Buenos Aires, November 10, 2025 – Total News Agency-TNA – The 'Notebooks of Bribes' case has taken a new turn with the emergence of a mysterious DVD that, according to a lawyer linked to the case, would contain recordings by driver Oscar Centeno. Although the footage would not provide new elements to the case, its reappearance puts back in the spotlight one of the most controversial figures of recent years: a media entrepreneur with a past in oversight bodies, ties to intelligence services, and a history of connections linking Kirchnerism with the interests of Caracas and Tehran. Robles declared before prosecutor Carlos Stornelli's office that she delivered the DVD last October, alleging that Bindi had acquired and viewed it in the offices of Extra TV, a communication channel that Bindi himself controls and which is pointed to as a Chavista and pro-Russian line. Bindi, for his part, denied having purchased or received recordings and denied that Robles had been his partner. However, the lawyer confirmed that the businessman viewed the material on a computer he owned and that, after returning it, the compact disc with the videos remained in the equipment. His Extra TV channel, which airs Chavist-oriented content, has just announced a 'political tourism' program to Cuba, with trips to destinations considered 'blocked' by the West, such as Nicaragua and Venezuela. His passage through the General Audit Office during the management of Alessandra Minnicelli, De Vido's wife, and his work in the Ministry of Security when it was headed by Aníbal Fernández consolidated his closeness to the darkest sectors of the state apparatus. His name is also associated with that of Allan Bogado, the supposed intelligence agent that prosecutor Alberto Nisman pointed to as the link between Argentine officials and Iranian intermediaries linked to the AMIA bombing. Furthermore, Bindi maintains ties with figures from the Bolivarian environment: he was an advisor to the Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA in Argentina and a personal friend of former President Evo Morales. Both shared a law firm and participated in the defense of Lázaro Báez, while Robles came to accuse financier Leonardo Fariña of offering 'scripted' statements against his former clients.
Mysterious DVD Emerges in Argentine Bribery Case
The 'Notebooks of Bribes' case gains a new twist with a mysterious DVD allegedly containing recordings that put controversial media tycoon Franco Bindi back in the spotlight.