The Prosecutor General's Office closed a criminal case against former Prime Minister Andris Skele.
Published:
7 August 2000 y., Monday
The Prosecutor General's Office closed a criminal case against former Prime Minister Andris Skele over his possible link to the pedophilia case on Aug. 1, citing false evidence.
The case opened in the wake of materials gathered about the possible links of Skele to the pedophilia case and was closed citing the lack of criminal action, the Prosecutor General's Office said.
The prosecutor's office previously decided to close analogous criminal cases against former Justice Minister Valdis Birkavs and State Revenue Service director General Andrejs Sonciks.
Prosecutor Modris Adlers told BNS the decision on whether the prosecutor's office would request Parliament to allow to launch prosecution of Adamsons will depend on whether the conditions outlined
by Parliament have been observed.
Namely, under the Latvian constitution, an MP can be called to responsibility in the event he or she has distributed libeling information being aware it is untrue. Exactly this will be the question the prosecutor's office will assess while making the next decision.
Šaltinis:
The Baltic Times
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Heads of Companies in Lithuania Support EU and NATO Membership
more »
Between 600-800 thousand illegal immigrants currently living in Moscow
more »
The Dalai Lama has concluded an eight-day tour of the Baltic states
more »
CATHOLICS, ORTHODOX CLASH OVER POPE
more »
UKRAINIAN ORTHODOX BELIEVERS TO STAGE ANTIPAPAL RALLY ON 21 JUNE
more »
Organizers and Exhibitors attach high hopes to this Mega-Event in Asia
more »
Demonstrators have been battling heavily outnumbered police in violence in Gothenburg, Sweden as European Union leaders meet for a summit.
more »
Signatures Collected To Establish Death Penalty For Drug Traffickers
more »
Bojars fires Riga police chief again
more »
But Exit Polls Indicate a Slightly Smaller Majority
more »