Los Angeles Times - 29.08.2019

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A4 THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 2019 LATIMES.COM


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Michael Avenatti:In the
Aug. 27 California section,
an article about a trial date
being set for lawyer Michael
Avenatti described a judge’s
ruling in regards to a “bank-
ruptcy receiver”; it is a re-

ceiver. Also, the article
stated that if convicted of all
charges, Avenatti could face
up to 97 years in prison. In
fact, he could face a maxi-
mum penalty of 404 years in
prison.

FOR THE RECORD


ROME — Italian Prime
Minister Giuseppe Conte
looks set to keep his job after
the Five Star Movement and
the Democratic Party
backed his reappointment
as part of a tentative coali-
tion deal reached Wednes-
day.
Conte was summoned for
a meeting with Italian Presi-
dent Sergio Mattarella on
Thursday that is widely ex-
pected to result in the prime
minister being officially or-
dered to form a new govern-
ment.
The center-left Demo-
cratic Party and the populist
Five Star Movement, known
as M5S, have been locked in
negotiations to form a gov-
ernment and avoid early
elections, which far-right
leader Matteo Salvini’s
League party would be the
favorite to win.
“Today we told the presi-
dent of the republic that
there is a political agree-
ment with the Democratic
Party that Giuseppe Conte
may be again given a man-
date as prime minister,”
M5S leader Luigi Di Maio
said.
He spoke after talks with
Mattarella, closing a two-
day round of consultations
the president held with po-
litical leaders. They were
seen as a deadline for the
M5S and Democratic Party
to strike an agreement.
Conte, a 55-year-old law
professor, had no political
experience before leading
the outgoing coalition gov-
ernment of Di Maio’s M5S
and Salvini’s League. He has
no official party affiliation
but is seen as close to M5S.
As prime minister-desig-
nate, Conte would have a few
days to consolidate the M5S-
Democratic Party pact, put
together a list of ministers,
report back to Mattarella
and be sworn in. He is serv-
ing as caretaker prime min-
ister after announcing his
resignation this month.
Despite agreeing on the
premier, the M5S and
Democratic Party have not
sealed their coalition. Di
Maio said the priorities and
the composition of the new
executive were still up for
discussion.
“Only after clearly setting
all the things we should do
together will we be able to
decide who will be called on
to implement the agreed

policies,” he said.
The new government
would be expected to be
more friendly toward the Eu-
ropean Union and take a
more moderate line on im-
migration than the outgoing
one.
Salvini triggered the gov-
ernment crisis this month by
ending a rocky 14-month co-
alition with the M5S and
calling for new elections. Re-
cent opinion polls indicate
the move has dented some of
his popularity.
Speaking to his party be-
fore meeting Mattarella,
Democratic Party leader
Nicola Zingaretti said it was
time to end a “season of ha-
tred, resentment, cunning,
selfishness.”
Yet Di Maio said he did
not regret his alliance with
Salvini. “I do not recant the
work done together in these
14 months,” he said.
Such divergent remarks
underlined the difficulty of
bringing together the M5S
and Democratic Party, two
former bitter allies who are
wrangling over top govern-
ment positions. The Demo-
cratic Party has called for
the new government to be
marked by “discontinuity”
from the previous one.
On Wednesday, the
Democratic Party balked at
demands that Di Maio
should remain deputy pre-
mier and that the final green
light to the alliance should
depend on an online vote by
M5S members.
Democratic Party depu-
ty leader Andrea Orlando
said it would be unaccept-
able if the M5S’s online vot-
ing system, known as
Rousseau, were to interfere
with the constitution and
presidential decisions.
The possibility remains
that a negative Rousseau
vote could stop the forma-
tion of a government.

Italian Premier


Conte expected


to keep his job


associated press

PRIME MINISTER
Giuseppe Conte would
lead a new coalition
without a far-right party.

