Pubdate: Thu, 5 Nov 1998 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1998 Associated Press. Author: Frank Bajak JAILED CALI DRUG TRAFFICKER KILLED IN PRISON YARD BOGOTA, Colombia -- A former top Cali cocaine boss was killed while watching a soccer game in a prison yard Thursday, two years after he surrendered and began fingering ex-associates. Helmer ``Pacho'' Herrera was shot at least five times in the face by a man who gained entry to the Palmira prison outside Cali by claiming to be a lawyer for another inmate, officials said. Herrera, 47, had been the No. 3 man in the Cali cartel, one of the world's biggest criminal organizations, and had set up and managed cocaine distribution rings in major U.S. cities, beginning in the 1980s. The assailant appeared to be ``an acquaintance of Herrera because he greeted him first,'' national police spokesman Carlos Perdomo said. Herrera died on the way to the hospital, emergency room director Dr. Gustavo Paredes said. Television video showed the body, in uniform and cleats, on a gurney, the floor beneath soaked in blood. The killer, identified as Rafael Angel Uribe, 32, was beaten by other inmates before guards took him away. He had entered the prison a half hour before the attack during a prison soccer match, national prisons director Carmen Lucia Tristancho said. She said it was unclear whether the murder weapon, a 9mm pistol, was smuggled into the penitentiary or whether it was already inside. Herrera surrendered to authorities in September 1996, the last of seven major cartel members to either turn themselves in or be arrested. He was convicted of drug trafficking in March and sentenced to six years and eight months in prison after incriminating at least 20 former associates. Herrera continued to seek sentence reductions, fingering his wheelchair-bound half-brother from jail. But in September, his prison term was increased to 14 years and eight months, following an appeal by prosecutors. When he surrendered, Herrera said he was tired of being on the run from enemies and thought he would be safer behind bars. Known as a man with a thousand faces, he had dodged hundreds of police raids, even dressing up as a woman to elude authorities. Drug Enforcement Administration officials in Washington said investigators believed Herrera had continued to traffic cocaine from prison and could have been killed by a competitor. ``It's an occupational hazard,'' said the agency's South American operations chief, Ron Lard. Lard said Herrera had over the years moved many tons of cocaine into the United States, where he was wanted for trial on murder, drug trafficking, and money-laundering charges. A decade ago, Herrera played a key role in the Cali cartel's secret alliance with the government to wipe out the more violent Medellin drug gang. His lawyer, Gustavo Salazar, said Thursday the killing could have been related to that rivalry. Herrera was believed responsible for a 1988 car bomb attack on a building where the family of the late Medellin drug boss Pablo Escobar was living. The family escaped unhurt. He survived a September 1990 raid by Medellin cartel hit men on a ranch he owned outside Cali in which 19 people were killed. In the 1980s, Herrera directed cocaine distribution and money-laundering in the New York City area for the cartel, which at its peak exported about 80 percent of the cocaine sold in the United States, according to the DEA. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry