he fears the Court could easily
backpedal. If the court rules in De Leon's favor in either
case, (there is a legal precedent for upholding his
autonomy-see comment) De Leon would have to be reinstated and
Berger's legal reform efforts would suffer a major early
defeat.

Staff Implications
--------------

4. (C) Alejandro Paiz, head of Criminal Investigations,
announced he will resign. Special Prosecutor for Human
Rights, Thelma de Lam, with whom we have had a productive
relationship, told HROff on February 24 that, even though she
has a contract with the new administration, she would leave
if De Leon's firing is upheld. She added that 15 people in
her office have only temporary contracts and would also
probably be let go. Shortly after the meeting, police
officers and representatives from MINUGUA and the Human
Rights Ombudsman's office surrounded the building due to
complaints that De Leon's employees were removing computers
and shredding documents. According to press reports, police
seized computers that these employees were loading into two
pickup trucks.

Replacement Sworn In
--------------

5. (U) De Leon's dismissal (Acuerdo Goberantivo 84-2004) also
nominated lawyer Juan Luis Florido Solis to fill out the
remainder of De Leon's original four-year term that began in
May, 2002. Florido's name, along with De Leon's, was among
six produced by a consultative process. In case of the
resignation or removal of an Attorney General, the President
is required to nominate a replacement from the same short
list. Florido was serving in the Congress as a member of
Berger's GANA coalition. The Mack Foundation and Supreme
Court Justice Alfonso Alvarez-Lobos have already criticized
Florido as not independent enough to be Attorney General. In
response, Florido has pointed out that he was a candidate for
Attorney General long before he became a candidate for
Congress. He has resigned from the Reform Movement party,
part of the GANA coalition. Others have criticized Florido's
lack of penal experience. As a lawyer, Florido represented
corporate interests, including Caterpillar and Hewlett
Packard (though not currently). Note: Hewlett Packard has a
multi-million dollar contractual dispute with De Leon's
Public Ministry. End Note. Florido has served as President
and Vice President of the Chamber of Tourism as well as
President of Banco Inmobilario.

Comment
--------------

6. (C) In early 1996, then-President Arzu gave his Attorney
General, Ramses Cuestas, a 48-hour deadline to file a similar
report. In that case, the Constitutional Court upheld
Cuestas' assertion that complying with the deadline would
strip his office of its constitutional autonomy within the
Executive. The current court, however, is the same court
that overturned numerous precedents when it allowed Rios
Montt to run for President. It is tempting to read into the
court's temporary ruling against De Leon that the FRG has
decided to dump the Attorney General (the President of the
Constitutional Court is an FRG hack),but FRG Congressional
representatives left the floor in an unsuccessful attempt to
deny Florido the quorum he needed to resign his seat in
Congress.


7. (U) Firing the Attorney General without final rulings from
the Constitutional Court is a bold move by President Berger,
one that has been widely applauded by civil society. There
is no doubt in the public mind that De Leon has largely
failed to carry out his duties--the official reason for his
dismissal according to Berger--but it remains to be seen what
standard the Constitutional Court will use. The unanimous
second ruling against De Leon is a very positive sign, but
until these rulings are finalized they cannot be taken for
granted.
HAMILTON