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News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 23, 2004
CARIBBEAN
AND SOUTH AMERICAN DRUG LORDS INDICTED AND MORE THAN 50 INDIVIDUALS
ARRESTED IN OPERATIONS BUSTED MANATEE AND DOUBLE TALK
DEA's
Caribbean Initiative Culminates in the Arrests of Key Members
of Cobos-Munoz and Maycock/Smith Drug Organizations
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DEA
Administrator Karen Tandy
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JUN 23 -
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Attorney General John Ashcroft, DEA Administrator
Karen Tandy
and
ONDCP Director John Walters today announced the indictment and arrest
of Colombian drug trafficker Elias Cobos-Munoz, the reputed head
of one of the largest drug trafficking and drug transportation organizations
based in Colombia and Jamaica, and more than 50 other high-level
traffickers.
Over the past several days, agents of the DEA, assisted by their
foreign law enforcement counterparts, executed arrest warrants for
the members
of the Cobos organization in Colombia, Panama, Jamaica, the Bahamas,
the United States and Canada. This series of indictments and related
arrests represents the successful culmination of DEA's "Caribbean
Initiative," a multi-faceted attack on all levels of certain major
trafficking organizations operating in the Caribbean corridor. Operations "Busted
Manatee" and "Double Talk" are the result of a 29
month-long international Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force
(OCDETF)
investigation into cocaine and marijuana trafficking, conducted by
the DEA and other federal, state and local law enforcement, working
with partners in six foreign countries.
In October 2003,
Elias Cobos-Munoz was placed on the Consolidated Priority Organization
Target (CPOT) List, a list that identifies those most responsible for
the nation's drug supply, and the most significant drug and money laundering
organizations threatening the United States. The CPOT List is overseen
by the OCDETF Program, a nationwide multi-agency task force that combines
the resources of seven law enforcement agencies from the Departments
of Justice, Homeland Security and Treasury, along with state and local
law enforcement.
According to the
superseding indictment unsealed today, the Cobos drug organization,
which was the focus of Operation "Busted Manatee," allegedly
imported large shipments of cocaine through transhipment points in
the Caribbean and distributed that cocaine in the Miami area and elsewhere.
Cobos' cocaine organization is alleged to have been operating since
about July 2000. The Cobos organization allegedly affiliated itself
with an organization headed by Melvin Maycock and Pedro Smith. Maycock,
Smith and 19 associates were targeted as part of Operation " Double
Talk." According to a separate indictment unsealed today, the
Maycock/Smith organization allegedly transported cocaine and marijuana
via aircraft and boat into the United States. According to the indictments,
both organizations shipped multi-ton quantities of illegal drugs into
the United States. The aggregate gross proceeds generated from the
cocaine and marijuana imported and distributed in the United States
by these organizations allegedly exceeds $275 million. According to
the Cobos indictment, proceeds of cocaine sales were laundered through
financial institutions in New York and elsewhere. The money laundering
activities allegedly served to promote and facilitate the illegal drug
trafficking activities of the organization.
DEA's "Caribbean
Initiative" strategically targeted the Cobos and Maycock/Smith
organizations, as well as other Colombian North Coast cocaine organizations,
by attacking the entire scope of their alleged drug and money laundering
operations, from the Colombian sources of supply to the transportation
cells in the Caribbean corridor to the distribution and financial operations
throughout the United States. Operations " Busted Manatee" and "Double
Talk" are the final two multi-jurisdictional investigations comprising
the Caribbean Initiative. The Special Operations Division, which developed
this Initiative, has now coordinated eight successful multi-national,
OCDETF operations under this comprehensive, regional approach to international
narcotics enforcement. The overall Caribbean Initiative has resulted
in the indictment and arrest of four of the 41 "most wanted" drug
traffickers: CPOT targets Jose Maria Henao-Mejia, Jose Arismendi Almonte-Pena,
Jean Jasme-Eliobert, and, today, Elias Cobos Munoz. More than 330 drug
associates also have been arrested as a result of the operations. The
Henao-Mejia organization, moreover, is one of eight CPOT organizations
to have been completely dismantled in 2003 as a result of enforcement
efforts.
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Attorney
General John Ashcroft |
"One by one,
we are dismantling the most dangerous drug cartels that poison our
citizens and communities. By targeting these organizations, we are
cutting off the flow of illegal drugs into America and helping secure
the health and welfare of our citizens," said Attorney General
John Ashcroft. "Operations Busted Manatee and Double Talk are
an example of our targeted strategy in the global fight against illegal
drugs. Working in partnership, the United States, Colombia, the Bahamas,
Jamaica, Canada, and Panama have achieved a substantial victory in
eliminating a major source of narcotics to our nation. I thank all
the foreign law enforcement agencies whose tireless efforts have contributed
to the success of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Caribbean Initiative
and to today's indictments."
To date, Operations
Busted Manatee and Double Talk, in particular, have resulted in the
seizure of 6,539 kilograms of cocaine, 2,665 pounds of marijuana, and
more than $25 million in U.S. currency and related assets. Importantly,
law enforcement authorities from the Bahamas, Colombia, Jamaica, Panama
and Canada assisted in locating and arresting defendants in those countries
on provisional arrest warrants at the request of U.S. authorities.
Moreover, more than 55 search and seizure warrants were executed in
the United States and abroad in conjunction with the arrests.
