Pubdate: Wed, 05 May 2004 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2004 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Michael Friscolanti MONTREALERS ACCUSED OF MONEY LAUNDERING Colombian Drug Profits Allegedly Routed Through Canada Five Montreal residents were arrested yesterday in connection with an international crime ring that allegedly laundered Colombian drug profits through Canada and the United States. The arrests were part of a massive multi-agency sweep that saw 34 people charged in cities around the globe. The two-year joint investigation, which also recovered US$20-million worth of illicit drug profits, involved members of the RCMP, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, London's National Crime Squad and police in Bogota. "Those who choose to help hide the proceeds of illicit drug trafficking are as much a part of the problem as those who bring the drugs into this country, and they will be dealt with accordingly," said John Ashcroft, the U.S. Attorney-General, who announced the arrests yesterday alongside numerous officials, including Superintendent Michel Cabana, the head of national and border security for the RCMP in Quebec. Authorities yesterday also unsealed a 48-page indictment that outlines how the organization -- using banks in North America and Europe -- laundered cash through the Colombian Black Market Peso Exchange, an underground operation that allows Colombians, mainly business people, to purchase U.S. currency without having to pay taxes and transaction fees. Under the scheme, drug traffickers who have large profits in North America trade their U.S. currency with a "peso broker," who is then responsible for laundering the cash. In most cases, the indictment charges, the broker works with a "second-tier" broker who collects the drug proceeds from the traffickers' associates and funnels it into the international banking system. A "third-tier" broker later trades that money for pesos with people back in Colombia. "In an effort to conceal the true nature of these transactions, dealings between the Colombian dollar purchaser and the peso broker are almost always based only on verbal agreements and conducted without any paperwork," the indictment reads. According to prosecutors, the five Montreal men implicated in the scheme worked for Colombian drug lords, gathering the cash in Canada that was eventually given to the "second-tier" peso brokers. Some of that money, the affidavit says, was unwittingly given to a U.S. undercover officer who had infiltrated the gang of "second-tier" brokers. Charged with conspiring to launder the proceeds of crime are Juan Carlos Ellis, 42; Hugo Palma, 43; Yip Oi Man, 48; Giovanni Di Rienzo, 43; and Gerardo Palma, 32. All are facing extradition to the United States to face the charges in New York. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom