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Image credit: “Luis Arce y Tristán Bauer en el CCK (52646726171)” by Ministerio de Cultura de la Nación, via Wikimedia Commons, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Luis_Arce_y_Tristán_Bauer_en_el_CCK_(52646726171).jpg, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0).

Ex-Bolivian President Luis Arce Arrested in Corruption Probe

Former Bolivian President Luis Arce was arrested on Wednesday as part of a sweeping corruption investigation, just a month after conservative President Rodrigo Paz took office and ended two decades of left-wing rule, according to the Associated Press.  

“MISA Y TE DEUM POR FIESTAS PATRIAS EN LA CATEDRAL DE LIMA, ASISTE PRESIDENTA DE LA REPÚBLICA Y GABINETE MINISTERIAL” by Ministerio de Defensa del Perú, via Wikimedia Commons (July 28, 2023). Licensed under CC BY 2.0. Edited for size and layout (cropped and color-corrected)

Judge Quashes Effort to Stop Peru’s Ex-President From Leaving Country During Criminal Probe

A Peruvian judge declined a request to restrict former President Dina Boluarte from leaving the country while prosecutors investigate her for corruption and money laundering, Reuters reported. 

Congress Expected to Subpoena Banks Linked to Epstein

Jeffrey Epstein remained embedded in Wall Street’s elite financial networks in the years before his 2019 death, maintaining accounts at more than 20 banks and executing large transactions with prominent investment firms, according to new reporting by The Wall Street Journal. 

Report Alleges Trump’s Ambassador Shielded Bukele From Investigation

A previously undisclosed report by the Inspector General for the U.S. State Department and officials interviewed by ProPublica allege that former Ambassador to El Salvador Ronald D. Johnson protected Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele from American and Salvadoran law enforcement efforts. 

JPMorgan Chase Ignored Years of Epstein Red Flags: NYT

JPMorgan Chase processed more than $1.1 billion in transactions for Jeffrey Epstein over a 15-year period, despite repeated anti-money laundering (AML) red flags raised internally, according to an investigative report by The New York Times.