- Mexican drug lord El Chapo gave $1 million to the ex-Honduran president's campaign, prosecutors say.
- The money was intended to secure a drug trafficking route through Honduras.
Mexican drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán personally handed a briefcase filled with $1 million to the brother of Juan Orlando Hernández, the one-time Honduran president, in hopes that his election would secure a drug trafficking route through Honduras, a former supplier to El Chapo testified Thursday.
Amilcar Alexander Ardon Soriano, the former mayor of the Honduran town of El Paraíso, who previously pleaded guilty to a laundry list of violent drug offenses — including drug trafficking, murder, and torture — testified in the Manhattan federal trial of Hernández.
Prosecutors accuse the ex-Honduras president, who was first elected in 2013, of working for years with "violent" drug traffickers to harm the United States.
In court documents, prosecutors wrote that Hernández told his coconspirators he wanted to "stuff the drugs up the noses of the gringos."
The trial, which began with opening statements Wednesday, sheds light on how deep the corruption of the drug cartel runs in Honduras — and how that corruption allows cocaine to end up on the streets of cities and towns in America.
Ardon testified Thursday that he gave millions in drug money to Hernández and the National Party over the years and assisted with election fraud and bribing voters.
Ardon described to the jury on Thursday a 2013 meeting he attended with El Chapo in Espíritu, Copán, at the property of Miguel Arnulfo Valle Valle and his younger brother Luis Alfonso — two of the most notorious cocaine traffickers in the world.
Ardon testified that an associate of El Chapo had told him to bring Hernández's brother, Tony, to the meeting. At the meeting, El Chapo told Tony Hernández he was looking to open new trafficking routes through Honduras.
Tony Hernández said that if his brother won the presidential election, "he could help," Ardon testified.
El Chapo then asked if, under his brother's administration, the Valle brothers or Ardon himself would be extradited for prosecution.
"Tony Hernández said that if Juan Orlando won, that we would not be extradited," Ardon told the jury.
At that point, El Chapo offered $1 million to Hernández's campaign, Ardon testified.
"Tony Hernández said he had to speak with his brother to see if he should accept the money," Ardon said, adding later, "Tony Hernández told me that he'd spoken to Juan Orlando Hernández and that they needed the money for the campaign."
At a different meeting that year, Ardon and Tony Hernández met with El Chapo again, and El Chapo personally handed the briefcase with $1 million to Hernández, the convicted drug trafficker testified.
Hernández barely won the 2013 election, with 36.89% of the votes.
The next year, when the Valle brothers were extradited to the United States to face prosecution on drug trafficking charges, El Chapo and his associates were worried, Ardon testified.
The drug lord wanted to know if Ardon and others were safe.
At some point in 2014 or 2015, both Juan Orlando and Tony Hernández met with El Chapo to discuss the extradition, Ardon testified.
"Juan Orlando Hernández told me that he had had them extradited because they had tried to have him killed," Ardon told the jury.
The president then got angry.
"Juan Orlando Hernández said that he had no obligation to anyone and that if they wanted the money back, he could return it," Ardon testified, adding that the president then stormed out.
Ardon says he's a better person now
Ardon's testimony for the prosecution concluded just after the lunch break, and he spent the rest of the day under cross-examination by defense attorney Raymond Colon, who began by questioning Ardon's motive for testifying.
"I'm just trying to tell the truth and get a new lease on life as a better person," the convicted drug trafficker said.
"So you're a better person now?" Colon fired back.
"The time I've spent in jail has made me a better person," said Ardon, who has been in custody since surrendering to US law enforcement in 2019.
Rather than focusing on the truth of the allegations Ardon made in his earlier testimony, Colon spent the afternoon almost exclusively on Ardon's violent past, including his direct involvement over the years in dozens of murders.
"I'm going to list some of the names of the 56 you've killed or had killed, and I want you to tell me if it was personal, revenge, or related to drug trafficking," Colon said, as he launched into questions about nearly two dozen murders spanning two decades.
But Colon's point soon got badly muddled by his meandering and poorly worded questions that frequently misstated facts, dates, and names, raising numerous objections from both the prosecution and Judge Kevin Castel.
Ardon grew testy at times as he gave answers to questions about events already covered at length. And on the beach, Castel began to lose patience, even snapping at Colon.
"That was only three questions ago, please!" Castel said after reading back a portion of the transcript to help Colon return to his place in the questioning.
As the afternoon drew to a close, Colon asked a final question about one of Ardon's murders, seemingly unaware that Ardon had walked him through that incident hours earlier at the very start of cross-examination.
At the defense table, Hernández could be seen at one point pinching the bridge of his nose and scrunching his eyes shut.
The trial is scheduled to resume Friday.