News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 1, 2007
Contact: Waldo P. Santiago
Public Information Officer
Number: 1-800-718-0781
DEA
Shuts Down Drug Ring In Guayama
Ponce Strike Force Investigation Sends 11 Drug Traffickers
to Federal Prison
FEB 1 --
(SAN JUAN) – Jerome Michael Harris, Special Agent in Charge,
Caribbean Division, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and Rosa
Emilia Rodríguez-Velez, United States Attorney for the District
of Puerto Rico, today announced the arrest of 11 drug traffickers operating
in the Municipality of Guayama. These arrests are the culmination of
a DEA High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) undercover operation
in response to the enormous and increasing drug problem in the Puente
Jobos and Pozuelo Wards.
The DEA HIDTA investigation,
conducted under the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF)
program, was part of the U.S. Attorney’s Ponce Strike Force initiative,
which seeks to reduce violent crime in the southern region of Puerto
Rico. The investigation resulted in a federal grand jury indictment
charging twelve individuals with possession with the intent to distribute,
distribution and conspiracy to distribute cocaine and heroin in violation
of the Federal Controlled Substances Act. One individual remains at
large.
Those indicted as
part of DEA’s Operation Capsize are:
-
HECTOR LUIS
GONZALEZ-COLON alias Chary – ARRESTED
-
LUIS GONZALEZ-COLON – FUGITIVE
-
SAMUEL GONZALEZ-COLON – ARRESTED
-
SAUL GONZALEZ-COLON alias
Pucho – ARRESTED
-
GLADYS DE LEON-MARTINEZ – ARRESTED
-
ROBERTO DE LEON-MARTINEZ – ARRESTED
-
AMERICO SANCHEZ-SANTIAGO – ARRESTED
-
HEITY GONZALEZ-VAZQUEZ – ARRESTED
-
MADELINE CAMPOS – ARRESTED
-
IDELFONSA CAMPOS – ARRESTED
-
JOSE DANIEL
VAZQUEZ-ENRIQUIEZ – ARRESTED
-
EDUARDO TORRES-BONES – ARRESTED
The indictment was
issued by a federal grand jury on December 20, 2006 and is the culmination
of a two-year OCDETF investigation led by the DEA with the collaboration
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
the U.S. Marshals Service, the Police of Puerto Rico and the Puerto
Rico Justice Department’s Special Investigations Bureau. The
statutory penalties for the offenses charged in the indictment range
from a minimum term of five years to a maximum of life imprisonment.
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