Pubdate: Tue, 10 August 1999 Source: Roanoke Times (VA) Copyright: 1999 Roanoke Times Contact: 201 W. Campbell Ave., Roanoke, Va. 24010 Website: http://www.roanoke.com/roatimes/index.html Author: Michael Hemphill, JAVIER CRUZ SERVED AS A SPY FOR THE DEA, THEN JUMPED BAIL Reports Say Cruz Is Dead Federal officials said they have not confirmed the report that Javier Cruz was killed and would continue their search for him until they do. Federal authorities are investigating reports that Javier Cruz -- a Roanoke-based cocaine kingpin turned government informant -- has been killed in his native Colombia. U.S. Attorney Bob Crouch offered no details about the reports, only that he first heard of the rumored slaying Monday morning from sources in the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, the agency for which Cruz worked undercover from 1992 to 1996. "We have received a report to that effect," Crouch said, "but at this point it is not confirmed, and we will have nothing further to say until such time as it is confirmed or confirmed that it's not true." The report could not be substantiated by an independent inquiry. Cruz's Roanoke attorney, Bill Cleaveland, said he hadn't heard the report. DEA officials in Virginia and Washington, D.C., declined to comment, referring questions to Colombian authorities and the U.S. embassy in Bogota. Embassy spokesman Bob Schmidt said Monday he knew nothing of the report, nor did his local DEA office. The spokesman for Colombia's national police could not be reached. A Cruz relative in the United States, who asked not to be identified for fear of retaliation, said an anonymous caller had related that Cruz was killed Thursday and buried Saturday in his childhood home of Buga Valle. The relative said the caller did not share how Cruz died. If true, Cruz's death brings to a close one of the biggest and most notorious federal investigations ever conducted in Roanoke. Cruz's official criminal tale began in 1987, when he fled North Carolina after shooting to death a 25-year-old man during an argument. He spent a year in New York, then moved to Virginia under an assumed name to work first as a dairy farmer in Floyd County before setting up a used-car lot in 1990 in Salem. The lot was actually a front for cocaine smuggling, and in a six-month period, his organization transported more than two tons of the drug through Roanoke. Arrested in 1991, Cruz agreed to become a DEA informant. He and his cocaine boss, Leonardo Rivera, both worked undercover while serving time in the Roanoke County-Salem Jail in an investigation dubbed Operation El Cid. With his murder charge reduced to involuntary manslaughter, Cruz pleaded guilty in 1992 and was soon released. He spent much of the next four years in Colombia posing as a money launderer to gather information on the Cali cartel, for which the DEA paid him $347,000. El Cid eventually resulted in 50 people indicted. However, most of them lived in Colombia and were never arrested. In January 1998, Cruz, then 40, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Roanoke to money laundering, drug conspiracy, possessing 10 firearms as a fugitive and being a drug kingpin -- a charge which mandated a life sentence if he hadn't become a DEA spy. He went to Miami to await his sentencing. Worried he'd still get substantial prison time, he allegedly fled to Colombia in May 1998. Monday's report was the first news to surface about Cruz since his disappearance. Among the last to speak with him in this country was Jose Blanco, Cruz's probation officer in Miami. Monday, Blanco said he hadn't heard the report of Cruz's death, but wouldn't be surprised if it were true considering the dangerous people he snitched on in Colombia. Tom Morefield, with the U.S. Marshals Service, the agency charged with finding fugitives, said he couldn't confirm the report and that their investigation will continue "until we have something that will definitely close it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D