Pubdate: Wed, 13 Jan 1999 Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Page: A2 Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Author: Dale Brazao, Toronto Star Staff Reporter MOUNTIE BLAMES BOSS FOR LEAKS Ordered To Sell Police Drug Data Judge Is Told VILA FRANCA DE XIRA, Portugal - Former Mountie Jorge Leite admitted yesterday that he sold RCMP information to drug lords on numerous occasions but insisted it was all part of his job. Leite, a former drug squad officer with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Montreal, said he took payoffs totalling more than $30,000 in an attempt to infiltrate the Cali drug cartel. He said he received between $1,000 and $2,000 for every piece of information he furnished from police computers. Describing the information he gave as innocuous, Leite said he turned over every penny he got from the drug dealers to Inspector Claude Savoie, who, Leite claims, was overseeing the clandestine operation. Savoie, who headed the Montreal drug squad at the time, shot himself in the head with his service revolver in 1992 as internal affairs officers waited outside his office to question him about his own alleged mob connection. The RCMP later said Savoie was on the take from another drug cell in Montreal and had received about $200,000 in payoffs. Leite said he sold the information to Ines Barbosa - police describe her as the Godmother of the Cali Cartel in Montreal - through his best friend, Luis Lopes, a convicted cocaine dealer. ``Everything I did, I did on orders and knowledge of my chief,'' Leite said on the first day of his trial for corruption and credit-card fraud. ``I had specific instructions from my supervisor to infiltrate the group,'' Leite told a courtroom packed with his relatives and Canadian media. Despite the large bribes he received, Leite said, he never got receipts from Savoie, or logged the payoffs in any police books. Leite fled to Portugal in May, 1991, amid allegations he was the mole who had sabotaged at least two large RCMP drug investigations involving millions. Savoie himself ordered the investigation of Leite after getting a tip that someone in the squad was dirty, the court was told yesterday. These revelations came on the first day of Leite's trial, a marathon 12-hour day before a three-judge panel that didn't believe in coffee breaks and worked until 9:30 p.m. after a quick lunch at McDonald's. While admitting to the bribes, Leite denied that his villa and condo in the trendy Algarve were also payoffs. He said he paid for the house with his hard-earned money, adding that he and his wife, Maria, were making about $150,000 a year when they decided to go back to Portugal. But Inspector Yves Roussel testified his investigation showed Leite was making only about $56,000 a year as a junior officer and his wife $16,000 as a part-time nurse. Asked by Judge Jose Duarte Martins to explain his hasty departure from Canada, Leite said working for the RCMP had left him ``feeling oppressed.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry