Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

forest444

(5,902 posts)
Wed Mar 30, 2016, 11:06 AM Mar 2016

First businessman sentenced for dictatorship-era crimes in Argentina.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald

A federal court in Salta Province, Argentina, sentenced former bus company owner Marcos Levín to 12 years in prison yesterday, making him the first businessman in the country’s history to be convicted for crimes against humanity committed during the last military dictatorship.

Levín, the ex-owner of the La Veloz del Norte transport company, was sentenced with two former police officers, Víctor Bocos and Víctor Almirón, for their role in the 1977 kidnapping and torture of his former employee Víctor Cobos. Another ex-police officer, Enrique Cardozo, was given an 8-year prison sentence. The sentences will likely be appealed.

“He (Levín) wasn’t convicted just because he happened to be the owner of a company with victims of crimes against humanity. There was evidence that proved Levín was linked to the crime,” Gastón Chillier, the director of the Centre for Legal and Social Studies (CELS) human rights organization, told the Herald. Chillier said the case is important because it was the first time a businessman was found guilty of committing crimes against humanity against his workers and labor union representatives in his company.

Labor disputes during the dictatorship were often immediately followed by military or police repression meant to have a “disciplinary effect” on employees, and Levín is one of a number of prominent Argentine businessmen prosecuted for crimes against humanity in recent years. These cases have moved more quickly since former President Cristina Kirchner signed a law in 2015 facilitating investigations of civilian complicity in the Dirty War.

Out of the 344 civilians currently under investigation for dictatorship-era crimes, at least 21 of them are businessmen, according to a CELS report released last week. Cobos, a member of the Salta delegation of the Transport Workers Union (UTA), was one of many of Levín’s employees that were arrested and tortured due to their union activity; but investigators haven’t yet been able to establish the exact number of victims.

“We hope that the Supreme Court authorizes us to represent the dozens of other workers that were persecuted and arrested due to Levín’s orders,” the plaintiff’s lawyer David Leiva told Página/12. The Supreme Court is reviewing whether to remove the statute of limitations for investigations in these types of cases.

Read more: http://buenosairesherald.com/article/211580/first-businessman-sentenced-for-dictatorshipera-crimes

3 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
First businessman sentenced for dictatorship-era crimes in Argentina. (Original Post) forest444 Mar 2016 OP
He directed the government to torture and murder his leftist employees. How fascist of him. Judi Lynn Mar 2016 #1
Thank you for your well-chosen illustrations, Judi. forest444 Mar 2016 #2
The fact the victim survived his vicious treatment in torture sessions makes this story even better. Judi Lynn Mar 2016 #3

Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
1. He directed the government to torture and murder his leftist employees. How fascist of him.
Wed Mar 30, 2016, 05:01 PM
Mar 2016

He probably expected smooth sailing after that, with the wind behind him as he filled their positions with people whom he could force to work for nearly nothing, while the remaining employees were simply glad enough to still be left alive, and not yet tortured.

That's the way business wants it. What a shame they can't actually force people to live their whole lives as machines for business interests.

Hope people will follow up on this door opening momentarily with a decision from the Supreme Court of Argentina to remove the statute of limitations for prosecuting people like Marcos Levín. He is in every way just as responsible for the suffering of those people and their loved ones and their co-workers as the people who did the actual physical torture and murdering.

[center]

Marcos Levín





Did they come for him in the night, as they did for those they murdered,
throwing them into the sea and river from airplanes and helicopters?



or did they drag him off in broad daylight? [/center]

forest444

(5,902 posts)
2. Thank you for your well-chosen illustrations, Judi.
Wed Mar 30, 2016, 07:43 PM
Mar 2016

Pictures say a thousand words (especially that last one).

This is from Víctor Cobos' testimony:

“It is indescribable what we suffered: beatings, an electric prod. I never thought I could scream from so much pain, I shook and cried with frustration. In one of the torture sessions I pleaded for them to kill me because I couldn’t take it anymore.”


He lived through it all, thankfully, and best of all lived to see a modicum of justice.

Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
3. The fact the victim survived his vicious treatment in torture sessions makes this story even better.
Wed Mar 30, 2016, 08:20 PM
Mar 2016

It would seem he probably didn't sleep for so long after he was released, visions of his own experiences, and those crimes committed to the people around him.

Such wonderful news to learn in hearing he lives, still!

Not that many walked away, and lived to tell others what happened to them.

Thank you for sharing the information a step has been taken to address the monstrosities committed by people hoping to gain from state violence against their enemies. From what we've heard about Iraq, that seems to be a wide-spread evil, people everywhere using the already murderous forces controlling a government to harm people for them, and get away with it.

Latest Discussions»Latest Breaking News»First businessman sentenc...