Pubdate: Tue, 27 Apr 1999 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 1999 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/observer/ Author: ERIC FRAZIER DRUG KINGPIN JAILED FOR LIFE Huge Colombian network sent cocaine to Charlotte A drug-smuggling network that steered hundreds of kilograms of Colombian cocaine to Charlotte suffered a heavy blow Monday when a federal judge sentenced its leader to life in prison without parole. U.S. District Judge Samuel Wilson sentenced Juan Bautista Alomia-Torres, 35, for federal drug and money-laundering crimes. A federal jury in Charlotte had convicted Alomia-Torres in October. Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Higdon said Alomia-Torres' operation, loosely known as "The Line," smuggled between 300 and 400 kilos of cocaine from 1989 until he was indicted in May 1997. The drugs had a street value of up to $20 million, Higdon said. The huge operation, according to one witness, sent at least 200 kilos into Charlotte between 1991 and 1996. Higdon said other drug-dealing groups may have moved more drugs through North Carolina in the past, but few have been as far-flung as this one, which used ports in Charleston, Wilmington, Houston, New York, Tampa, New Orleans and Baltimore to import its illegal merchandise. "It was certainly one of the largest in terms of geographic size and impact," Higdon said. "It really does give us an inkling that more is going on in Western North Carolina than meets the eye. Groups like the Colombians are here, and they are active." Higdon said Alomia-Torres came to the U.S. in 1985 as an illegal immigrant stowaway aboard a ship from Colombia. Alomia-Torres moved to Winston-Salem, where he lived with others in plain houses and apartments and drove nondescript cars, Higdon said. From bases in Winston-Salem, Atlanta and Houston, the group sent drugs flowing throughout North Carolina, Georgia and Texas. Higdon said by the time authorities indicted Alomia-Torres in May 1997, police had run into members of his group in South Carolina, Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi. The group even used a fleet of vehicles rigged with hidden compartments to transport cocaine and thousands of dollars of drug proceeds. Evidence presented at Alomia-Torres' trial in October showed that he recruited all the members of "The Line" from his Colombian hometown of Buenavista, a seaport. Some walked across the border into the United States; some came as stowaways in boats. Authorities said the name of the organization came from its belief that none of its members "breaks the Line" and cooperates with police. "They had a common goal, a common background, a common understanding," Higdon said. "They worked together." Fifteen other defendants were indicted with Alomia-Torres. Seven of Alomia-Torres' codefendants have been sentenced. Six are in prison, serving terms from four years to 13 years. Three others are awaiting sentencing. Four are fugitives. Another is being prosecuted in Texas and the charges in Charlotte have been dismissed. Alomia-Torres' empire began crumbling on Dec. 9, 1996, when Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officers got a tip about a man transporting drugs. They stopped a red Pontiac in the 2200 block of Beatties Ford Road. Inside, they found Bruce Elliott Little, a 35-year-old Charlotte resident, and 95 grams of cocaine, Higdon said. Little agreed to cooperate with police. At his home, officers found 109 more grams of cocaine, Higdon said. Little agreed to contact his source, whom he knew only as "John." Little arranged to buy 18 ounces of cocaine for $15,000 at a hotel in Charlotte off Interstate 77, Higdon said. Police arrested the two men who came to make the sale, and they found Alomia-Torres in the parking lot. One of the men began outlining the international scope of the network. Agents from the U.S. Customs Service and U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service then took over the investigation, assisted by agents from the Internal Revenue Service, Charlotte-Mecklenburg police and the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. "It was just basically good police work," Higdon said, "incredibly good police work, putting it all together piece by piece." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck