And although 50 folders have already been concluded and resulted in administrative sanctions and disqualification of former public servants, 81 were channeled by the Comptroller of the capital to the Court of Administrative Justice so that this body can impose the corresponding sanction.
Officials attached to the head of government between 2017 and 2018 –which corresponded to Miguel Ángel Mancera and José Ramón Amieva, respectively–, belong to the body that has the most investigation files in the Comptroller’s Office with 80, followed by the Ministry of Works and Services with nine, the Tlalpan mayor’s office with four.
On the other hand, the Institute of Administrative Verification and the Ministry of Finance have two pending investigation folders to be resolved and one in the Ministry of Civil Protection and another in the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing.
The document indicates that in five years only 15 administrative sanctions and disqualifications were imposed against former public servants ranging from 10 to 20 years in which they will not be able to hold positions in the government.
Among those sanctioned are area directors, deputy directors and general directors.
Were there sanctions in the CDMX mayor’s offices?
Parallel to these investigations by the Comptroller of Mexico City, three of the 16 mayors’ offices reported inquiries and imposed sanctions against public servants related to alleged acts of corruption due to the 2017 earthquakes.
In the case of the mayor Magdalena Contreras, the demarcation reported 14 investigation folders; Of this total, seven sanctions were imposed against five public servants, which consisted of dismissal or being placed at the disposal of some internal control body.
The Cuauhtemoc reported 13 research folders and 10 in Coyoacanboth demarcations without sanctions to public servants.