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Sada Goray, the businesswoman investigated for being part of a corruption network operating within the Ministry of Housing, Construction, and Sanitation, left the women’s annex prison in Chorrillos after the Supreme Court revoked the preventive detention order imposed on her.
The owner of Marka Group left the penitentiary facility on Saturday at 9 a.m. after the National Penitentiary Institute ordered her release.
The Permanent Criminal Chamber of the Supreme Court ordered a 36-month travel ban for businesswoman Sada Goray, former director of the Mi Vivienda Fund, Pedro Arroyo Marquina, and former head of the National Superintendency of National Assets (SBN), Roger Gavidia Johanson.
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The grounds used by the judicial authority to take this stance were the residential, familial, and occupational ties of the three individuals involved in the Mi Vivienda Fund case, as well as the lack of evidence suggesting a risk of flight or obstruction of the investigation.
It is worth noting that the Special Team of Prosecutors Against Corruption of Power (Eficcop) formalized the investigation against the businesswoman, who acknowledged having paid S/ 4,000,000 to the former head of the technical cabinet of the Ministry of Housing, Salatiel Marrufo, to favor her company with the ministry’s contracts.
Additionally, she allegedly took control of the Mi Vivienda Fund by appointing its directors, whom she also reportedly “trained” to favor Marka Group in the processes they carry out for the awarding of contracts.