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News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 19, 2002
DEA
DIRECTOR ANNOUNCES ARREST OF FARC MEMBER
DEA Administrator Asa
Hutchinson today announced the arrest of Carlos Bolas, a Colombian national
and a leader of the Colombian narco-terrorist group, Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarios
de Colombia (FARC), for drug trafficking. On June 19, 2002, DEA agents
transported Bolas to the Washington D.C. area where he will be arraigned
in U.S. District Court.
DEA obtained custody
of Bolas on June 18, 2002, after Suriname authorities arrested him for
immigration violations when it was determined he was using a false Peruvian
passport. Bolas appeared before a magistrate in Suriname, and knowing
that he was wanted in the U.S. on drug trafficking charges, Surinamese
authorities expelled him and turned him over to DEA.
"This arrest
takes our fight against narco-terrorism to a new level. For the first
time we have not only indicted a member of a terrorist organization involved
in drug trafficking, but we have also arrested him. This means that narco-terrorists
will be held accountable to the justice system and to the rule of law
in both the United States and Colombia," said DEA Administrator Asa Hutchinson.
In March 2002, a
federal grand jury in the District of Columbia indicted Bolas, other FARC
members Tomas Molina Caracas and John Doe (aka Oscar "El Negro")
and four others for conspiring to manufacture and import cocaine into
the United States. The charges resulted from an investigation conducted
by the Bogota and Brasilia offices of the DEA in conjunction with the
Government of Colombia, as well as attorneys from the Narcotics and Dangerous
Drugs Division of the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice.
The indictment alleges
that, starting in 1994, Carlos Bolas and his associates were leaders of
a cocaine trafficking ring centered in Barranco Minas, Colombia, that
manufactured and sold cocaine to international drug traffickers in exchange
for money, weapons, and equipment for the FARC. As he indicated in March,
Attorney General John Ashcroft said, "the indictment marks the convergence
of two of the top priorities of this Department of Justice - the prevention
of terrorism and the reduction of illegal drug use - in a single act of
justice."
The U.S. State Department
has called the FARC the most dangerous international terrorist group based
in the Western Hemisphere. Since 1980, the FARC has murdered 13 U.S. citizens
and kidnapped over 100 more, including 3 U.S. missionaries, kidnapped
in 1993, who are now believed dead.
DEA wishes to thank
the Government of Suriname and the U.S. Department of State for their
outstanding cooperation in this effort. The Surinamese authorities conducted
first-rate law enforcement work which lead to the arrest of this notorious
terrorist and drug trafficker.
For more information,
please call DEA's Office of Public Affairs at (202) 307-7977. |