What began as a legitimate 2018 appointment to lead the Cibao Regional Cancer Institute (IORC) ended in a forced expulsion seven years later, after the former leader refused to step down following the end of his two-year term and now faces criminal charges for diverting public funds meant for vulnerable low-income cancer patients.
Héctor Antonio Lora Cruceta was formally named president of both IORC’s Board of Directors and its governing Board of Trustees on October 9, 2018, with a statutory term limit of just two years. When his tenure expired in 2020, Lora Cruceta refused to cede power, clinging to his position for an additional five years beyond his legal mandate. By October 2025, governing body officials had exhausted all administrative avenues to remove him, prompting the Board of Trustees to call an Extraordinary General Assembly on October 6 that year. During the meeting, members voted unanimously to install a new, legitimate Board of Directors led by Dr. Iván Alexis Mercader Mateo.
Rather than comply with the democratic decision of the board, Lora Cruceta — who stands accused of heading a criminal network that siphoned off millions of pesos in funding for low-income cancer care — launched a barrage of legal appeals to block the transfer of power. His obstruction dragged on for weeks, until authorities launched Operation Oncol4, arresting Lora Cruceta and his remaining allied board members and initiating criminal proceedings against the group.
Even after the unanimous vote to replace his leadership, Lora Cruceta and four other former board members — including his ex-wife Dilcia Vargas Sánchez, Thelma Sadi Rodríguez Báez, and Yanet Rodríguez — continued their efforts to reverse the outcome of the Extraordinary General Assembly. On October 23, 2025, the group filed a lawsuit seeking to invalidate the October 6 assembly, falsely claiming they still held legal authority to represent the institute. One week later, they filed a second civil suit to suspend the assembly’s results and request court-ordered asset sequestration of the board.
In the most damaging act of obstruction, on November 7, the ousted former leaders used an official bailiff’s order to block the transfer of the Cibaeño Cancer Foundation’s financial securities to major local banking institutions including BHD Bank, Banco de Reservas, and the La Altagracia Cooperative, as well as to other authorized entities. This action severely disrupted the day-to-day operations of the non-profit cancer institute, which relies on consistent access to its funds to deliver care to vulnerable patients.
It was not until October 15, 2025, that the legitimate new leadership was able to access the institute’s facilities. After repeated attempts to negotiate a voluntary transfer failed and Lora Cruceta and his allies refused to vacate the Board of Trustees’ premises, officials were forced to request intervention from state security forces to physically remove the illegal incumbents. Court documents supporting the use of coercive measures note that this intervention was unavoidable: up to that point, the ousted former leadership had actively blocked the legitimately elected October 6 board — comprising Mercader Mateo, Dr. Naly Antonia Cruz Ventura, Nicolás Edmundo de Jesús Guillén Guzmán, Edilma Inés Rodríguez Vargas, and Radhamés José Rosado Sánchez — from taking up their official posts and beginning their work.
