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"No son todos los que están, ni están
todos los que son." —Tio Genaro

Guilty Until Proven Innocent Dept.
PR Gov. Pleads "Not Guilty"
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -- Puerto Rico Gov. Anibal Acevedo Vila
pleaded not guilty Friday to corruption charges in an alleged campaign
finance scheme and was released on his own recognizance. He said on TV
he won't resign.
Hundreds of flag-waving supporters turned out to cheer Acevedo when he
arrived at the federal courthouse in San Juan to be fingerprinted and
have his mug shot taken. The governor, who appeared before a
federal magistrate, used a smart phone to send a message of gratitude
from inside the courthouse to his raucous supporters outside. "We
recognize the presence of the outraged Puerto Ricans here in defense of
our people," he said. "We give them thanks and respect."
The governor, charged with 19 counts carrying a potential prison
sentence of up to 20 years, is the first Puerto Rican governor to face
federal charges since the island became a semiautonomous U.S.
commonwealth in 1952. A grand jury indictment accuses Acevedo and a
dozen associates of illegally raising money to pay off more than
$500,000 in campaign debts from his two terms as Puerto Rico's nonvoting
delegate to Congress from 2000-2004.
Acevedo has denied any wrongdoing and accused U.S. authorities of
launching a politically motivated attack. The governor, who is up for
re-election this year, said in a televised address Thursday that he will
not resign. "While I will vigorously defend my actions, my family and my
honor, I will never let a politically motivated process distract me from
the job I do for you," he said.
At a Thursday night meeting with members of his Popular Democratic
Party, however, Acevedo agreed to do anything necessary -- including
resign -- to keep the investigation from harming the organization,
former party leader Miguel Hernandez Agosto said. "That, to me, is a
very serious, important and patriotic declaration," Hernandez said. "You
cannot be more clear."
The Gov's chief rival in November's gubernatorial election called on
Acevedo to resign. The governor "does not have the moral standing to
govern the people and resolve this mess that he has gotten us into,"
said Luis Fortuno, who is the island's current nonvoting congressional
delegate.

June 2007 - Vila marches with then gov. NY
Eliot Spitzer (r.), the city mayor, council members and enourage during
the 50th Anniversary of the National PR Day Parade
Acevedo's Popular Democratic Party supports maintaining Puerto Rico's
semiautonomous relationship to the United States, while his rival wants
the island to become the 51st state. Anibal had accused the Justice
Department of targeting him for his criticism of a 2005 FBI raid in
Puerto Rico in which a fugitive independence militant was killed. He
also said he is being targeted for his opposition to the death penalty,
which can only be imposed in the island for federal crimes.
Acting U.S. Attorney Rosa Emilia Rodriguez and the head of the FBI in
San Juan have denied any political motivation to the charges against the
governor.
I, personally, wish him the best and I hope that, if he's really
honest... he gets exonerated.
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