Guillermo Mercado Romero

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Guillermo Mercado Romero
Governor of Baja California Sur
In office
April 5, 1993 – April 4, 1999
Preceded byVíctor Manuel Liceaga Ruibal
Succeeded byLeonel Cota Montaño
Personal details
BornMexico
Political partyInstitutional Revolutionary Party
Spouse(s)María Concepción Casas
Occupationpolitician

Guillermo Mercado Romero is a Mexican politician who served as the Governor of Baja California Sur from 1993 to 1999. He is a member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).[1]

Mercado left office in 1999. In early 2001, Mercado and eighteen other former Mexican government officials were charged with diverting approximately $55 million in public funding.[1] Mercado was indicted for two charges: Mercado's gubernatorial administration was accused of purchasing airline tickets for official government travel through a travel agency owned by his wife and daughter.[1] Second, Mercado was also charged with improperly transferring ownership of public land to a private research institute during his tenure as governor.[1]

Romero's wife, Maria Concepcion Casas de Mercado, owned a condo in San Diego, California, which she sold in January 2001 for $330,000.[1] She then purchased a new home in El Cajon, California, in February 2001, just one month later, for $188,000.[1] In June 2001, U.S. immigration agents questioned Mercado at his home in El Cajon to determine his legal status.[1] Mercado showed the investigators a valid pilot's license and Social Security card as proof that he was in the United States legally.[1] Mercado also had a visa, which allows Mexicans living near the U.S. border o travel up to 25 miles inside the U.S. for up to three days.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Fugitive ex-Mexican governor found". Associated Press. The Record (Stockton). 2001-09-20. Retrieved 2012-03-08.
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