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Honduran family seeks dismissal of U.S. money laundering case
By Nate Raymond
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Two members of a prominent Honduran family accused by U.S. authorities of engaging in a decade-long money laundering scheme are seeking the dismissal of the charges after the government froze their assets and made paying their lawyers impossible.
Yankel Rosenthal, a former minister of investment under current Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez, and Yani Rosenthal, a former Cabinet member in Honduras, filed papers late on Friday in federal court in Manhattan to dismiss their indictment.
Prosecutors said the Rosenthals used their businesses to engineer a scheme to launder drug trafficking and foreign bribery proceeds through U.S. bank accounts.
The motions came after months of wrangling over their inability to pay their lawyers due to the U.S. Treasury Department in October taking steps that resulted in the freezing of hundreds of millions of dollars of their assets.
They pointed to a March decision from the U.S. Supreme Court declaring it unconstitutional for the government to restrain assets belonging to defendants that are not linked to the criminal conduct, and are needed to hire counsel of their choice.
Lawyers for Yankel Rosenthal said as a result, the government was violating his “right to counsel of his choice by blocking funds he otherwise could use to pay counsel to defend against that same government’s prosecution of him.”
A spokesman for Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara declined comment.
The two men were charged in October along with Jaime Rosenthal, a former vice president, and Andres Acosta Garcia, a lawyer with the family’s Grupo Continental conglomerate.
The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control classified the Rosenthals and seven businesses, including Grupo Continental and its Banco Continental unit, as “specially designated narcotics traffickers.”
That designation allowed for the blocking of hundreds of millions of dollars assets that Christine Chung, Yani Rosenthal’s lawyer, at a May 6 hearing said vastly exceeded the roughly $10 million that was allegedly laundered.
Lawyers for Yankel Rosenthal, who was president of Club Deportivo Marathon soccer club and was arrested in Miami in October, and his cousin Yani Rosenthal, who waived extradition, argue OFAC has refused to take steps to enable them to access those assets to pay their lawyers.
Yani Rosenthal has to date been able to pay his lawyers $1.5 million, while Yankel Rosenthal’s attorneys have been paid nothing, they said.
The case is U.S. v. Rosenthal Oliva et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 13-cr-00413.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond; Editing by Alistair Bell)