Wednesday, 13 April 2016
Panama papers: Mossack Fonseca headquarters raided
Prosecutors said the operation had been carried out at the
offices of Mossack Fonseca in Panama City "without incident
or interference".
The leaked "Panama Papers" have shown how some wealthy
people use offshore firms to evade tax and avoid sanctions.
The firm has denied wrongdoing. It says it is the victim of a
hack and that the information is being misrepresented.
Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela has promised to
work with other countries to improve transparency in its
offshore financial industry.Police carried out Tuesday's raid along with officials from an
organised crime unit. Officers set up a perimeter around the
headquarters while prosecutors entered the offices to
search for documents.
Afterwards, the attorney general's office said the aim had
been "to obtain documentation linked to the information
published in news articles that establish the use of the firm
in illicit activities".
The statement added that searches would also take place at
subsidiaries of the firm.
Panama's government promised an investigation soon after
news reports emerged more than a week ago based on
more than 11 million documents from the firm.
The firm tweeted [in Spanish] that it "continues to co-
operate with authorities in investigations made at our
headquarters".
Many other countries are probing possible financial crimes
by the rich and powerful in the aftermath of the leak.
Mossack Fonseca partner Ramon Fonseca says the company
had been hacked by servers based abroad and has filed a
complaint with the Panamanian attorney general's office.
Mr Fonseca served as a minister in Mr Valera's government
but stepped aside earlier this year after separate allegations
linked the firm to the corruption scandal engulfing the
Brazilian state oil company Petrobras.
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