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Supreme Tribunal of Justice (Venezuela)

The Supreme Justice Tribunal (Spanish: Tribunal Supremo de Justicia or TSJ) is the highest court of law in the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela and is the head of the judicial branch. As the independence of the Venezuelan judiciary under the regime of Nicolás Maduro is questioned, there have recently been many disputes as to whether this court is legitimate.

Supreme Justice Tribunal
Tribunal Supremo de Justicia
TSJ building in Caracas
Established1999
LocationCaracas
Authorized byConstitution of Venezuela
WebsiteOfficial website
President
CurrentlyMaikel Moreno
Since24 February 2017

The Supreme Tribunal may meet either in specialized chambers (of which there are six: constitutional, political/administrative, electoral, civil, criminal, and social) or in plenary session. Each chamber has five judges, except the constitutional, which has seven. Its main function is to control, according to the constitution and related laws, the constitutionality and legality of public acts.

The Supreme Tribunal's 32 magistrates (magistrados) are appointed by the National Assembly and serve non-renewable 12-year terms. Appointments are made by a two-thirds majority, or a simple majority if efforts to appoint a judge fail three times in a row. Under article 265 of the 1999 Constitution, judges may be removed by a two-thirds majority of the National Assembly, if the Attorney General, Comptroller General, and Human Rights Ombudsperson have previously agreed to a "serious failure" and suspended the judge accordingly.

History and controversies edit

The Tribunal was created under the 1999 Constitution of Venezuela, replacing the Supreme Court of Venezuela. For some years provisional statutes regulated the number of judges – initially 20, with three in each chamber except the constitutional, which had five – and their selection. The statutes were replaced in 2004 by an organic law (a law required to clarify constitutional provisions). The law also permitted the National Assembly to revoke the appointment of a judge, by a simple majority, where a judge had provided false information as to their credentials.[citation needed]

2002 coup d'état edit

In a controversial sentence, on 14 August 2002, after the 2002 Venezuela coup d'état, the Supreme Tribunal acquitted Division Generals Efraín Vásquez (Army) and Pedro Pereira (Aviation), Vice-admirant Héctor Ramírez and Counter admiral Daniel Comisso in a rebellion trial. According to the sentence, "con los pronunciamientos efectuados en abril, los altos oficiales acusados no desconocieron al Gobierno, sino la orden dictada por el presidente de la República de aplicar el Plan Ávila, porque resultaba contraria a la protección de los derechos humanos de la ciudadanía y ello significaría una masacre".[3](With the pronouncements made in April, the accused high-ranking officials did not ignore the Government, but the order issued by the President of the Republic to apply the Avila Plan, because it was contrary to the protection of the human rights of citizens and this would mean a massacre.)

The sentence argued that there was a "power vacuum" after the Military High Command chief, General Lucas Rincón announced that Chávez had resigned from office. The discontent of the Venezuelan government was considerable; Chávez condemned the sentenced, stating "Esos once magistrados no tienen moral para tomar ningún otro tipo de decisión, son unos inmorales y deberían publicar un libro con sus rostros para que el pueblo los conozca. Pusieron la plasta".[4](Those eleven magistrates have no moral to make any other kind of decision, they are immoral and should publish a book with their faces so that the people know them. They put the plasta). Chávez announced a strategy to revert the decision, creating a commission in the National Assembly to review the stay of the justices in the Supreme Tribunal, saying that "No nos vamos a quedar con esa, ahora lo que viene es un contraataque del pueblo y de las instituciones verdaderas, contraataque revolucionario" and that "Así que la AN que los nombró tiene que asumir su tarea, para evaluarlos y el que no tenga los requisitos habrá que sacarlo de allí".[4](We are not going to stay with that, now what is coming is a counterattack of the people and the real institutions, revolutionary counterattack" and that "So the AN that appointed them has to assume its task, to evaluate them and whoever does not have the requirements will have to be removed from there.)

The result was a new Supreme Tribunal of Justice Law with two purposes: establishing a procedure to suspend justices and increasing the number of justices from 20 to 30.[5] The following year, the executive branch managed to promote the increase to 32 justices, after which the Tribunal started the reviewed the original sentence. On 14 March 2005, the Tribunal overruled the decision.[6] The opposition considers that the override of the sentence was caused by the changes made to the high court by a legislation change by lawmakers of the ruling party, which had a majority at the time.[7] Government supporters consider that the first sentence was political and there were several reasons to start a trial of a coup d'état.[8]

2006 judicial year beginning edit

During the 2006 judicial year beginning, the justices of the Supreme Tribunal stood up from the seats of the Criminal Chamber to chant "¡Uh, ah, Chávez no se va!", while president Chávez was present in the auditorium. The act was interpreted as a demonstration of political partiality by the justices and the institution.[9]

Open letter of former Justice Eladio Aponte Aponte edit

On 20 August 2009, drug trafficker Walid Makled was captured in Cúcuta by the Colombian Administrative Department of Security (DAS) and later moved to Bogotá. Walid was requested by both the American and the Venezuelan anti-narcotics authorities.[10] During his arrest, Makled was found with a credential of the Venezuelan military prosecution, allegedly issued by the Supreme Tribunal justice Eladio Aponte Aponte. Venezuela's opposition's spokesperson, Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, declared that the investigation would be obstructed in the country by the very public officials.[11]

On 16 April 2012, Aponte wrote an open letter from San José, Costa Rica, in which he claimed to have received orders and pressure from president Hugo Chávez to convict Iván Simonovis, security chief of the Metropolitan District of Caracas, as well as Caracas Metropolitan Police officers Henry Vivas and Lázaro Forero, applying the maximum sentence for their participation during the Llaguno Overpass events. The letter was published in September.[12]

Aponte fled Venezuela to Costa Rica in April 2012 after being accused of assisting Makled who said he had been paying Aponte US$70,000 per month related to joint business ventures. Aponte then contacted the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration which provided him with a flight to the United States.[13]

2015 justices appointment edit

Currently, for a part of Venezuelan society, the legitimacy of the Supreme Tribunal is in question,[14][15] especially the legitimacy of its origin, due to the appointment on 23 December 2015 of 13 main justices and 21 supplementary justices by a lame duck National Assembly with a ruling party majority,[16] as well as its actions since.[17] Article 264 of the Venezuelan Constitution and Title V of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice Organic Law[18] contemplate an extense procedure of more than thirty days for the appointment of the justices, both main and alternate, in which it is required to form a Judicial Nominations Committee integrated by members of the National Assembly and civil society, which will do a preselection of candidates that will be submitted to the Republican Moral Council: the Ombudsman, the Public Ministry and the Comptroller General, which will do a second preselection that in turn will be submitted to the National Assembly, which will have a lapse of three plenary sessions to appoint the justices with the vote of two thirds of the deputies or a fourth plenary session with the vote of a simple majority in case of not getting two thirds of the vote. The appointment of the justices was not done in accordance with the legal procedure, but with a hurried process carried out on 23 December 2015 by the lame duck National Assembly with a ruling party majority, when the legislature ended on 15 December, after being defeated on the 2015 parliamentary election, where the opposition, represented by the Democratic Unity Roundtable opposition coalition, gained 112 of the 167 seats.[citation needed]

During the process, the "Citizen branch" issued a list of preselected candidates of previous processes, endorsed by the Ombudsman Tarek William Saab and the Comptroller Manuel Galindo.[19] The National Assembly approved the candidates in a single plenary session on the night of 23 December 2015.[20][21]

Both the opposition and several jurists have described the appointment as illegal for not being performed according to the constitution and the Organic Law, including the challenges period, their lack of responses and the omission of the definite selections of the candidates.[20][21][22] According to a mid 2016 report issued by the Venezuelan NGO Acceso a la Justicia (Access to Justice), only one of seven justices of the Constitutional Chamber comply with the requirements for the position demanded by Venezuelan laws and their designation process was irregular.[23][24]

On 14 June 2016 the National Assembly nullified the appointment carried out in 2015.[25]

Challenge of electoral results edit

Weeks after the parliamentary elections and after the oathtaking of the elected representatives in the National Assembly, seven complaints were presented to the electoral results to the Amazonas, Aragua and Yaracuy states, six of which were rejected and one was admitted, suspending the results of the Amazonas state circuits.[26][27]

The Electoral Chamber of the Supreme Tribunal ordered the Assembly to disincorporate the deputies from Amazonas,[28] but the Assembly, presided by Henry Ramos Allup, disobeyed responding that the deputies already had parliamentary immunity;[29] The Attorney General, Luisa Ortega Díaz, later assured that the National Assembly was not in contempt, since contempt could only be applied to individuals and not institutions.[30]

After this, deputy Héctor Rodríguez, from the Great Patriotic Pole coalition, introduced an appealto the TSJ on 7 January 2016 to declare null all of the acts of the National Assembly. On 11 January, the Tribunal accepted the appeal and ruled in favor of it, declaring without effect all of the acts of the National Assembly "while it stayed in contempt"

With each action of the National Assembly now in hands of the opposition, the ruling party introduced appeals to annul such actions, and through numerous sentences the Tribunal started limiting the Assembly actions established in the constitution, while at the same time it exercised actions constitutionally exclusive to the parliament with the justification of "legislative omission" due to the "contempt" of the Assembly.[31][32][33]

Starting 2017, in an ordinary plenary session, the National Assembly, the presided by Julio Borges, officially disincorporated the three contested deputies, complying with the condition of the Supreme Tribunal to end the "contempt".[34] However, the Supreme Tribunal did not withdraw the contempt arguing that the previous directive, presided by Ramos Allup, was the one that should have done the procedure.[35]

2017 constitutional crisis edit

Rulings 155 and 156 edit

On 27 March 2017, in sentence 15several5, the Tribunal granted faculties of the National Assembly to Nicolás Maduro to legislate and "take the civilian, military, economic, criminal, administrative, political, juridic and social measures considered necessary to prevent a state of conmotion...".[citation needed] On 29 March, the Tribunal published a second sentence, 156, attributed to itself the constitutional functions of the Assembly and decided on delegating them on the organisms that is considered pertinent, on the pretext of "legislative omission" of the Assembly.[36] The sentence was met with both domestic and international alarm from different personalities and institutions,[37][38] some of which defined sentence 156 as a self-coup d'état.[39][40] This included Attorney General Luisa Ortega Díaz, who during a press conferenced in the seat of the Public Ministry defined both sentences as a "rupture of the constitutional order".[citation needed]

Maduro qualified the Attorney's declarations as a "impasse" between the Public Ministry and the Tribunal, as the reason why the same day he convened a Nation Defense Council to discuss the review of sentences 155 and 156. The following day, the Tribunal published clarifications on the sentences where the measures that transferred the parliament competences to the Tribunal and Maduro were partially suppressed.[41] Jurists defined the clarifications as illegal, since the Constitutional Chamber cannot make a review of the sentences for being res judicata (claim preclusion).[42][43]

On 1 May 2017, Maduro convenes a Constituent National Assembly based on a disputed interpretation of Articles 347, 348 and 349 of the constitution. Such call was met with preoccupation again, and many jurists argued that Maduro violated the constitution by assuming functions of the citizens to summon a Constituent Assembly. [44][45][46][47][48]

On 17 May, the Tribunal decided on five nullity complaints from 2010 against the Reform of the Organic Law of Municipal Public Power, which replaced the Parochial Meetings with Communal Parochial Meetings. The Tribunal decided that communal councils could elect the members of the Parochial Meetings, implementing an indirect suffrage. The sentence has been qualified as a grave violation of the direct, universal and secret vote of Article 63 of the Constitution.[49][50][51][52]

On 7 June 2017, the Constitutional Chamber issued sentence 378, where the Tribunal decided that the president is empowered to summon a Constituent Assembly without a previous consultative referendum.[53] Once again the sentence was criticized for being considered violatory of the constitutional principles, specially sovereignty, since Article 5 of the constitution states that it "resides intransferibly in the people".[54][55][56][57]

Helicopter attack edit

Venezuela's protesters set fire to the executive directorate of the judiciary of the Supreme Court in the Chacao municipality on 12 June 2017. Violence broke out in protests at the Supreme Court over a bid to change the Constitution.[58] On 27 June 2017, a helicopter attacked the TSJ building with gunfire and grenades.[59]

Attorney General response edit

On 8 June, the Attorney General introduced an electoral contentious appeal in the Electoral Chamber Constituent Assembly, and invoking Article 333 of the constitution she invited the Venezuelans to adhere to the appeal with the purpose of stopping the Constituent Assembly and preserve the validity of the current constitution.[60] The following day the surroundings of the Tribunals were blocked by security forces, impeding citizens from adhering to the appeal.[61][62] On 12 June, the Tribunal declared inadmissible the appeal due to "inept pretensions accumulation".[63]

In response to the rejection of the Tribunal, the Luisa Ortega challenged the appointment of the 13 main justices and 21 alternates for considering a lack of suitability and bias in their actions, as well as aggravating the crisis in the country. She also requested the challenged justices to refraining to learn about the cause of the challenge, in accordance of Articles 55, 56 and 57 of the Supreme Tribunal Organic Law.[64][65] The Attorney General explained that during the appointment procedure of the justices, the Moral Council did not convene an extraordinary sessions to evaluate the candidacy conditions in compliance of Article 74 of the Supreme Tribunal Law, but rather the candidates expedients were submitted and later she was handed the act to be signed, which she refused to do for not convening the session.[66] On the following day, Ombudsman Tarek William Saab published a document with the alleged signature of Luisa Ortega, arguing that she did sign the act.[67] Afterwards, María José Marcano, former secretary of the Moral Council, accused William Saab of lying and presenting a forged document, since neither Luisa Ortega or she had signed the act, finding it being done illegally with political pressures.[68]

On 14 June, the Tribunal once again dismissed the appeal, warning that:

El 13 de junio la Fiscal solicitó al TSJ antejuicio de mérito contra 6 magistrados principales y 2 suplentes por conspiración para atentar contra la forma republicana de la nación, delito tipificado en el artículo 132 del Código Penal, al mismo tiempo que solicitó a los magistrados acusados inhibirse de conocer de la causa de conformidad con los artículos 55, 56 y 57 de la LOTSJ.[66]

2017 appointment and Supreme Tribunal of Justice in exile edit

The discontent with the Bolivarian government saw the opposition being elected to hold the majority in the National Assembly of Venezuela for the first time since 1999 following the 2015 Parliamentary Election.[69] As a result of that election, the lame duck National Assembly consisting of Bolivarian officials filled the Supreme Tribunal of Justice with their allies.[69][70]

Following months of unrest surrounding the recall referendum against President Maduro in 2016, on 29 March 2017 the Bolivarian Supreme Tribunal of Justice ruled that the National Assembly was "in a situation of contempt", because of the aforementioned rulings against the election of some of its members. It stripped the Assembly of legislative powers, and took those powers for itself; which meant that the Court would have been able to create laws. The court did not indicate if or when it might hand power back.[71] As a result of the ruling, the 2017 Venezuelan protests began surrounding the constitutional crisis, with the Bolivarian Supreme Tribunal of Justice reversing its ruling on 1 April 2017.[72]

After being stripped of power during the constitutional crisis and the call for a rewriting of the constitution by the Bolivarian government, opposition-led National Assembly of Venezuela created a Judicial Nominations Committee on 13 June 2017 to elect new members of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice.[73] On 12 July 2017, Ombudsman Tarek Saab, head of the Moral Council of Venezuela, said that the call for new magistrates would not be officially recognized by the Bolivarian government and that the magistrates already appointed by the lame duck Bolivarian National Assembly would instead continue to be recognized.[74] Despite the rejection of recognition by the Bolivarian government, the opposition-led National Assembly then voted 33 magistrates into office on 21 July 2017, separate from the Bolivarian government, forming the Supreme Tribunal of Justice in exile.[75]

2018 opposition parties prohibition in presidential election edit

On 23 January 2018, the Constituent National Assembly ordered the presidential elections should be scheduled in 2018 and before 30 April. Several Venezuelan NGOs, such as Foro Penal Venezolano, Súmate, Voto Joven, the Venezuelan Electoral Observatory and the Citizen Electoral Network, expressed their concern over the irregularities of the electoral schedule, including the lack of the Constituent Assembly's competencies to summon the elections, impeding participation of opposition political parties, and the lack of time for standard electoral functions.[76] Because of this, the European Union,[77][78] the Organization of American States and countries including Australia and the United States rejected the electoral process.[79][80]

Two days later, on 25 January, the high court ordered the Electoral Council to exclude from the elections the Democratic Unity Roundtable, the most voted coalition in Venezuela's democratic history, arguing that in the coalition there were political parties that did not meet validation requirements.[81]

2018 Christmas party edit

In December 2018, videos and pictures were leaked showing a glamorous Christmas party that counted with an expensive feast, including French wine, taking place in the Supreme Tribunal seat. The images received considerable backlash from social networks, criticizing the costs of the party during the grave economic crisis in the country and the hypocrisy of the socialist regime.[82]

Christian Zerpa defection edit

On 8 January 2019, Electoral Chamber justice Christian Zerpa defected and escaped to the United States, dissenting with the inauguration of Nicolás Maduro as president for a second period.[83] From Orlando, Florida, Zerpa made a series of declarations that questioned the independence of powers and the transparency of the judiciary system in Venezuela. In an interview, Zerpa denounced that Cilia Flores handles the Venezuelan judiciary branch arbitrarily and that in 2015 he received a call from Flores telling him that he would be appointed as justice.[84] He confessed that he was appointed as justice of the Supreme Tribunal in 2015 for always have been loyal to chavismo.[85]

Among the declarations given, he affirmed that many of the court's decisions responded to orders from the ruling party,[86] and stressed that Maikel Moreno, the current chief justice of the Supreme Tribunal, and Raúl Gorrín, president of the television channel Globovisión, are involved in corruption schemes.[87]

Chambers edit

The Supreme Tribunal is divided in six chambers or instances that divide the work depending on its competences, which are the following:

  • Constitucional Chamber
  • Politic-Administrative Chamber
  • Electoral Chamber
  • Civil Cassation Chamber
  • Social Cassation Chamber
  • Criminal Cassation Chamber

All of the chambers are part of the Plenary Chamber.

Constitucional Chamber edit

Year Judges of the Constitucional Chamber
2001 Iván Rincón Urdaneta[88] José Delgado Ocando (Retired)[88] Antonio García García (Retired)[88] Jesús Eduardo Cabrera (Retired)[88] Pedro Rondón Haaz (Retired)[88]
*
2002
2003
2004
2005 Francisco Carrasquero López[89] Luisa Estela Morales[89] Luis V. Velázquez (Dismissed)[88][90]
2006 Marcos Tulio Dugarte Padrón[91] Carmen Zuleta[92]
2007 Arcadio de Jesús Delgado Rosales[92]
2008
2009 Juan José Mendoza Jover[92]
2010
2011 Gladys Gutiérrez
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016 Calixto Ortega Luis Damiani Lourdes Suárez
2017
2018
2019
*=Only 20 judges were chosen[93]
  Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ (12 years)[94]
  Alternate Judge (vacant seat)

Politic-Administrative Chamber edit

Year Judges of the Politic-Administrative Chamber
1999 Yolanda Jaimes Guerrero[88] Levis Ignacio Zerpa[95] Hadel Mostafá Paolini (Retired)[95]
*
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005 Evelyn Margarita Marrero Ortiz[89] Emiro Antonio García Rosas[89]
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010 Trina Omaira Zurita (Deceased)[88][96]
2011
2012
2013 Emilio Ramos G.[97][92] Mónica Misticchio[97][92] María C. Ameliach[97][92]
2014
2015 Inocencio Figueroa[89] Bárbara Gabriela César[89]
2016 Marcos Medina Eulalia Guerrero
2017
2018
2019
*=Only 20 judges were chosen[93]
  Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ (12 years)[94]
  Alternate Judge (vacant seat)

Electoral Chamber edit

Year Judges of the Electoral Chamber
1999 Alberto Martini Urdaneta (Retired)[88] Rafael Ángel Hernández Uzcátegui (Retired)[88] Luis Martínez Hernández (Retired)[88]
*
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005 Iván Vásquez[88] Fernando Ramón Vegas Torrealba[89] Luis Alfredo Sucre Cuba (Retired)[88] Rafael Arístides Rengifo (Retired)[88]
2006
2007 Juan José Núñez Calderón[89]
2008
2009
2010
2011 Malaquías Gil Rodríguez[92] Oscar León U. (Deceased)[88][98] Jhannett María Madriz Sotillo[92]
2012
2013 Indira Alfonzo[97][92]
2014
2015
2016 Fanny Márquez Christian Tyrone Zerpa (Resigned)[99]
2017
2018
2019 Grisel López
*=Only 20 judges were chosen[93]
  Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ (12 years)[94]
  Alternate Judge (vacant seat)

Civil Cassation Chamber edit

Year Judges of the Civil Cassation Chamber
1999 Antonio Ramírez Jiménez[88] Franklin Arrieche (Dismissed)[88][100] Carlos Oberto Vélez[88]
*
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004 Tulio Álvarez[88]
2005 Yris Armenia Peña Espinoza[89] Luis Antonio Hernández Ortiz[89]
2006 Isbelia Pérez Velásquez[89]
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013 Aurides M. Mora[97][92] Ymaira Zapata L.[97][92]
2014
2015 Guillermo Blanco[97][92] Marisela Godoy[97][92]
2016 Vilma Fernández Francisco Velásquez Ivan Bastardo[97]
2017
2018
2019
*=Only 20 judges were chosen[93]
  Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ (12 years)[94]
  Alternate Judge (vacant seat)

Social Cassation Chamber edit

Year Judges of the Social Cassation Chamber
1999 Omar Mora Díaz[88] Juan Rafael Perdomo[88] Alfonso Rafael Valbuena[88]
*
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005 Luis Eduardo Franceschi Gutiérrez[89] Carmen Elvigia Porras Escalante[89]
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013 Octavio J. Sisco[97][92] Sonia C. Arias[97][92] Carmen E. Gómez[97][92]
2014
2015 Edgar Gavidia Rodríguez[89] Mónica Gioconda Misticchio Tortorella[89] Marjorie Calderón[89] Danilo Mojica[89]
2016 Jesús Manuel Jiménez Alonzo
2017
2018
2019
*=Only 20 judges were chosen[93]
  Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ (12 years)[94]
  Alternate Judge (vacant seat)

Criminal Cassation Chamber edit

Year Judges of the Criminal Cassation Chamber
1999 Rafael Pérez Perdomo (Retired)[88] Alejandro Angúlo Fontiveros (Retired)[88] Blanca Rosa Mármol de León[88]
*
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004 Julio Elías Mayaudón[88]
2005 Deyanira Nieves Bastidas[89] Eladio Aponte Aponte (Dismissed)[89][101]
2006 Héctor Manuel Coronado Flores[89]
2007 Miriam del Valle Morandy[88]
2008
2009
2010
2011 Ninoska Queipo B. (Deceased)[88][102]
2012
2013 Yanina B. Karabín[97][92] Úrsula M. Mujica[97][92] Paúl José Aponte Rueda[97][92]
2014
2015 Elsa Gómez[89] Maikel Moreno[89] Francia Coello[89]
2016 Juan Luis Ibarra Yanina Karabín de Díaz
2017
2018
2019
*Only 20 judges were chosen[93]
  Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ (12 years)[94]
  Alternate Judge (vacant seat)

Criticisms edit

Venezuela's judicial system has been deemed the most corrupt in the world by Transparency International in 2014.[103] Human Rights Watch claimed that in 2004, President Hugo Chávez and his allies took over the Supreme Tribunal of Justice, filling it with his supporters and adding measures so the government could dismiss justices from the court. In 2010, legislators from Chávez's political party appointed nine permanent judges and 32 stand-ins, which included several allies. They claimed that some judges may face reprisals if they rule against government interests.[104]

It has also been alleged that the Supreme Tribunal of Justice, with the majority supporting Chávez, elected officials to the supposedly non-partisan National Electoral Council of Venezuela, despite the 1999 Constitution empowering the National Assembly of Venezuela to perform that action.[105] This resulted in Chavistas making up a majority of the electoral council's board.[105]

After Chávez' death and with Nicolás Maduro as president, following the 2015 National Assembly election, the lame duck National Assembly, the majority of whom were Bolivarian supporters, filled the Supreme Tribunal of Justice with Maduro allies.[69][106] The tribunal then quickly stripped three new opposition lawmakers of their National Assembly seats in early 2016, citing irregularities in their elections, thereby preventing an opposition supermajority which would have been able to challenge Maduro.[69] The tribunal then approved several actions by Maduro and granted him more powers.[69]

References edit

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  2. ^ "Parlamento chileno aprueba proyecto que reconoce la legitimidad del TSJ venezolano en el exilio". La Patilla (in European Spanish). 2018-10-04. Retrieved 2018-10-05.
  3. ^ TSJ allanó camino para enjuiciar al presidente Hugo Chávez El Universal. 15.08.2002
  4. ^ a b anuncia una marcha contra el fallo del Supremo que exculpó a los militares golpistas ABC. 18.08.2002
  5. ^ Tragarla como un pez con espinas El Universal. 18.01.2013
  6. ^ Véase noticia de .
  7. ^ Véase un análisis más detallado en Analítica January 4, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Véase un análisis sobre la primera sentencia en La insignia.
  9. ^ Poliszuk, Joseph; Cardona, Gabriela. "El chavismo enroca sus militantes en los tribunales penales". p. Armando.Info.
  10. ^ "Capturado Walid Makled por el DAS en Colombia". NotiTarde (in Spanish). 20 August 2009. Retrieved 6 November 2010.
  11. ^ Yolanda Valery (9 November 2010). "Venezuela y EE.UU. piden la extradición del presunto narcotraficante Walid Makled". BBC (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  12. ^ . La Nación. Tal Cual. 2012. Archived from the original on September 18, 2012.
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  23. ^ Vanessa, Moreno Losada (5 April 2017). "Sentencias de la Sala Constitucional son firmadas por magistrados que incumplen requisitos para el cargo". Efecto Cocuyo. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
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External links edit

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supreme, tribunal, justice, venezuela, this, article, about, supreme, tribunal, justice, which, considered, illegitimate, some, countries, americas, europe, supreme, tribunal, justice, appointed, national, assembly, 2017, supreme, tribunal, justice, venezuela,. This article is about the Supreme Tribunal of Justice which is considered illegitimate by some countries in the Americas and Europe 1 2 For the Supreme Tribunal of Justice appointed by the National Assembly in 2017 see Supreme Tribunal of Justice of Venezuela in exile This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2016 This article has been translated from the article Tribunal Supremo de Justicia de Venezuela in the Spanish Wikipedia and requires proofreading If you are confident enough in your fluency of English and Spanish please proofread it May 2019 You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish January 2019 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 5 012 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Tribunal Supremo de Justicia de Venezuela see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated es Tribunal Supremo de Justicia de Venezuela to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Learn how and when to remove this message The Supreme Justice Tribunal Spanish Tribunal Supremo de Justicia or TSJ is the highest court of law in the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela and is the head of the judicial branch As the independence of the Venezuelan judiciary under the regime of Nicolas Maduro is questioned there have recently been many disputes as to whether this court is legitimate Supreme Justice TribunalTribunal Supremo de JusticiaTSJ building in CaracasEstablished1999LocationCaracasAuthorized byConstitution of VenezuelaWebsiteOfficial websitePresidentCurrentlyMaikel MorenoSince24 February 2017 The Supreme Tribunal may meet either in specialized chambers of which there are six constitutional political administrative electoral civil criminal and social or in plenary session Each chamber has five judges except the constitutional which has seven Its main function is to control according to the constitution and related laws the constitutionality and legality of public acts The Supreme Tribunal s 32 magistrates magistrados are appointed by the National Assembly and serve non renewable 12 year terms Appointments are made by a two thirds majority or a simple majority if efforts to appoint a judge fail three times in a row Under article 265 of the 1999 Constitution judges may be removed by a two thirds majority of the National Assembly if the Attorney General Comptroller General and Human Rights Ombudsperson have previously agreed to a serious failure and suspended the judge accordingly Contents 1 History and controversies 1 1 2002 coup d etat 1 2 2006 judicial year beginning 1 3 Open letter of former Justice Eladio Aponte Aponte 1 4 2015 justices appointment 1 5 Challenge of electoral results 1 6 2017 constitutional crisis 1 6 1 Rulings 155 and 156 1 6 2 Helicopter attack 1 6 3 Attorney General response 1 7 2017 appointment and Supreme Tribunal of Justice in exile 1 8 2018 opposition parties prohibition in presidential election 1 9 2018 Christmas party 1 10 Christian Zerpa defection 2 Chambers 2 1 Constitucional Chamber 2 2 Politic Administrative Chamber 2 3 Electoral Chamber 2 4 Civil Cassation Chamber 2 5 Social Cassation Chamber 2 6 Criminal Cassation Chamber 3 Criticisms 4 References 5 External linksHistory and controversies editThe Tribunal was created under the 1999 Constitution of Venezuela replacing the Supreme Court of Venezuela For some years provisional statutes regulated the number of judges initially 20 with three in each chamber except the constitutional which had five and their selection The statutes were replaced in 2004 by an organic law a law required to clarify constitutional provisions The law also permitted the National Assembly to revoke the appointment of a judge by a simple majority where a judge had provided false information as to their credentials citation needed 2002 coup d etat edit In a controversial sentence on 14 August 2002 after the 2002 Venezuela coup d etat the Supreme Tribunal acquitted Division Generals Efrain Vasquez Army and Pedro Pereira Aviation Vice admirant Hector Ramirez and Counter admiral Daniel Comisso in a rebellion trial According to the sentence con los pronunciamientos efectuados en abril los altos oficiales acusados no desconocieron al Gobierno sino la orden dictada por el presidente de la Republica de aplicar el Plan Avila porque resultaba contraria a la proteccion de los derechos humanos de la ciudadania y ello significaria una masacre 3 With the pronouncements made in April the accused high ranking officials did not ignore the Government but the order issued by the President of the Republic to apply the Avila Plan because it was contrary to the protection of the human rights of citizens and this would mean a massacre The sentence argued that there was a power vacuum after the Military High Command chief General Lucas Rincon announced that Chavez had resigned from office The discontent of the Venezuelan government was considerable Chavez condemned the sentenced stating Esos once magistrados no tienen moral para tomar ningun otro tipo de decision son unos inmorales y deberian publicar un libro con sus rostros para que el pueblo los conozca Pusieron la plasta 4 Those eleven magistrates have no moral to make any other kind of decision they are immoral and should publish a book with their faces so that the people know them They put the plasta Chavez announced a strategy to revert the decision creating a commission in the National Assembly to review the stay of the justices in the Supreme Tribunal saying that No nos vamos a quedar con esa ahora lo que viene es un contraataque del pueblo y de las instituciones verdaderas contraataque revolucionario and that Asi que la AN que los nombro tiene que asumir su tarea para evaluarlos y el que no tenga los requisitos habra que sacarlo de alli 4 We are not going to stay with that now what is coming is a counterattack of the people and the real institutions revolutionary counterattack and that So the AN that appointed them has to assume its task to evaluate them and whoever does not have the requirements will have to be removed from there The result was a new Supreme Tribunal of Justice Law with two purposes establishing a procedure to suspend justices and increasing the number of justices from 20 to 30 5 The following year the executive branch managed to promote the increase to 32 justices after which the Tribunal started the reviewed the original sentence On 14 March 2005 the Tribunal overruled the decision 6 The opposition considers that the override of the sentence was caused by the changes made to the high court by a legislation change by lawmakers of the ruling party which had a majority at the time 7 Government supporters consider that the first sentence was political and there were several reasons to start a trial of a coup d etat 8 2006 judicial year beginning edit During the 2006 judicial year beginning the justices of the Supreme Tribunal stood up from the seats of the Criminal Chamber to chant Uh ah Chavez no se va while president Chavez was present in the auditorium The act was interpreted as a demonstration of political partiality by the justices and the institution 9 Open letter of former Justice Eladio Aponte Aponte edit On 20 August 2009 drug trafficker Walid Makled was captured in Cucuta by the Colombian Administrative Department of Security DAS and later moved to Bogota Walid was requested by both the American and the Venezuelan anti narcotics authorities 10 During his arrest Makled was found with a credential of the Venezuelan military prosecution allegedly issued by the Supreme Tribunal justice Eladio Aponte Aponte Venezuela s opposition s spokesperson Miguel Angel Rodriguez declared that the investigation would be obstructed in the country by the very public officials 11 On 16 April 2012 Aponte wrote an open letter from San Jose Costa Rica in which he claimed to have received orders and pressure from president Hugo Chavez to convict Ivan Simonovis security chief of the Metropolitan District of Caracas as well as Caracas Metropolitan Police officers Henry Vivas and Lazaro Forero applying the maximum sentence for their participation during the Llaguno Overpass events The letter was published in September 12 Aponte fled Venezuela to Costa Rica in April 2012 after being accused of assisting Makled who said he had been paying Aponte US 70 000 per month related to joint business ventures Aponte then contacted the U S Drug Enforcement Administration which provided him with a flight to the United States 13 2015 justices appointment edit Currently for a part of Venezuelan society the legitimacy of the Supreme Tribunal is in question 14 15 especially the legitimacy of its origin due to the appointment on 23 December 2015 of 13 main justices and 21 supplementary justices by a lame duck National Assembly with a ruling party majority 16 as well as its actions since 17 Article 264 of the Venezuelan Constitution and Title V of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice Organic Law 18 contemplate an extense procedure of more than thirty days for the appointment of the justices both main and alternate in which it is required to form a Judicial Nominations Committee integrated by members of the National Assembly and civil society which will do a preselection of candidates that will be submitted to the Republican Moral Council the Ombudsman the Public Ministry and the Comptroller General which will do a second preselection that in turn will be submitted to the National Assembly which will have a lapse of three plenary sessions to appoint the justices with the vote of two thirds of the deputies or a fourth plenary session with the vote of a simple majority in case of not getting two thirds of the vote The appointment of the justices was not done in accordance with the legal procedure but with a hurried process carried out on 23 December 2015 by the lame duck National Assembly with a ruling party majority when the legislature ended on 15 December after being defeated on the 2015 parliamentary election where the opposition represented by the Democratic Unity Roundtable opposition coalition gained 112 of the 167 seats citation needed During the process the Citizen branch issued a list of preselected candidates of previous processes endorsed by the Ombudsman Tarek William Saab and the Comptroller Manuel Galindo 19 The National Assembly approved the candidates in a single plenary session on the night of 23 December 2015 20 21 Both the opposition and several jurists have described the appointment as illegal for not being performed according to the constitution and the Organic Law including the challenges period their lack of responses and the omission of the definite selections of the candidates 20 21 22 According to a mid 2016 report issued by the Venezuelan NGO Acceso a la Justicia Access to Justice only one of seven justices of the Constitutional Chamber comply with the requirements for the position demanded by Venezuelan laws and their designation process was irregular 23 24 On 14 June 2016 the National Assembly nullified the appointment carried out in 2015 25 Challenge of electoral results edit Weeks after the parliamentary elections and after the oathtaking of the elected representatives in the National Assembly seven complaints were presented to the electoral results to the Amazonas Aragua and Yaracuy states six of which were rejected and one was admitted suspending the results of the Amazonas state circuits 26 27 The Electoral Chamber of the Supreme Tribunal ordered the Assembly to disincorporate the deputies from Amazonas 28 but the Assembly presided by Henry Ramos Allup disobeyed responding that the deputies already had parliamentary immunity 29 The Attorney General Luisa Ortega Diaz later assured that the National Assembly was not in contempt since contempt could only be applied to individuals and not institutions 30 After this deputy Hector Rodriguez from the Great Patriotic Pole coalition introduced an appealto the TSJ on 7 January 2016 to declare null all of the acts of the National Assembly On 11 January the Tribunal accepted the appeal and ruled in favor of it declaring without effect all of the acts of the National Assembly while it stayed in contempt With each action of the National Assembly now in hands of the opposition the ruling party introduced appeals to annul such actions and through numerous sentences the Tribunal started limiting the Assembly actions established in the constitution while at the same time it exercised actions constitutionally exclusive to the parliament with the justification of legislative omission due to the contempt of the Assembly 31 32 33 Starting 2017 in an ordinary plenary session the National Assembly the presided by Julio Borges officially disincorporated the three contested deputies complying with the condition of the Supreme Tribunal to end the contempt 34 However the Supreme Tribunal did not withdraw the contempt arguing that the previous directive presided by Ramos Allup was the one that should have done the procedure 35 2017 constitutional crisis edit Main article 2017 Venezuelan constitutional crisis Rulings 155 and 156 edit On 27 March 2017 in sentence 15several5 the Tribunal granted faculties of the National Assembly to Nicolas Maduro to legislate and take the civilian military economic criminal administrative political juridic and social measures considered necessary to prevent a state of conmotion citation needed On 29 March the Tribunal published a second sentence 156 attributed to itself the constitutional functions of the Assembly and decided on delegating them on the organisms that is considered pertinent on the pretext of legislative omission of the Assembly 36 The sentence was met with both domestic and international alarm from different personalities and institutions 37 38 some of which defined sentence 156 as a self coup d etat 39 40 This included Attorney General Luisa Ortega Diaz who during a press conferenced in the seat of the Public Ministry defined both sentences as a rupture of the constitutional order citation needed Maduro qualified the Attorney s declarations as a impasse between the Public Ministry and the Tribunal as the reason why the same day he convened a Nation Defense Council to discuss the review of sentences 155 and 156 The following day the Tribunal published clarifications on the sentences where the measures that transferred the parliament competences to the Tribunal and Maduro were partially suppressed 41 Jurists defined the clarifications as illegal since the Constitutional Chamber cannot make a review of the sentences for being res judicata claim preclusion 42 43 On 1 May 2017 Maduro convenes a Constituent National Assembly based on a disputed interpretation of Articles 347 348 and 349 of the constitution Such call was met with preoccupation again and many jurists argued that Maduro violated the constitution by assuming functions of the citizens to summon a Constituent Assembly 44 45 46 47 48 On 17 May the Tribunal decided on five nullity complaints from 2010 against the Reform of the Organic Law of Municipal Public Power which replaced the Parochial Meetings with Communal Parochial Meetings The Tribunal decided that communal councils could elect the members of the Parochial Meetings implementing an indirect suffrage The sentence has been qualified as a grave violation of the direct universal and secret vote of Article 63 of the Constitution 49 50 51 52 On 7 June 2017 the Constitutional Chamber issued sentence 378 where the Tribunal decided that the president is empowered to summon a Constituent Assembly without a previous consultative referendum 53 Once again the sentence was criticized for being considered violatory of the constitutional principles specially sovereignty since Article 5 of the constitution states that it resides intransferibly in the people 54 55 56 57 Helicopter attack edit Main article 2017 Caracas helicopter attack Venezuela s protesters set fire to the executive directorate of the judiciary of the Supreme Court in the Chacao municipality on 12 June 2017 Violence broke out in protests at the Supreme Court over a bid to change the Constitution 58 On 27 June 2017 a helicopter attacked the TSJ building with gunfire and grenades 59 Attorney General response edit On 8 June the Attorney General introduced an electoral contentious appeal in the Electoral Chamber Constituent Assembly and invoking Article 333 of the constitution she invited the Venezuelans to adhere to the appeal with the purpose of stopping the Constituent Assembly and preserve the validity of the current constitution 60 The following day the surroundings of the Tribunals were blocked by security forces impeding citizens from adhering to the appeal 61 62 On 12 June the Tribunal declared inadmissible the appeal due to inept pretensions accumulation 63 In response to the rejection of the Tribunal the Luisa Ortega challenged the appointment of the 13 main justices and 21 alternates for considering a lack of suitability and bias in their actions as well as aggravating the crisis in the country She also requested the challenged justices to refraining to learn about the cause of the challenge in accordance of Articles 55 56 and 57 of the Supreme Tribunal Organic Law 64 65 The Attorney General explained that during the appointment procedure of the justices the Moral Council did not convene an extraordinary sessions to evaluate the candidacy conditions in compliance of Article 74 of the Supreme Tribunal Law but rather the candidates expedients were submitted and later she was handed the act to be signed which she refused to do for not convening the session 66 On the following day Ombudsman Tarek William Saab published a document with the alleged signature of Luisa Ortega arguing that she did sign the act 67 Afterwards Maria Jose Marcano former secretary of the Moral Council accused William Saab of lying and presenting a forged document since neither Luisa Ortega or she had signed the act finding it being done illegally with political pressures 68 On 14 June the Tribunal once again dismissed the appeal warning that cualquier comision artificio o accion que tenga el objeto de anular la designacion de magistrados subvierte el procedimiento constitucional para remocion de magistrados del TSJ y por lo tanto es irrito y nulo de toda nulidad y carente de validez existencia y eficacia juridica y quienes participen en ellos estan sujetos a la responsabilidad penal civil y administrativa que corresponda any commission artifice or action that has the purpose of nullifying the appointment of magistrates subverts the constitutional procedure for the removal of magistrates from the TSJ and therefore is void and void of all nullity and lacking validity existence and legal effectiveness and those who participate in them are subject to the corresponding criminal civil and administrative responsibility citation needed El 13 de junio la Fiscal solicito al TSJ antejuicio de merito contra 6 magistrados principales y 2 suplentes por conspiracion para atentar contra la forma republicana de la nacion delito tipificado en el articulo 132 del Codigo Penal al mismo tiempo que solicito a los magistrados acusados inhibirse de conocer de la causa de conformidad con los articulos 55 56 y 57 de la LOTSJ 66 2017 appointment and Supreme Tribunal of Justice in exile edit Main article Supreme Tribunal of Justice of Venezuela in exile The discontent with the Bolivarian government saw the opposition being elected to hold the majority in the National Assembly of Venezuela for the first time since 1999 following the 2015 Parliamentary Election 69 As a result of that election the lame duck National Assembly consisting of Bolivarian officials filled the Supreme Tribunal of Justice with their allies 69 70 Following months of unrest surrounding the recall referendum against President Maduro in 2016 on 29 March 2017 the Bolivarian Supreme Tribunal of Justice ruled that the National Assembly was in a situation of contempt because of the aforementioned rulings against the election of some of its members It stripped the Assembly of legislative powers and took those powers for itself which meant that the Court would have been able to create laws The court did not indicate if or when it might hand power back 71 As a result of the ruling the 2017 Venezuelan protests began surrounding the constitutional crisis with the Bolivarian Supreme Tribunal of Justice reversing its ruling on 1 April 2017 72 After being stripped of power during the constitutional crisis and the call for a rewriting of the constitution by the Bolivarian government opposition led National Assembly of Venezuela created a Judicial Nominations Committee on 13 June 2017 to elect new members of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice 73 On 12 July 2017 Ombudsman Tarek Saab head of the Moral Council of Venezuela said that the call for new magistrates would not be officially recognized by the Bolivarian government and that the magistrates already appointed by the lame duck Bolivarian National Assembly would instead continue to be recognized 74 Despite the rejection of recognition by the Bolivarian government the opposition led National Assembly then voted 33 magistrates into office on 21 July 2017 separate from the Bolivarian government forming the Supreme Tribunal of Justice in exile 75 2018 opposition parties prohibition in presidential election edit Main article 2018 Venezuelan presidential election On 23 January 2018 the Constituent National Assembly ordered the presidential elections should be scheduled in 2018 and before 30 April Several Venezuelan NGOs such as Foro Penal Venezolano Sumate Voto Joven the Venezuelan Electoral Observatory and the Citizen Electoral Network expressed their concern over the irregularities of the electoral schedule including the lack of the Constituent Assembly s competencies to summon the elections impeding participation of opposition political parties and the lack of time for standard electoral functions 76 Because of this the European Union 77 78 the Organization of American States and countries including Australia and the United States rejected the electoral process 79 80 Two days later on 25 January the high court ordered the Electoral Council to exclude from the elections the Democratic Unity Roundtable the most voted coalition in Venezuela s democratic history arguing that in the coalition there were political parties that did not meet validation requirements 81 2018 Christmas party edit In December 2018 videos and pictures were leaked showing a glamorous Christmas party that counted with an expensive feast including French wine taking place in the Supreme Tribunal seat The images received considerable backlash from social networks criticizing the costs of the party during the grave economic crisis in the country and the hypocrisy of the socialist regime 82 Christian Zerpa defection edit On 8 January 2019 Electoral Chamber justice Christian Zerpa defected and escaped to the United States dissenting with the inauguration of Nicolas Maduro as president for a second period 83 From Orlando Florida Zerpa made a series of declarations that questioned the independence of powers and the transparency of the judiciary system in Venezuela In an interview Zerpa denounced that Cilia Flores handles the Venezuelan judiciary branch arbitrarily and that in 2015 he received a call from Flores telling him that he would be appointed as justice 84 He confessed that he was appointed as justice of the Supreme Tribunal in 2015 for always have been loyal to chavismo 85 Among the declarations given he affirmed that many of the court s decisions responded to orders from the ruling party 86 and stressed that Maikel Moreno the current chief justice of the Supreme Tribunal and Raul Gorrin president of the television channel Globovision are involved in corruption schemes 87 Chambers editThe Supreme Tribunal is divided in six chambers or instances that divide the work depending on its competences which are the following Constitucional Chamber Politic Administrative Chamber Electoral Chamber Civil Cassation Chamber Social Cassation Chamber Criminal Cassation Chamber All of the chambers are part of the Plenary Chamber Constitucional Chamber edit Year Judges of the Constitucional Chamber 2001 Ivan Rincon Urdaneta 88 Jose Delgado Ocando Retired 88 Antonio Garcia Garcia Retired 88 Jesus Eduardo Cabrera Retired 88 Pedro Rondon Haaz Retired 88 2002 2003 2004 2005 Francisco Carrasquero Lopez 89 Luisa Estela Morales 89 Luis V Velazquez Dismissed 88 90 2006 Marcos Tulio Dugarte Padron 91 Carmen Zuleta 92 2007 Arcadio de Jesus Delgado Rosales 92 2008 2009 Juan Jose Mendoza Jover 92 2010 2011 Gladys Gutierrez 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Calixto Ortega Luis Damiani Lourdes Suarez 2017 2018 2019 Only 20 judges were chosen 93 Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ 12 years 94 Alternate Judge vacant seat Politic Administrative Chamber edit Year Judges of the Politic Administrative Chamber 1999 Yolanda Jaimes Guerrero 88 Levis Ignacio Zerpa 95 Hadel Mostafa Paolini Retired 95 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Evelyn Margarita Marrero Ortiz 89 Emiro Antonio Garcia Rosas 89 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Trina Omaira Zurita Deceased 88 96 2011 2012 2013 Emilio Ramos G 97 92 Monica Misticchio 97 92 Maria C Ameliach 97 92 2014 2015 Inocencio Figueroa 89 Barbara Gabriela Cesar 89 2016 Marcos Medina Eulalia Guerrero 2017 2018 2019 Only 20 judges were chosen 93 Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ 12 years 94 Alternate Judge vacant seat Electoral Chamber edit Year Judges of the Electoral Chamber 1999 Alberto Martini Urdaneta Retired 88 Rafael Angel Hernandez Uzcategui Retired 88 Luis Martinez Hernandez Retired 88 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Ivan Vasquez 88 Fernando Ramon Vegas Torrealba 89 Luis Alfredo Sucre Cuba Retired 88 Rafael Aristides Rengifo Retired 88 2006 2007 Juan Jose Nunez Calderon 89 2008 2009 2010 2011 Malaquias Gil Rodriguez 92 Oscar Leon U Deceased 88 98 Jhannett Maria Madriz Sotillo 92 2012 2013 Indira Alfonzo 97 92 2014 2015 2016 Fanny Marquez Christian Tyrone Zerpa Resigned 99 2017 2018 2019 Grisel Lopez Only 20 judges were chosen 93 Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ 12 years 94 Alternate Judge vacant seat Civil Cassation Chamber edit Year Judges of the Civil Cassation Chamber 1999 Antonio Ramirez Jimenez 88 Franklin Arrieche Dismissed 88 100 Carlos Oberto Velez 88 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Tulio Alvarez 88 2005 Yris Armenia Pena Espinoza 89 Luis Antonio Hernandez Ortiz 89 2006 Isbelia Perez Velasquez 89 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Aurides M Mora 97 92 Ymaira Zapata L 97 92 2014 2015 Guillermo Blanco 97 92 Marisela Godoy 97 92 2016 Vilma Fernandez Francisco Velasquez Ivan Bastardo 97 2017 2018 2019 Only 20 judges were chosen 93 Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ 12 years 94 Alternate Judge vacant seat Social Cassation Chamber edit Year Judges of the Social Cassation Chamber 1999 Omar Mora Diaz 88 Juan Rafael Perdomo 88 Alfonso Rafael Valbuena 88 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Luis Eduardo Franceschi Gutierrez 89 Carmen Elvigia Porras Escalante 89 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Octavio J Sisco 97 92 Sonia C Arias 97 92 Carmen E Gomez 97 92 2014 2015 Edgar Gavidia Rodriguez 89 Monica Gioconda Misticchio Tortorella 89 Marjorie Calderon 89 Danilo Mojica 89 2016 Jesus Manuel Jimenez Alonzo 2017 2018 2019 Only 20 judges were chosen 93 Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ 12 years 94 Alternate Judge vacant seat Criminal Cassation Chamber edit Year Judges of the Criminal Cassation Chamber 1999 Rafael Perez Perdomo Retired 88 Alejandro Angulo Fontiveros Retired 88 Blanca Rosa Marmol de Leon 88 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Julio Elias Mayaudon 88 2005 Deyanira Nieves Bastidas 89 Eladio Aponte Aponte Dismissed 89 101 2006 Hector Manuel Coronado Flores 89 2007 Miriam del Valle Morandy 88 2008 2009 2010 2011 Ninoska Queipo B Deceased 88 102 2012 2013 Yanina B Karabin 97 92 Ursula M Mujica 97 92 Paul Jose Aponte Rueda 97 92 2014 2015 Elsa Gomez 89 Maikel Moreno 89 Francia Coello 89 2016 Juan Luis Ibarra Yanina Karabin de Diaz 2017 2018 2019 Only 20 judges were chosen 93 Year within the regulatory period according to LOTSJ 12 years 94 Alternate Judge vacant seat Criticisms editVenezuela s judicial system has been deemed the most corrupt in the world by Transparency International in 2014 103 Human Rights Watch claimed that in 2004 President Hugo Chavez and his allies took over the Supreme Tribunal of Justice filling it with his supporters and adding measures so the government could dismiss justices from the court In 2010 legislators from Chavez s political party appointed nine permanent judges and 32 stand ins which included several allies They claimed that some judges may face reprisals if they rule against government interests 104 It has also been alleged that the Supreme Tribunal of Justice with the majority supporting Chavez elected officials to the supposedly non partisan National Electoral Council of Venezuela despite the 1999 Constitution empowering the National Assembly of Venezuela to perform that action 105 This resulted in Chavistas making up a majority of the electoral council s board 105 After Chavez death and with Nicolas Maduro as president following the 2015 National Assembly election the lame duck National Assembly the majority of whom were Bolivarian supporters filled the Supreme Tribunal of Justice with Maduro allies 69 106 The tribunal then quickly stripped three new opposition lawmakers of their National Assembly seats in early 2016 citing irregularities in their elections thereby preventing an opposition supermajority which would have been able to challenge Maduro 69 The tribunal then approved several actions by Maduro and granted him more powers 69 References edit Senado chileno reconoce al TSJ en el exilio como autoridad legitima de Venezuela Diario Las Americas in Spanish Retrieved 2018 07 12 Parlamento chileno aprueba proyecto que reconoce la legitimidad del TSJ venezolano en el exilio La Patilla in European Spanish 2018 10 04 Retrieved 2018 10 05 TSJ allano camino para enjuiciar al presidente Hugo Chavez El Universal 15 08 2002 a b anuncia una marcha contra el fallo del Supremo que exculpo a los militares golpistas ABC 18 08 2002 Tragarla como un pez con espinas El Universal 18 01 2013 Vease noticia de Radio Nacional de Venezuela Vease un analisis mas detallado en Analitica Archived January 4 2006 at the Wayback Machine Vease un analisis sobre la primera sentencia en La insignia Poliszuk Joseph Cardona Gabriela El chavismo enroca sus militantes en los tribunales penales p Armando Info Capturado Walid Makled por el DAS en Colombia NotiTarde in Spanish 20 August 2009 Retrieved 6 November 2010 Yolanda Valery 9 November 2010 Venezuela y EE UU piden la extradicion del presunto narcotraficante Walid Makled BBC in Spanish Retrieved 23 November 2010 La confesion de Aponte La Nacion Tal Cual 2012 Archived from the original on September 18 2012 Ellsworth Brian 26 April 2012 Accused drug dealer says paid off fugitive Venezuela judge Reuters Retrieved 25 September 2019 Fiscal pide anular designacion de magistrados y responsabiliza al Gobierno por seguridad de su familia Informe21 com in Spanish Retrieved 30 July 2017 Federacion Nacional de Abogados emite nota de protesta ante sentencias del TSJ Pronunciamiento Retrieved 30 July 2017 Designados nuevos magistrados del TSJ El Nacional 23 December 2015 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Acceso a la Justicia califica al TSJ como politizado y parcializado runrun es 10 January 2017 Retrieved 27 August 2017 LEY ORGANICA DEL TRIBUNAL SUPREMO DE JUSTICIA LOTSJ Acceso a la Justicia www accesoalajusticia org Archived from the original on 2017 06 15 Solo cinco de los 13 magistrados principales aprobaron el baremo del Consejo Moral Only five of the 13 main magistrates approved the scale of the Moral Council Cronica Uno in European Spanish 14 June 2017 Retrieved 27 August 2017 a b FCJP UCV Designacion precipitada de magistrados del TSJ en contra de la soberania popular FCJP UCV Hasty appointment of magistrates of the Supreme Court against popular sovereignty Comunicacion Continua in Spanish 23 December 2015 Retrieved 30 June 2017 a b Pardo Daniel 23 December 2015 Por que importan tanto los magistrados que designo el chavismo en Venezuela Why do the magistrates appointed by Chavismo matter so much in Venezuela BBC Mundo in Spanish Retrieved 30 June 2017 5 violaciones cometidas durante la designacion de los magistrados del TSJ por Jose I Hernandez Prodavinci prodavinci com Retrieved 30 June 2017 Vanessa Moreno Losada 5 April 2017 Sentencias de la Sala Constitucional son firmadas por magistrados que incumplen requisitos para el cargo Efecto Cocuyo Retrieved 18 April 2018 Moreno Losada Vanessa 16 October 2016 Maximos interpretes de la Constitucion en el TSJ no llegan a 15 anos en el ejercicio del derecho Efecto Cocuyo Retrieved 18 April 2018 Venezuela AN aprueba anular designacion de magistrados Deutsche Welle Prodavinci 15 July 2016 Retrieved 25 May 2018 impugnan resultados en Amazonas Archivos El Pitazo El Pitazo Retrieved 30 June 2017 TSJ admite recursos para impugnar resultados electorales en 6 circuitos En la Agenda 2001 com ve 2001 com ve Retrieved 30 June 2017 Sala Electoral ordeno a la AN desincorporar a diputados impugnados El Nacional 12 January 2016 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Asamblea Nacional no acatara decision del TSJ contra diputados de Amazonas runrun es 8 January 2016 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Ortega Diaz aseguro que la Asamblea Nacional no esta en desacato El Nacional 28 June 2017 Retrieved 10 May 2019 Web El Nacional 13 January 2017 TSJ aprobo que Maduro de memoria y cuenta 2016 el domingo a las 11 00am El Nacional Retrieved 30 June 2017 WEB EL NACIONAL 3 March 2017 Tareck El Aissami presento la memoria y cuenta ante el TSJ El Nacional Retrieved 30 June 2017 Vidal Brian TSJ usurpa funciones de la AN con respecto a designacion de rectores El Impulso El Impulso Retrieved 30 June 2017 WEB EL NACIONAL 9 January 2017 AN termino con desacato y desincorporo oficialmente a diputados de Amazonas El Nacional Retrieved 30 June 2017 TSJ insiste en que la AN se encuentra en desacato pese a desincorporacion de diputados de Amazonas Retrieved 30 June 2017 20Minutos El Supremo venezolano quita los poderes a la Asamblea Nacional y asume la funcion legislativa 20minutos es 20minutos es Ultimas Noticias Retrieved 30 June 2017 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Golpe de Estado en Venezuela Reacciones hasta ahora www cuentasclarasdigital org in Spanish 31 March 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Asi rechaza el mundo el golpe de Estado en Venezuela El venezolano 31 March 2017 Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Jefe de la OEA denuncia autogolpe de Estado en Venezuela Panorama Retrieved 30 June 2017 Causas y consecuencias del Auto golpe de estado El Informe Archived from the original on 29 August 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2017 WEB EL NACIONAL 1 April 2017 TSJ elimino decisiones que atentan contra la Asamblea Nacional El Nacional Retrieved 30 June 2017 Aclaratoria ilegal del TSJ no detiene el golpe de estado ni reivindica a la AN El venezolano 2 April 2017 Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Aclaratorias del TSJ no enmiendan ruptura del orden constitucional afirma Juan Manuel Raffalli Venezuela ALPUNTO 2 April 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2017 WEB EL NACIONAL 23 May 2017 Magistrado del TSJ se pronuncio en contra de la Constituyente El Nacional Retrieved 30 June 2017 Magistrada del TSJ Marisela Godoy se pronuncia en contra de la constituyente Maduro www lapatilla com 24 May 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Diputado del Psuv German Ferrer rechazo convocatoria a la Constituyente Panorama Retrieved 30 June 2017 Colegios de Abogados anuncian acciones judiciales contra la Constituyente convocada por Maduro www lapatilla com 3 May 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2017 SILVA JOSE 2 May 2017 Eustoquio Contreras expreso su desacuerdo con una nueva Constituyente El Universal Archived from the original on 27 May 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Vidal Brian Sala Constitucional adelanta base comicial para Constituyente sectorial El Impulso El Impulso Retrieved 2 July 2017 Sobre la sentencia 355 y la eleccion comunal por Juan Manuel Raffalli RunRun es runrun es 23 May 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Sentencia 355 del TSJ busca radicalizar la dictadura www diariodelosandes com Retrieved 2 July 2017 Sentencia 355 del TSJ podria acabar con el voto universal en Venezuela www caraotadigital net in Spanish Archived from the original on 6 June 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 TSJ sentencia que Maduro puede convocar Constituyente sin referendo La Razon 31 May 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Sentencia N 378 del TSJ sobre ANC viola el principio de progresividad de los derechos PROVEA www derechos org ve Retrieved 2 July 2017 Sentencia 378 del TSJ liquida el poder constituyente originario afirman expertos Efecto Cocuyo 2 June 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Sentencia 378 del TSJ no da garantias a la Constituyente www caraotadigital net in Spanish Archived from the original on 6 June 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Vidal Brian Asi reaccionaron las redes sociales por nueva sentencia del TSJ 31Mayo El Impulso El Impulso Retrieved 2 July 2017 Venezuela protesters set fire to Supreme Court building as crisis deepens The Telegraph 13 June 2017 Venezuela crisis Helicopter launches attack on Supreme Court BBC News 28 June 2017 Retrieved 2017 06 28 WEB EL NACIONAL 8 June 2017 Ortega Diaz invito a firmar documento que pide nulidad de la Constituyente El Nacional Retrieved 2 July 2017 Casualidad Luisa Ortega Diaz habla y cierran accesos al TSJ en Caracas El venezolano 9 June 2017 Archived from the original on 29 August 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Cerrados accesos al TSJ en la avenida Baralt por barreras de la GNB El Universal 9 June 2017 Archived from the original on 5 July 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 TSJ declara inadmisible recurso de Fiscal General contra la Constituyente Efecto Cocuyo 12 June 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Fiscal General de la Republica impugna nombramiento de magistrados del TSJ Panorama Retrieved 2 July 2017 Web El Nacional 12 June 2017 Ortega Diaz impugno nombramiento de magistrados del TSJ El Nacional Retrieved 2 July 2017 a b Globovision Fiscal General solicito antejuicio de merito contra 6 Magistrados de la Sala Constitucional del TSJ Globovision Retrieved 2 July 2017 Defensor del Pueblo Fiscal no se opuso a designacion de magistrados Diario El Luchador 13 June 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2017 MORA FANNY 16 June 2017 Exsecretaria del Consejo Moral Eleccion de magistrados estuvo viciada El Universal Archived from the original on 23 June 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 a b c d e Casey Nicholas Torres Patricia 30 March 2017 Venezuela Muzzles Legislature Moving Closer to One Man Rule The New York Times p A1 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Venezuela s Lame Duck Congress Names New Supreme Court Justices Bloomberg 23 December 2015 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Venezuela coup Alarm grows as court takes power BBC 31 March 2017 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Venezuela Supreme court backtracks on powers bid BBC 1 April 2017 Retrieved 1 April 2017 Asamblea Nacional continuara proceso para eleccion de nuevos magistrados El Nacional in Spanish 2017 06 13 Retrieved 2018 07 10 Consejo Moral Republicano rechazo listado de preseleccionados al cargo de Magistrados realizado por la AN LaPatilla com La Patilla in European Spanish 2017 07 12 Retrieved 2018 07 10 Venezuela un Tribunal Supremo de Justicia en el exilio se instala en la OEA Clarin in Spanish 12 October 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2018 Rodriguez Rosas Ronny 23 February 2018 Foro Penal no avala convocatoria a elecciones presidenciales Efecto Cocuyo Retrieved 24 February 2018 Leon Ibis 9 December 2017 Observadores electorales detectan 11 irregularidades en el proceso de municipales Efecto Cocuyo Retrieved 10 December 2017 Rodriguez Rosas Ronny 15 February 2018 CNE obstaculiza inscripcion de venezolanos en Registro Electoral afirman ONG Efecto Cocuyo Leon Rafael 25 January 2018 Adelanto de sufragios acorta plazos de jornadas del RE El Nacional Retrieved 9 February 2018 Parlamento Europeo rechaza las elecciones presidenciales por considerarlas fraudulentas La Patilla in European Spanish 8 February 2018 Retrieved 10 February 2018 Eurocamara pide la suspension inmediata del proceso ilegitimo del 20May en Venezuela La Patilla in European Spanish 3 May 2018 Retrieved 4 May 2018 Web El Nacional 23 February 2018 Estos paises votaron a favor de la resolucion de la OEA sobre Venezuela Retrieved 21 May 2018 EFE 23 February 2018 La OEA insta a Maduro a cancelar las elecciones presidenciales de abril Retrieved 21 May 2018 Wyss Jim 7 February 2018 Solo el 29 de los venezolanos planea votar en las elecciones presidenciales El Nuevo Herald Retrieved 14 February 2018 Seis paises reunidos por G 20 desconocen el proceso ilegitimo de Venezuela La Patilla in European Spanish 21 May 2018 Retrieved 21 May 2018 ROMERO VALENTIN 26 January 2018 TSJ ordena al CNE excluir a la MUD del proceso de validacion El Universal in Spanish Archived from the original on 27 January 2018 Retrieved 28 January 2018 La ostentosa fiesta navidena del TSJ en medio de la crisis mas grande del pais NTN24 15 December 2018 Retrieved 11 May 2019 Christian Zerpa juez afin a Maduro huye a Estados Unidos CNN in European Spanish 9 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 EC Redaccion 6 January 2019 Magistrado venezolano que deserto a EE UU esta dispuesto a contar todo lo que sabe El Comercio in Spanish Retrieved 20 January 2019 Magistrado Christian Zerpa huyA a EEUU No quiero que Maduro se juramente Efecto Cocuyo efectococuyo com 6 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Las confesiones mA s polA c micas del exmagistrado Christian Zerpa en Orlando El Pitazo in European Spanish 7 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Exmagistrado Christian Zerpa destaco que Moreno y Gorrin estan asociados en corrupcion En la Agenda 2001 com ve www 2001 com ve Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Tribunal Supremo de Justicia Venezuela Archived from the original on 2014 08 19 Retrieved 2020 01 29 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w http www justicia net noticias id 463 amp accion detalle dead link http www eluniversal com 2006 06 09 pol art 09104A bare URL http 190 9 128 170 index php nacionales 5866 Juramentados 20tres 20nuevos 20magistrados 20del 20Tribunal 20Supremo 20de 20Justicia bare URL a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Informe21 a b c d e f Ley Org nica de la Corte Suprema de Justicia Legislaci n Archived from the original on 2001 02 20 a b c d e f LEY ORG NICA DEL TRIBUNAL SUPREMO DE JUSTICIA DE LA REP BLICA BOLIVARIANA DE VENEZUELA Archived from the original on 2004 06 19 a b Magistrados www tsj gov ve Archived from the original on 20 February 2001 Retrieved 15 January 2022 http www tsj gov ve informacion notasdeprensa notasdeprensa asp codigo 11663 dead link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Magistrados TSJ www tsj gov ve Archived from the original on 8 December 2013 Retrieved 15 January 2022 Falleci el magistrado y exrector del CNE Oscar Le n Uzc tegui Nacional y Pol tica Archived from the original on 2014 09 25 Magistrado del TSJ huyo de Venezuela para colaborar con la justicia 6 January 2019 http www eluniversal com 2004 06 22 pol ava 22A469989 bare URL En Gaceta destitucion del magistrado Aponte Aponte Ultimas Noticias Archived from the original on 2016 03 07 Al menos 27 muertos en ataques rusos en el este de Ucrania Eluniversal com 17 March 2022 Retrieved 2022 03 20 Corruption by Country Territory Venezuela Transparency International Retrieved 26 February 2014 World Report 2012 Venezuela Human Rights Watch 22 January 2012 Retrieved 18 March 2014 a b Hawkins Kirk A 2010 Venezuela s Chavismo and populism in comparative perspective 1 publ ed New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521765039 Venezuela s Lame Duck Congress Names New Supreme Court Justices Bloomberg 23 December 2015 Retrieved 15 January 2019 External links editTribunal Supremo de Justicia web site in Spanish magistrados in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Supreme Tribunal of Justice Venezuela amp oldid 1189617295, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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