The Panama Papers revelations have triggered a multitude of probes around the world.
Panama City, PANAMA:
Panama's public prosecutor against organized crime said on Wednesday there was no evidence so far to take action against the law firm at the center of the Panama Papers scandal, following a raid lasting 27 hours on its offices.
"Right now we don't have any strong evidence allowing us to take any sort of decision" against the firm Mossack Fonseca, the prosecutor, Javier Caraballo, told reporters.
He said the swoop on its law offices, located in Panama's banking district, had begun on Tuesday on the basis of the news reports about the offshore businesses it created and in some cases ran for wealthy clients around the world.
"The information we have collected is what will permit us to have evidence to take a decision later on," Caraballo said.
He said the investigation was complicated by the fact that the firm kept most of its records in digital form, on more than 100 computer servers, and not on paper.
But he added that the firm had "cooperated" with his investigators.
Nearly 40 years' worth of archives from Mossack Fonseca have been pored over by hundreds of journalists around the world since being given to a German reporter a year ago.
They have resulted in the so-called Panama Papers: a series of reports exposing politicians, celebrities and some criminals who used Mossack Fonseca's services to stash assets in offshore companies.
Mossack Fonseca's founders, lawyers Ramon Fonseca and Juergen Mossack, insist they did nothing illegal.
They stress that offshore companies in themselves are not illicit -- and they were not responsible for any activities their clients did with the entities.
Fonseca is a friend to Panama's President Juan Carlos Varela and, until March, served as a senior advisor on his cabinet.
The Panama Papers revelations have triggered a multitude of probes around the world as authorities look for evidence people named in them might have committed tax fraud, money laundering or other criminal acts.
Varela's government is currently fighting to prevent other countries responding to the scandal by putting Panama back on international blacklists of nations that facilitate money laundering or tax evasion.
Panama's chief state prosecutor, Kenia Porcell, earlier on Wednesday gave a news conference in which he noted that "in Panama, tax evasion does not constitute a crime."
He said, however, that the country was extending "all necessary cooperation" to address the scandal.
Porcell said he had been contacted by counterparts from Peru, Venezuela, Guatemala, El Salvador and Costa Rica, but did not elaborate.
"Right now we don't have any strong evidence allowing us to take any sort of decision" against the firm Mossack Fonseca, the prosecutor, Javier Caraballo, told reporters.
He said the swoop on its law offices, located in Panama's banking district, had begun on Tuesday on the basis of the news reports about the offshore businesses it created and in some cases ran for wealthy clients around the world.
"The information we have collected is what will permit us to have evidence to take a decision later on," Caraballo said.
He said the investigation was complicated by the fact that the firm kept most of its records in digital form, on more than 100 computer servers, and not on paper.
But he added that the firm had "cooperated" with his investigators.
Nearly 40 years' worth of archives from Mossack Fonseca have been pored over by hundreds of journalists around the world since being given to a German reporter a year ago.
They have resulted in the so-called Panama Papers: a series of reports exposing politicians, celebrities and some criminals who used Mossack Fonseca's services to stash assets in offshore companies.
Mossack Fonseca's founders, lawyers Ramon Fonseca and Juergen Mossack, insist they did nothing illegal.
They stress that offshore companies in themselves are not illicit -- and they were not responsible for any activities their clients did with the entities.
Fonseca is a friend to Panama's President Juan Carlos Varela and, until March, served as a senior advisor on his cabinet.
The Panama Papers revelations have triggered a multitude of probes around the world as authorities look for evidence people named in them might have committed tax fraud, money laundering or other criminal acts.
Varela's government is currently fighting to prevent other countries responding to the scandal by putting Panama back on international blacklists of nations that facilitate money laundering or tax evasion.
Panama's chief state prosecutor, Kenia Porcell, earlier on Wednesday gave a news conference in which he noted that "in Panama, tax evasion does not constitute a crime."
He said, however, that the country was extending "all necessary cooperation" to address the scandal.
Porcell said he had been contacted by counterparts from Peru, Venezuela, Guatemala, El Salvador and Costa Rica, but did not elaborate.
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