In a major development that has stirred political discussion across Belize, the high-profile cybercrime prosecution against former United Democratic Party (UDP) Deputy Chairman Alberto August has been formally terminated, bringing an abrupt end to a case long dogged by accusations of political motive.
The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) issued a formal order to Belize law enforcement to halt all legal proceedings against August, a directive that Belize Police Department has publicly confirmed it received. As part of the order closure, all evidence and personal property seized during the investigation – including August’s mobile phones, which the former party leader had been battling to recover for nearly 30 days – will be returned to him.
The entire case traces back to just over one month ago, on May 30, when August was taken into custody under Section 15(4) of Belize’s Cybercrime Act. The arrest followed a criminal complaint filed by current Home Affairs Minister Oscar Mira, who is currently under cabinet suspension pending an investigation. The offending content at the center of the case was a Facebook post authored by August that mocked Mira’s public response to the high-profile murder of Dr. Naun Bonilla.
Unlike many defendants facing criminal cyber charges, August never attempted to distance himself from the post. From the moment of his arrest, he openly acknowledged creating the content and maintained he stood by every word. He spent 28 hours behind bars before securing release on station bail, a process that launched a weeks-long public fight to clear his name.
From the earliest stages of the case, August’s legal representation, lead attorney Michael Peyrefitte, pushed back aggressively against the charges, framing the arrest as nothing more than political retaliation dressed up as legitimate law enforcement. In one of his earliest statements on the case, Peyrefitte argued that the prosecution was disproportionate, noting that criminal custody was an extreme response to a single social media post.
The termination of charges comes against a backdrop of growing political turmoil for the complainant, Minister Mira. Weeks before the DPP’s order, Mira was sidelined from his cabinet position after allegations of procurement irregularities tied to his family members emerged. The scandal, dubbed “Mira Millions” by local political observers, has already triggered a full government audit. Ahead of the dropped charges, August described the unfolding scandal in a June 23 interview as having “stirred an ant’s nest” of scrutiny around the growing allegations against the suspended minister.
