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The week that Arturo Murillo and his chief of staff Sergio Rodrigo Mendez decided to swindle the Bolivian government was filled with sudden actions taken before the ink (or blood) was dry from the last… @CarwilBJ/1400916028683554818
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Nov 11: Murillo was Jeanine Áñez co-passenger on a military-escorted plane to La Paz. Reportedly, he suggested multiple nominations to her cabinet, evidently including himself.
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Nov 13: Shortly after being sworn in as Minister of Government, Murillo threatens to "hunt down" political opponents. youtube.com/watch?v=92rK0zqgYoY
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The decree authorizing impunity to security forces is dated this day, but issued the following day. @CIDH/1195817630533390336
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Nov 15: Military and police shoot over 100 protesters in Sacaba, ultimately killing 10. @carwilbj/1327984522990903299
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Fellow minister Roxana Lizárraga claims: ”Mr. Murillo, in a cabinet meeting—and everyone [there] most know this—when they said five dead, Mr. Murillo came and said, ’Why were we called in, were we disturbed, for five deaths? We have so much work and they call us in for this.”
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Presidential Minister Jerjes Justianiano begins circulating the lie that the Sacaba protesters were victims of gunfire from one another. Arturo Murillo repeats this the next day.
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Nov 16: A letter from Murillo invites Bryan Berkman's Florida-based shell company Bravo Tactical Solutions to submit a bid for a anti-riot munitions and equipment at inflated prices.
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Thus begins a scheme to steal over $2 million from the Bolivian treasury, distributed among five co-conspirators named in a May 2021 US indictment. woborders.files.wordpress.com/2021/06/usa-vs-bryan-berkman-2.pdf
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The chutzpah involved in this juxtaposition speaks volumes about Murillo and the Áñez government, and their attitude to governing and public funds. woborders.blog/2021/06/04/arturo-murillo-corruption-scheme/


