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Chile will ask Venezuela to extradite citizens suspected of killing an anti-Maduro dissident

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Chile will ask Venezuela to extradite citizens suspected of killing an anti-Maduro dissident
News

News

Chile will ask Venezuela to extradite citizens suspected of killing an anti-Maduro dissident

2024-04-13 04:26 Last Updated At:04:30

QUITO, Chile (AP) — Prosecutors in Chile said Friday they plan to formally request that Venezuela extradite two of its citizens to stand trial for charges related to the abduction and killing of a Venezuelan dissident in Chile earlier this year, a case that has strained relations between the South American nations.

Prosecutors ruled that the slaying of the activist and former army lieutenant was plotted in Venezuela. If proven, the grisly killing on Chilean soil could signal a new front in the widespread repression by the government of President Nicolás Maduro against the opposition ahead of his re-election contest later this year.

Venezuela has denied involvement.

Chilean prosecutors on Friday publicly implicated Venezuela’s largest criminal organization, the Aragua Train, in the crime. Authorities also hinted that they believe the culprits in the killing of 32-year-old Ronald Ojeda — who had sought asylum in Chile after protesting Maduro’s administration — may have been working on behalf of the Venezuelan government.

Ojeda’s outspoken politics, prosecutors said, ruled out speculation the group killed him over his participation in illicit street gang activity. The Aragua Train never made a ransom demand. Ojeda was killed just hours after being kidnapped.

“We are talking about a victim who has participated in actions against the Venezuelan government,” said Héctor Barros, the prosecutor leading the case.

Further raising suspicions, Barros said, the disposal of Ojeda’s corpse was chillingly methodical — something unusual for the Aragua Train. On March 1, after 10 days of feverish searching, Chilean authorities found his body squeezed into a suitcase, buried a meter beneath a building in the hardscrabble suburbs of Santiago, sprinkled with white lime powder to hasten decomposition and covered with cement.

Chilean police detained a 17-year-old Venezuelan in the country illegally in relation to the case. Demanding that Venezuela cooperate in the investigation, the Chilean government promised to pursue the extradition of the two other suspects who had fled to Venezuela. Once Venezuela gets the request, the process would move to Venezuelan courts, which would determine whether the suspects could be extradited before the judiciary makes the final determination.

Yet Venezuela has thus far failed to cooperate with Chile's past extradition requests in other criminal cases.

“The eyes of the world will be watching how (Venezuela) acts," Interior Minister Carolina Tohá told reporters on Friday. “We are going to make sure of it.” She said Chile viewed the crime “with the utmost gravity.”

Ojeda, a former member Venezuela’s military, escaped Venezuelan detention in 2017 and sought refuge in Chile, which granted him asylum last year. From exile, he continued to voice opposition to Maduro on social media until his disappearance.

Surveillance camera footage from the early morning of Feb. 21, the date of Ojeda's abduction, shows three men dressed as Chilean police taking him from his apartment and bundling him into a vehicle.

The incident brought already tense relations between Chile and Venezuela to an inflection point.

Santiago recalled its ambassador in Caracas on Thursday over Ojeda’s kidnapping. Calls grew for the government to sever relations with Venezuela after its foreign minister, Yvan Gill, dismissed the Aragua Train prison gang and its reach across Latin America as a “fiction created by international media.”

The case comes at a sensitive time for Maduro, who is running for re-election in July. In recent months, his long-running campaign to crush dissent has drawn widespread criticism and strained efforts by the Biden administration to pave the way for free and fair elections in the country.

CORRECTS ROLAND TO RONALD - FILE - The widow, son, and sister of former Venezuelan dissident military officer Ronald Ojeda, bury him at the Canaan Cemetery in Santiago, Chile, March 8, 2024, after he was kidnapped and his body was found buried on the outskirts of the capital. Chile will request the extradition of two Venezuelan citizens who allegedly participated in Ojeda's kidnapping and murder, according to the Chilean prosecutor's office on April 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

CORRECTS ROLAND TO RONALD - FILE - The widow, son, and sister of former Venezuelan dissident military officer Ronald Ojeda, bury him at the Canaan Cemetery in Santiago, Chile, March 8, 2024, after he was kidnapped and his body was found buried on the outskirts of the capital. Chile will request the extradition of two Venezuelan citizens who allegedly participated in Ojeda's kidnapping and murder, according to the Chilean prosecutor's office on April 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 1, 2024--

New Brentwood based law firm SCHONBUCH HALLISSY LLP, providing exceptional trial skills, litigation strategy and legal counseling, opens on May 1, 2024. Located at 11999 San Vicente Boulevard in Brentwood, the firm has additional offices in Westlake Village and Mission Viejo.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240430628195/en/

The firm’s slogan, “Real. Trial. Lawyers.,” was created by founding partner Mike Schonbuch, signifying that firm attorneys try cases all the time. In fact, the experienced and respected attorneys at SCHONBUCH HALLISSY LLP have tried hundreds of cases before a jury, and are often retained at the eve of trial as “parachute counsel” to handle the trial after settlement talks break down. They excel in selecting the best jurors for a particular case, and presenting testimony and evidence in a powerful manner.

The firm also prides itself on supporting and promoting female attorneys; three of their five equity partners are women. They are members of the ASCDC Women in the Law Committee and the LACBA President’s Advisory Committee on Women in the Legal Profession. Two of the female equity partners, Erin Hallissy and Mary Fersch, just completed the final jury trial of the prior firm before becoming SCHONBUCH HALLISSY LLP, securing a hard-fought defense verdict for their client.

The firm’s attorneys are among the most experienced, talented and respected trial lawyers in California, and are always responsive to their clients’ needs and goals. They are leaders and members in every major bar organization in California and nationwide, including the prestigious American College of Trial Lawyers, American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA), the Association of Southern California Defense Counsel (ASCDC), Los Angeles County Bar Association (LACBA), the International Association of Defense Counsel (IADC), the Federation of Defense and Corporate Counsel (FDCC), the ASCDC Women in the Law Committee, the LACBA President’s Advisory Committee on Women in the Legal Profession, and the Jack Daniels Trial School, founded by former partner, Jack Daniels. Schonbuch has served as ABOTA President (2020-2021) and is the 2022 recipient of the Lee B. Wenzel ABOTA Civility Award.

With a rich history in California spanning decades, Schonbuch Hallissy LLP began in 1982 as Daniels, Baratta & Fine LLP, which became Daniels, Fine, Israel & Schonbuch LLP, and then Daniels, Fine, Israel, Schonbuch & Lebovits LLP. The core group of partners has remained the bedrock of the firm, with the shared philosophy of vigorous representation combined with civility. They are also committed to providing an equal opportunity platform for lawyers and staff to thrive.

SCHONBUCH HALLISSY LLP is bringing on Laurie Julien, to act as its Managing Director to shepherd the firm into the future. Julien has over 30 years of experience as a high-stakes insurance coverage and bad faith litigator.

Michael Schonbuch, Founding Partner, Schonbuch Hallissy LLP (Photo: Business Wire)

Michael Schonbuch, Founding Partner, Schonbuch Hallissy LLP (Photo: Business Wire)

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