Money for Questions Answered about TeleSUR, The Ministry of Popular Power for Communication and Information, The Public Ministry, and the Office of the Comptroller General of the Republic

Independent  Journalist and Media Strategist Needs Assistance

Greetings,

I have evidence of gross incompetence and corruption at the executive level of TeleSUR, but I am not sure how to obtain more information before I send a full report to the Venezuelan government.

If you can help me find the right contacts such that I can provide my report of gross incompetence at TeleSUR and get the job at TeleSUR English, I will send you money for your assistance.

I will specify my requests now, and then explain about my efforts at completing these two tasks as the questions I need to be answered and the way I’m seeking to get them answered will make some wonder.

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Helping Me Report Corruption at TeleSUR English

Because of Arts. 28 y 143 CRBV o 10 de la Ley Contra la Corrupción I know that I can request information on public enterprises.

I requested information from the Ministry of Popular Power for Communication and Information on TeleSUR and I have requested information from Helga Malve, the Director of TeleSUR Communications. Neither has responded to me.

Who should I be contacting to get information related to TeleSUR’s budget and internal reporting documents?

Who can provide me legal assistance to help me formulate specific charges against TeleSUR Executives once I have reviewed these and found additional problems other than those I have already discovered?

Though Orlando Perez, currently assistant director of TeleSUR, once boasted of his success as Director of El Telegrafo in Aporrea in 2012, in 2017 he was said to be responsible for millions of dollars in waste.

Currently, I can show that he and Patricia Villegas are wasting money again, but only a portion of what I imagine they have wasted. I want to make a comprehensive report and want to make sure I’m citing the right statues and articles before I submit my official denunciation to the Ministerio Publica, Contraloria General de la Republica, and Transparencia Venezuela.

Rationale for Actions

Reporting Corruption at TeleSUR

Outing government corruption in any form is a public duty.

Without a doubt, I have evidence of malversacion (art 56) by the executive leadership at TeleSUR. Their website is and has been a disaster for years. However I’m not 100% sure who the parties involved were and won’t be able to tell until I can make a more informed review of internal documents.

Based on the strategy of the TeleSUR, I strongly believe that ocultamiento, inutilizacion, retencion, alteracion o destruccion de libros or documentos (Art. 78) has also occurred, but won’t know for sure once this is clarified for me in legal terms and I have the proper documentation.

I’ve requested that Helga Malve provide me with information promised by Patricia Villegas related to Cuidadano TeleSUR – the failed public support campaign for the organization. She has not told me how much money was collected nor what are the successes that Patricia Villegas speaks of in this promotional video.

 

 

 

 

 

 

As I wrote about in more detail here, the now former Director of TeleSUR English Pablo Vivanco paid for fake social media reactions; then lied about the cause of their Facebook Account going down to two of his long-time associates that then reported on this. I want to know, did TeleSUR pay these men to comment on a fake report? If so, this may fall under pagos fraudulentos (80.2) as the hoped for viral spread of this story never occurred or abuso de funciones (art 67), because the “reporters” used were friends of Pablo Vivanco’s.

The next two acts are related, and I’m not sure what the proper delito code so I group them together:

I have obtained numerous reports from TeleSUR contractors for non-payment or very late payment. I would like to look at the payment logs to determine if this is perhaps part of an effort by those who don’t want TeleSUR’s mission to succeed by alienating workers that would otherwise assist TeleSUR’s mission.

I have solicited numerous reports from TeleSUR employees as to a very high turnover rate, I’d like to look at the HR data to determine if indeed it is true and if so try to find out if this is perhaps part of an effort by those who don’t want TeleSUR’s mission to succeed by alienating workers that would otherwise assist TeleSUR’s mission.

All these issues lead me to believe that there is an intentional effort to subvert the mission of TeleSUR and TeleSUR English. Before the 4-year anniversary of TeleSUR English, I would like to bring some transparency to these issues and those causing them so that they can be addressed.

If you can give me information on this, please email me.

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Closing Thoughts

TeleSUR and TeleSUR English, which is paid for supposedly in Venezuelans name, produces graphics that lie; tells stories that no one wants to read; at a level of English that no one wants to read; on a website that barely functions; is filled with pop-up advertising to annoy readers; has employees back-linking to in places no one wants to read; spends money needlessly on apps no one uses; that don’t even function; which just shows links to YouTube videos no one watches; or comments on; leading to no subsequent change of psychological identification or change in behavior; except being liked and shared by people that don’t exist. The grand vision described in the interviews of Patricia Villegas is more like a listing of her lies.

One thought on “Money for Questions Answered about TeleSUR, The Ministry of Popular Power for Communication and Information, The Public Ministry, and the Office of the Comptroller General of the Republic”

  1. The U.S. crossing out the 2nd Amendment is more likely than you getting a job at TeleSUR.

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