Kuczynski offered his resignation Wednesday, a day before Congress was due to vote on impeaching him
Lima, Peru:
Authorities in Peru raided two houses owned by former president Pedro Pablo Kuczynski as part of a money laundering probe, the public prosecutor's office said on Saturday.
Both homes are in Lima, the office announced on Twitter.
Television images showed officials entering the properties with boxes, a day after Congress accepted Kuczynski's resignation.
In another development, Kuczynski's defense team said it accepted a request from the prosecutor's office to ban the ex-president from leaving the country.
The former Wall Street banker, 79, is under investigation over bribes he allegedly accepted from Brazilian construction firm Odebrecht to secure public works contracts.
The bribes were allegedly paid to consulting companies linked to Kuczynski when he was finance minister under President Alejandro Toledo, who governed from 2001 to 2006.
Toledo is himself accused of receiving $20 million in kickbacks in return for awarding the Brazilian construction giant a contract to build a road in the Amazon.
Kuczynski offered his resignation Wednesday, a day before Congress was due to vote on impeaching him for lying about his ties with Odebrecht.
He had denied all links with the company until it revealed it issued the bribes in exchange for contracts in December.
On Friday, new President Martin Vizcarra, Kuczynski's vice president, was sworn in to replace him.
Both homes are in Lima, the office announced on Twitter.
Television images showed officials entering the properties with boxes, a day after Congress accepted Kuczynski's resignation.
In another development, Kuczynski's defense team said it accepted a request from the prosecutor's office to ban the ex-president from leaving the country.
The former Wall Street banker, 79, is under investigation over bribes he allegedly accepted from Brazilian construction firm Odebrecht to secure public works contracts.
The bribes were allegedly paid to consulting companies linked to Kuczynski when he was finance minister under President Alejandro Toledo, who governed from 2001 to 2006.
Toledo is himself accused of receiving $20 million in kickbacks in return for awarding the Brazilian construction giant a contract to build a road in the Amazon.
Kuczynski offered his resignation Wednesday, a day before Congress was due to vote on impeaching him for lying about his ties with Odebrecht.
He had denied all links with the company until it revealed it issued the bribes in exchange for contracts in December.
On Friday, new President Martin Vizcarra, Kuczynski's vice president, was sworn in to replace him.