Pubdate: Thu, 30 Aug 2001 Source: South Florida Sun Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 2001 Sun-Sentinel Co & South Florida Interactive, Inc Contact: http://www.sun-sentinel.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1326 Author: Ivan Roman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) MORE COPS ARRESTED IN NEW BUST IN PUERTO RICO SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- Seven police officers, including three accused of selling pure-grade heroin from their patrol cars, were arrested Wednesday in the latest corruption scandal to hit the beleaguered Puerto Rico Police Department. Five of the officers and a mechanic related to one of them were rounded up Wednesday on various parts of the island. The other two were among 29 officers arrested two weeks ago as part of the FBI's Operation Lost Honor, the largest police-corruption probe in the agency's history. The officers arrested Wednesday are accused of receiving thousands of dollars from undercover agents posing as drug dealers in exchange for the use of their weapons, cars and identities as police officers to transport and protect cocaine shipments. Three of them -- Alex Lopez Lopez, Jose R. Martinez Hernandez and Wilfredo Martinez Rodriguez -- went a step further by selling 250 grams, or 8.75 ounces, of Colombian heroin to agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration, authorities said. The officers, agents said, sold the heroin from their patrol cars while in uniform. Acting Assistant U.S. Attorney Guillermo Gil urged police officers Wednesday to blow the whistle on colleagues suspected of wrongdoing. A similar plea by Gil after the Lost Honor arrests already has yielded results, he said. "We've already gotten a lot of calls, but there have to be more," Gil said, addressing the police officers through the media. "You yourselves have to clean your own house." Police Superintendent Pierre Vivoni reassured residents that local and federal authorities were rooting out corrupt officers in the 19,000- strong police force. Residents, he said, should not be alarmed because the arrested officers represent a small portion of the department. "We will keep detecting and eradicating any remnant of corruption, wherever it is," Vivoni said. "We've started at home, by being the example, so there should be no doubt that there is no room for corrupt delinquents or two-faced agents here." Wednesday's batch of arrests led by the DEA stunned a department already reeling from a series of corruption accusations, brutality claims and other irregularities in the past few months. In Operation Lost Honor, the 29 officers, a corrections officer and two civilians arrested Aug. 14 were caught on videotape transporting and protecting cocaine shipments. They also were videotaped taking money from an FBI informant posing as a drug dealer. The tapes also show an evidence technician offering a fake drug trafficker advice on how to get rid of a homicide victim. Hit fast- forward and the tape shows another officer offering to kill a drug dealer for $20,000 in cash. Videotapes also were used in the latest corruption case announced Wednesday. In addition to the three officers accused of dealing heroin, Officers Gabriel Maldonado Colon, Manuel Santiago Franco, Jose Torres Jorge, Juan Lopez Roman and mechanic Miguel Rosario Diaz are charged with helping to transport cocaine for undercover agents they thought were traffickers. They're also accused of working with a real network of drug traffickers on the island. Rogelio Guevara, special agent in charge of the DEA's Caribbean Field Division, would not comment on the fate of the drug-trafficking network except to say the investigation continues. All of the officers also are charged with carrying firearms during a drug crime. If convicted, they face anywhere from 10 years to life in prison. "These individuals don't deserve the honor of being called police officers," Guevara said. Vivoni feels the same way and is taking more steps to deal with the problem. Besides strengthening internal supervision and investigations, he has vowed to have the police screen prospective recruits more carefully and put ethical and civil-rights training on the front burner at the police academy. Vivoni is reacting not only to the recent drug arrests but to other problems, as well. Six officers in Loiza face police-brutality charges after going to a child's birthday party and beating people with nightsticks. The melee was caught on videotape and shown repeatedly on the evening news, enraging many viewers. Charges are pending against four officers in the central town of Utuado. The officers, who were out of uniform, made a traffic stop and then shot at the driver who sped off thinking it was a robbery attempt. On Monday, a mechanic complained that officers in Loiza beat him up. Police are investigating allegations that supervisors did nothing and laughed at the mechanic's relatives when they tried to file a complaint at the local precinct. And hours after federal agents rounded up the 29 officers charged in Operation Lost Honor, Puerto Rico police arrested two of their own on charges of taking a car-theft victim's ATM card when they returned her purse and withdrawing money from her bank account. Vivoni expects that more corrupt officers will be identified as those arrested begin talking in exchange for lighter sentences. "I presume that they may offer information that will expand these investigations," Vivoni said. "This isn't over." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake