Pubdate: Tue, 11 Sep 2007 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2007 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: SIBYLLA BRODZINSKY, Special to The Miami Herald COLOMBIAN DRUG LORD CAPTURED BOGOTA -- One of the world's most-wanted drug lords was captured hiding under a pile of leaves Monday in a major strike against a powerful and violent cocaine cartel that had managed to infiltrate the top ranks of Colombia's security forces. Diego Leon Montoya Sanchez, who goes by the name "Don Diego," was the leader of the Norte del Valle cartel, believed to be responsible for nearly two-thirds of the 500 tons of cocaine exported from Colombia every year and at least 1,500 murders. Among the FBI's top 10 most wanted criminals, he has been indicted in the United States, including in South Florida. "This is the toughest blow to drug trafficking in 12 years," said Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos in a televised press conference. In 1995, Colombian police seized Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela of the Cali cartel, then the world's largest. Montoya Sanchez was escorted off a Colombian Air Force plane onto the tarmac at Bogota's military air base by army commandos who captured him on a ranch in rural southwestern Colombia. Sporting a scruffy beard and mustache, the heavy-set man looked considerably different from his grainy image on wanted posters. Hunted Down Army commander Gen. Mario Montoya (no relation) said the operation came after months of surveillance and intelligence that led troops to the ranch where Montoya Sanchez was hunted down and captured early Monday morning. Gen. Montoya said Montoya Sanchez offered the soldiers who captured him $5 million to let him go. Montoya Sanchez, also known as the "boss of bosses," faces indictments in three different federal courts in the United States, including two in South Florida. The charges include drug trafficking, money laundering and murder. His brother, Juan Carlos Montoya Sanchez, received a 22-year prison sentence in a Miami federal court in February 2006. Their cousin, Carlos Felipe Toro Sanchez, was also sentenced last year to about 20 years in prison. Diego Montoya Sanchez caught the attention of U.S. authorities in 1999, when he was indicted in a South Florida court for drug trafficking and money laundering. Two more indictments were handed down in New York and Washington, D.C. A $5 million reward was offered for his capture. When Colombian authorities stepped up the heat on Montoya Sanchez in about 2003, he circulated numerous accounts of his own death, including having been gunned down by rival factions of the cartel. Montoya Sanchez, along with several other Colombia drug lords, had reportedly been seeking to strike a deal with U.S. authorities to hand themselves over, but negotiations failed. "This is a blow that speaks to the commitment of the armed forces in the fight against drug trafficking," said Vice President Francisco Santos. The capture comes just a month after that commitment was cast in doubt by revelations that Montoya Sanchez had recruited or bribed high-ranking army officers to tip him off to any operations against his organization. The scandal cost two generals their jobs and led to the capture of 26 officers and noncommissioned officers. "There is no doubt that the purge of the armed forces allowed this capture to happen," said Santos. "It is logical to conclude that they [the cashiered officers] used to pass on information." With the moles out of the way, Santos said, the operation was planned. A special commando force was choppered into the area where his Montoya Sanchez's presence had been detected, penetrating his multiple rings of security, said Gen. Montoya. The soldiers surrounded the farmhouse but did not find Montoya Sanchez among its occupants. Spotting a trail in the leaves outside the house, the soldiers followed it to a stream where they found Montoya Sanchez -- wearing only a T-shirt and underpants -- under a pile of leaves, the general said. He was transferred to Bogota, and was placed in the custody of Colombia's prosecutor's office, which will process him for extradition to the United States. Santos said he expected Montoya Sanchez to be in a U.S. prison within two months. "We hope this [the extradition request] will be processed as quickly as possible," he said. The Norte del Valle cartel rose to prominence after the notorious Medellin and Cali cartels were dismantled in the 1990s. Montoya Sanchez started his career in the underworld in the 1990s overseeing the Cali cartel's cocaine labs and took advantage of the demise of his former bosses to take up the trade himself, controlling everything from coca fields and cocaine labs, to export corridors along the southwestern Pacific coast. Powerful Network He had a close relationship with paramilitary warlords who protected drug routes. "We don't know who will take his [Montoya Sanchez's] place but rest assured that our intelligence has given us clues as to who it could be and we will continue hitting those organizations until we finish them off," Santos said. Miami Herald staff writer Jay Weaver contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart