Statement by:
Donnie Marshall
Chief of Operations, Drug Enforcement Administration
U.S. Department of Justice
Before the:
Subcommittee on National Security, International Affairs and Criminal Justice
Regarding:
Cooperative efforts of the Colombian National Police and military in anti-narcotic
efforts, and current initiatives DEA has in Colombia.
Date:
July 9, 1997
DRCNet Response: It should be noted that no one pretends that we will ever be able to cut off the supply of drugs from South America. One simple reason is that the coca-growing area in South America is larger than the United States east of the Mississippi, and most of that region is jungles and mountains.
The Emergence of New Trafficking Threats to the Western Hemisphere
FARC Involvement in the Drug Trade
Mr. Chairman, Members of the Subcommittee: I appreciate the opportunity to appear
before the Subcommittee today to discuss the cooperative efforts of the Colombian National
Police and military in our joint anti-narcotic efforts, as well as current initiatives DEA
has in Colombia. First I would like to thank you, Mr. Chairman and the Subcommittee, for
your continued support of DEA and its programs, both internationally and on the homefront.
I know you recently showed your commitment and continued interest in the anti-narcotics
efforts in the Western Hemisphere by traveling to the source countries of Colombia, Peru,
and Bolivia. This allowed you to see first hand the initiatives that have been put into
place as a result of the substantial budget increases for the Andean Ridge, strongly
supported by this committee, in the FY-97 budget.
Narco-traffickers from Colombia seized total control of the cocaine trade in the late
1970's. The first to dominate this trade were the organized criminal groups headquartered
in Medellin, Colombia, led by violent criminals like Fabio Ochoa, Jose Rodriquez-Gacha,
Carlos Lehder, and arguably the most violent criminal in history, Pablo Escobar. These
individuals ruled the drug trade in Colombia and in major cities in the United States,
such as Miami and New York, with an iron fist. As with organized crime throughout history,
their climb to success was rooted in bribery, intimidation and murder. The murder rate in
Colombia has always been exponentially higher per capita than in the United States. During
the heyday of Escobar and his confederates, as a result of their violence, up to 2,000
citizens and police officers were murdered per year in Medellin. At the height of his
power, in an act of total impunity, Escobar placed a $1,000/$3,000 bounty on the lives of
police officers in Colombia and he was the mastermind behind an Avianca commercial
airliner being blown from the sky in Bogota killing 107 persons. Numerous Colombian
Supreme Court Justices considering the extradition of Colombian drug lords to the United
States lost their lives at the hands of Escobar's ruthless henchmen.
One by one the leaders of the most violent organized criminal group in history were
brought to justice by the Colombian National Police. Lehder was extradited to the United
States, to stand trial for his crimes, and is currently serving life terms in a Federal
Penitentiary. The Ochoa brothers were arrested, but received ridiculously short jail terms
for their crimes, and were in fact recently released from a Colombian prison. Jose Gonzalo
Rodriguez-Gacha and Pablo Escobar were killed in bloody gunfights with the Colombian
National Police.
During the time the Colombian National Police were engaged in their campaign to bring
down the Medellin Crime Syndicate, a group of young criminals in Cali, Colombia, led by
Miquel Rodrigues Orejuela, his brother Gilberto, and Jose Santa Cruz Londono were building
what was to become the most prolific and successful criminal enterprise in history. By the
early 1990's, these traffickers from Cali, far less flamboyant and seemingly less violent
than their counterparts from Medellin, had slowly established control over the cocaine
trade in this hemisphere as well as in Europe, and even began opening new markets in the
Far East.
Orejuela created an enormous monolithic organization that orchestrated the manufacture
of hundreds of tons of cocaine in Colombia, which were moved through the Caribbean and
later Mexico, to U.S. markets. The leadership of the Cali Cartel ruled this seven billion
dollar per year business, while safely ensconced on foreign soil. In short, they became
the prominent "mob leaders of the 1990's." However, they were far wealthier, far
more dangerous, far more influential, and had a much more devastating impact on the
day-to-day lives of the citizens of our country than either their domestic predecessors or
the crime families from Medellin.
Miguel Orejuela and his confederates set up an extremely well-disciplined system of
compartmentalization that spanned and insulated every facet of their drug business. The
organization's tentacles reached into the cities and towns of the United States either
through their U.S.-based infrastructure or their surrogates who sold crack cocaine on the
streets of locations as varied as Chicago, Illinois and Rocky Mount, North Carolina. At
the height of his power, Orejuela was reportedly using as much as one-half of his seven
billion dollar annual income from drug sales to bribe government officials, judges, and
police officers in Colombia. Although they freely used their enormous wealth to bribe,
they were just as prone to violence as the thugs from Medellin. Just as
"traditional" organized crime was addressed over time in the United States by
exposing its leaders, and systematically stripping away the pretense that they were
legitimate businessmen, the organized criminal groups from Colombia have been eviscerated,
and are now a fragment of what they once were.
The Colombian National Police (CNP), through tenacity, courage, and bravery that has
seldom, if ever, been seen in law enforcement, faced down the most powerful organized
criminal syndicate in history. Through the fearless leadership of General Rosso Serrano
and Colonel Leonardo Gallego of the Colombian National Police, as well as that of General
Harold Bedoya of the Colombian military, they built cases on the entire upper echelon of
the Cali drug trafficking organization. They methodically tracked each leader down until
the entire infrastructure of the Cali Mafia was either incarcerated or dead. There is no
tribute too great for the brave men and women of the CNP who gave their lives in this
effort.
Yet, even though Orejuela and his brother are in jail, the violence continues. On
November 4, 1996, a van , filled with 360 pounds of dynamite, was discovered parked
outside a chemical plant owned by the family of a Senator sponsoring a bill that lifted
the ban on extradition of Colombian drug traffickers to the United States. The car-bomb,
once the signature of the Medellin Cartel, was discovered just days before the extradition
bill was scheduled for debate by the Colombian Senate. On June 18th, eight Colombian
National Police Officers were killed and 12 others wounded as they tried to disarm a
powerful truck-bomb that had been located during a cursory vehicle search just west of
Bogota. A news outlet in Bogota reported receiving a telephone call from
an individual indicating that "the Extraditables" were taking responsibility for
the bombing. There have also been recent reports from Colombia that Miguel and Gilberto
Orejuela are actively plotting their escape from La Picota Prison, a high security
detention facility outside Bogota, where they are being held.
The Emergence of New
Trafficking Threats to the Western Hemisphere
Despite accurate reports indicating the Orejuelas have ready access to both pay phones
and cellular phones in their cells, they are unable to control their vast empire from
jail. Consequently, their ability to function as the first among all others has been
seriously degraded. There are many groups in Colombia and Mexico trying to fill the void
left by the incarceration of the Cali leadership. Without question the organized crime
families in Mexico, most notably the Arellano-Felix brothers, Miquel Caro-Quintero and
Jesus Amezcua-Contreras, and, until his death last week, Amado Carrillo-Fuentes, have
eclipsed the Colombian traffickers as the most dominant figures in the cocaine trade
today.
Originally, these Mexican crime families received shipments of cocaine from the Cali
group and then smuggled it across the U.S.- Mexico border, where it was turned over to
Colombian distribution cells. First paid $1000 to $2000 per kilo for their services, they
ultimately began receiving between 40% to 50% of each shipment as payment. Amado
Carrillo-Fuentes and the other major traffickers quickly amassed fortunes from the profits
of the sale of thousands of kilograms of cocaine and systematically expanded their
distribution networks.
Although Colombian traffickers still dominate the movement of cocaine from the jungles
of Bolivia and Peru to the large cocaine hydrochloride (HCL) conversion factories in
Southern Colombia, they have lost their stranglehold on the U.S. wholesale market. The
ascension to power by the groups from Mexico has garnered them enormous wealth and a
demonstrative expansion in their spheres of influence. The organized criminal groups from
Mexico now control virtually all cocaine sold in the western half of the United States
and, for the first time, we are seeing a concerted effort on their part to expand into the
lucrative East Coast market.
However, the remnants of the Cali group still directed by the Orejeulas, as well as
Cali splinter groups such as the Grajales-Urdinolas, have become powerful forces in their
own right. New independent traffickers from the Northern Valle del Cauca have risen to
prominence. and are responsible for huge volumes of cocaine and heroin being shipped to
the United States. With their surge to power, the face of the drug trade has changed.
These groups have enlisted the aid of traffickers and smugglers from the Dominican Republic to deliver their product to market and have placed an entire command and control infrastructure in the Caribbean, predominantly in Puerto Rico, to manage the movement of cocaine throughout the Caribbean Corridor. There has been a concerted effort on the part of these Colombian groups to franchise their smuggling and transportation operations to Puerto Rican and Dominican groups in order to minimize their presence on the island. This is an example of the recent decentralization of the cocaine trade in Colombia. The leadership of these new Colombian groups is adopting a less monolithic approach in their operations, as demonstrated by a willingness to sub-contract transportation services and franchise distribution operations in the United States.
This has effectively amputated one to two levels of the Colombian cell system
and forced them to relinquish some profits and control. The cell system is still
employed to provide security and compartmentalization, but it no longer exists to the
extent that the Colombian traffickers exert complete control over the distribution
networks. They have been using Dominican trafficking groups to handle, and to some degree,
control wholesale and street level distribution of cocaine and heroin. By using this
approach they may forego some profits, but they gain the insulation from U. S. justice
that they desire. These new traffickers vying for the Cali throne understand that direct
control creates vulnerability for the criminal organization's leadership in both the
United States and Colombia.
Traffickers from the Dominican Republic have developed intricate trafficking networks
to distribute cocaine and heroin for the Colombians in the lucrative New York market, as
well as in cities all along the East Coast and operate with efficiency, relying heavily on
counter surveillance, and operational security to ensure success. They use sophisticated
communications equipment, cloned cellular communications, alarm systems, and police
scanners to monitor the activity of law enforcement. They also rely heavily on the
ingenious construction of vehicle "traps" to secrete and secure their drug loads
for transportation in passenger vehicles or trucks for transportation to cities throughout
the Northeast.
The criminal groups from the Dominican Republic also provide a natural conduit for
Colombian heroin to the large addict population in New York and the northeastern United
States. Approximately 63 percent of the heroin seized in the United States last year was
of South American origin. Abuse of high quality Colombian heroin, which can easily be
snorted or smoked, rather than injection the traditional method of of administration, has
significantly increased over the last several years, and its use has unfortunately become
"fashionable" for many young people. The heroin trade in Colombia is controlled
by independent traffickers who harvest the poppy in the mountainous areas of the Andes and
produce heroin in small laboratories throughout the area. They then employ an army of
couriers who smuggle the heroin into the United States via ingestion, body carrys and
increasingly in concealed compartments in luggage. The couriers enter the United States
primarily at the ports of San Juan, Puerto Rico, Miami, Florida and New York City from
where they distribute this highly addictive drug all along the East Coast.
An estimated 15% of the world's coca leaf is grown in Colombia and the vast majority of
the cocaine base and cocaine HCL is produced in laboratories throughout Colombia. The
fingerprints of Colombian traffickers are on the vast majority of the cocaine distributed
in the United States today. Many of these activities take place in the southern
rainforests and eastern lowlands of Colombia. Most of the coca cultivation occurs in the
Departments of Guaviare, Caqueta, and Putumayo. Cocaine conversion labs range from small
"family" operations to large facilities, employing dozens of workers. Common
methods are still used to extract cocaine alkaloids from raw coca leaf and to remove
impurities from cocaine base and cocaine HCL. Once the cocaine HCL is manufactured, it is
either shipped via maritime or aircraft to traffickers in Mexico, or shipped through the
Caribbean corridor, including the Bahama Island chain, to U.S. entry points in San Juan,
Puerto Rico, Miami and New York City. The Cali splinter groups and the new groups from
Colombia have returned to the traditional smuggling routes in the Caribbean, creating
alliances with Dominican and Puerto Rican trafficking groups.
The following new independent traffickers from the Northern Valle del Cauca have risen
to prominence:
Jairo Ivan Urdinola Grajales and his brother Julio Fabio
Urdinola Grajales head a major drug trafficking organization associated with the
so-called Northern Valle del Cauca drug mafias. The Urdinolas
are related by marriage to the Henao Montoya family. The CNP arrested Ivan
in April 1992, while Fabio later surrendered to Colombian authorities in
March 1994. The incarceration of the Urdinola Grajales brothers
notwithstanding, their organization reportedly remains active in the drug trade.
The Henao Montoya brothers, Arcangel de Jesus and Jose
Orlando, run trafficking operations out of the Northern Valle del Cauca region.
The Henao Montoyas run the most powerful of the various independent
trafficking groups that comprise the North Valle drug mafia. The major North Valle drug
mafia organizations are poised to become among the most powerful drug trafficking groups
in Colombia. The Henao Montoya organization has been closely linked to the paramilitary
group run by Carlos Castano, a major cocaine trafficker in his own right.
Diego Montoya Sanchez heads a North Valle trafficking organization
that transports cocaine base from Peru to Colombia and produces multi-ton quantities of
cocaine HCI for export to the United States and Europe. DEA considers Montoya
Sanchez to be one of the most significant cocaine traffickers in Colombia today.
In March 1996, Juan Carlos Ramirez Abadia (aka "Chupeta"),
surrendered to Colombian authorities. Chupeta is believed to have
surrendered, in part, due to his fear for his personal safety and to be eligible for a
more lenient prison sentence. In December 1996, Chupeta was sentenced to 24 years in
prison, but may actually serve as little as 7 1/2 years due to Colombia's lenient
sentencing laws. DEA and CNP reports indicate that Chupeta continues to
direct his drug operations from prison.
Julio Cesar Nasser David heads a major polydrug trafficking and money
laundering organization based out of Colombia's North Coast. His organization smuggles
multi-ton quantities of cocaine and marijuana to the United States via commercial
shipments and maritime vessels. In 1994 DEA and Swiss authorities arrested Nasser-David's
wife and seized over 180 million dollars in drug proceeds concealed in secret Swiss bank
accounts.
Alberto Orlando Gamboa (aka "Caracal") runs the most
powerful drug trafficking organization on the North Coast. Gamboa exploits maritime and
air routes to the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Puerto Rico, and other Caribbean islands, to
smuggle multi-ton quantities of cocaine and marijuana into the United States.
FARC Involvement in the Drug
Trade
Adding significantly to the dangers faced by the anti-narcotic forces in Colombia is
the protection being afforded to the farmers, who grow the coca and to the traffickers who
process it into cocaine base and cocaine HCL, by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC) and the National Liberation Army (ELN). The FARC factions continue to
raise funds through extortion, by providing security services to traffickers, and charging
a fee for each gallon of precursor chemicals and each kilo coca leaf and cocaine HCL
moving in their region. Some of these groups have assisted the drug traffickers by storing
and transporting cocaine and marijuana within Colombia, and certain FARC units in Colombia
may be engaged in localized opiate trafficking.
CNP helicopters and planes used in drug eradication efforts continually receive ground
fire when conducting counterdrug operations. Guerilla groups provide security for and
aggressively defend coca and poppy fields and the processing laboratories, like the huge
HCL conversion complex seized in January of 1997. The FARC, and other guerilla groups,
were originally founded and built on ideological beliefs, but profits from the
multi-billion dollar drug trade have sparked the guerillas' interest in selling their
services to drug traffickers instead of pursuing ideology. To date, there is little to
indicate the insurgent groups are trafficking in cocaine themselves, either by producing
cocaine HCL and selling it to Mexican syndicates, or by establishing their own
distribution networks in the United States.
Cases against the leaders of these criminal groups most often originate from
investigations being conducted in the United States. Through what was originally
designated our Southwest Border Initiative, but has become a Hemispheric Strategy, we are
able to build cases on the bosses and the U.S. based infrastructure of these international
drug syndicates and with the assistance of foreign governments, their long-term
incarceration leave entire organizations in disarray.
Combining resources from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Department of
Justice (DOJ), the United States Attorney's Office, and other Federal, State, and local
agencies, as well as the host country law enforcement agencies, as we did with the CNP, we
can ensure that the leaders of these groups will be arrested and hopefully sentenced to
prison terms commensurate with their crimes.
The central focus of the DEA office in Bogota is the identification and investigation of the organized drug syndicates in Colombia that control the growth, manufacturing, and flow of cocaine to the United States. These investigations, conducted with the CNP in support of domestic investigations, target the leadership and U.S. based infrastructure of their distribution cells by attacking the communications systems of their command and control functions in an effort to build criminal cases that will result in their conviction and incarceration in either the United States or Colombia. In support of this strategy DEA Bogota and the Colombian National Police have developed a series of programs and operations designed to enhance the criminal investigations, attack the weakness of the major criminal groups in Colombia, and inhibit the flow of cocaine through the key source zone located south and east of the Andes Mountains. These support programs have the immediately positive result of seizing cocaine, conversion laboratories, and aircraft. However, the overriding benefit of these programs is the critical intelligence and evidence they provide to our primary program of building cases on the criminal organizations' leadership and infrastructure. Key programs DEA has been able to either initiate or expand as a result of funding for the Andean Ridge in the FY97 budget are:
.
The DEA, working in Colombia with the CNP, and domestically with our Federal, State,
and local partners, will concentrate on the vulnerabilities of these Colombian
organizations. First, we will continue to focus our domestic investigative efforts on the
U.S.-based infrastructure of these groups, particularly those in the Caribbean theater and
South Florida. For example, we know that the more powerful of the Colombian groups have
moved high level managers from Colombia into Puerto Rico to direct and coordinate cocaine
shipments through the region. The sophistication and volume of these smuggling operations
was seen recently when six tons of cocaine were seized
from the freighter Limerick when it was searched by Cuban authorities at our
request after developing engine problems and washing into Cuban waters. Secondly, we will
work in Colombia to build cases on the leaders of the new groups vying to dominate the
cocaine trade as well as direct resources against their production and transportation
operations.
Thank you again for giving me the opportunity to testify today and I will be happy to answer any questions you may have.