News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
March 22,
2006
DEA Public
Affairs
202-307-7977
United
States Charges 50 Leaders Of Narco-Terrorist FARC In
Colombia With Supplying More Than Half Of The World's Cocaine
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Since
1980, the FARC has kidnapped over 100 individuals and murdered 13
U.S. citizens, including three U.S. missionaries who were executed
in 1999.
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(WASHINGTON, D.C.)—Fifty
leaders of the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (the FARC) in
Colombia have been indicted on charges of importing more than $25 billion
worth of cocaine into the United States and other countries, the Department
of Justice announced today.
“From their jungle
hideaway, the FARC uses the drug trade to bankroll terrorism in Colombia,
finance attacks on innocent citizens, and poison Americans,” said DEA
Administrator Karen P. Tandy. “Today’s indictment challenges
that lawlessness, and the FARC leadership should prepare to face the justice
that they have long denied to so many.”
The one-count indictment,
returned by a federal grand jury in the U.S. District Court for the District
of Columbia on March 1, 2006, and unsealed today, names as defendants 50
leaders of the FARC, a designated foreign terrorist organization. Three of
the charged FARC leaders are currently in custody in Colombia, and the United
States is seeking their extradition on the charges unsealed today. In addition,
the United States Department of State announced more than $75 million worth
of rewards for information that leads to the capture of the remaining FARC
leaders.
“This indictment
strikes at the very heart of the FARC narcotics operation that has flooded
our communities with cocaine,” said Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales. “Because
of unprecedented cooperation between U.S. and Colombian authorities, we are
closer than ever before to reaching our goal of bringing the leaders of this
narco-terrorist group to justice in the United States.”
According to the indictment,
the FARC currently supplies more than 50 percent of the world’s cocaine
and more than 60 percent of the cocaine that enters the United States. The
FARC initially taxed other narcotics traffickers involved in the manufacture
and distribution of cocaine in areas the FARC controlled, it was charged.
Recognizing the increased profits available, from the 1990s up to the present,
the FARC moved to become directly involved in the production and distribution
of cocaine by, among other criminal activities, setting the prices to be
paid to farmers across Colombia for cocaine paste, the raw material used
to produce cocaine, and transporting cocaine paste to jungle laboratories
under FARC control where it was converted into ton quantities of finished
cocaine and then shipped out of Colombia to the United States and other countries.
Recognizing that cocaine was the “lifeblood” of the FARC, the
charged FARC leaders collected millions of dollars in cocaine proceeds and
used the money to purchase weapons for the FARC’s terrorist activities
against the government and people of Colombia, it was charged.
According to the indictment, the charged FARC leaders used terrorism and violence
to further the FARC’s cocaine-trafficking activities. The charged
FARC leaders ordered that Colombian farmers who sold cocaine paste to non-FARC
buyers or otherwise violated the FARC’s strict cocaine policies be
murdered, it was charged. Colombian farmers who violated FARC rules were
allegedly shot, stabbed, or dismembered alive, and the bodies of murdered
farmers were cut open, filled with rocks, and sunk in nearby rivers. The
defendants also allegedly ordered FARC members to kidnap and murder U.S.
citizens to discourage the U.S. government from disrupting the FARC’s
cocaine-trafficking activities. According to the indictment, the charged
FARC leaders authorized their members to shoot down U.S. fumigation planes,
and plotted to retaliate against U.S. law enforcement officers who were
conducting the investigation into the FARC’s narcotics activities.
United
States Seeks to Extradite Three FARC Leaders Currently In Colombian Custody
Attorney General Gonzales
also announced today that the United States will immediately seek to extradite
three of the charged FARC leaders who are currently in custody in Colombia.
JORGE Enrique Rodriguez Mendieta, a/k/a "Ivan Vargas," Erminso
Cuevas Cabrera, a/k/a "Mincho," and Juan Jose Martinez Vega, a/k/a "Gentil
Alvis Patino,” a/k/a "Chiguiro,” will each be served with
an United States provisional arrest warrant based on the indictment unsealed
today, the first step in the extradition process. These three defendants
led the FARC’s cocaine-trafficking activities in various ways, as described
below:
• Jorge Enrique
Rodriguez Mendieta, a/k/a “Ivan Vargas,” served as a member
of the FARC’s Estado Mayor or operational leadership council and
as the Front Commander for the FARC’s 24th Front. Rodriguez Mendieta
allegedly directed the purchase of hundreds of thousands of kilograms of
cocaine paste and transmitted billions of Colombian pesos in cocaine proceeds
to other FARC officials. Rodriguez Mendieta is also alleged to have ordered
the murder of at least eight farmers, including several whom he personally
dismembered alive, and to have plotted to retaliate against United States
law enforcement officers who were conducting the narcotics-trafficking
investigation that led to the charges announced today. Rodriguez Mendieta
was arrested by Colombian authorities in late 2004, and is in custody in
Colombia.
• Erminso Cuevas
Cabrera, a/k/a "Mincho," was a FARC associate who managed cocaine
laboratories for the FARC’s 14th Front. Cuevas Cabrera allegedly
supervised the production and distribution of hundreds of thousands of
kilograms of cocaine. Erminso Cuevas Cabrera is also alleged to be the
brother of charged Estado Mayor member Jose Benito Cabrera Cuevas, a/k/a "Fabian
Ramirez." Cuevas Cabrera was arrested by Colombian authorities in
late 2004, and is in custody in Colombia.
• Juan Jose Martinez
Vega, a/k/a "Gentil Alvis Patino,” a/k/a "Chiguiro," was
a FARC associate who provided large quantities of arms and ammunition to
the FARC in exchange for thousands of kilograms of cocaine. Martinez Vega
was arrested in Venezuela in early 2005 during the rescue mission of former
Detroit Tigers pitcher Ugueth Urbina’s mother. At the time of his
arrest in Venezuela, Martinez Vega was allegedly in possession of approximately
700 kilograms of cocaine. Martinez Vega is currently in custody in Colombia.
State
Department Offers More Than $75 Million In Rewards For Fugitive FARC Leaders
The United States Department
of State announced today rewards of more than $75 million for information
leading to the capture of 24 of the FARC leaders charged today. Specifically,
the State Department is offering rewards of up to $5 million for information
leading to the arrest of the seven members of the FARC Secretariat, the ultimate
policy and decision-making body of the criminal enterprise. The State Department
also is offering rewards of up to $2.5 million for information leading to
the arrest of seventeen additional charged FARC leaders who are members of
the FARC’s Estado Mayor or governing council.
The investigation culminating
in the indictment announced today was led by the International Narcotics
Trafficking Unit of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District
of New York, assisted by the Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section (NDDS) of
the Criminal Division at the Department of Justice, along with law enforcement
officers from the DEA, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and
the Internal Revenue Service, working together as part of the New York OCDETF
Strike Force (the “New York Strike Force”). The New York Strike
Force is composed of law enforcement officers from the DEA, ICE, the IRS,
the FBI, the New York City Police Department, the New York State Police,
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, and the U.S. Marshals Service.
The investigation and prosecution are supported by trial attorneys from the
Criminal Division’s Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section and by the
U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colombia. The indictment
announced today resulted from unprecedented cooperation between U.S. law
enforcement officers and Colombian law enforcement authorities.
The charges contained
in the indictment are merely allegations. All defendants are presumed innocent
until and unless convicted in a court of law.
***VIDEO
AND PHOTOS AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
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