Federal Prosecutor Gerardo Pollicita, with Judge Ariel Lijo presiding, has summoned four women listed as creditors for dollar-linked loans tied to two properties of the official in the Buenos Aires neighborhood of Caballito. In other words, the attempt is to go beyond mere registration and get to the economic heart of the operations. The case has been heating up for days as it no longer revolves solely around the formal existence of assets, but around the rate at which the official's assets expanded since coming to power. In this vein, the prosecutor's measures show a clear direction: to reconstruct the complete sequence of acquisitions, mortgages, creditors, and supporting documentation to determine if the asset evolution is compatible with his declared income or, on the contrary, if inconsistencies appear that warrant deepening the accusation. Two of them must appear this Thursday, the 9th, and the other two on Monday, the 13th, in a sequence that could begin to order, or further complicate, the official's asset explanation. The first to pass through the prosecutor's office will be Claudia Sbaboy and Beatriz Viegas, who are associated with the apartment on Miró Street, where Adorni currently lives with his family. This is compounded by the fact that in parallel, Lijo and Pollicita are also monitoring the episode of the private flight to Punta del Este, another case that keeps Adorni at the center of an increasingly uncomfortable judicial and political front. In the federal courts, no one yet dares to anticipate conclusions. This data had already raised alarms because most of the operation was sustained by financing from private individuals and not by a traditional bank loan, a legal modality but inevitably more exposed to judicial scrutiny when it comes to a top-level official. Adriana Mónica Nechevenko, the notary for Adorni. The second block of summoned individuals includes Graciela Isabel Molina de Cancio and Victoria María José Cancio, mother and daughter, who appear as creditors for another mortgage of $100,000 on the property on Asamblea Street, linked to the official's and his wife's previous assets. According to the documentation known in the case, the purchase was certified on November 18, 2025, for a value of $230,000 and was backed by a private mortgage of $200,000, that is, close to 87% of the declared amount. Comodoro Py, April 8, 2026 - Total News Agency - TNA - The investigation for alleged illicit enrichment against the Chief of Cabinet, Manuel Adorni, escalated again this Wednesday with a series of testimonies pointing to the most sensitive core of the case: how he financed the purchase of his properties and the real level of consistency of the private mortgages behind those operations. The prosecution is seeking to detail under oath how these purchases were structured, who provided the money, how the guarantees were structured, and what documentation supported each step. For the ruling party, the problem now is not just the political cost of the revelations, but the risk that the accumulation of evidence may begin to give the case a density that is difficult to relativize. This temporal crossover is one of the aspects the prosecution is trying to unravel to precisely reconstruct the origin and application of the funds. Moreover, Wednesday's session began with another central testimony: that of the notary Adriana Mónica Nechevenko, who began testifying in the morning at Pollicita's prosecutor's office. Her role is especially sensitive because she intervened in several of the operations now under review: the purchase of the apartment on Miró Street, the mortgage on the Asamblea property, and the operation of the house in Indio Cuá. But it is admitted that the case has moved past the initial stage of paper collection to a more committed one: the direct testimonies of those who put their name, signature, or money in operations that now must be explained with rigor. In this area, the four summoned women and the notary who has already testified can provide the missing pieces to understand whether they were simple private loans or a much more complex asset architecture than has been attempted to be shown so far. According to information incorporated into the file, Molina de Cancio would have contributed $85,000 and Victoria Cancio another $15,000. A relevant point is that this mortgage is dated November 2024, the same time the purchase of the house in the Indio Cuá Golf Club in Exaltación de la Cruz was registered in the name of Bettina Angeletti.
Investigation into Chief of Cabinet Manuel Adorni Escalates
Federal Prosecutor summons four women linked to dollar loans for Chief of Cabinet Manuel Adorni's properties. The probe focuses on the financing sources for his purchases and the actual solidity of private mortgages, creating significant political and legal risks for his administration.