Colombian National Sentenced For Role in Assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise

Colombian National Sentenced For Role in Assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise

MIAMI, FL– Retired Colombian military officer German Rivera was sentenced to life imprisonment on Friday for his role in the July 7, 2021 assassination of the 53-year-old Haitian President, Jovenel Moise, at his private residence, overlooking the capital, Port au Prince.

Moise’s wife, Martine Marie Étienne Moïse, who was present when the armed group entered the private residence, had to be treated in the United states for injuries sustained in the attack carried out by hired group of about 20 military-trained Colombians.

The United States has maintained it has jurisdiction in the case because  Washington claims the plot to kill Moise was hatched in part in the US.

Rivera, who last month pleaded guilty to taking part in the plan, appeared before Judge Jose Martinez for sentencing. Dressed in brown prison garb, with his feet and wrists bound, Rivera passed on an opportunity to address the court before the sentence was read out.

He is the second person convicted in the United States over the assassination. In June, Haitian-Chilean Rodolphe Jaar, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life in prison for his role in supplying weapons to carry out the assassination.

Last week, the investigative judge in Haiti, Walter Wesser Voltaire, remanded Joseph Félix Badio to prison after he appeared before him for less than 10 minutes.

Badio is the first person sent to prison by magistrate Voltaire as part of the investigation of the assassination of Moise, whose death plunged Haiti into further instability with armed criminal gangs ruling most of the capital.

Badio, 60, a former official of the Anti-Corruption Unit, who was dismissed on May 17, 2021, for serious breaches of ethical rules, is suspected of ordering the assassination of President Moise and had been on the run since his murder at his private residence overlooking the capital, Port au Prince.

Badio is accused of ordering hitmen to carry out the attack. He is charged with murder, attempted murder, and armed robbery.

A spokesperson for the Haitian National Police (PNH), Inspector Gary Desrosiers, said that Badio was caught while driving out of a supermarket car park in the capital five days ago.

Earlier this year, US Attorney Markenzy Lapointe told a new conference that underlying the attack on Mpise was a lust for money and power. He said  two managers of a Miami security firm, CTU, devised a plan to kidnap Moise and replace him with Christian Sanon, a Haitian-American citizen who wanted to become president.

In exchange for toppling Moise, they were promised lucrative contracts to build infrastructure and provide security forces and military equipment in a future government led by Sanon, also indicted in the United States, prosecutors said.