Pubdate: Wed, 05 Jul 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 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) TRIAL OFFERS 'MIAMI VICE' SCENARIO TAMPA - The arrest of Joaquin Mario Valencia-Trujillo climaxed one of the biggest U.S. drug investigations ever. Now jurors in a Tampa federal courtroom will decide the fate of the man authorities say was a leader in the notorious Cali Cartel. Valencia-Trujillo, 48, was the main target of Operation Panama Express, an international drug trafficking investigation based in Tampa. Authorities think Valencia-Trujillo was responsible for shipping 100 tons of cocaine a year into the United States, or about 20 percent of what came into the country. When Valencia-Trujillo was extradited two years ago, a Drug Enforcement Administration official compared him to Pablo Escobar, the late leader of the Medellin Cartel. Valencia-Trujillo has pleaded not guilty to charges including drug trafficking and money laundering. Some of the charges can bring life sentences, but U.S. officials agreed as part of the extradition that he would receive no more than 40 years in prison. After several delays, jury selection is scheduled to start today in the courtroom of U.S. District Judge Elizabeth Kovachevich. Opening arguments are scheduled to start Monday. The trial is expected to last six months. Authorities said Valencia-Trujillo had assets of $500 million. The U.S. government froze his assets, so he is being defended by court-appointed lawyers, Matthew Farmer and Ronald Kurpiers II. Life At Casa Blanca Valencia-Trujillo lived in an extravagant compound known as Casa Blanca, or the White House. He is married to a Colombian skating star and raised rare show horses. He also operated a paper company called Unipapel, which authorities allege was a front for his drug operations. The prosecution says Valencia-Trujillo, also known as Oscar Martinez, was the Colombian cocaine supplier to Miami drug lords Salvador Magluta and Augusto Guillermo "Willie" Falcon. Prosecutors say the two made $2 billion smuggling cocaine in the 1980s, according to The Associated Press. Politically connected in Colombia, Valencia-Trujillo, 48, fought extradition for more than a year after his January 2003 arrest. Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Ruddy has alleged in court papers, for instance, that a Colombian prosecutor lost his job after admitting he improperly helped Valencia-Trujillo's defense by providing an affidavit from a witness in exchange for a promise of money or a job. The defense responded that the prosecutor in question, Daniel Serrano, publicly denied allegations that he was fired for taking a bribe from Valencia-Trujillo. As he awaited extradition in a Colombian jail, Valencia-Trujillo was on a hunger strike, according to Colombian newspapers. Since he arrived in Tampa, his attorneys have waged a vigorous legal battle, successfully limiting the prosecution on several fronts. For instance, although the prosecution alleges Valencia-Trujillo's drug trafficking dates to the 1980s, he cannot be convicted of any charges based on activities before Dec. 17, 1997. The Colombian Constitution prohibits extradition for charges before that date. However, the prosecution does intend to try to offer evidence that covers events before that to support allegations that Valencia- Trujillo's crimes continued. The trial is expected to feature testimony of violence, international intrigue, betrayal and vast amounts of money. The trial likely will feature a parade of international drug traffickers who were captured and turned informant. Cocaine By Sea The star witness is likely to be Jose Castrillon-Henao, who has admitted running Valencia-Trujillo's maritime smuggling operation. Castrillon-Henao is living in the witness protection program after having turned informant in 1999, three years after he was arrested and jailed in Panama. Authorities say Castrillon-Henao became central to Valencia-Trujillo's success in the drug business by establishing an effective route for maritime cocaine smuggling. Castrillon-Henao's story was told in detail in a 139-page FBI affidavit made public last year when it was placed on the court docket in Valencia-Trujillo's case. Authorities tricked Castrillon-Henao into getting onto a plane to Tampa. After fighting the charges for months, he began to tip authorities off to cocaine shipments, enabling the Coast Guard and Navy to seize them as they moved in fishing boats, according to information in the affidavit. Authorities estimated unprecedented cooperation has led to 775 arrests and the seizure of 400 tons of cocaine. According to the FBI affidavit, Castrillon-Henao and Valencia-Trujillo met in 1989 after Castrillon-Henao had built up a fishing and seafood export company called Invermap. The two men were introduced by an acquaintance, the court document states, and they soon began talking about smuggling cocaine over the eastern Pacific. Castrillon-Henao subsequently was shot and then kidnapped. Valencia- Trujillo came to his rescue, paying the kidnappers to release him. After that, according to the affidavit, Castrillon-Henao began shipping Valencia-Trujillo's cocaine to repay the debt. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake