Search warrant issued against Puerto Rico’s embattled governor

People take to the Las Americas Highway in San Juan, Puerto Rico, July 22, 2019 on day 9th of continuous protests demanding the resignation of Governor Ricardo Rosselló. – Protests erupted last week after the leak of hundreds of pages of text chats on the encrypted messaging app Telegram in which Rossello and 11 other male administration members criticize officials, politicians and journalists. In one exchange, chief financial officer Christian Sobrino makes homophobic references to Latin superstar Ricky Martin. In another, a mocking comment is made about bodies piled up in the morgue after Hurricane Maria, which left nearly 3,000 dead. (Photo by Eric Rojas / AFP)

MIAMI, FLA. (AFP) — Authorities in Puerto Rico have issued a search warrant against the US territory’s governor and 11 other men who exchanged derogatory chat messages about gays, hurricane victims and others, officials said Tuesday — the latest twist in a scandal engulfing the island’s leadership.

The release of those chats two weeks ago helped trigger huge street demonstrations demanding the resignation of Governor Ricardo Rossello, who has refused to step down as leader of the Caribbean island.

The search warrant was issued Monday, said Kelvin Carrasco of the Puerto Rico Justice Department.

Carrasco declined to say if the warrant has been carried out yet or what premises are named in it, only saying the probe is under way.

The newspaper El Nuevo Dia reported that the 12 men involved in the chat case have been ordered to surrender their cell phones. The paper quoted the Justice Department.

At least one of these officials or former officials has refused, the paper said.

Rossello is facing a full-blown political crisis over the chat scandal and corruption cases involving money that was supposed to help victims of Hurricane Maria, which devastated Puerto Rico in 2017 and killed nearly 3,000 people.

Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of San Juan Monday in the largest protest yet, demanding that Rossello step down. It lasted into the night.

At a smaller rally in front of the governor’s residence, police fired tear gas to disperse a crowd of hundreds.

Rossello said Sunday he would not seek re-election next year and would step down as leader of his party, but he refused to immediately resign.