Pubdate: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Section: International Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Clifford Krauss MONTESINOS FLOWN TO PERU TO FACE CHARGES BUENOS AIRES -- Vladimiro Montesinos, the former Peruvian spy chief who evaded an international manhunt for eight months before his arrest last weekend, was flown to Lima today in handcuffs and a bulletproof vest and began what promises to be months of questioning and legal processing. Once a top aide to former President Alberto K. Fujimori who had cooperated with the Central Intelligence Agency, Mr. Montesinos was evicted early this morning from Venezuela, where he had been hiding. Peruvian prosecutors say he faces a possible life sentence on charges he was involved in arms trafficking, money laundering, death squad activities, torture, the purchasing of faulty armaments for kickbacks, and the bribing of officials to fix the election last year for Mr. Fujimori, who is now in exile in Japan. Mr. Montesinos, 56, was briefly seen on Peruvian television, wearing jeans, a tan jacket and a thin smile, as he was taken off an aircraft by heavily armed security officers. After hours of questioning, he was expected to be placed in a high security prison in the port of Callao -- the same facility where the top leader of the Shining Path terrorist group has been imprisoned. Six investigative judges began interrogating Mr. Montesinos today in an underground cell in a courthouse in downtown Lima. Already, 140 criminal investigations are under way involving the former spy chief, with more than 500 people implicated in his crimes. The first details of how his arrest was made on Saturday night in Caracas were made public today by Peruvian and American officials who emphasized that the role of the Venezuelan security forces was secondary. What has emerged is a story of some good detective work by one American law enforcement agency to catch an official who for years had done favors for the C.I.A. Mr. Montesinos, who first began trading information with the C.I.A. in the 1970's, managed a large Peruvian antidrug operation set up by the agency in the early 1990's -- a period when narcotics traffickers said he was taking bribes from them. Even though Mr. Montesinos was long a controversial figure in the eyes of the Clinton administration, American officials still went to him to lobby for the interests of American businesses in Peru and to lobby for human rights votes against Cuba in The Hague. The first major breaks that led to Mr. Montesinos's arrest came about two months ago as the F.B.I. and Peruvian law enforcement agents scoured the world to find and freeze Mr. Montesinos's numerous bank accounts. As the operation progressed, the F.B.I. located a $38 million account in the Pacific Industrial Bank, an offshore financial institution headquartered in Grand Cayman with offices in Miami, which was then frozen at the request of the Peruvian authorities. A month ago, said an American Embassy official in Lima, a former Venezuelan intelligence officer who served as an aide to Mr. Montesinos tried to extort the bank to release the frozen money. The Venezuelan, who remains unidentified, threatened that Mr. Montesinos would reveal the bank's involvement in an assortment of money laundering schemes. But bank officials contacted the F.B.I., the American official said, to report the threat. The F.B.I. then identified the Venezuelan and managed to intercept his e-mail communications with Mr. Montesinos, officials said. F.B.I. agents set up a sting operation, posing as bank officials, to meet with the Venezuelan. The F.B.I. arrested the Venezuelan on Thursday in Miami on charges of extortion. During his interrogation, the Venezuelan told them Mr. Montesinos's whereabouts -- a hideaway in Caracas not far from President Hugo Chavez's presidential palace. Peruvian and American law enforcement agencies and diplomats worked closely to bypass the Venezuelan government, which officials said they believed had been protecting Mr. Montesinos all along. Officials said Mr. Montesinos's Venezuelan bodyguards somehow learned that the American and Peruvian governments were closing in on the arrest. Peruvian law enforcement officials tried to make an agreement with the Venezuelans, in which they would hand Mr. Montesinos over to Peruvian diplomats in Caracas. But the guards changed their minds at the last minute and handed Mr. Montesinos over to Venezuelan intelligence agents instead. "The end result was the same," the American official said. Peruvian law enforcement officials and Congressional investigators say they are hoping that Mr. Montesinos will lead them to many corrupt officials who remain in Peru's bureaucracy. Hundreds of videotapes captured from Mr. Montesinos after he fled Peru late last year have already shown congressmen, top military officials, owners of television stations and businessmen taking bribes and conspiring. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth