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Nicaragua conviction for figure in singer's death

September 27, 2012 | Modified: September 27, 2012 at 10:18 pm
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Photo -   Henry Farinas speaks during the last day of his trial 23 other suspects on charges related to drug trafficking, money laundering and organized crime, at court in Managua, Nicaragua, Wednesday, Sept 26, 2012. Farinas, a businessman, is believed by authorities to be the intended target of the July 2011 ambush in Guatemala that killed Argentine folk singer Facundo Cabral. Prosecutors said on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 that Henry Farinas was an associate in a gang along with Costa Rican Alejandro Jimenez Gonzalez, who allegedly ordered the attack on Farinas in retaliation for a purported betrayal. The killers' bullets hit Cabral instead. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
Henry Farinas speaks during the last day of his trial 23 other suspects on charges related to drug trafficking, money laundering and organized crime, at court in Managua, Nicaragua, Wednesday, Sept 26, 2012. Farinas, a businessman, is believed by authorities to be the intended target of the July 2011 ambush in Guatemala that killed Argentine folk singer Facundo Cabral. Prosecutors said on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 that Henry Farinas was an associate in a gang along with Costa Rican Alejandro Jimenez Gonzalez, who allegedly ordered the attack on Farinas in retaliation for a purported betrayal. The killers' bullets hit Cabral instead. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) — Henry Farinas, the man who was allegedly targeted when gunmen killed Argentine folk singer Facundo Cabral last year, has been convicted of money laundering, drug trafficking and organized crime, a Nicaraguan judge announced Thursday.

Judge Adela Cardoza found Farinas and 21 other people guilty of smuggling money for drug traffickers in a ruling late Wednesday after a monthlong trial. Their sentences are pending.

Prosecutors said Cabral was killed during an attack aimed at Farinas because the drug trafficking gang headed by Alejandro Jimenez believed Farinas had betrayed them. Jimenez, a Costa Rican citizen, allegedly ordered the hit on Farinas.

Farinas and Jimenez are alleged to have worked with a gang of Colombian traffickers who had ties to a Mexican cartel, La Familia.

Farinas was driving with Cabral after a July 2011 concert in Guatemala that Farinas organized when the hired gunmen sprayed the car with bullets. Cabral died, and Farinas was wounded but survived.

Prosecutors argued that the gang headed by Farinas laundered more than $1 billion for Jimenez, who is being held in Guatemala pending trial. Cabral has not been implicated in any illicit activity.

After the verdict, Farinas repeated his insistence that he is innocent.

"The police have demonized me," Farinas said. "Those who carried out the attempt to kill me, I forgive them, and the same for those who have done this to me. Nothing has been fully proved here."

"If I am ever freed nobody will want to get near me," Farinas added. "I swear to God ... that the accusation is false."