Pubdate: Sun, 10 Apr 2005 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2005 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: Taft Wireback, Staff Writer INDICTED MECHANIC 'HERO' IN DRUG WAR GREENSBORO -- Percy A. Vega, the aircraft mechanic, is biding his time these days in the Guilford County jail in High Point awaiting trial in U.S. Middle District Court. But 20 years ago, he was Percy A. Vega, commandante in the Peruvian naval air forces and an ally in the United States' efforts to wipe out the cocaine trade in his homeland. Vega ranked as "one of the best friends" the U.S. government had in Peru at that time; his exploits against narcoterrorists won praise from the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, the U.S. Embassy in Peru and the Peruvian government, said Creighton Dennis, then a narcotics officer with the U.S. Embassy. "While I don't know the full circumstances of Mr. Vega's arrest, I hope this sheds some light on his pro-American feelings and may be taken into account at his trial," Dennis said. Vega's daughter, Lisseth Mocoso, disputes the government's contention that her father is an illegal immigrant who falsified his application for a mechanical license from the Federal Aviation Administration. "I have all the proof that he did get the license and met all the requirements of the FAA," said Mocoso, 26, a legal permanent resident of the United States. "He is a smart man who maybe has done too much for the U.S. government and so, now, this is how they are paying him back." Vega was arrested a month ago in a sting led by the U.S. Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement at the TIMCO aviation maintenance plant at Piedmont Triad International Airport. Of 24 people arrested on immigration charges, he is among the two or three facing the most serious charges. Vega, now 53, risked life and limb during the mid-1980s to save a DEA agent and some Peruvian forces who were pinned down by armed drug traffickers, said Dennis, who now lives in Nassau, Bahamas. "Cmdr. Vega organized a rescue mission to relieve the DEA and Peruvian personnel who were under attack from narcoterrorists," Dennis said. "Under fire and at great personal risk, Cmdr. Vega and his crew landed the aircraft, set up a defensive perimeter and rescued the DEA and Peruvian personnel." For his efforts, Vega ended up with a price on his head by Colombian "narcotraffickers" and other terrorists, including the Maoist Shining Path insurgents, he said. Mocoso, who lives in northern Virginia, said that is a key reason her family left Lima, Peru, in the early 1990s. A background check by the News & Record showed that Vega's first known address in this country was 11 years ago in Miami on Southwest 107th Avenue. "His life was threatened," she said. "Due to what? All this that he had done for the United States. They said they were going to come after us." "It all happened in a weekend," said Mocoso, who was 14 or 15 at the time. "We woke up one Saturday morning. He said, 'We're going to take a long, long trip. We're going to see Mickey Mouse.' " A grand jury indicted Vega on March 28 allegations he lied to the FAA about having experience with complex repairs on three types of jets commonly used in passenger service. He is accused of exaggerating his experience so he could take the test for the FAA's airframe and powerplant license, commonly called the A&P, which allows a mechanic to work on the more complex mechanical parts of an airplane. Vega also is charged with possessing a counterfeit Social Security card and a fake green card when he was taken into custody March 8. TIMCO said Vega did not use his license to work on those components during the five years he worked there. He worked in the interiors shop, which focuses on seating and other aspects of the areas occupied by passengers and crew, the company said. Vega's lawyer, Walter L. Jones of Greensboro, declined to comment on the case. In a recent telephone interview, Dennis, the former embassy narcotics officer, said he is available to testify on Vega's behalf. Dennis said he met Vega in 1982 when he was first sent to Peru to help curb the production of coca leaf in the country's Upper Huallaga Valley. Vega provided naval infantry escorts as U.S. government photographers documented reductions in the crop, he said. Vega's efforts brought him to the attention of Colombian drug traffickers and two Peruvian terrorist groups, the Shining Path and the MRTA, Dennis said. They put a $10,000 bounty on his head, he said. Later, Dennis worked with Vega as U.S. advisers helped the Peruvian military "in jungle raids against cocaine labs," Dennis said. In one of those raids, narcoterrorists shot down a helicopter with a rocket-propelled grenade, triggering a gunbattle that Vega and his troops broke up, he said. After that, the bounty on Vega was increased to $50,000, Dennis said. Because of that, Vega sought political asylum in the United States but was denied for reasons that Mocoso, Vega's daughter, said were never clarified. The charges against him say that Vega left the United States voluntarily in late 1999, returning to Peru before re-entering this country on a work visa good through November 2002. But Vega didn't leave, instead continuing to work at TIMCO. He recently married a legal permanent resident and, because of that, was seeking to have his immigration status changed at the time of his arrest, Mocoso said. She said that as a result of that application, her father had obtained a permit from immigration authorities that entitled him to work here through September. A spokesman for the federal office of Citizenship and Immigration Services said that could be true, but it doesn't necessarily mean Vega was using the permit in a legal way. Mocoso has a thick file detailing her father's past, including letters of commendation about Commandante Vega from the U.S. Embassy in Peru to his superiors, which she intends to employ if Vega faces trial. The file also includes letters of recommendation to the FAA from other A&P license holders attesting to his expertise working "in all phases of structural repair," as one puts it, on a variety of planes. The paper trail dates to a letter from the captain of a Peruvian navy aviation-maintenance hub where Vega apparently was posted in the late 1980s. Manny Van Pelt, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, said it is impossible to speculate on the relative uniqueness of Vega's story of drug-war heroics among the hundreds the federal agency has arrested on immigration charges in its continuing crackdown in the aviation industry. All have their unique stories to tell, said Van Pelt, whose department includes agencies involved in the investigation at TIMCO. But if it comes to a trial, federal prosecutors will contend that Vega's letters of recommendation were inaccurate, that he knew it and that he admitted as much after his arrest. However it all comes out, Mocoso said her father is a good man and she believes in him. It could be a death sentence to send him back to Peru, she said. "We fear for his life in Peru just as much as we fear for him in jail, maybe more in Peru," she said. "He will be at risk because he is Percy Vega. He will be at risk because of everything he did fighting for the U.S. and fighting against narcoterrorism." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek