Indonesia jails top traffic cop in $18M graft scandal

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

A five-judge panel unanimously found Indonesia's former traffic police chief Djoko Susilo guilty of corruption and money laundering

GUILTY. In this file photo, the former chief of the Indonesian police traffic division Djoko Susilo (C) arrives at the anti-graft court in Jakarta on April 23, 2013 to face trial for corruption charges. AFP / Bay Ismoyo

JAKARTA, Indonesia – Indonesia’s anti-corruption court jailed the country’s former traffic police chief for 10 years on Tuesday, September 3, after he built up an $18 million empire by accepting enormous bribes.

The sentencing of Djoko Susilo brings to an end a dramatic case that has captivated Indonesia, and is a major victory for anti-graft investigators battling against the odds in one of the world’s most corrupt countries.

Susilo reportedly earned a humble police salary of $1,000 a month — but the country’s anti-graft agency seized assets from him, including houses, cars and even petrol kiosks, worth 200 billion rupiah (around $18 million).

After taking several hours to read the 3,000-page indictment against Susilo, a five-judge panel unanimously found him guilty of corruption and money laundering.

“It was clear to the panel he had committed acts of corruption,” said Judge Anwar, who goes by one name, as the sentence was handed down after the verdict was announced.

Susilo was also ordered to pay a fine of 500 million rupiah ($45,000) at the end of the lengthy trial, which started in April.

Prosecutors had sought an 18-year jail term and a one-billion-rupiah fine.

Rigged tender

The case began with the discovery that a tender for driving simulators in 2011 had been rigged, with Susilo accused of siphoning off 32 billion rupiah from the failed project.

Police initially sought to protect Susilo by refusing to let the anti-graft commission, the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK), handle the case.

But they were finally forced to hand the case over — and the anti-corruption agency quickly discovered a vast empire built on the back of corrupt payments.

The KPK has been granted extraordinary powers to investigate the rich and powerful in Indonesia, ranked 118th most corrupt country in the world in a 176-nation index compiled by Transparency International.

The commission has helped put senior officials and powerful businesspeople behind bars, in the process winning the fervent support of ordinary Indonesians, many of whom live in grinding poverty. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!