Defendant
in Colombian Norte Valle Drug Cartel
Extradited to the United States
WASHINGTON,
D.C. – A leader of the North Valle Cartel, one of Colombia’s
most powerful cocaine trafficking organizations, has been extradited
by Colombia to the United States to face racketeering and drug charges,
the Department of Justice announced today.
Jairo
Aparicio-Lenis arrived in Florida yesterday and was transferred to
Washington, D.C., where he has been charged by a federal grand jury
along with eight other leaders of the Norte Valle Cartel. The April
29, 2004 indictment charges the cartel leaders with violations of
the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and
with distributing cocaine knowing and intending that it would be
unlawfully imported into the United States.
Aparicio-Lenis
is scheduled to make an initial appearance today before U.S. Magistrate
Judge Deborah Robinson at 1:30 P.M. at U.S. District Court in the
District of Columbia.
“ The
extradition of Jairo Aparicio-Lenis demonstrates the commitment of
the United States and Colombia to work together to end the flow of
illegal drugs,” said Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales. “Together
with our allies abroad, we will continue pursuing those who would
bring illegal drugs into this country, regardless of where they may
be.”
According
to the indictment, Aparicio-Lenis was a member of the Norte Valle
Cartel, responsible for laundering the cartel’s cocaine proceeds.
The cartel operated in the Norte Valle del Cauca region of Colombia,
the cities of Cali and Buenaventura, Colombia, as well as Mexico
and the United States. Between 1990 and the present, the cartel allegedly
exported more than 1.2 million pounds of cocaine – worth over
$10 billion – from the Pacific coast of Colombia through Mexico
to the United States. The Norte Valle Cartel conducted financial
transactions which laundered millions of dollars in drug proceeds.
The
Norte Valle Cartel allegedly used brutality and violence to further
its goals. Members of the cartel used murder as an accepted practice
to eliminate rival drug traffickers, buyers who failed to pay for
cocaine, and cartel members whose loyalty was suspect. In order to
protect its distribution routes and cocaine laboratories, the cartel
employed the services of the Autodefenses Unidas de Colombia (AUC),
an illegal armed group in Colombia that has been listed as a Foreign
Terrorist Organization by the U.S. State Department. The cartel also
relied on the AUC to provide personal protection for cartel members
and associates.
“Today's
extradition of Jairo Aparicio-Lenis is another crippling blow to
the Norte Valle Cartel, ending its reign of terror, fear, drug trafficking
and violence,” said DEA Administrator Karen P. Tandy. “As
one of the cartel's chief money launderers, Aparicio-Lenis enabled
the cartel to flourish with millions of dollars in blood money with
which to carry out its deadly destruction. Now, through his extradition,
he will face justice on American soil.”
The
indictment alleges that the Norte Valle Cartel bribed and corrupted
Colombian legislators. Cartel members knowingly engaged in courses
of illegal conduct designed to hinder honest government in order
to protect cocaine shipments, to prevent the arrest and prosecution
of Cartel members, and to block legislation in Colombia permitting
the extradition of narcotics traffickers to the United States for
prosecution.
If
convicted, Aparicio-Lenis faces a maximum sentence of up to life
imprisonment on the cocaine-importation charges and 20 years in prison
for the RICO charge.