Lucía Hiriart (1925-2021) Former First Lady of Chile
Lucía Hiriart (1925-2021) Former First Lady of Chile dies at 16 December 2021
Name | Lucía Hiriart |
Age | 96 Years |
Birth | 10 December 1923 |
Birthplace | Antofagasta, Chile |
Death | 16 December 2021 |
Deathplace | Santiago Metropolitan, Chile |
Profession | First Lady of Chile |
Parents | Osvaldo Hiriart Corvalán, Lucía Rodríguez Auda de Hiriart |
Children | 5 Children – Lucía Pinochet(D), Jacqueline Marie Pinochet(D), María Verónica Pinochet(D), Augusto Osvaldo Pinochet(S), Marco Antonio Pinochet(S) Daughter(D)/Son(S) |
Burial | Burial Details Unknown |
Nationality | Chilean |
Lucía Hiriart First Lady of Chile (1925-2021)
María Lucía Hiriart Rodríguez she was also know as Lucía Hiriart de Pinochet, she was the First Lady of Chile from December 17, 1974 until March 11, 1990 and the widow of former president Augusto Pinochet.
Early life and education
Hiriart was born into a wealthy family in Antofagasta, on 10 December 1923 to Osvaldo Hiriart Corvalán, a lawyer, former Radical Party senator, and former Interior Minister of president Juan Antonio Ríos; and Lucía Rodríguez Auda de Hiriart, of Basque French descent.[citation needed] She was a direct descendant of Dominique Joseph Garat.[citation needed]
Legal accusations
In 2005, Hiriart was sued by Chile’s Internal Tax Service (“Servicio de Impuestos Internos”) over tax evasion totaling US$2.35 million and was arrested with her son Marco Antonio a few months later. In October 2007, she was arrested again in the frame of the Riggs case, along with Pinochet’s five children and 17 other people (including two generals, one of his ex-lawyers and his ex-secretary) on charges of embezzlement and use of false passports. They were accused of having illegally transferred $27m (£13.2m) to foreign bank accounts during Pinochet’s rule.
In August 2016, Hiriart was accused of using funds from her NGO, CEMA Chile. During Pinochet’s time under house arrest in London, two separate transfers were made from Chile to herself, in 1998 and 1999. Each transfer was totaled to be $50,000. According to her prosecutors, the money was used to pay for Pinochet’s living expenses.Hiriart was sued by two Communist Party lawmakers from Chile, Hugo Gutierrez and Karol Cariola, along with the Relatives of Disappeared Detainees Group (AFDD) for misuse of public assets owned by CEMA Chile for misappropriation of public assets, tax fraud, and embezzlement. CEMA Chile is accused of illegally acquiring more than 30 properties for more than $18 million. During the investigation, Hiriart resigned following a news report from November 2015 stating that she had used sales and rentals of public lands from CEMA Chile for her own benefit.
Personal life and death
On 30 January 1943, Hiriart married Augusto Pinochet Ugarte, then a Chilean army Infantry School lieutenant. They had five children – three daughters (Inés Lucía, María Verónica, and Jacqueline Marie) and two sons (Augusto Osvaldo and Marco Antonio).
On 30 December 2018, Hiriart was hospitalized after falling at her home in Santiago and fracturing her arm and several ribs.
Hiriart died from heart failure in Santiago on 16 December 2021, at the age of 98.