No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeNewsletterAdministrative Court suspends dismissal of Costa Rica's Railroad Institute president

Administrative Court suspends dismissal of Costa Rica’s Railroad Institute president

An Administrative Court on Friday evening accepted an appeal by Costa Rican Railroad Institute President Miguel Carabaguíaz that challenged an order of dismissal by the Comptroller General’s Office on Thursday.

The court on Monday will notify the Comptroller General’s Office about the opening of an administrative trial to review the ruling against Carabaguíaz.

The comptroller’s office on Thursday ordered the immediate dismissal of Carabaguíaz and Social Christian Unity Party lawmaker Walter Céspedes. The ruling also banned both officials, along with four ex-board members of the Agriculture Development Institute (IDA), from holding public office for several years over a series of irregular property transfers between 2004 and 2005. That ban included former Agriculture Minister Rodolfo Coto Pacheco.

Earlier, the watchdog agency had rejected an appeal filed by Carabaguíaz against an investigation last November that held the group responsible for transferring five state-owned properties, considered natural heritage, to private individuals for use in farming. Carabaguíaz at the time was an IDA board member.

In July 2013, the Comptroller General’s Office opened an administrative investigation of the officials following the cancellation of all five property transfers on the grounds that “the land is not suitable for agriculture.”

The investigation also found the properties “were forested areas that cannot be removed from public domain.”

The sanction forbids Carabaguíaz, Céspedes and former IDA board members Efraín Alfaro Barrantes, Édgar Umaña González and Danilo Elizondo Cerdas from holding public office for six years. The agency banned ex-minister Coto from holding public office for five years.

Céspedes told Channel 7 Telenoticias that the property transfers were agreed upon following inspections by IDA’s regional officials, and that “the final report was drafted by IDA’s legal department.”

The lawmaker on Friday evening said he also will file a similar appeal before the Administrative Court.

However, Carabaguíaz and Céspedes likely will complete their terms, as the trial could take several months, and their terms end in a few days.

Céspedes’ last day as a lawmaker is April 30, while Carabaguíaz will leave office with the rest of President Laura Chinchilla’s Cabinet on May 7.

On May 8, President-elect Luis Guillermo Solís will be inaugurated at the National Stadium in La Sabana Park, west of San José. Solís on Friday received his presidential credentials at a ceremony held at the Supreme Elections Tribunal.

Former Health Minister María Luisa Ávila, who resigned in 2011 over her involvement in a highly criticized national vaccination program and a working trip to Iceland, took to Twitter to criticize the Comptroller General’s Office’s latest move, saying:

After seeing the news and being a victim of the CGR [Comptroller General’s Office], I insist the CGR should be submitted to an external audit.

Ávila, the most popular Cabinet member at the time of her resignation, was the fifth minister to step down during the first 15 months of Chinchilla’s presidency. She now heads the infectious diseases unit at the National Children’s Hospital.

 

Trending Now

Guanacaste Leads Coastal Recovery in Costa Rica Real Estate

Costa Rica’s real estate market heads into 2026 with steady footing after recent adjustments in high-end coastal areas. Buyers and investors find a landscape...

Channing Tatum Spotted Sharing Kiss with Girlfriend on Costa Rican Beach

Hollywood actor Channing Tatum turned heads this weekend when paparazzi caught him in a tender moment with his girlfriend, Inka Williams, on one of...

El Salvador’s Bukele to Break Ground on Costa Rica’s Mega-Prison

President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador plans to arrive in Costa Rica next week for an official visit focused on the country's new high-security...

The Palmares 2026 Festival is Costa Rica’s biggest January Event

For first time visitors, the Fiestas de Palmares can feel like several Costa Rican traditions stacked into one place. It is part town fair,...

Beatriz Haddad Maia Carries Brazil’s Hopes into the Australian Open

Beatriz Haddad Maia comes to the Australian Open in January 2026 as Brazil’s clearest singles reference point and one of the few Latin American...

Novak Djokovic Steps Away from PTPA, Citing Transparency Issues

Novak Djokovic, the 24-time Grand Slam champion, has ended his association with the Professional Tennis Players Association (PTPA), the players' group he helped establish...
L. Arias
L. Arias
Reporter | The Tico Times |
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica