Pubdate: Sat, 03 Apr 2004
Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Copyright: 2004 St. Petersburg Times
Contact: http://connect.sptimes.com/contactus/letterstoeditor.html
Website: http://www.sptimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419
Author: David Adams, Times Latin America Correspondent

TAINT OF DRUGS REACHING HAITI'S UPPER ECHELON

U.S. Officials Explore Whether Drug Corruption Went All The Way To The 
Office Of Former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide

MIAMI - In a farewell speech in July, shortly before leaving Haiti, former 
U.S. Ambassador Brian Dean Curran told an audience that Haiti had become 
corrupted by drug traffickers.

"Parents of Haiti, wake up," he said, in remarks to the Haitian- American 
Chamber of Commerce. "I don't understand what has become of the moral 
values of this society," he went on, complaining about the lack of 
cooperation in denouncing the traffickers.

Eight months later, and barely a month after President Jean-Bertrand 
Aristide abandoned power and fled into exile, federal prosecutors in Miami 
are investigating his alleged drug ties. An indictment on drug charges 
could be only months away, according to Bush administration and Justice 
Department officials.

In addition, Florida courts have recently witnessed a series of drug 
indictments against major traffickers in Haiti, as well as a senior Haitian 
government official.

Court documents and interviews with several U.S. officials reveal that drug 
trafficking in Haiti, which has served as a conduit for Colombian cocaine 
for many years, rose after the election of Aristide in 2000. U.S. officials 
became increasingly concerned about the degree of drug corruption in Haiti 
and the high levels it had reached within the government.

"It is just a totally different world," Drug Enforcement Administration 
Agent Younjae Kim told a Miami court Oct. 21 in a hearing involving one of 
the Haitian trafficking suspects. "The level of corruption goes from a 
lowly patrolman all the way to the top of the Haitian National Police."

Officials at the DEA, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and the 
Justice Department are now asking if it went higher than that. Senior-level 
discussions in Washington were held to consider the pros and cons of a drug 
indictment last year, officials say.

But the Bush administration was concerned that a drug indictment might 
derail Washington's political leverage with Aristide on policies affecting 
key U.S. interests, especially Haiti's continued cooperation in restricting 
the illegal migration of Haitian refugees.

Officials also recognized that as a sitting head of state, Aristide enjoyed 
immunity from prosecution under well-established international legal doctrine.

In the end, officials ultimately concluded that they did not have "a 
clear-cut" case against Aristide, despite plenty of circumstantial 
evidence. But a series of incidents and arrests in the last eight months 
has may have altered that picture.

While officials were unwilling to discuss the case against Aristide 
publicly, intense activity by federal agents involved in investigating 
Haitian traffickers, as well as court records, strongly suggest that 
evidence may be building against the one-time populist priest.

Ira Kurzban, a Miami lawyer who represents Aristide, denied the former 
president had any dealings with drug traffickers: "I don't think Aristide 
would have taken drug money. It's just not Aristide."

But drug experts and lawyers in Miami point to the arrest in the last 10 
months of half a dozen prominent drug traffickers in Haiti, several of whom 
have signed plea bargains and are cooperating with the government.

One of those men, Carlos Ovalle, a longtime Colombian trafficker who lived 
in Haiti, pleaded guilty in an Ocala court last November to two counts of 
drug trafficking and money laundering in a Lake County DEA sting operation.

In a major breakthrough, one of Haiti's most wanted traffickers, Beaudouin 
"Jacques" Ketant, was captured last year by the DEA. After being brought to 
Miami, he agreed to cooperate with prosecutors in return for a sentence 
reduction.

Also assisting prosecutors is a senior former Haitian police chief 
implicated in drug trafficking, Rudi Therassan, who began cooperating with 
the DEA in April last year while still employed by the police in Haiti. He 
has since been brought to Miami under federal protection.

Therassan allegedly was involved in the murder last year of Ketant's 
brother, Hector Ketant, during a disputed drug deal. Ketant says Therassan 
insisted on being cut in on a 1,540-pound planeload of Colombian cocaine 
that had been personally authorized by Aristide.

U.S. officials investigating the Haitian drug trade got a further boost 
last month when Canadian police arrested Oriel Jean, the former chief of 
security at the Presidential Palace, and one of Aristide's most trusted 
officials.

After he agreed to waive extradition proceedings, Jean was flown to Miami 
where he faces drug trafficking charges. It was Aristide's refusal to fire 
Jean two years ago, despite strong evidence of his ties to drug money, that 
made U.S. officials begin to seriously suspect the president.

Jean was one of six senior Haitian police officers allegedly linked to 
drugs that the United States pressed Aristide to fire. The U.S. Embassy 
withdrew Jean's visa in 2002 and tipped Aristide to the evidence of his 
drug dealing. But Jean remained in his job until Aristide's Feb. 29 
resignation.

Despite the mounting circumstantial evidence against Aristide, the legal 
case against him remains uncertain, in large part because Aristide, 
currently in Jamaica with his family, doesn't fit the bill of the typical 
drug-tainted dictator with a lavish lifestyle and secret bank accounts.

"He has no money. He left with the clothes on his back," said Kurzban, the 
attorney.

But federal agents and prosecutors are looking closely into Aristide's 
personal finances. They are particularly interested in the discovery last 
month of an estimated $350,000 in cash in a safe in a secret, underground 
basement chamber at Aristide's private residence in the capital, 
Port-au-Prince. Looters found the money the day after Aristide fled the 
country.

DEA agents have interviewed at least one of the people who found the cash - 
in stacks of rotting $100 bills - and are considering bringing the stash 
and the looters' family to Miami. U.S. officials want to know if the money 
can be connected to drug payoffs allegedly made by traffickers to Aristide.

Diplomats who observed Aristide closely say that while he did not appear to 
have lived in great luxury, he needed large amounts of money to run a 
political system based largely on corrupt patronage. That dependency became 
more acute after his government was cut off from official international 
lenders following the fraudulent 2000 elections.

"After the embargo, drugs became the only way (for Aristide) to tap into 
large financial resources," said Eduardo Gamarra, director of the Latin 
American and Caribbean Center at Florida International University. "In a 
small economy like Haiti's, a small amount of drugs can make a huge 
difference."

While Aristide did not display the trappings of enormous wealth, he seemed 
to leave known traffickers alone. Despite facing charges in the United 
States, and being featured in September 2001 on the program America's Most 
Wanted, Ketant, for example, "continued to traffic in massive quantities of 
illegal drugs while living openly and lavishly on his narcotics proceeds," 
according to court documents.

He drove around the posh Vivi Michel suburb of the capital in a Humvee and 
held parties at his hillside villa, according to U.S. and Haitian officials.

He was arrested last June. After pleading guilty in Miami to two counts of 
trafficking cocaine, he was sentenced to 27 years in jail Feb.25 - and 
fined $15-million.

A cooperation deal with U.S. authorities went sour after prosecutors 
accused him of lying about his illegal assets, including a safe supposedly 
containing $5-million and a collection of 200 valuable paintings.

At his sentencing, Ketant angrily accused Aristide of betraying him to the 
DEA, complaining that the pair had been partners in the drug business. U.S. 
officials are investigating whether Aristide protected Ketant for six years 
after his 1997 indictment on drug charges in the United States.

Ketant says he paid Aristide a $500,000 monthly retainer to land drug 
flights from Colombia on Route 9, a major highway near Aristide's home and 
one of the few pieces of straight, unpotholed tarmac in the country.

The judge in the case suggested that Ketant was not worthy of a sentence 
reduction because he was guilty of corrupting Haitian officials.

"Your honor, to suggest that my client corrupted government officials," 
retorted his attorney Ruben Oliva, "is like suggesting that a parish priest 
converted the Vatican to Catholicism."

- - Times researcher Kitty Bennett assisted in preparing this report.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom