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Peruvian Congress postpones vote to suspend JNJ

Photo: Congreso de Perú

December 17 |

The president of the Peruvian Congress, Alejandro Soto Reyes, announced this Friday that the members of the National Justice Board (JNJ) will be summoned again to appear before the National Representation on the occasion of the motion presented by the Congress for the removal of their positions.

“The decision was adopted after reading two documents sent by the members of the JNJ, where they inform, in one of them, that the magistrate Guillermo Thornberry has been hospitalized since November 13 and, in another, where they ask to specify the charges against them and to be summoned again,” said the note issued by the Congress of Peru.

The head of the Parliament also said that “in view of the documents read and in order to preserve the unrestricted right to legitimate defense, the members of the National Board of Justice will be summoned in due time, only once, to attend a new session of the Plenary of the Congress”.

For its part, the National Justice Board (JNJ) requested minimum guarantees of due process to the Congress of the Republic in the processing of Motion 9525 and “requests a new date with reasonable time to exercise its defense”.

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The Peruvian entity stressed in a statement that “the lack of typicity and the absence of a pre-established procedure place us in a scenario that lacks guarantees for the responsible exercise of the individual defense of the members of the JNJ and the institutionality of the autonomous constitutional body that we are part of”.

The Peruvian Congress presented the motion that proposes the dismissal of the members of the National Justice Board (JNJ) for having suspended Judge Patricia Benavides as Attorney General of the Republic.

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International

Trump to build $200M ballroom at the White House by 2028

The U.S. government under President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that it will begin construction in September on a new 8,000-square-meter ballroom at the White House.

The announcement was made by Karoline Leavitt, the administration’s press secretary, during a briefing in which she explained that the expansion responds to the need for a larger venue to host “major events.”

“Other presidents have long wished for a space capable of accommodating large gatherings within the White House complex… President Trump has committed to solving this issue,” Leavitt told reporters.

The project is estimated to cost $200 million, fully funded through donations from Trump himself and other “patriots,” according to a government statement. Construction is scheduled to begin in September and is expected to be completed before Trump’s term ends in 2028.

The Clark Construction Group, a Virginia-based company known for projects such as the Capital One Arena and L’Enfant Plaza in Washington, D.C., has been selected to lead the project.

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The new ballroom will be built on the East Wing of the White House, expanding the iconic residence with a space designed for state dinners, official ceremonies, and large-scale events.

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International

Three salvadorans in Florida sentenced in $146 million construction tax fraud scheme

Three Salvadoran residents living in Orlando, Florida, were sentenced for conspiracy to commit tax fraud and wire fraud involving a scheme exceeding $146 million in the construction industry, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida. The sentence was handed down by federal judge Timothy J. Corrigan on Tuesday, July 29.

Eduardo Aníbal Escobar (45) was sentenced to 4 years and 9 months in prison, Carlos Alberto Rodríguez (36) to 3 years and 4 months, and Adelmy Tejada (57) to 18 months in prison, followed by 6 months of house arrest. All three pled guilty on April 3, 2025.

In addition to the prison terms, the court ordered restitution payments totaling $36,957,616 to the IRS for unpaid payroll taxes, and $397,895 to two insurers for workers’ compensation claims related to the scheme.

Escobar and Rodríguez are permanent legal residents originally from El Salvador, while Tejada is a naturalized U.S. citizen of Salvadoran origin.

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International

Kremlin hails preparedness after Kamchatka quakes leave no casualties

The Kremlin expressed relief that the earthquakes that struck Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula today —the first being the strongest since 1952— resulted in no casualties, and emphasized that the region is well prepared to face such natural disasters.

“Thank God, there were no victims,” said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov during his daily press briefing.

The presidential representative stated that “all alert systems were activated in time, and evacuations were organized for residents in areas requiring it in response to tsunami threats.”

“Overall, the seismic resilience of the buildings proved effective (…) Therefore, we can say that the technological preparedness demonstrated a high level,” Peskov added.

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