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News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 26, 2003
Drug
Defendant Sentenced To Life In Federal Prison In Connection With Largest
Ever Cocaine Seizure In Massachusetts History
Boston, MA
.A
Westport, Massachusetts man was sentenced today in federal court to a
life term of imprisonment for his leadership role in a drug conspiracy.
Investigation of the case resulted in the seizure of a 260 kilogram shipment
of cocaine - the largest ever seizure in Massachusetts history.
Mark R. Trouville,
Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, New
England Field Division, United States Attorney Michael J. Sullivan, Steven
J. Farquharson, District Director of the Immigration and Naturalization
Service in New England; Colonel Thomas J. Foley, Superintendent of the
Massachusetts State Police; Michael Healy, Chief of the Westport Police
Department; John M. Sousa, Chief of the Fall River Police Department;
and Arthur J. Kelly, Chief of the New Bedford Police Department; announced
today that Chief U.S. District Judge William G. Young sentenced RAFAEL
YEJE-CABRERA, age 27, formerly of 20 LePire Avenue, Westport, Massachusetts,
to life imprisonment, without the possibility of probation or parole.
Chief Judge Young also imposed a $16 million fine.
"The life sentence
handed down today by the Court clearly sends the message that trafficking
in drugs can be a life changing event," said DEA Special Agent in
Charge Mark Trouville. "Life behind bars is appropriate for those
traffickers who deal in death and destruction. We will continue to aggressively
pursue those who bring drugs into our communities."
In imposing sentence
of YEJE-CABRERA, Chief Judge Young stated, "The illegal conduct here
was massive and without legal restraint. The enormity of the crime staggers
the imagination, and it kills as certainly as direct assaults on the person."
In weighing whether to assess an additional penalty against YEJE-CABRERA
for threatening the witness, Chief Judge Young decided not to enhance
his sentence under the Sentencing Guidelines for obstruction of justice,
but rather to take YEJE-CABRERA's conduct into account when deciding the
length of the sentence. The government had offered evidence that YEJE-CABRERA
had repeatedly threatened the witness who had decided to testify against
him, in one case suggesting that if anyone talked, "bodies will drop."
On December 12, 2002,
following a six-week trial, a jury convicted YEJE-CABRERA of conspiring
to distribute cocaine, and specifically found that YEJE-CABRERA had conspired
to distribute in excess of 260 kilograms. YEJE-CABRERA was also convicted
of paying a $100,000 bribe to an agent posing as a corrupt INS agent in
an attempt to get out of INS custody and to protect his drug trafficking
organization and of attempting to possess 260 kilograms of cocaine with
the intent to distribute it.
The jury also convicted
YEJE-CABRERA's three co-defendants: Wilfredo Perez, age 35, Nerys Cabrera,
age 48, and William Olivero, age 25, of conspiring to distribute cocaine.
All three defendants are pending sentencing.
Of the 21 individuals
originally indicted on December 21, 2001, fifteen have previously pleaded
guilty and are awaiting sentencing. One defendant, Jason Pacheco, age
26, is scheduled for trial on March 3, 2003.
The evidence at
trial showed that YEJE-CABRERA and his partners, including his mother,
father, two uncles, a brother and a cousin, received four or five truckloads
of cocaine and marijuana from a supplier in Arizona. The cocaine was distributed
from July 2000 through December 21, 2001, in Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
New York and Atlanta. The evidence also showed that the last truckload,
which was seized by the Massachusetts State Police on December 8, 2001,
contained 260 kilograms of cocaine. Law enforcement agents were able to
track the truck from New York to New Bedford, Massachusetts based on conversation
intercepted pursuant to court-authorized wiretaps of five of the organizations
telephones. That seizure of cocaine-with a street value estimated at 20.6
million-was the largest seizure of cocaine in Massachusetts's history.
The case was investigated
by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, the Immigration and Naturalization
Service, the Massachusetts State Police, the Department of Justice, Office
of Inspector General, and the Westport, Fall River, and New Bedford Police
Departments.
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