Gregorio BorgiaAssociated Press

sity war, with a high number
of individual killings yet
fewer mass murders de-
signed to garner grisly head-
lines.
But that seems to be
changing. In April, 13 people
were killed when armed men
opened fire at a bar during a
family celebration in Minati-
tlan, Veracruz. On Aug. 8,
residents in Uruapan, Mi-
choacan, woke up to news
that 19 bodies had been left
overnight on a major boule-
vard, some of them hung
from a highway overpass.
There are many reasons
that criminal groups might
decide to carry out more
dramatic acts of violence,
analysts say. For example,
one criminal group might do
so to focus unwanted police
attention on a region con-
trolled by another group.
Alejandro Hope, a securi-
ty analyst based in Mexico
City, said such acts are de-
ployed “to buttress the repu-
tation of a particular group.”
“It intimidates rivals,” he
said. “It creates fear.”
Speaking at his daily
news conference Wednes-
day, President Andres Ma-
nuel Lopez Obrador called
the bar attack “the most in-
human thing possible.”
The president said offi-
cials believe one of the or-
ganizers of the attack was a
local cartel member identi-
fied as Ricardo “N,” who uses
the alias La Loca.
The man had recently
been arrested but was later
released, Lopez Obrador
said. He called for local pros-
ecutors to be investigated to
see why the alleged perpe-
trator had been freed.
“It is regrettable that or-
ganized crime acts in this
manner,” the president said.
“It is more regrettable that


there may be collusion with
authorities.”
The state attorney gener-
al’s office responded with a
statement denying any col-
lusion and saying that it was
federal authorities who were
responsible for the release of
La Loca.
Such finger-pointing is
particularly common in
Veracruz, where mistrust
among factions of govern-
ment is high.
The oil-rich state was
governed by a single political
faction, the Institutional
Revolutionary Party, or PRI,
for more than a century until
2016, when then-Gov. Javier
Duarte fled the country
amid corruption allegations.
Duarte was eventually ar-
rested and convicted of
charges including criminal
association and money laun-
dering.
The center-right Na-
tional Action Party, or PAN,
won an election to replace
Duarte in 2016, and the presi-
dent’s left-leaning Morena
party won the governorship
two years later.
Such rapid political turn-

over has disrupted agree-
ments between cartels and
public officials, said Falko
Ernst, senior analyst for
Mexico at the International
Crisis Group. It also appears
to have created divisions be-
tween those in government
now aligned with Morena
and prosecutors still aligned
with the PAN.
“There’s no trust be-
tween these different frag-
ments of the government,”
Ernst said. “They don’t even
speak to each other.”
“What we’re seeing is the
failure of two political transi-
tions to address the root
causes of violence,” he add-
ed.
Experts say a separate
political change has also
hampered Mexico’s ability
to fight crime.
The country’s justice sys-
tem is in the midst of a major
overhaul, transitioning from
a system based on written
arguments to one in which
evidence is presented orally.
Most experts agree the
transition is needed, but be-
cause police and prose-
cutors have not received

proper training in many
parts of the country, many
cases have been dismissed
by judges because of investi-
gation errors.
The transition to the new
justice system was under-
way before Lopez Obrador
took office in December, and
critics say he has not done
enough to support it. In fact,
the president has dramati-
cally cut funding across gov-
ernment during his first nine
months in office, including
to police forces and the at-
torney general’s office.
“The police have not ad-
apted to the new system,
and neither have prose-
cutors,” said Hope, the secu-
rity analyst, who served as
an advisor to one of Lopez
Obrador’s opponents in the
2018 presidential election.
“There is chronic under-
funding of the criminal jus-
tice system, but institution-
building is not [Lopez
Obrador’s] forte.”
The president’s security
strategy has been focused on
the creation of two elements:
a new national guard and a
cash transfer program that
provides government fund-
ing to young people who are
enrolled in school or intern-
ships.
Neither has had an im-
mediate effect on crime,
which is growing.
What is needed, Hope
said, is better-trained police
and prosecutors and better
enforcement of the country’s
laws. Widespread impunity
means criminal groups have
little incentive to refrain
from attacks such as the one
on the bar, he said.
“If an extraordinary
event like this doesn’t gener-
ate an extraordinary reac-
tion, these type of events will
just happen again and
again.”

RELATIVESand friends of victims comfort one another after a deadly bar fire in Coatzacoalcos, Mexico. The
attack raised concerns that Mexico’s criminal groups may be returning to spectacular acts of violence.


Victoria RazoAFP/Getty Images

Fiery bar attack kills 27


ATTACKERS locked the bar before setting it on fire.
Its owner had refused to let a gang sell drugs there.

Pedro PardoAFP/Getty Images

[Mexico,from A1]

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