• “I can’t believe I get to live in a place like this”: Deborah Carr
  • “Our rural roads are dangerous”: Cheryl Johnson
  • “Scarlet flowers in a messy garden:” Rick Roth
  • 2021 CUPE strike
  • About
    • History
    • Join us / Rejoignez-nous
  • Archives
  • Brian Beaton Annual Prize in Journalism for Justice / Le prix annuel de journalisme Brian Beaton pour la justice
  • Calendar
  • Comment soumettre votre article
  • Contact
  • Front Page
  • Garlic and optimism by Stephanie Coburn
  • google site verification – do not delete
  • Join the Co-op / Donate
  • Local Journalism Initiative
  • Markets and inter-generational goodness by Teri McMackin
  • Nuclear energy in New Brunswick
  • On hanging on and being hopeful: Deborah Carr
  • Our Team / Notre Équipe
  • Posts Page
  • Privacy policy
  • Share a Story
  • Subscribe/ S’abonner
  • The Brief / En Bref
  • The hills of Penobsquis by Beth Nixon
  • The NB debrief with Tobin Haley
  • Devenir membre / Faire un don
  • Donation Confirmation
  • Donation Failed
  • Donor Dashboard
NB Media Co-op
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
NB Media Co-op
No Result
View All Result
Home Indigenous

Canadian tourist operators in Honduras charged with money laundering and fraud related to sales of Indigenous Garifuna lands

Commentary

by Grahame Russell
June 19, 2024
in Canada, Indigenous, Opinion, Politics, World
0
Maclean's magazine cover featuring Randy Jorgensen with the headline "The King of Porn" and a subheadline about his $25-million adult video empire. He is smiling, wearing a suit, with shelves of adult videos in the background.

Randy Jorgensen, named the "Canadian porn king" in this nineties edition of Maclean's, is among three Canadian citizens charged with money laundering and fraud related to their tourism developments on Garifuna lands in Honduras. Photo from Rights Action.

0
SHARES
0
VIEWS

In Honduras, three Canadian citizens, Randy “porn king” Jorgensen, Malik Zoharan and Darren Wade, have been charged with money laundering and fraud related to sales to other Canadian tourist investors of lands that have been violently taken from the Garifuna people for decades.

The most corrupt and violent time for the Garifuna people, in terms of foreign tourist “investors” seizing their lands, was 2009-2022 when Honduras was ruled with an iron fist by the “Open for Global Business,” military-backed, drug-trafficking regime of President Juan Orlando Hernandez, a government supported the entire time as a “democratic ally” of the US and Canadian governments.

After the US and Canadian-backed military coup in 2009 ousted Honduras’ government led by President Manuel Zelaya, the US and Canadian governments maintained full relations with the post-coup regimes and openly promoted the expansion of North American investors and corporate interests into Honduras.

During the ensuing 13 years of the repressive drug-trafficking regime of President Juan Orlando Hernandez, many Canadians (amongst others) happily came to buy their “piece of paradise” along Honduras’ Caribbean shore.

During this entire time, OFRANEH – the leading Garifuna rights organization – denounced investors purchasing lands stolen from the Garifuna people. Rights Action and other US/ Canadian organizations helped document and denounce numerous violent land invasions of foreign investors in partnership with corrupt government officials. Randy “porn king” Jorgensen, and a good number of his associates, were at the center of many such schemes.

Now, as it turns out, the “porn king” and his named associates were allegedly frauding other investors from Canada (and beyond) who had been all too happy to buy a “piece of paradise” in Honduras during the 13 years of the US and Canadian-backed drug-trafficking regime in power, according to El Heraldo News.

A total of 233 property assets, two trading companies and eight vehicles were seized from Jorgensen, Zoharan and Wade in the department of Colon in northern Honduras.

The companies were identified as Desarrollos Visión de Vida S. de R.L. and Grande Trujillo Autoridad S. de R.L. with properties located in the cities of Trujillo and Santa Fe.

#EstáPasando| @MP_Honduras asegura 233 bienes inmuebles en inmobiliaria, cuyos propietarios estafaron a varios ciudadanos canadienses en Colón. pic.twitter.com/70aAW85gG6

— tunotacom (@tunota_com) April 11, 2024

According to the investigations of the Public Prosecutor’s Office, the three Canadians, since 2008, signed contracts for the purchase and sale of land lots, valued between $29,000 and $45,000 each, in alleged real estate developments between the municipalities of Trujillo and Santa Fe.

