Fujimori government Peru's most prominent political corruption scandal is probably the case of
Alberto Fujimori,
Peru's President from 1990 to 2000. In 2000, Fujimori resigned and fled to Japan. He returned from Japan in 2005 and in April 2009 was sentenced to 25 years in prison for authorizing murders by death squads and for two kidnappings. During his rule, Fujimori helped to maintain the government's image of honesty by using his advisor, Vladimiro Montesinos, to carry out the administration's corrupt procedures. Montesinos served as the head of the National Intelligence Service (SIN) where he systematically bribed politicians, judges, and the news media. An empirical analysis of Montesinos' corruption conducted by John McMillan and Pablo Zoido describes how Montesinos used over 75% of SIN's unsupervised budget to bribe over 1,600 individuals. McMillan and Zoido estimate that at the height of the scandal more than U.S.$3.5 million was being paid monthly to various congressmen, judges and media executives. The most common bribes were paid to television-channel owners which allowed Fujimori's administration to control the media and politically influence Peruvians.
Recent history After further scandals and facing a second impeachment vote,
Pedro Kuczynski, his successor, resigned the presidency on 21 March 2018 following the release of videos showing alleged acts of
vote buying, presenting his resignation to the Council of Ministers. As a result of the
Odebrecht scandal and other controversies, in 2018 all of Peru's living former presidents were either imprisoned or the focus of corruption investigations. == Bribery ==