Former Argentina president Cristina Kirchner, who has been accused of receiving tens of millions of dollars in bribes during her term in office, will go on trial for corruption, a federal court confirmed on Thursday.
Kirchner is accused of running a criminal network related to the infamous "corruption notebooks" scandal -- revealed through the meticulous records of millions of dollars in bribes paid by businessmen to government officials kept by a ministerial chauffeur.
The court accepted a request by judge Claudio Bonadio that Kirchner, now a senator, be held in pre-trial detention, but her partial parliamentary immunity prevents that from happening.
She is protected by lawmakers' immunity from imprisonment, but not from prosecution.
In August, the Senate voted to partially lift her immunity so that investigators could search her three luxury homes -- but unless it is entirely lifted, she cannot be jailed even if found guilty.
The court also seized 1.5 billion pesos (USD 38 million) worth of her assets and ordered former planning minister Julio de Vido to be prosecuted for his role in the illicit association.
Several other people, former junior ministers and businessmen, were ordered to be released from detention but will still be prosecuted for bribery.
Both Kirchner, 65, and her late husband and predecessor as president, Nestor, are suspected of having received millions of dollars in bribes from businessmen in exchange for large-scale public works contracts.
The payments were documented by ministerial chauffeur Oscar Centeno in notebooks seized by investigators.
Nestor Kirchner, who died of a heart attack in 2010, was president from 2003-07, with his wife then serving consecutive terms until 2015.
More than a dozen former government officials and 30 top businessman are implicated in the case, first reported by La Nacion newspaper on August 1. Prosecutor Carlos Stornelli has said a total of USD 160 million in bribes was handed over between 2005 and 2015.
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