May 2024

Police arrest brother and lawyer of Peru’s president over alleged influence peddling

LIMA, Peru (AP) — Peruvian authorities arrested President Dina Boluarte’s brother and her lawyer Friday over influence-peddling accusations, a day after the South American country’s government disbanded a police unit that assisted prosecutors in investigating the president’s inner circle.

A judge signed off on the arrests, according to a copy of the warrant obtained by The Associated Press. The document accuses the president’s sibling of working to appoint government officials in exchange for money and an agreement to gather signatures to register a political party.

The developments mark the latest step in mounting pressure on Boluarte, who became president in December 2022 when she replaced then-president Pedro Castillo. He was dismissed by Parliament and is now imprisoned while being investigated for alleged corruption and rebellion.

The warrant also granted the prosecutors’ request to keep both men incommunicado for 10 days, a legal maneuver that authorities typically reserve for cases they deem highly serious.

Boluarte’s office did not immediately return a request for comment from AP.

Local television stations showed images of the arrests of Nicanor Boluarte and Mateo Castañeda. The Attorney General’s Office later confirmed their arrests on social media.

The president’s brother faces charges of conspiracy and influence peddling for allegedly appointing prefects — local officials who track social conflicts in remote areas — in exchange for money and the gathering of signatures to register the Citizens for Peru party.

“I am innocent,” Nicanor Boluarte told reporters as he left his house handcuffed and wearing sunglasses, a facemask and a baseball cap. He is the second to last of 12 siblings, and the president is the youngest of all.

Prosecutors accuse Castañeda of interfering with the investigation into Nicanor Boluarte by offering certain benefits to members of the now-disbanded police unit, which focused on tax probes.

Before his arrest

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Former lawyer who suffered stroke awarded $41 million in medical malpractice lawsuit

Eight years after a stroke left one side of his body paralyzed, Craig Pierce can no longer practice law or get around without the help of his wife and grandchildren.

But a $41 million award will give him the round-the-clock care he needs. Earlier this week, a Cook County jury ruled in favor of Pierce and his wife Susan after a month-long trial. The award is believed to be the largest in Illinois history for a medical malpractice case involving a plaintiff over the age of 70.

Pierce, who lives in downstate Bushnell, was admitted to St. Francis Hospital in Peoria on Feb. 28, 2016, for pneumonia. While hospitalized, he developed an acute kidney injury from the pneumonia treatment that required short-term dialysis.

A cardiologist diagnosed Pierce with a common heart condition that causes abnormal heart rhythm, so he was prescribed an anticoagulant to minimize the risk of a stroke. The medication required daily blood tests to make sure it was working as intended and not causing problems with blood clotting.

Two weeks later, Pierce was discharged from the hospital, and while arrangements were made for outpatient dialysis, there were no plans for monitoring his blood .

His condition soon took a turn for the worst when four weeks after he was discharged he suffered a large cerebral artery stroke in his brain. A CT scan revealed a large clot had lodged in his brain , cutting off circulation to nearly all of the brain’s right side.

Blood tests taken during his dialysis treatments revealed levels had dropped dangerously low, but none of his doctors adjusted the dosage that would help prevent a stroke.

The stroke left Pierce, now 72, paralyzed on the left side of his body and caused severe cognitive deficiencies.

In 2020, Hurley McKenna & Mertz filed

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Michael Cohen, former President Donald Trump’s lawyer and fixer, expected to take the witness stand against the former president next week

Key witness Michael Cohen is one of two final people expected to testify for the prosecution at the hush money trial of ex-President Donald Trump next week, prosecutors said Friday, signaling that the end of the historic trial is in sight.

Trump’s personal attorney and fixer turned sworn enemy, Cohen, a Lawrence native, is expected to take the jury inside what prosecutors have said was a conspiracy between the men and a tabloid publisher to pay off women who allegedly had sexual encounters with Trump in order to keep the stories of his affairs from hurting his chances at winning the 2016 presidential election.

The prosecution told Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Juan M. Merchan Friday it could rest its case as early as the end of next week.

Trump’s lead defense attorney Todd Blanche asked Merchan to order Cohen, who has been vocally critical of Trump on social media — including Cohen wearing a T-shirt depicting Trump behind bars on the social media application TikTok recent, according to Blanche — to keep quiet about the case until he completes his testimony.

Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Joshua Steinglass said he has repeatedly asked witnesses in the case to refrain from commenting on the trial, but has little power to force the issue.

“I would direct the people [prosecutors] to tell Cohen that the judge asks that he not comment,” Merchan said from the bench Friday after testimony concluded for the day in the early afternoon.

Trump, the GOP’s presumptive presidential nominee, is on trial on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in connection with the $130,000 payment made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels, who testified earlier this week that she had a sexual encounter with Trump and later signed a nondisclosure agreement that prohibited her from speaking about it.

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Top lawyer at Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation quits over emailed slur about immigrant

The top lawyer at the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation has resigned abruptly over an email that used a derogatory term to describe an immigrant lacking permanent legal status.

The email was written by Jana Wallace in 2022 while she was a judge. Why it came to light this year is unclear.

In the email, she refers to an immigrant lacking permanent legal status as a “wet back.”

Wallace, 61, became general counsel at the OSBI after stepping down in November from the judiciary. She had been an associate district judge for 14 years in Pushmataha County, which is in far southeast Oklahoma.

“My dad told me when you make a mistake, you face it, own it and then move on,” she told The Oklahoman Friday in a text message. “That is exactly what I’ve done.”

She said she dearly loves the OSBI and resigned so the email would not reflect negatively on it. She also said “someone had a vendetta against me or just wanted to embarrass me and/or the OSBI.”

The OSBI has special agents who investigate many of the state’s most sensational crimes. Wallace resigned from there Thursday.

The email − obtained Friday by The Oklahoman − referred to a father from Mexico by the derogatory term. She sent the email to a lawyer at the Oklahoma Department of Public Safety because of a divorce case.

More: Mexican slur has long history in politics

The OSBI declined to comment Friday about her resignation, saying it is a personnel matter.

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Wallace

The same derogatory language has surfaced in recent media accounts about former President Donald Trump’s pledge to deport millions of noncitizens if reelected. His plan is being compared to an Eisenhower-era military-style effort called “Operation Wetback.”

The email shows Wallace asked on April 21, 2022, if a

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