Pubdate: Sat, 21 Oct 2006 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2006 The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tbo.com/news/opinion/submissionform.htm Website: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/446 Author: Elaine Silvestrini, The Tampa Tribune Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials CALI COKE CASE NOW UP TO JURY TAMPA - After more than three months of trial, a federal jury will begin deliberations Monday in the case of a man prosecutors say was once one of the largest drug kingpins in the world. Jurors are set to decide the case of [Name redacted] , who is accused by the government of exporting hundreds, if not thousands, of tons of cocaine into the United States from Colombia. The prosecution alleges [Name redacted] was a top leader in the notorious Cali Cartel. After receiving legal instructions from U.S. District Judge Elizabeth Kovachevich on Friday, jurors selected a foreman and determined a schedule for deliberations that could take days or weeks. In closing arguments that spanned three days, attorneys on both sides painted [Name redacted] in starkly different terms: the prosecution portraying him as a cunning and fearsome drug lord and the defense depicting him as an innocent, legitimate businessman. Investigation Spanned Decade [Name redacted] was the main target of "Operation Panama Express," a decadelong international maritime drug smuggling investigation coordinated by federal authorities in Tampa. Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph K. Ruddy told jurors Friday that [Name redacted] has wreaked havoc on U.S. streets. "He has lived a life of wealth and privilege at the expense of literally thousands of people," Ruddy said. "Now is the time for [Name redacted] to be held responsible for what he's done ... Justice compels you to send him the bill." Defense attorney Ronald Kurpiers, however, told jurors Thursday: "The government's case doesn't hold water. ... The government has emphasized a case against a man who didn't do anything wrong." Kurpiers argued that government witnesses, many of whom were criminals who testified in hopes of lenience, were working out of a playbook assembled by the Cali Cartel. When all else fails, Kurpiers said, the playbook requires members to make up a story about someone else in hopes of saving themselves. "This case is based on the lips of convicted felons," Kurpiers said. "It's not based on documents." Prosecution Sought Inside Sources Ruddy said although it's "distasteful," the government has no choice but to cut deals with felons. "The people involved in the criminal activity of the defendant are in the best position to describe what happened," he said. He said the only legitimate records available for the prosecution came from outside Colombia. Inside that country, he said, records "just happen to disappear." Kurpiers criticized the government for not having any tapes of telephone calls involving [Name redacted] . Ruddy said, however, that [Name redacted] was careful in his communications. "He never talks on the phone," Ruddy said. "He talks on the radio under an assumed name with codes." Prosecutors didn't want jurors to know, Kurpiers argued, "that [Name redacted] was a tax-paying businessman." Quoting one of the trial witnesses, Kurpiers said, "You have to have objective verification other than the word of an informant. This is where the government breaks down. There is not any objective verification." The sides also had different takes on [Name redacted] sprawling estate, known as Casa Blanca. Kurpiers said the defense had proved that [Name redacted] wealth was all derived from his "legitimate, good" paper company, Unipapel, and his horse ranch, La Luisa. "He's a charitable, kind man," Kurpiers said. "He's a devoted family man - that's why his house was built - a religious man." "How does [Name redacted] live in Casa Blanca?" Ruddy asked. "I think you heard from the witnesses how he could afford that - through hundreds or thousands of tons of cocaine brought into the United States, or more." - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine