BUENOS AIRES, (Reuters) – An Argentine judge has summoned former President Cristina Fernandez for questioning in a probe into the sale of dollar future contracts at below market rates by the central bank just months before she handed over power in December.
Judge Claudio Bonadio also summoned Fernandez’s former economy minister, Axel Kicillof, and former central bank chief Alejandro Vanoli on suspicions of defrauding the public administration with the sale of $17 billion of contracts.
Bonadio summoned the former populist leader to appear for questioning on April 13 at 10 a.m. as the last of 13 suspects in the case.
Under Fernandez, the central bank routinely sold dollar futures to prop up the peso, partly in an attempt to anchor double-digit inflation in Latin America’s No. 3 economy.
Two lawmakers last October filed a complaint alleging that the price at which the contracts were sold constituted a serious financial loss for the state.
During Vanoli’s short time at the helm, the bank was selling March contracts at 10.65 pesos per dollar when these contracts were trading at between 14 and 15 pesos on Wall Street.