Chile Judge Says Pinochet Had False Passports
Fri Jan 7, 2005 03:09 PM ET
SANTIAGO, Chile (Reuters) - A judge on Friday accused Augusto Pinochet of having false passports, deepening the former Chilean dictator's legal woes three days after he was placed under house arrest in a human rights case.
Sergio Munoz, a special judge who is investigating multimillion-dollar secret accounts that Pinochet, 89, held in the 1990s at Riggs Bank in Washington, made the accusation in a court filing.
The discovery of the Riggs accounts in July last year led to investigations of tax evasion and fraud, on top of the dozens of investigations Pinochet already faces for human rights violations during his 1973-1990 regime.
Munoz, along with a dozen police officers, raided Pinochet's private office in an exclusive area of Santiago on Thursday and interviewed Pinochet employees, seeking false documents and proof the retired general had bank accounts in other countries besides the United States.
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http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=7269488