"These are
the modern day Pirates of the Caribbean who prey on the vulnerable,
plunder for profit, and intimidate through violence," said DEA
Administrator Karen Tandy. "The trafficking organizations we have
dismantled were responsible for distributing three metric tons of cocaine
in this country every month, amounting to at least 10 to 12 percent
of the U.S. cocaine supply.. We are seeking extradition of these alleged
criminals to the United States so that they will answer to the courts
in the same land where they profited from poisoning America's children."
The majority of
the indicted defendants will be brought to trial in the Southern District
of Florida, whose U.S. Attorney, Marcos Daniel Jiménez, along
with his narcotics team, has led this effort. The superseding indictment
against the Cobos supply organization, unsealed today, was filed in
the Southern District of Florida on June 1, 2004. The indictment specifically
charges defendants Elias Cobos-Munoz, Hernan Cobos-Munoz, Miguel Umbacia-Salgado,
Jose Antonio Herrera-Hernandez and 17 other key associates of the organization
with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute 5 kilograms or
more of cocaine, conspiracy to import 5 kilograms or more of cocaine,
and conspiracy to commit various money laundering offenses. The indictment
also charges various defendants with substantive money laundering offenses.
According to the indictment, this organization is believed to have
generated more than $145 million in proceeds from its cocaine trafficking
activities.
"The Caribbean
Initiative has caused a system shock to some of the operations of some
major cocaine and marijuana traffickers," said John Walters, Director
of National Drug Control Policy. "Cases like these disrupt the
illegal drug market and magnify the effect of Colombia's one-third
cut in cocaine production over the past two years. Taken together,
we are causing a major reduction in the flow of cocaine to the United
States."
The related indictment
against the Maycock/Smith transportation organization was returned
on April 1, 2004, in the Southern District of Florida. and charges
defendants Melvin Maycock, Pedro Smith and 19 other key associates
of the Maycock/Smith organization with conspiracy to import 5 kilograms
or more of cocaine and 1000 pounds or more of marijuana, and conspiracy
to possess with intent to distribute 5 kilograms or more of cocaine
and 1000 pounds or more of marijuana. Further, Maycock and other defendants
are charged in the same indictment with aiding and abetting in the
possession with intent to distribute of cocaine, aiding and abetting
in the importation into the United States of cocaine, and other drug-related
offenses.
The defendants
face a maximum of life imprisonment and a maximum fine of $4 million
if convicted on the drug conspiracy charges. Each faces a maximum of
twenty (20) years' imprisonment if convicted on the money laundering
offenses. The money laundering charges also carry a maximum fine of
$500,000 or twice the value of the property involved in the offenses,
whichever is greater.
In addition to
the indictments filed in Florida, an indictment was returned on February
5, 2004, by a federal grand jury sitting in the District of Columbia
charging Darren Ferguson, one of the pilots for the Cobos organization,
with drug trafficking. Ferguson is a Bahamian National, residing in
Haiti, who allegedly flew bulk loads of cocaine from Colombia to Jamaica
and the Bahamas for further delivery to the United States. Ferguson
has been indicted by the Criminal Division's Narcotic and Dangerous
Drug Section. Finally, criminal money laundering charges are also currently
pending in the Southern District of New York and in the Western District
of New York against other alleged associates of the Cobos organization.
The investigations
were conducted by agents and analysts from the Drug Enforcement Administration,
the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Internal Revenue
Service, the United States Coast Guard, the South Florida Money Laundering
Task Force, the New York City Police Department, the Royal Bahamas
Police Force, Queen's Counsel of the Bahamas, the Colombian National
Police, the Colombian Fiscal's Office, the Jamaican Constabulary and
Defense Force, the Jamaican Prosecutor's Office, the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police, Department of Justice Canada, Her Majesty's Customs
and Excise, the Panama Police, and the Panama Fiscal's Office. Prosecutors
from the United States Attorneys Offices in the Southern District of
Florida, the Southern District of New York, the Eastern District of
New York and the Western District of New York, as well as from the
New York Office of the Special Narcotics Prosecutor, supported these
investigations. The operations were coordinated by the Special Operations
Division, a DEA-led multi-agency program.
The charges contained
in the indictment are allegations and the defendants are presumed innocent
unless and until proven guilty in a court of law.
The following foreign
and domestic agencies participated in Operations Double Talk and Busted
Manatee:
International
Royal Bahamas Police
Force
Queen's Counsel of the Bahamas
Colombian National Police
Colombian Fiscal's Office
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Department of Justice Canada
Jamaican Constabulary and Defense Force
Jamaican Prosecutor's Office
Her Majesty's Customs and Excise (United Kingdom)
Panama Judicial Police
Panama Fiscal's Office
Domestic
Drug Enforcement
Administration - Miami/New
York/Nassau/Cartagena/Kingston/Bogota/
Ottawa/Panama
Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement - New York and Miami
Internal Revenue Service - Miami
Drug Enforcement Administration - Special Operations Division
U.S. Attorney's Offices for the Southern District of Florida, Southern
District of New York, Eastern District of New York, and Western
District of New York
U.S. Department of Justice, Criminal Division, Narcotic and Dangerous
Drug Section
South Florida Money Laundering Strike Force
Florida Highway Patrol
Broward County Sheriff's Office
Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office
Homestead Police Department
Margate Police Department
Florida Game and Fish Commission
New York Police Department
New York Office of the Special Narcotics Prosecutor
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