Following democratic reforms, the paper continued to report on politics and government corruption. In the
1994 presidential election, the paper opposed
Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD) candidate
Ernesto Pérez Balladares—the election's eventual winner—stating in editorials that he was a threat to the country's post-dictatorship democracy.
Americas Watch and the
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) issued statements in support of Gorriti, as did British novelist
John le Carré and Peruvian novelist
Mario Vargas Llosa. In 1998,
La Prensa and other Panamanian papers reported that the construction of a new National Assembly building had been tainted by graft, and that a representative of the US corporation
HNTB had distributed US$5 million in bribes to secure the project. The following year, the paper broke the story that two members of the campaign of PRD candidate
Martín Torrijos had accepted bribes from
Mobil for use of a former US military base. Former Attorney General
José Antonio Sossa filed a criminal complaint for libel against four
Prensa journalists in 2000: Gorriti, business editor
Miren Gutiérrez Almazor, and journalists Monica Palm and Rolando Rodriguez. The complaint cited a series of stories the paper published in 1999 reporting that a drug trafficker had donated to one of Sossa's political campaigns. In 2004, Sossa also filed a complaint against Eisenmann, who had questioned his work as a public servant. Former vice president
Ricardo Arias Calderón pressed criminal defamation charges against
Prensa cartoonist Julio Briceño in 2001 for a cartoon of Arias standing besides the
Grim Reaper, representing his new alliance with the PRD; Arias additionally asked for a million dollars in damages. called the election, and the resignations and demotions of investigative staff that followed, a "boardroom coup" that left "the once feisty paper a shadow of its former self". In 2012,
La Prensa published a series of investigative reports of Transcaribe Trading Company, one of the country's largest construction firms, alleging that it had made millions off favorable contracts with the government. In response, workers from the company surrounded and blockaded the
Prensa building, requiring President
Ricardo Martinelli to intervene to end the standoff. == References ==