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News > World

Former Honduras President's Son Pleads Guilty to Drug Smuggling

  • Former Honduran President Porfirio Lobo

    Former Honduran President Porfirio Lobo

Published 16 May 2016
Opinion

Fabio Lobo, son of former President Porfirio Lobo, said he new what he was doing is a crime.

The son of former Honduras President Porfirio Lobo pleaded guilty on Monday to conspiring to import cocaine into the United States, a year after his arrest in Haiti as part of a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration probe.

Fabio Lobo, 44, faces a mandatory 10-year minimum prison term when he is sentenced on Sept. 15, and could get up to life behind bars following his plea to a single count of conspiring to import cocaine.

At a hearing in federal court in Manhattan, Lobo admitted to participating in a drug trafficking scheme that a federal prosecutor said also involved Honduran police officers.

"I knew that it was illegal," Lobo said.

Lobo's father was elected president of Honduras in late 2009 after a military U.S.-backed coup — United States Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton has been linked to the event — ousted then-President Manuel Zelaya. Porfirio Lobo left office in January 2014, when Juan Orlando Hernandez assumed the presidency.

At the time of his son's arrest, Porfirio Lobo said he hoped his son was innocent, "but if he is guilty, he should take responsibility for his actions."

In court, Assistant U.S. Attorney Emil Bove said evidence showed that beginning in late 2013, Lobo began discussing drug trafficking activities with confidential DEA sources posing as drug traffickers.

The goal, he said, was to profit from facilitating drug-running through Honduras. The notoriously violent Central American country has long served as a major transshipment point for U.S.-bound cocaine smuggled out of South America.
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