Eliane Karp, the Belgian anthropologist of Jewish descent who, as the wife of Alejandro Toledo, has not been heard from since May 10 when she boarded a plane from San Francisco to Tel Aviv. to be the first lady of Peru in the first five years of 2000. Karp’s trip was not to visit a relative or to do tourism, but to elude the Peruvian justice who has been looking for her for six years, since the country does not have …
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Eliane Karp, the Belgian anthropologist of Jewish descent who, as the wife of Alejandro Toledo, has not been heard from since May 10 when she boarded a plane from San Francisco to Tel Aviv. to be the first lady of Peru in the first five years of 2000. Karp’s trip was not to visit a relative or to do tourism, but to evade Peruvian justice who has been looking for her for six years, since the country does not have extradition agreement with Israel.
Karp is accused of the alleged crime of money laundering in the Ecoteva case. According to the tax thesis, the ex-presidential partner used the offshore company Ecoteva Consulting Group, in the name of Karp’s mother, Eva Fernenburg, to camouflage the millionaire bribes they would have received for favoring the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht. It is presumed that around 35 million dollars with which they acquired several luxury properties. The colleague from Toledo has a pre-trial detention order of 18 months since 2017 and a request for a sentence of 16 years and eight months since 2019.
According to this request for preventive detention in force, this Tuesday the Judiciary ordered that the State of Israel be requested to arrest Eliane Karp for the purpose of extradition. An indispensable procedure for the authorities of this country to evaluate his provisional arrest. During the hearing, the Prosecutor’s Office brought to attention a document from Interpol in Jerusalem in which they maintain that Israel “does not stop fugitives because of an international arrest warrant or a red notice” and that it was therefore necessary to formalize the extradition order.
The last time Karp was seen was when he said goodbye to Alejandro Toledo before the former president surrendered to justice and shortly after was returned to Peru on April 23. Within days, she got her passport back and, in addition, about $175,000 that she paid as part of the bail for her husband to be released on parole. Although the Public Ministry insists on having sent all the necessary documents to the United States for Karp’s extradition at the end of 2021, there was no impediment to her departure. That’s why he had no problems leaving the country where he met Toledo.
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