Authorities say the complex is made up of the subdivisions Campa Vista, Alta Vista Beach, Alta Vista Mountain, Campo del Mar, Park Side and Corazalta, registered in the Property Institute of Trujillo, under different licenses, and which were offered to their compatriots in order to be subdivided.

After investigations by the Public Prosecutor’s Office, it was verified that the purchase and sale value stated in the public deeds is not in fact the price paid by each buyer, most of them from Canada, committing the crimes of money laundering and continuous swindling.

This operation was carried out by the Public Prosecutor’s Office through the Special Prosecutor’s Office Against Organized Crime (FESCCO) and the Technical Agency of Criminal Investigation (ATIC) within the framework of Operation Corozo, with the support of the 15th Battalion of Special Forces.

Grahame Russell is the director of Rights Action. Grahame is a non-practicing lawyer and part-time adjunct professor at University of Northern British Columbia. He is the co-editor with Catherine Nolin of Testimonio: Canadian Mining in the Aftermath of Genocides in Guatemala.

Tags: ATICDarren WadeDesarrollos Visión de Vida S. de R.L.FESCCOfraudGarifunaGrahame RussellGrande Trujillo Autoridad S. de R.L.Hondurasindigenous rightsJuan Orlando Hernandezland seizureMalik ZoharanManuel Zelayamoney launderingOFRANEHRandy JorgensenRights Action

Recommended

No Content Available

Site Links

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
  • “I can’t believe I get to live in a place like this”: Deborah Carr
  • “Our rural roads are dangerous”: Cheryl Johnson
  • “Scarlet flowers in a messy garden:” Rick Roth
  • 2021 CUPE strike
  • About
  • Archives
  • Brian Beaton Annual Prize in Journalism for Justice / Le prix annuel de journalisme Brian Beaton pour la justice
  • Calendar
  • Comment soumettre votre article
  • Contact
  • Front Page
  • Garlic and optimism by Stephanie Coburn
  • google site verification – do not delete
  • Join the Co-op / Donate
  • Local Journalism Initiative
  • Markets and inter-generational goodness by Teri McMackin
  • Nuclear energy in New Brunswick
  • On hanging on and being hopeful: Deborah Carr
  • Our Team / Notre Équipe
  • Posts Page
  • Privacy policy
  • Share a Story
  • Subscribe/ S’abonner
  • The Brief / En Bref
  • The hills of Penobsquis by Beth Nixon
  • The NB debrief with Tobin Haley
  • Devenir membre / Faire un don
  • Donation Confirmation
  • Donation Failed
  • Donor Dashboard

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

No Result
View All Result
  • “I can’t believe I get to live in a place like this”: Deborah Carr
  • “Our rural roads are dangerous”: Cheryl Johnson
  • “Scarlet flowers in a messy garden:” Rick Roth
  • 2021 CUPE strike
  • About
    • History
    • Join us / Rejoignez-nous
  • Archives
  • Brian Beaton Annual Prize in Journalism for Justice / Le prix annuel de journalisme Brian Beaton pour la justice
  • Calendar
  • Comment soumettre votre article
  • Contact
  • Front Page
  • Garlic and optimism by Stephanie Coburn
  • google site verification – do not delete
  • Join the Co-op / Donate
  • Local Journalism Initiative
  • Markets and inter-generational goodness by Teri McMackin
  • Nuclear energy in New Brunswick
  • On hanging on and being hopeful: Deborah Carr
  • Our Team / Notre Équipe
  • Posts Page
  • Privacy policy
  • Share a Story
  • Subscribe/ S’abonner
  • The Brief / En Bref
  • The hills of Penobsquis by Beth Nixon
  • The NB debrief with Tobin Haley
  • Devenir membre / Faire un don
  • Donation Confirmation
  • Donation Failed
  • Donor Dashboard

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

X
Did you like this article? Support the NB Media Co-op! Vous avez aimé cet article ? Soutenez la Coop Média NB !
Join/Donate