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Antonini wrote letter to Chávez; asked for money

The money was allegedly for funding Cristina Fernández de Kirchner's presidential campaign (Photo: Césaro de Luca/Efe)

Politics Venezuelan-US businessman Guido Antonini sent President Hugo Chávez a letter to make a deal with the Venezuelan government related to the attempt at smuggling into Argentina a suitcase stuffed with USD 800,000 in cash presumably for election purposes, said on Tuesday an attorney during a trial in Miami.

"Antonini told Venezuela's government officials, 'If you do not give me two million dollars, I will tell the press all about it' (…) He even wrote President Chávez a letter," said attorney Ed Shohat, the agent of the main defendant in the trial derived from the scandal which is carried out in Miami, AFP reported.

US prosecutors and the defense made on Tuesday their respective pleadings to the jury that will be responsible for suing Venezuelan businessman Franklin Durán, charged by the US government with acting in Miami as a covert agent for the Venezuelan government to conceal the source and destination of the seized money.

For his part, federal Assistant US Attorney Thomas Mulvihill claimed that the cash found "was for the presidential campaign of Cristina Kirchner, then a candidate running for Argentina's president.


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Bases of discord

04:17 PM. Western Hemisphere. "Damned empire; I curse you one thousand times; some day you will be finished off and wrecked. I curse you one thousand times, empire." This is the least that President Hugo Chávez has uttered to refer to the US government. In urging the Bolivarian Armed Forces to prepare for war, he said that a US raid on Venezuela through Colombia would trigger and spread over the region "the 100-year war."

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