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Francisco Flores
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===Research=== At the end of the year [[2013]], the Attorney General's Office of the Republic of El Salvador began an investigation to reveal whether there were links between Francisco Flores and a case of alleged embezzlement and illicit negotiations involving the company company ENEL and the Hydroelectric Executive Commission of the Lempa River (CEL), for which a file was opened for him, and bank traces were carried out and although no payments were found from the ENEL company, transfers were found that the Embassy of Taiwan in El Salvador had been carried out in a US bank, in addition, the existence of a Suspicious Operation Report from the International Bank of Miami is reported. With this information, in early September of [[2013]], the Attorney General detailed in a report that Francisco Flores received three checks (for 4, 5 and 1 million dollars ), the Suspicious Operation Report was made by the International Bank of Miami because the justification for the operation was the financing of his political campaign, a fact that raised suspicions since in El Salvador there is no presidential re-election, in addition to the destination of the money it was to a bank in Bahamas, a recognized tax haven. The Financial Investigation Unit of the El Salvador Attorney General made a request to the United States Department of State, in which they requested that a property in North Miami Beach, Florida, owned by the family of former President Flores, as well as information on the “América Libre Institute”, a composite think tank founded by Francisco Flores and whose board of directors is made up of multiple Salvadoran politicians and businessmen such as Juan José Daboub, José Ángel Quirós, Miguel Ángel Simán, Rafael Barraza and Arnoldo Jiménez. The case gained notoriety when, in November 2013, Mauricio Funes, president of El Salvador at the time, made public on his radio program that he had a copy of the document investigating Francisco Flores, a fact that was pointed out by numerous members of the ARENA as a political persecution, Flores was subsequently summoned by the Legislative Assembly of El Salvador to answer a series of questions in this regard, Francisco Flores agreed to attend the first two appearances, but he refused to attend the third, so the Assembly decided to summon him out of urgency and asked the National Civil Police of El Salvador to locate the former president. Flores justified his absence by accusing the commission of charging him with crimes when it is not one of his powers,
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