Mexico ambassador resigns after book theft allegation

MEXICO CITY (AP) — A Mexican ambassador who was called home after allegedly attempting to steal a book from a shop in Argentina has resigned, officials said, and relatives reported he may have suffered behavioral changes due to a brain tumor.

On Monday, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador called the case “painful”and "sad".

Officials said late Sunday that Ambassador Óscar Ricardo Valero had resigned for health health reasons, and Mexico's Foreign Relations Secretary, Marcelo Ebrard, wrote in his Twitter account that Valero "is undergoing neurological treatment".

Mexican news media reported that Valero allegedly also tried to take a T-shift without paying from a shop at the airport after he was called back to Mexico in early December.

At the request of relatives, Ebrard's office published a doctor's letter saying Valero had been treated for a brain tumor that may have altered his behavior.

Ebrard described Valero, 77, a career diplomat with a long pedigree in Mexico’s left, as “a great person."

A letter by Dr. Ana Luisa Sosa states that Valero was diagnosed with a brain tumor in 2012 that resulted in “behavioral changes.”

While the tumor was surgically removed years ago, the letter says behavior changes in the last 1 1/2 years — including traffic tickets and “difficulties in personal relationships” — suggests the tumor or its after-effects may have returned or worsened.

Video of the bookstore incident earlier this year appears to show the diplomat tucking the book — reportedly worth about $9.50 — into a stack of papers he is holding and being stopped by security after passing a detector gate on the way out.

The incident is especially embarrassing given López Obrador’s main policy aim of promoting honesty among public servants.