Drug trafficking charges filed against Tony Hernandez, brother of Honduran president

The former honduran congressman is accused of importing “multi-ton loads of cocaine” into the United States for more than a decade.

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Por:
David C Adams.
Foto de archivo del excongresita hondureño Juan Antonio 'Tony' Hernández acusado de narcotráfico en una corte federal de Nueva York.
Foto de archivo del excongresita hondureño Juan Antonio 'Tony' Hernández acusado de narcotráfico en una corte federal de Nueva York.
Imagen AP

A brother of Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández was charged by federal prosecutors in New York on Monday with being “a large-scale drug trafficker” who conspired to bring tons of cocaine into the country between 2004 and 2016..

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Juan Antonio “Tony” Hernández appeared in court in Miami on Monday three days after his arrest at Miami airport. The indictment, first obtained by Insight Crime, accuses the 40-year-old former Honduran congressman of importing packages of cocaine stamped with his initials and protecting "multi-ton loads" of cocaine shipments by paying bribes to local officials and arranging for "machine-gun toting security", including Honduran police.

Hernández was also charged with weapons related offenses involving the use and possession of machineguns and "destructive devices", and making false statements to federal agents. . If convicted, he faces possible life in prison.

"Hernández and his criminal associates allegedly conspired with some of the world's most deadly and dangerous transnational criminal networks in Mexico and Colombia to flood American streets with deadly drugs," said Special Agent in Charge Raymond Donovan in a statement.

The indictment alleges that Hernández was involved "in processing, receiving, transporting, and distributing" cocaine that arrived in Honduras via planes, go-fast vessels, and, on at least one occasion, a submarine. It adds that he had access to cocaine laboratories in Honduras and Colombia, at which some of the cocaine was stamped with the symbol “TH,” i.e., “Tony Hernandez.”

The arrest comes less than a year after Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga, a former leader of the once powerful “Cachiros” criminal group, testified that he paid bribes to Hernández. The indictment described a video of a meeting in 2014 in Honduras where Hernández agreed to help Rivera Maradiaga by arranging for Honduran government entities to pay money owed to Cachiros money-laundering front companies in exchange for kickback payments. Rivera Maradiaga paid Hernández approximately $50,000 during the meeting, according to the indictment.

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Univision Investiga last year reported how a Honduran army captain was fired after he accused Tony Hernández of ties to a helicopter seized in a drug raid.



The Hernández brothers belong to a large family of 17 children, the offspring of a coffee farmer in rural Lempira province,

The birthplace of President Juan Orlando Hernández, in Gracias, Lempira, a poor, mountainous province in western Honduras. Photo by Jeff Ernst.
A cement plaque sits along a road that’s under construction in Valladolid, Lempira, the home province of President Juan Orlando Hernández: “Here began the political career of Honduras’ best president,” signed by Hernández himself. Photo by Jeff Ernst
Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández grew up in rural Lempira province, one of 17 children of a coffee farmer. Photo courtesy of JuanOrlando.com
President Juan Orlando Hernández campaigning on horseback. Photo courtesy of JuanOrlando.com
Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández campaigned on horseback in rural areas. The president seen here in Olancho (white shirt on the lead horse).
The hotel Posada Don Juan in Gracias, Lempira, is owned by the Hernández family. Photo by Jeff Ernst.
The hotel Posada Don Juan in the town of Gracias, in the mountainous western province of Lempira, is owned by the Hernández family. Photo by Jeff Ernst
Ruling party election publicity in of La Campa, Lempira, the home province of President Juan Orlando Hernández. The federal government has invested heavily in social programs in rural areas. As a result the ruling National Party won by a landslide in those areas in the controversial Nov. 26 elections. Photo by Jeff Ernst.
Ruling National party flags adorn the streets of of La Campa, Lempira, in the mountainous western province of Lempira, Honduras, home to President Juan Orlando Hernández. Photo by Jeff Ernst.
A home built with funds from the Honduran government program Vida Mejor. When Hernández assumed the presidency in 2014, rural families became the focus and the program was placed under the umbrella of Vida Mejor along with a vast expansion of direct assistance programs. Photo by Jeff Ernst
President Hernández’s signature poverty eradication initiative, 
<i>Vida Mejor</i> (Better Life) is very evident in Valladolid in the westerrn province of Lempira, including this church. Photo by Jeff Ernst.
President Hernández lay foundation stones at a park, part of a government experiment to create safe places in gang-invested neighborhoods for families to take children to play. Courtesy of the President's office.
Juan Orlando Hernández, president of Honduras during an interview with Univision News at his home in the capital, Tegucigalpa, Jan 19, 2018.
Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez speaks during his closing campaign rally, in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. Nov. 19, 2017 file photo, AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
Juan Orlando Hernández was sworn in as president on Saturday for a second term. Seen here with First Lady Ana García at the National ceremony in Tegucigalpa.
Honduras' former President Juan Orlando Hernandez boards a plane of the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), during his extraditaton to United State at the Air force Base, in Tegucigalpa, on April 21, 2022.
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The birthplace of President Juan Orlando Hernández, in Gracias, Lempira, a poor, mountainous province in western Honduras. Photo by Jeff Ernst.


President Hernández said his brothers' arrest was "a heavy blow for the family. But he added that “no one is above the law,” and he hoped that "the justice system will be able to shed light on whether those allegations are true or not."

He also said that his government remained committed to the fight against drug trafficking and corruption.

President Hernández, 50, first took office in January 2014 and was narrowly re-elected a year ago in a disputed election during which more than 20 people were killed in protests over alleged vote fraud.

Honduras' ruling National Party has been hit with a series of drug scandals. In September 2017, US authorities sentenced Fabio Lobo, the son of former President Porfirio Lobo, to 24 years in jail for conspiring with the Cachiros to smuggle into the United States.