Romanian Mayor Awaits Sentence in Longest Corruption Trial

The Bucharest Appeal Court was set to issue a sentence on Friday in Romania's longest-ever corruption trial that has lasted nine years and counted over 100 hearings. But the court postponed the decision until May 31.

Radu Mazare, 48, former Mayor of the port of Constanta and one of Romania's richest politicians, together with 36 businessmen, lawyers and employees of the City Hall, were indicted in 2008 for the illegal sale of state-owned land along the coast and of public beaches. 

The sentence has already been postponed three times with Mazare stating that he is innocent, must be acquitted and that he doesn't even understand the accusations.

A former journalist who founded several regional publications, Mazare is one of the most controversial politicians in Romania. He was first elected Mayor of Constanta in 2000 as an independent, but joined the Social Democrat Party, PSD, in 2003 and was re-elected with a comfortable majority in 2004, 2008 and 2012. He resigned in 2015 following accusations of corruption, saying he was under unbearable stress because of "politically motivated investigations".

He was nicknamed a "local baron", a nickname given by the media to several rich PSD members who controlled the public administration in different regions of Romania.

Romania's National Integrity Agency, ANI, filed a request at the Supreme Court to investigate Mazare's entire assets after inspectors said they suspected he had hidden sums of money and that some of his income was illegal. Mazare's wealth was then estimated at 8 billion euros, with numerous properties and hotels on the seaside but also a hotel in Madagascar.

His assets were frozen in 2014 during the corruption investigation. In 2015, Mazare was also indicted for under...

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