Pubdate: Fri, 11 Mar 2005 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2005 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Gerardo Reyes JAILED DRUG LORD MAY BE ORDERING HITS A Colombian drug lord jailed in the U.S. may be ordering the murder of his enemies through the use of relatives and e-mail, U.S. officials said. U.S. and Colombian authorities are investigating whether a top Colombian drug lord in an American U.S. prison used relatives and e- mails to order the murder of enemies, officials and lawyers close to the case say. Victor Patio Fomeque, 45, is regarded as one of the top drug lords held in a U.S. prison, a former leader of the powerful Northern Valley Cartel who was extradited to the United States in 2003 and is awaiting trial. Although there has been no official confirmation that Patio has been cooperating with U.S. prosecutors, many of his associates in Colombia believe that he is -- and have unleashed scores of revenge and counter-revenge killings. FAMILY QUESTIONED U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents have questioned Patio's mother, Deisy Fomeque, and his sisters, Maria Helena and Marleny, about the e-mails, said Patio's Miami attorney Humberto Dominguez. The three women live in the United States under U.S. government protection, apparently part of Patio's deal with prosecutors. Deisy Fomeque has claimed that most of the 200 hundred suspect e-mails, obtained by El Nuevo Herald from persons close to the case, were fake. ''They mixed facts and falsehoods and wrote down whatever came into their minds,'' she said. But senior Colombian police officials said they believe the e-mails are real communications between Patio relatives in the United States and Colombia -- and that they sometimes indicate that Pati=F1o is giving orders. For example, one e-mail from a Patio nephew, who later was jailed in Colombia, seemed to show that the nephew ordered the murder of a crooked policeman referred to only as ''Baldy'' Molina. ''Baldy is already with my dad,'' said one e-mail sent on last August by the nephew, whose father has been dead for some time, to Patio's sister Maria Elena Ocampo. Another e-mail, this time from a Patio relative in the United States -- someone close to the nephew -- indicated that Patio may have been guiding the nephew's actions. Patio ''says you should see what you can do to solve the problem of [the jailed nephew] . . . because . . . if they find out that [Patio] . . . was sponsoring everything he [the nephew] did, the negotiations [for a reduced U.S. sentence] could get complicated,'' said the e-mail. An e-mail later in the same day, apparently from Patio's sister Marleny, says, ``I'm very happy to hear about that S.O.B. Molina . . . and please keep us informed us about the casualties.'' FORGERY ALLEGED Dominguez maintained the e-mails were forged by Patio's enemies in the Northern Valley Cartel. ''The family left there because Colombia is incapable of protecting its own citizens,'' but now is suspected of running its violent affairs by long-distance, the lawyer added. ``That's absurd''. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin