Pubdate: Sat, 13 Aug 2005 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) Copyright: 2005 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: Michael Perlstein, staff writer DEFENDANT STUNNED BY GUILTY VERDICT He Refused Favorable Plea Deal Kenneth Vicknair was so confident he could prove his innocence in a bizarre money laundering scheme, he turned down a plea deal that could have given him as little as six months' probation. Vicknair's attorney, John DiGulio, was so confident at the trial that he rested his case without calling a single witness. But, in the end, 12 jurors were so confident of Vicknair's guilt, they convicted him after deliberating for little more than an hour in the two-day trial. He now faces as much as 20 years in prison. Vicknair, 53, was found guilty this month of money laundering and wire fraud in a scheme to sell Venezuelan promissory notes to two U.S. Secret Service agents posing as front men for high-level Colombian drug traffickers. Vicknair became the third person convicted in the unusual sting operation, which began in 2002 when Secret Service agents received information from the U.S. Customs Service that local men were trafficking in suspicious bank notes. The Secret Service was told the men were trying to unload more than $150 million of the paper notes for a fraction of their value. Harry Adair, of Belle Chasse, was convicted of money laundering in March 2004 for acting as the middleman in arranging for the notes to be traded for drug money. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison. A second defendant, David Wallace, of River Ridge, pleaded guilty March 30 to one count of wire fraud and is awaiting sentencing. Vicknair, of Marrero, was Wallace's partner in the scheme, federal authorities said. A former pilot and self-styled international entrepreneur, Vicknair allegedly had the contacts to obtain the Venezuelan notes, a rarely used financial instrument that is scarce even at the highest levels of international banking. As the case unfolded, there was considerable controversy about the authenticity of the notes, which the government maintained were counterfeit, a contention Vicknair denied. Even after sophisticated ink-and-paper tests and consultation with the Bank of the Republic of Venezuela, authenticity remained in question. As things turned out, it didn't matter. In a transaction arranged by Adair, Vicknair and Wallace met with two undercover Secret Service agents posing as money launderers at the Hilton Garden Inn in Kenner on Jan. 15, 2003. When the discussion at the rendezvous turned to swapping a $5 million promissory note for drug money, the agents launched their trap and arrested the suspects. An audiotape of the meeting was the centerpiece of the government's evidence at trial. "Even though Venezuelan promissory notes sound like an oddball contraband, it was still used as contraband and that made it a clear case of money laundering," said Kim Tate , special agent in charge of the Louisiana branch of the Secret Service. "It didn't matter (if the notes were authentic), because the jury accepted the fact that these individuals were willing to launder the proceeds of drug money." Vicknair said he was "devastated" by the verdict and is already working on an appeal. "It's not like I was involved in some backroom deal," said Vicknair, who did not take the stand. "I negotiated for five years to get these notes. I'm the one caught on tape talking about putting the bonds in escrow. I'm the one talking about going to a bank." DiGulio said the undercover agents barely gave his client time to comprehend his predicament, much less figure a way out without risking his life. "They had Ken at one meeting and they popped him only 12 minutes after they announced it was Colombian drug money. If they really wanted to see if he was in on it, why not wait 24 hours and see what he does?" DiGulio asked. But Tate said the undercover agents intentionally gave the defendants a chance to back away from the transaction. "The agents gave them an opportunity to bow out of the deal, but they indicated that they didn't care where the money was coming from," he said. Vicknair, who was convicted Aug. 2, remains free on a $50,000 property bond until his scheduled sentencing Nov. 3. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin