Financial scandal: key figure in the “Panama Papers” case dies

Financial scandal
Key figure in Panama Papers case dies

Ramón Fonseca has died at the age of 71. photo

© Arnulfo Franco/AP

Ramón Fonseca and his business partner Jürgen Mossack are said to have helped celebrities from all over the world hide their assets in tax havens. The verdict in the case is imminent.

A few weeks before the expected verdict in the “Panama Papers” trial, one of the key figures in the Panamanian lawyer Ramón Fonseca dies in financial scandal. The National Bar Association of Panama announced this on Thursday. Fonseca, co-founder of the now-defunct law firm Mossack Fonseca, died in a Panama City hospital at the age of 71, local media reported. The public prosecutor’s office had demanded twelve years in prison for Fonseca and his former business partner, Jürgen Mossack, who is of German descent.

The verdict in the money laundering trial is expected by the beginning of June at the latest. The law firm Mossack Fonseca is said to have founded 215,000 shell companies in tax havens in which politicians, celebrities and athletes from all over the world concealed their assets. Eight years after the scandal broke, a total of 29 defendants appeared in court in Panama in April. Fonseca was unable to appear at the hearing in person because he had been taken to a clinic.

“A great person, lawyer, writer and politician. May he rest in peace,” wrote Panama’s ex-President Ricardo Martinelli, who ruled between 2009 and 2014, on the platform X. Fonseca was the victim of cruel persecution.

In the spring of 2016, the “Süddeutsche Zeitung” and other media outlets from the Network of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) disclosed the business of the shell companies founded in Panama. As a result of a huge data leak, 11.5 million documents were leaked to the newspaper. Almost 400 reporters from more than 80 countries took part in the research.

dpa

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