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News
Release
April 26, 2004
78
Charged in United States, Colombia and Netherlands Antilles in International
Narcotics Conspiracy
APR
26 - DAVID N. KELLEY, the United States Attorney for the Southern
District of New York, ANTHONY PLACIDO, the Special Agent in Charge
of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s New York Office, and
JEROME M. HARRIS, the Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement
Administration's Carribean Division, announced today the unsealing
in Manhattan federal court of Indictments charging 15 people in the
United States, Colombia, and Curacao,Netherlands Antilles, with participating
in two separate international conspiracies to import heroin and cocaine
into the United States from Colombia via, among other places, the
Caribbean Island of Curacao, Netherlands Antilles.
The
arrests were the culmination of Operations Encore and Barehak, two
related investigations involving the transport of massive
amounts of narcotics that were manufactured in Colombia and imported
to the United States through various means, including by transshipment
through Curacao, Netherlands Antilles.
The unsealing of the two Indictments follows the arrests over the weekend
in the United States, Colombia and Curacao of approximately 30 defendants.
According to law
enforcement officials, these cases are the result of unprecedented
international cooperation between the Netherlands
Antilles, Colombia and the United States, and represent the first joint
investigations and prosecutions of large-scale narcotics trafficking
organizations operating in these three countries. The coordinated efforts
included simultaneous telephone intercepts in all three countries,permitting
law enforcement to root out all aspects of the organizations – from
the sources of supply in Colombia, to the transshippers in Curacao,
to the wholesale importers and distributors in the United States.
During the course
of these coordinated investigations, approximately 4,438 kilograms
of cocaine, 34 kilograms of heroin, 15
kilograms of methamphetamine, 484 kilograms of marijuana,$180,000 in
United States currency, 21 firearms, 7 vessels and businesses have
been seized, and the United States is seeking $43 million in asset
forfeiture from the defendants.
The Valencia Indictment
The United States
Indictment that has arisen out of Operation Barehak charges six defendants,
all of whom were
recently arrested in Curacao, Netherlands Antilles. According to the
Indictment, JAMES YEZID VALENCIA RUGELES the defendant, along with his
two sons, MARIO ALBERTO VALENCIA, and JAMES JESUS VALENCIA MUNEVAR, ran
a massive cocaine smuggling organization (the "Valencia Organization")
which received tons of cocaine in Curacao, which they then transported
northward, to St. Maarten, Netherlands Antilles, before eventual importation
into Puerto Rico and the continental United States.
According to the
Valencia Indictment, the Valencia Organization received its cocaine
after it traveled, by container ship
and high-speed motorboat, from the northern coasts of Venezuela and
Colombia (the northern coast of Venezuela is approximately 24 nautical
miles south of Curacao). The Valencia Indictment further stated that
in order to successfully import narcotics into Curacao, the Valencia
Organization paid corrupt law enforcement officials to provide security
for the Valencia Organization, including serving as look-outs in Curacao
when a shipment of cocaine was scheduled to arrive and providing information
to the Valencia Organization about law enforcement's interdiction efforts
so that the Valencia Organization could avoid detection and interception
of the loads of narcotics. Two
of the arrested defendants who are being prosecuted in Curacao were local
police officers who provided such services to the Valencia Organization.
According to the Valencia Indictment,after the cocaine arrived in Curacao,
the Valencia Organization arranged for its shipment to St. Maarten, where
it was stored until it was eventually shipped to Puerto Rico and the
continental United States.
Payment for the
cocaine would be received in United States currency which was transported
back to Curacao by, among other
means, human couriers. According to the Valencia
Indictment,people who failed to pay for the cocaine were subject to threats
of physical violence, including threats to the family members of such
co-conspirators.
The Diaz-Betancur
Indictment
The United States
Indictment that arose from Operation
Encore charges 10 defendants, 3 in the United States, 6 in
Colombia and 1 in Curacao, Netherlands Antilles, with conspiracy
to distribute heroin. According to the Diaz-Betancur Indictment and the Requests for Provisional Arrest to Colombia
and the Netherlands Antilles, OMAR DIAZ BETANCUR and HERNAN DIAZ BETANCUR,
among others, were involved in a large-scale heroin distribution organization
based in Colombia that was responsible for importing large quantities
of heroin into the United States,including New York, through various
routes, including overland over the Mexican border into Texas and by
boat through Curacao and the Caribbean. According
to the Diaz-Betancur Indictment, JUAN MARTIN OCAMPO CORTES negotiated
heroin transactions with OMAR DIAZ
BETANCUR and HERNAN DIAZ BETANCUR, arranged for the smuggling of such
narcotics into the United States, and directed wire transfers to be made
in payment for the heroin and for expenses relating to the smuggling.
More than 19 kilograms of heroin havebeen seized throughout South America,
and more than $100,000 in United States currency have been seized in
connection with Operation Encore.
If convicted, each defendant faces a maximum sentence
of life in prison and a $4 million, or twice the gross gain or loss resulting
from the crime.
Mr. KELLEY praised
the investigative efforts of the Drug Enforcement Administration, the
Korps Politie Curacao (KPC), the
Recherché Samenwerking Team (RST), the Coast Guard of the Netherlands
Antilles and Aruba (CGNAA), the Curacao District Attorney’s Office,
the Colombian National Police, the New York City Police Department
and the New York State Police for their unprecedented cooperation and
coordination. He said the investigation is continuing.
Assistant United
States Attorneys NEIL M. BAROFSKY and KEVIN R. PUVALOWSKI are in charge
of the prosecution. |