Lincoln Díaz-Balart
and Mel Martínez tried to silence corruption witness
JEAN-GUY ALLARD
• "THEY wanted to silence" Jorge de Castro Font,
the Puerto Rican politician convicted of corruption,
to avoid the involvement of Republican Party figures
such as Cuban-Americans Lincoln Díaz-Balart and
Melquíades "Mel" Martinez, according to the
Primera Hora newspaper, which reported how the
former senator received an offer of no prosecution
in exchange for his collaboration.
Shortly
after his arrest by the FBI on corruption charges,
on August 28, 2008, Jorge de Castro Font revealed
that he had made a special trip to Florida in 2004
to give the Mafioso congress member Lincoln Díaz-Balart
"a few checks" for illegal contributions.
The Puerto Rican newspaper article, published on
Thursday, Feb. 26 with the byline of journalist
Rosita Marrero, noted that "during the period when
the former senator’s home was being raided and
charges were brought against him, messengers were
sent to him from individuals in the top leadership
of the New Progressive Party (PNP)," along with a "communicator",
who brought him the first message "sent by prominent
members of the majority in the Legislative Assembly."
The day that federal authorities raided his
office and home, the then-senator "received a visit,"
in which it was "proposed that he remain silent, and
in exchange, he would not be charged locally and his
family would be taken care of," Primera
Hora quoted a source as confirming.
After the charges, on December 4, 2008, "another
source told Primera Hora that De Castro
received the visit of not one but three messengers,
asking him not to talk about presumed allegations of
very specific crimes, by very specific people,
related to donations made to the Cuban-born
Republican congressman from Florida, Mel Martínez".
The U.S. senator Melquíades "Mel" Martínez
unexpectedly resigned in August 2009.
Primera Hora reported that the messengers
waited for De Castro Font’s answer until December
30, when the Senate Ethics Commission sent the
report on the Puerto Rican politician to the U.S.
Justice Department.
The newspaper article hints at the real
possibility that the FBI might have information
regarding both Mel Martinez and now Lincoln Díaz-Balart
(who just resigned from his seat), having received
illegal donations from De Castro Font and his
friends in Puerto Rico.
It is now up to the Justice Department in
Washington D.C. to take the investigation further
and settle on the due charges, which depends on the
influence struggles within the labyrinth of a system
not known for its transparency.
A FEW CHECKS FOR LINCOLN
In a statement previously reported by the Puerto
Rican media, De Castro Font asserted in 2008 that he
made the trip on a private American Airlines plane
to hand over money from the Fonalledas family, which
owns Plaza Las Americas, to the Mafioso congressman.
De Castro Font explained that he went to Florida
in the company of Luis Fortuño, the then-candidate
for resident commissioner of the island.
Agents from the FBI and the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) raided De Castro Font’s home and
office on August 24, 2008 and seized documents and
weapons.
De Castro Font faced 32 counts in federal court
for soliciting money in exchange for passing laws.
During this same period, it was revealed in the
United States that the elder of the Díaz-Balart
brothers in Congress had obtained millions in
federal funds for defense contractors from his
district in Miami-Dade County, Florida, who had
contributed to his political campaign, and that of
his brother, Mario Díaz-Balart.
Locust USA and Mark Two Engineering gave $67,000
to the Diaz-Balart campaigns and political action
committees in 2001.
Locust won a $20.8 million Pentagon contract for
research and development between 2001 and 2007,
which was never appropriately investigated, because
this politician had his network of protection.
Melquíades Martínez and Lincoln Díaz-Balart have
just resigned from their political careers. The
departure of both from the U.S. Congress was
attributed to family reasons and their desire to "fight
for Cuba." A few days after his announcement, "Mel"
Martínez reappeared in a lobbying firm connected
with the Bacardí Corporation, which had benefited
from his time in office. It is not yet known what
plans Díaz-Balart has for taking advantage of his
privileged contacts in the federal corruption
apparatus. Time will tell. •