I'm not aware of every case. There's the U.S.-funded and -trained major crimes task force. I haven't seen significant results of all this. There have been a few token prosecutions—for example, the conviction of a member of the military police, who broke the camera of a journalist some time ago. That's one of the only....
I haven't seen it in the prominent cases, the big cases. For example, Alfredo Landaverde, a former police commissioner who denounced police corruption in the fall of 2011, was assassinated in December of 2011. On his case, very prominently, nothing has gone forward; and similarly on the case of Villatoro, a major radio announcer and friend of President Lobo who was assassinated in the spring of 2012. These are the most prominent cases that have not gone forward.
I think there is some motion to investigate some cases. I wouldn't say nothing is moving, but I would also say [Technical difficulty--Editor]...larger pattern is that this is tokenism. We're not seeing the kind of prosecutions we should.
The most obvious person who I believe should be prosecuted is Mr. Facussé, who has alleged and has himself admitted, including in a letter to me, that his security forces killed four campesinos at El Tumbador in late 2009. He says that it was in self-defence. Why has that situation not been investigated?
So I think, yes, there is some motion, but not at a significant level. With the recent appointments of Arturo Corrales, who was the chief negotiator for the leader of the coup, and Roberto Micheletti, the new minister of security and defence, we again have these really scary military figures now in charge of top positions at the police.
Also, there is a very alarming situation in prosecutor's office, where a recent top prosecutor in charge of money laundering was just assassinated a few weeks ago.