Pubdate: Sun, 21 May 2000 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2000 The Miami Herald Contact: One Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132-1693 Fax: (305) 376-8950 Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: Tim Johnson DID DEA INFORMANTS SWINDLE DRUG LORDS? Millions In Cash Allegedly Taken BOGOTA, Colombia -- No one disputes that Baruch Jairo Vega possesses the nerves of steel and savvy manner required of anyone who does business with international drug traffickers. The question is whether Vega was audacious enough, or crazy enough, to snooker some of Colombia's biggest drug dealers out of millions of dollars and pocket the money. Or -- his version -- whether he instead performed extraordinary work as a confidential informant for the DEA and the FBI, and maybe the CIA, bringing the U.S. government both sought-after drug lords and cash. Among those with the biggest stake in the answers are two Drug Enforcement Administration agents who oversaw Vega as he zigzagged between Miami and Panama in recent months to haggle with top Colombian drug dealers. Both agents are suspended with pay and under investigation. In the end, a federal judge hearing the case against Vega, who faces money laundering charges, will have to sort out the truth. But much of the improbable saga of the Miami Beach resident and his connections to the drug trade is already being told in court documents and attorneys' statements. It is the story of huge piles of money and possible secret deals between the U.S. Justice Department and Colombian drug traffickers. Some Colombian officials say the deals lured drug lords to get out of the narcotics business, pay huge fines, and rat on colleagues in exchange for lenient U.S. treatment. In Colombia, there is even a nickname for the group of drug barons allegedly involved with Vega -- the cartel de los sapos, or "Cartel of the Snitches." Although there are many unanswered questions, some Colombian authorities seem inclined to believe in the existence of an official, U.S.-sponsored operation. For one thing, they have heard numerous tales of drug lords paying millions of dollars to Vega for what they believed was his official role in helping confessed drug traffickers get their records wiped clean by striking cooperation agreements with U.S. prosecutors and forfeiting half their wealth. They also find it hard to believe that some of the world's most shrewd and most vicious criminals could be duped by a con man. "Either the narcos are stupid or this operation had some legitimacy," a Colombian intelligence official said, asking to remain unnamed. Vega was the far more experienced of two Colombian-born informants who were arrested March 22 in South Florida. The FBI said Vega and the second man, Roman Suarez Lopez, conjured up "phony cooperation deals" with indicted and suspected Colombian drug lords, as DEA agents waited in adjoining hotel rooms. "According to sources who have spoken with several of these drug traffickers, Vega and Suarez's fees have ranged from $6 million to $100 million," the criminal complaint says. It details how at least $6 million was paid to the two men by narco-traffickers, and says they received an additional "several million dollars in drug proceeds." CHARGES FILED The complaint portrays the two men as rogue snitches who became "intermittent" sources of information for federal agencies. It charges them with money laundering and obstruction of justice. The two men went free on $100,000 bond May 12. Neither man would speak to The Herald, but their attorneys said their actions were sponsored by U.S. government agents. "Let me tell you, whatever [Vega] did, he did with the understanding, knowledge and agreement of the DEA agents. This was a Baruch Vega joint venture with the DEA," said Nelson Rodriguez-Varela, his attorney. Suarez's lawyer, Ruben Oliva, said his client and Vega concocted a plan under DEA auspices to lure drug traffickers into meetings and received money with DEA knowledge. "If it was a scam, it was like any scam that a [confidential informant] perpetrates on a criminal target," Oliva said. Both in their 50s, Vega and Suarez were born in Colombia. They have lived in South Florida for decades. LINKS TO AGENCIES Baruch Vega, a professional photographer with a smooth manner, had long-standing ties with law enforcement agencies and even boasted of working for the CIA, the complaint says. He was the leader among the two men. "Baruch is very slick, but he has to be," said an acquaintance, who noted Vega's frequent dealings with major Colombian drug smugglers. "His whole world is deception," said Joseph Rosenbaum, a Miami lawyer for Larry E. Castillo, a DEA agent suspended with pay following Vega's arrest. Also suspended was Castillo's DEA supervisor, David Tinsley. After nearly two decades as an informant, mostly for the FBI, Vega came into his heyday when Colombia's Congress ended a six-year ban on extradition of drug traffickers in late 1997. That move paved the way for U.S. authorities to seek to bring more drug lords to U.S. prisons. Colombian drug traffickers fear nothing more than U.S. jails, and both Vega and U.S. law enforcement officials apparently saw an opportunity to strike cooperation deals with the narcos. One Colombian who reportedly reached such an agreement, art dealer Arturo Piza, was gunned down in Medellin early last year, apparently in retaliation for a cooperation pact. But a surprising number of drug traffickers has apparently sought to reach similar deals since then with U.S. authorities, often working through Vega. Neither the U.S. Attorney's Office in South Florida nor the DEA would talk about such alleged agreements or about Baruch Vega and Roman Suarez. "No comment," said Rosa Rodriguez Mera of the U.S. Attorney's Office. 31 SEIZED IN RAID A spark for the deals came with Operation Millennium, a massive DEA-sponsored raid in Colombia and Mexico in mid-October that netted 31 people, including Fabio Ochoa, a former leader of the Medellin Cartel. All 31 now await extradition to the United States. As a result, Colombian drug criminals were forced to consider whether they might someday face extradition themselves -- their worst nightmare. Enter Vega. According to flight records, he flew between 10 and 12 times from South Florida to Panama to hold meetings with Colombian drug traffickers -- mainly from the Northern Valley Cartel and from remnants of the Medellin Cartel -- to seek alleged cooperation agreements, several sources close to Vega said. On those trips, Vega and Suarez were usually accompanied by a coterie of DEA agents, local police officers, South Florida criminal lawyers - -- and a fashion model or two. Panamanian aviation records seen by The Herald indicate that Miami-based DEA agent Castillo was nearly always along. Also joining the group on occasion were Bill Gomez, a Miami-Dade Police Department narcotics officer; Daniel Forman, a criminal defense attorney in Miami; and Carlos Ramon Zapata, a 34-year-old suspected Colombian cocaine trafficker who apparently has struck a deal with U.S. prosecutors that leaves him enjoying his freedom at a high-rise on the southern tip of Miami Beach. Ramon and Gomez could not be located for comment. Forman did not return repeated messages left at his office. Castillo declined through his attorney to speak to a Herald reporter. MEETING IN PANAMA Just two weeks after the Operation Millennium arrests, on Nov. 1, Vega and Suarez hosted a meeting at the Panama City hotel with a drug trafficker who is a cooperating witness in an ongoing drug probe in Colombia, the complaint says. "Vega told the [cooperating witness] that he had U.S. officials in the hotel room next door and arranged for the [cooperating witness] to meet with them," it says. "The [cooperating witness] then met with four DEA agents and a Miami police officer." According to the complaint, Vega and Suarez told visiting drug lords that they had the clout to bribe Justice Department officials, set up phony cooperation agreements and arrange for the drug barons to "not serve a single day in jail" -- in exchange for huge sums of money. One alleged drug lord, Carlos Julio Correa, lured other traffickers to Vega and Suarez, vouching for their legitimacy and showing off the U.S. visa he had reportedly obtained through them. "When he began to enter and leave the United States without any problems, the other narcos saw this and got interested," the Colombian intelligence official said, noting that Vega and Suarez appeared to have great clout. Adding spice to the frequent flights Vega made to Panama were some of Colombia's most alluring models. SOCIAL OCCASION On a flight Dec. 8 between Panama City's Tocumen International Airport and South Florida, Suarez and Vega were joined by Natalia Paris, Colombia's most widely known fashion model, flight records show. Between drinks and socializing, Vega and Suarez reeled in some of the major smugglers of the Northern Valley and Medellin cartels, including Juan Usuga, Oscar Eduardo Campuzano and others, their attorneys said. "[Vega] brought in Orlando Sanchez Cristancho. He brought in the Usugas. He brought in El Medico," said Rodriguez-Varela, Vega's attorney, referring to the nickname used by Carlos Ramon. "He was in the process of working a number of others." If such traffickers genuinely collaborated with U.S. prosecutors, it would be a major coup against the Colombian cocaine trade, Colombian officials say. In what has been interpreted as a sign that deals for cooperation are being struck, U.S. prosecutors have allowed several accused major traffickers to go free on bond in South Florida after their capture. Those alleged Colombian traffickers include Juan Usuga, Carlos Ramon and Carlos Julio Correa. Others in the so-called "Cartel of the Snitches" remain in Colombia, protected by the 8,000-man, right-wing army run by Carlos Castano, who has declared all-out war against leftist guerrillas. COCA CONNECTION Both the guerrillas and Castano's militias receive financing from farmers of coca, the raw ingredient in cocaine, although Castano says he is now actively trying to help the U.S. counterdrug effort. In an e-mail to a Herald reporter last month, Castano touched on the issue of narcotics traffickers cooperating with the U.S. justice system. "Drug traffickers are surrendering voluntarily to U.S. justice. As long as this doesn't lead to impunity, it is the best way to end narco-trafficking without violence," Castano wrote. In a follow-up e-mail, Castano said through an intermediary that he is pressuring traffickers to strike deals with U.S. prosecutors, and that he will seek eradication of coca once his combatants rout leftist guerrillas. The issue now is whether Vega and Suarez struck up a private scheme on the side to defraud drug traffickers of huge sums of money. According to the complaint against the two men, they collected one payment of $1 million "near the Miami International Airport" in early January, and Vega received $3 million in New York City a month earlier. In a separate instance, one of Colombia's biggest alleged drug traffickers, Hernando Gomez, who is known as "Rasguno," or "Scratch," paid $5 million to Vega, the intelligence official said. SCAM DENIED Vega's attorney denies that his client scammed narcos. "He didn't make millions of dollars," Rodriguez-Varela said, adding that much of the money went to finance DEA operations that resulted in "bringing in these heavyweights," referring to narcotics traffickers. Vega and Suarez were under DEA supervision, he said. "They should not blame Baruch Vega for actions of agents who may have been overzealous," he said. The attorney for Castillo, the suspended DEA agent, differs sharply on what the two Colombian-born informants did. "They used their position as confidential informants . . . to enrich themselves without the knowledge of the agents," Rosenbaum said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea