Police Shove Officials in Election Document Raid

International organizations criticize raids as effort to taint voting results
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Sep 30, 2023 4:15 PM CDT
Police Wrestle Election Papers From Guatemalan Officials
Supreme Electoral Tribunal's President Irma Palencia, center, accompanied by magistrates Ranulfo Rojas, left, and Mynor Franco, outside the Constitutional Court building in Guatemala City on Friday.   (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

Police officers shoved and wrestled with justices of Guatemala's top electoral tribunal Saturday, as prosecutors sought to seize the tally sheets of votes from the August presidential elections. There were harrowing scenes of justices holding tight to boxes, as police tried to wrestle them away as part of raids to investigate spurious claims of voting fraud. Observers at the time said they saw no evidence of any such fraud, and most in Guatemala see it as an attempt to weaken or disqualify the winning candidate, Bernardo Arévalo, the AP reports. Seventy-year-old Justice Maynor Franco, wearing a suit and tie, refused to give up his grip on a vote box on Saturday, even as a much younger agent tried to wrestle it away.

Justice Blanca Alfaro pleaded with officers not to take the boxes because they represented the will of voters. She was shoved and briefly fell to the floor during the fracas. Saturday's events came during the latest round of raids by Attorney General Consuelo Porras and prosecutor Rafael Curruchiche. International groups have said the effort is aimed at overturning or tarnishing the electoral results, and the Organization of American States expressed criticism on Friday.

Porras took over as attorney general in 2018 and in 2021 was sanctioned by the US government for being an undemocratic actor and undermining investigations into corruption. She has denied any wrongdoing. Porras' office has ongoing investigations into the way Arévalo's Seed Movement gathered the necessary signatures for its registration years earlier, as well as into allegations of fraud in the election that independent observers have said are unsubstantiated. (More Guatemala stories.)

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