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Caracas,
Venezuela. Venezuelan soldiers captured an alleged Colombian drug trafficker
Sunday who authorities say ruthlessly ran the neighboring country’s biggest
right-wing criminal gang and conspired to export tons of cocaine to the United
States through Mexico and Central America.
Diego Perez
Henao, 41, is one of Colombia’s “most sinister drug traffickers and murderers,”
Colombia’s national police director-designate, Gen. Jose Roberto Leon, told
reporters in Bogota.
Colombian
officials called him the leader of the “Rastrojos,” or Leftovers, a violent
offshoot of the Norte del Valle cartel that engages in drug trafficking,
extortion and murder as it competes with other criminal bands that grew out of
the far-right militias known as paramilitaries.
The gang,
which is thought to have hundreds of members, operates on Colombia’s Pacific
coast and along the border with Venezuela, Colombian police say.
Better
known by his alias “Diego Rastrojo,” Perez was indicted in 2001 in Florida on
charges of conspiracy to traffic cocaine. The US State Department had a $5
million reward out for his capture.
Henao was
pretending to be foreman of a rice farm in Venezuela’s border state of Barinas,
living with 10 bodyguards who posed as his workers, and was arrested just before
dawn Sunday, Leon said.
Venezuela’s
justice minister, Tareck El Aissami, said at a news conference that Perez was
“one of the most wanted criminals in Latin America” and that the government of
President Hugo Chavez planned to turn him over the Colombian authorities.
Colombian
and US Drug Enforcement Administration
agents led Venezuelan authorities to Perez, said a US government official, who
spoke on condition he not be further identified because of the political
sensitivity.
Colombian
President Juan Manuel Santos praised the cooperation of Venezuela’s
counter-narcotics police, and Leon said two informants would receive cash
rewards from the United States.
The US
State Department said Perez has “been linked to kidnappings, tortures and
assassinations in Colombia, Venezuela, and Panama.”
Perez was a
member of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, Latin America’s largest
leftist rebel band, when the Norte del Valle cartel recruited him in the 1990s.
Such shifts in ideological allegiance occur periodically in Colombia’s
drug-fueled conflict, often propelled by lucre.
Perez
became a lieutenant of Wilber Varela, a former Colombian police officer and one
of that cartel’s last remaining bosses. He and the other top leader of Los
Rastrojos, Javier Antonio Calle Serna, are believed responsible for the 2008
killing of Varela in Venezuela’s western city of Merida, said Leon, the
Colombian police director.
Calle Serna
turned himself in to US authorities last month. Another of his brothers, Juan
Carlos Calle Serna, was arrested in Ecuador in March and sent to the United
States and a third brother, Luis Enrique Calle Serna, remains a fugitive and is
believed to be the titular head of Los Rastrojos, Leon added.
DEA
regional director Jay Bergman said the Rastrojos have dominated Colombia’s
Pacific maritime cocaine-smuggling routes as well as production in the
country’s southwest.
He said
Perez was among Colombia’s most violent criminals.
“Violence
is what got him there and violence was what was going to keep him in power,”
Bergman said. “His pedigree from his early trafficking days is that he came out
of the sicarios (cartel hitmen), so violence is in his DNA.”
Bergman
noted that major Colombian traffickers are increasingly hiding outside their
homeland — and being caught there.
Perez’s
capture was the latest in a series of arrests of reputed Colombian drug
traffickers in Venezeula that began after Santos took office in August 2010.
Venezuela
has been a major cocaine transit country in recent years, responsible for the
majority of smuggling flights bound for Mexico and Central America, according
the Colombian and US officials.
Associated Press
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