Turkish Prosecutor Says Police Obstructed Corruption Case As Scandal Deepens
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
"By means of the police force, the judiciary was subjected to open pressure, and the execution of court orders was obstructed," public prosecutor Muammer Akkas said in a written statement distributed to Turkish media.
"A crime has been committed throughout the chain of command ... Suspects have been allowed to take precautions, flee and tamper with the evidence."
Though Akkas did not identify anyone by name, his allegations looked likely to add to spiraling anger in Turkey over the case that erupted on December 17 with the detention on graft charges of dozens of people, among them the sons of three cabinet ministers and the head of state-run Halkbank.
Erdogan portrayed the probe as a foreign-orchestrated plot without legal merit and responded by sacking or reassigning some 70 of the police officers involved, including the chief of the force in Istanbul, where Halkbank is headquartered.
Akkas said he had ordered more suspects to be taken into custody on Wednesday but that police did not comply.
"As of today ... I have found out that I have been removed from my jurisdiction with no reason given," he said. "All of my colleagues and the public should know that my ability as a public prosecutor to conduct an investigation has been obstructed."
(Writing by Ece Toksabay, editing by David Evans)
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