If the Army Major Raúl Alejando Girón Jiménez stunned the country by removing the cover from the knob and revealing in the Coral case the operation of the alleged criminal network that through Cestur and Cusep would have drained millionaire resources from the State, the captain of Police David Agustín Abreu Padilla could shake you when they uncover the ins and outs of the payment system in Coral 5G.
Abreu Padilla, former assistant to the financial manager Rafael Núñez de Haza, and in charge of accounts receivable from Cestur, was the character in the plot who had the task of destroying all “that was evidence when the government of Danilo Medina changed,” according to the Public ministry.
His testimony was offered to the court by the prosecuting body in the request for a measure of coercion against the 13 defendants in the second part of Operation Coral, to prove, in the first place, that even when General Núñez de Aza ceased to be the manager Cestur’s financier in 2020, “everyone had to continue dispatching with him by order of Juan Carlos Torres Robiou.”
Abreu Padilla will account for the amount of personal payments that would have been made to Núñez de Haza; of the money deliveries to Pastor Rossy Guzmán Sánchez, the deposits to the Unico Real State and Inversiones SRL company, and the credit card payments, by order of the same general.
Also from the money that he supposedly deposited with the daughter of Núñez de Haza and the nieces of Adán Cáceres Silvestre; the defendants Julio Camilo de los Santos Viola, Boanerges Reyes Batista, Franklin Antonio Mata Flores, among others; and it will explain the alleged payments for the maintenance of properties of Generals Núñez de Aza and Torres Robiou.
No one better than the former Cestur account manager to explain the “squares” that were used to control the expenditure of funds from the corruption network, and the codinomes (code names) used by them.
Another task of Abreu Padilla and on which he had great details was to collect at the La Marina fuel station from the accused César Féliz Ramos, who benefited from contracts to supply fuel tickets that he never supplied.