Peru's
Supreme Court president Duberli Rodriguez offered his resignation on Thursday
after the publication of a series of audio recordings sparked a growing scandal
over the sale of sentences and influence peddling.
"Given
the institutional crisis that the judicial branch is going through, I present
my irrevocable resignation from the post," said Rodriguez in a short
letter published on the Supreme Court's Twitter account.
Rodriguez
said the reasons for his resignation would be explained during a Supreme Court
extraordinary session on Thursday afternoon.
He had been
under pressure from Supreme Court colleagues demanding he resign so someone
else -- completely untouched by the scandal -- could be tasked with
reorganizing the judicial system.
Peru's
judicial branch had announced a 90-day emergency on Wednesday, signed by
Rodriguez and published in the El Peruano newspaper.
"In
response to the judicial problems it is imperative that urgent and immediate
measures are adopted to restore the normal, efficient and transparent
development of jurisdictional activities," the judicial authority's
resolution stated.
The
National Council of the Magistracy's (CNM) president Orlando Velasquez also
resigned on Thursday after just three days in the job, saying he did so for
"dignity."
The CNM is
the body that nominates judges and prosecutors.
The news
comes less than a week after Peruvian President Martin Vizcarra dismissed
Justice Minister Salvador Heresi over the embarrassing revelations.
"For
the health of the justice system reform, I've asked minister Heresi to
resign," Vizcarra had said on Twitter. "The period Peru is going
through requires firm action."
Vizcarra
appointed a committee of six jurists headed by ex-chancellor Allan Wagner to
deliver a judicial reform proposal.
He has
called an extraordinary session in parliament for Friday to discuss the
possibility of a blanket resignation of CNM magistrates.
The
diffusion of inflammatory audio recordings began 10 days ago on investigative
journalism website IDL-Reporteros and the Panorama program on television
station Canal 5, after which the public prosecutor's office opened an
investigation into suspected influence peddling.
A number of
judges and judicial officials implicated in the scandal have been suspended.
Heresi was
sacked after a conversation between him and Supreme Court judge Cesar
Hinostroza, another implicated in the affair, was played on television.
In the
recording, Heresi asks Hinostroza to come to his office to talk to him about a
legal initiative.
The
president of Peru's Judiciary and Supreme Court, Duberli Rodriguez (C) speaking
during a meeting with a committee of jurists, has resigned over a growing
scandal linked to the sale of sentences and influence peddling.

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