09/10/2024
09/10/2024
GUATEMALA CITY, Oct 9, (AP): Guatemala’s Attorney General Consuelo Porras has been criticized and sanctioned by countries around the world for allegedly obstructing corruption investigations and using her power to persecute political opponents, but the country is effectively stuck with her, according to a legal analysis published Tuesday.
Since President Bernardo Arévalo's election last year, Porras has pursued his Seed Movement party, alleging wrongdoing in how it gathered the necessary signatures to establish itself. Her investigators raided the party offices, seized and opened ballot boxes and sought multiple times to have his immunity lifted. Arévalo has said Porras is protecting powerful and corrupt interests in Guatemala who fear his promise to root out corruption.
He has called for her resignation. But Guatemalan lawmakers have created an untouchable attorney general without any feasible legal mechanism to remove her, according to the study by Stanford Law School and Cyrus R. Vance Center for International Justice. The only way for Arévalo - one of those in Porras’ sights - to remove her is for "duly established just cause,” which since 2016 reforms to narrow the process means conviction for a crime while carrying out her functions.
But that is impossible because Porras controls Guatemala’s criminal investigative and prosecutorial powers. Her own staff would have to initiate and carry out the investigation with her oversight. There’s no way to suspend her while an investigation is carried out. Porras would be the one to appoint any special prosecutor, with the power to remove them. In addition, she has immunity from prosecution that can only be removed by Congress. Porras’ term runs until May 2026.