Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
April 3, 2008
   
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Stay off the yellow: Luis Cordero yesterday sprays bright yellow paint on the road to Limón just before the bridge (over the Virilla River ) between Tibás and Heredia, in an initiative to paint a combined 550 kilometers of fresh lane divider lines on four Costa Rican roads.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Unusual bond payment in Costa Rican property fraud case
In a new quirk in the $12.5 million real estate fraud case of Italian Matteo Quintavalle, the accused is attempting to pay a $300,000 bond with “industrial machinery.”
Costa Rica's March inflation slower, at 0.39%
Inflation eased during March, with consumer prices increasing 0.39%, down from last month's 1.11% price hikes.
Colombia's top prosecutor wants
Costa Rican couple tried on Tico turf
Colombia's top prosecutor says he will continue pushing for legal action against a Costa Rican couple found with $480,000 of alleged Colombian guerrilla cash in a safe box in their home.
Edited By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
April 3

Free film screening: “Agua
7 p.m., Spanish Cultural Center, Av.13, Ca. 31. Info: 2257-2919, ext. 118,.

2nd Salsa Festival
With concert by Puerto Rican David Pabón, 8 p.m., Discoteca Rumba, Santa Ana-Belén road, tickets at Merecumbé dance schools. Info: 8367-2746.

Unusual bond payment in
Costa Rican property fraud case
By Nick Wilkinson
Tico Times Staff | nwilkinson@ticotimes.net

In a new quirk in the $12.5 million real estate fraud case of Italian Matteo Quintavalle, the accused is attempting to pay a $300,000 bond with “industrial machinery.”

A criminal judge ordered the former aspiring soccer mogul to pay the bond by yesterday and he dropped the machinery off at the court ahead of the deadline.

Lawyers representing 94 of Quintavalle's alleged victims and the prosecutor handling the case were mystified by the payment.

Prosecutor José Martínez said he doesn't even know what the equipment is, much less if it is worth $300,000. He immediately appealed the payment as illegitimate and said it's in the hands of the judge.

Different sides have tied up the case in appeals and motions since July 2007, when Quintavalle was originally arrested.

Martínez said he couldn't say if he was close to indicting the Italian.

“It all depends on the level of proof,” he said. “It's still under investigation.”

Quintavalle is not the only person facing potential indictment. Interpol has confirmed two U.S. suspects are wanted: Christopher Coulther and Robert Simmons Davis.

The original criminal complaint names 10 people, including Quintavalle and Coulther.

Costa Rica's March inflation slower, at 0.39%

Inflation eased during March, with consumer prices increasing 0.39%, down from last month's 1.11% price hikes.

Annual inflation through last month stands at 11.04%, still far above the Central Bank's stated goal of 8% – plus or minus a point – for the year, but down from 11.4% seen through February.

Food continues to pressure the consumer price index most, with the cost of food and non-alcoholic beverages (1.12%) and food and drink outside the home (1.03%) rising the most.

Meanwhile, the cost of clothing (-1.14%), transportation (-0.47%) and entertainment (-0.44%) registered price decreases.

 

Colombia's top prosecutor wants
Costa Rican couple tried on Tico turf
By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net

Colombia's top prosecutor says he will continue pushing for legal action against a Costa Rican couple found with $480,000 of alleged Colombian guerrilla cash in a safe box in their home.

Costa Rica has said the couple – esteemed university professor Francisco Gutiérrez and his wife Cruz Prado, also an academic and former labor union activist – will not be extradited.

However, Colombian Chief Prosecutor Mario Iguarán told the Costa Rican daily Al Día he will send this country information that should lead to an investigation here of Gutiérrez and Prado on their home turf.

“Although you (Costa Rican authorities) do not penalize for financing terrorism, we will give you elements to allow an investigation for money laundering,” he said.

The Tico Times reported last month that the couple had opened their home in Heredia, north of San José, about 11 years ago to guerrilla leaders without knowing the true identities of the Colombian men, who had told the couple they were here to engage with the United States in peace talks. The men turned out to be top commanders of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The couple also alleged they knew nothing about the money until police busted open the safe last month.

“It's not a crime to have rotting money,” Prado said, referring to the weathered, brittle bills hiding in the safe.

Colombia's chief prosecutor does not agree.

“It's money that they (Gutiérrez and Prado) haven't been able to justify to the news media, and who's claiming ownership of that money? Nothing more and nothing less than the FARC,” Iguarán told Al Día.

The interview ran yesterday, the morning after Colombia had issued a communiqué that said it has found no ties between Costa Rican politicians and Colombian guerrillas in computers that belonged to FARC's No. 2 chief, Raúl Reyes, whom Colombian military shot down in a March 1 attack in Ecuadorean territory.

Iguarán reiterated the claim of no political connections in the interview.

Yet the opposite claim, that there purportedly are “political sectors” here linked to “drug-trafficking” Colombian rebels caused Costa Rica's former public security minister, Fernando Berrocal, on Sunday to lose his job.

Pressed by President Oscar Arias and several top officials and legislators, Berrocal later said there wasn't a specific list of names of politicians connected to the FARC, but he nevertheless maintained that the rebel group has infiltrated this country on a large scale.

An article published Monday in the Colombian daily El Tiempo reported that “Colombian intelligence has identified from five to seven names in Costa Rica of people collaborating with the guerrillas.”

However, Rodrigo Arias, Costa Rica's minister of the presidency, said yesterday, “We have no official communication from Colombia on this,” according to newswire ACAN-EFE.

He also announced the date for Friday for a fact-finding mission to Colombia. The committee is made up of officials including Vice President Laura Chinchilla, who replaced Berrocal as security minister, and is expected to get to the bottom of the alleged FARC infiltration in Costa Rica.

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