The Haitian police has accused a former Supreme Court judge of meeting Colombian mercenaries accused of killing President Jovenel Moise, suggesting her deep links to the assassination that rocked the world in early July.

Earlier this week, the police issued an arrest warrant for Wendelle Coq-Thelot, a former Supreme Court judge who was removed from office with two other judges earlier in February this year when Moise alleged that a coup was being planned against him.

The former judge has not yet commented on the issue and her whereabouts remain unknown, Reuters reported.

The assassination of Moise has plunged the Western hemisphere’s poorest nation deeper into chaos. An international manhunt has been launched to find mercenaries and the murder masterminds across the Americas.

Inspector General Marie Michelle Verrier, the spokesperson for the National Police of Haiti, said that the mercenaries arrested in the wake of the assassination disclosed that they had met with Coq-Thelot.

“Several of them have indicated that they have been to Mrs. Coq’s home twice. These people gave to (police) details of documents signed during the meetings at Mrs. Coq’s home,” Reuters quoted Verrier as saying.

The police has raided the house of the former judge who, according to them, remains at large.

Many questions remain over who was behind the assassination this month and how the killers gained access to the president’s home. Haitian officials blamed a squad of mostly Colombian mercenaries, three of whom were killed by police.