Pubdate: Sun, 02 May 2004 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2004 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Steven Dudley ATTORNEY ON EDGE AS WARLORD IN COLOMBIA REMAINS MISSING Peace Talks Stop; Drug Traffickers Drug Traffickers Fearing Betrayal MIAMI - Joaquin Perez should have been focused on one thing. Perez, an attorney who graduated from the University of Massachusetts and Boston College Law School, was part of the host committee at a local fund-raiser on April 20 for Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kerry. His job was to make Kerry feel at home. But Perez had other serious matters to preoccupy him. Perez, who represents some of the most notorious drug traffickers in the Southern Hemisphere, was concerned about the Colombian right-wing paramilitary leader Carlos Castao. Castao was targeted April 16 when gunmen went after him and his family at a jungle hide-out in northern Colombia. He is thought to have escaped, although several of his bodyguards were killed. Reverberations from the attack have been felt all the way to Miami, where Perez lives with his wife and two children. ''This is going to impact me," Perez said after the attack. ''The rules of the game have changed, and the people who have power are the people who do not have the same views that Carlos Castao has." The United States has asked for Castao's extradition on charges of transporting 17 tons of cocaine through Florida. Castao, who is still at large, has maintained his innocence, but the prospect that the paramilitary leader will hand himself over to US authorities has made him a wanted man in the Colombian underworld; and the prospect that Perez is facilitating this handover makes the lawyer a target as well. ''I'm not going to get an armored car," he said. But ''I have to be careful." It has been a long and strange path that has led Perez, a 52-year-old Cuban-American and self-described liberal Democrat, to work so closely with the likes of Castao. Perez's family moved from Spain to Boston in 1968. Through college and law school, Perez's parents worked in a factory in Watertown Square that made medical instruments. ''In other places, they value money," Perez recalled of his years in the Northeast. ''In Boston, they value education." After law school, Perez worked as a public defender in Rhode Island before making his way to Miami and slipping into private practice. It was the 1980s, the drug-trafficking heyday in South Florida. Many of Perez's clients were involved in the illegal trade. By the 1990s, Perez was making regular trips to Colombia, and in 1999, a client introduced the lawyer to Castao, who later broke with his paramilitary group and spoke out against traffickers. Despite their political differences, the two men immediately found common cause. ''I got to know a man of integrity," Castao once said of his lawyer, ''a man who wanted to fight against drug trafficking, get these countries back to normal. [His] interest went much further than simply the law. [He wanted] to contribute, to end these problems, and avoid violence." The feeling is mutual. Despite reports that Castao's paramilitary organization, the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, known by its Spanish initials AUC, massacres civilians in its fight against left-wing guerrillas in that country, Perez has maintained that Castao is more of a reconciling force than a divisive one. For years, the two men played key roles in the US war on drugs. In Colombia, Castao protected drug traffickers who wanted to turn themselves over to US authorities; in Miami, Perez defended these traffickers, often brokering agreements with drug enforcement agents and prosecutors who significantly lowered the sentences of these traffickers in return for their cooperation on other investigations. ''I am absolutely sure that many people who collaborated with the United States did so because they had the backing of Carlos Castao," Perez said. ''Whether we like it or not, he was a political animal with political ambitions who had decided to bring about changes in Colombia." Castao was also a key player in peace negotiations between the AUC and the government that had begun last year. The attempt on Castao's life has temporarily halted the talks while authorities sort out the splits in the AUC. The last time Perez saw Castao, he said, was in September 2002, when the lawyer traveled to one of Castao's hide-outs in northern Colombia. Perez said the two spoke about the peace talks and the increasing isolation of Castao by his AUC colleagues. Like Castao, many of them face drug-trafficking charges. Unlike Castao, these men do not like to help US antidrug agents. Castao's authority over the AUC has eroded as the United States has stepped up the pressure on him and his group. First, the State Department put the AUC on its list of terrorist groups in 2001. Then in 2002, a US court indicted Castao. Perez said these actions have debilitated the last remaining US ally in the AUC and perhaps the drug war in Colombia. ''I hope the US realizes that by undermining him, they are giving more power to the hard-liners, the big drug-traffickers," Perez said. Perez said that he has not communicated with his client in weeks and that he is waiting for Castao, who is married and has an infant daughter, to reemerge. Some reports have said Castao died in the attack or was taken prisoner and executed. Perez says Castao is probably in hiding. Perez said he himself will not return to Colombia anytime soon. There was a time he felt safe in that country, especially with Castao in charge of the AUC. Now he does not feel safe in Miami. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek