News
Release
November 16, 2006
Contact: SA Erin
Mulvey
Number: 212-337-2906
Cali
Cartel Leaders Plead Guilty To Laundering
Cocaine Proceeds Through Pharmaceutical Drug
Companies
NOV 16 --
JOHN P. GILBRIDE, Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent in
Charge of the New York Field Division, MICHAEL J. GARCIA, the United
States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and R. ALEXANDER
ACOSTA, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida,
announced today the guilty pleas of GILBERTO RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA and
MIGUEL ANGEL RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA, brothers and the leaders of the notorious
Cali Cartel in Colombia, to money-laundering charges.
“These guilty
pleas are a victory for law enforcement in the United States and in
Colombia,” said Special Agent in Charge John Gilbride. “The
DEA is not only focused on putting drug traffickers behind bars, but
taking away what they cherish the most—their money. The Orejuelo
brothers ran the Cali Cartel for years, profiting and laundering millions
of dollars of drug proceeds. The Orejuelo brothers will profit no more
as they spend time in jail for their crimes.”
Under the terms
of a plea agreement with the United States Government, the RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA
brothers previously pleaded guilty to an Indictment filed in the Southern
District of Florida (the "SDFL Indictment") charging them
with importing tons of cocaine into the United States. The agreement
also called for the brothers to plead guilty to an Indictment initially
filed in the Southern District of New York (the "SDNY Indictment")
charging them with money-laundering crimes. The guilty pleas to the
SDNY Indictment were entered today before Judge FEDERICO A. MORENO
of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
As alleged in both the SDNY and the SDFL Indictments, GILBERTO and
MIGUEL ANGEL RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA once controlled a powerful Colombian
narcotics-trafficking organization based in Cali, Colombia (the "Cali
Cartel"). In their previous guilty pleas to the SDFL Indictment,
the defendants admitted to importing more than 200 tons of cocaine
into the United States for resale.
As alleged in the
SDNY Indictment, in order to insulate the illicit fortune of the Cali
Cartel from law enforcement detection and seizure, GILBERTO RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA,
MIGUEL ANGEL RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA, and their criminal associates invested
millions of dollars of the Cali Cartel's cocaine proceeds in ostensibly
legitimate companies, including companies involved in the production
and sale of pharmaceutical drugs. Although GILBERTO and MIGUEL ANGEL
RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA were initially identified in public documents in
Colombia as partners in several of the companies, they subsequently
attempted to conceal their continuing ownership and control of these
companies to protect their illicit assets from seizure by law enforcement
authorities. As part of their efforts at concealment, the RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA
brothers allegedly arranged for their companies to be held under the
names of family members or trusted associates when, in fact, the companies
continued to be controlled by the defendants.
On October 21, 1995,
President CLINTON, pursuant to the authority granted by, among other
things, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, Sections 1701
to 1706 of Title 50 of the United States Code, signed Executive Order
12978, entitled "Blocking Assets and Prohibiting Transactions
with Significant Narcotics Traffickers." In the Order, President
CLINTON declared a national emergency based on the threat posed to
the United States by significant narcotics traffickers centered in
Colombia; applied economic sanctions against, among others, GILBERTO
RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA and MIGUEL ANGEL RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA; and delegated
the enforcement and regulation of the economic sanctions to the Treasury
Department's Office of Foreign Asset Control ("OFAC").
Based on the continuing
threat posed to the United States by significant narcotics traffickers
centered in Colombia, on about October 19, 2001, President BUSH continued
the national emergency declared in Executive Order 12978. From October
21, 1995 to the present, OFAC has persisted in applying economic sanctions
against numerous companies effectively controlled by GILBERTO and MIGUEL
ANGEL RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA and against other criminal associates of the
Cali Cartel.
As charged in the
SDNY Indictment, between about October 21, 1995 and the present, in
an attempt to protect their assets and to evade OFAC sanctions, and
in violation of United States law, GILBERTO RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA, MIGUEL
ANGEL RODRIGUEZOREJUELA, and their associates removed their names from
companies that had been sanctioned by OFAC. In addition, after the
companies themselves were subsequently sanctioned by OFAC, GILBERTO
and MIGUEL ANGEL RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA, with the assistance of others,
established "new" or "re-organized" companies to
replace the previously-sanctioned companies. In fact, these "new" or "re-organized" companies
simply assumed the assets and continued to perform the services of
the previously sanctioned companies and often had the same management
and physical business locations. After the "new" or "re-organized" companies
were formed to protect their assets and to evade OFAC sanctions, GILBERTO
and MIGUEL ANGEL RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA then named additional family members
and trusted associates who had not been sanctioned by OFAC to manage
the companies. Between about March 2002 and January 2003, the RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA
brothers were involved in transferring approximately $1.5 million in
funds controlled by pharmaceutical drug companies through bank accounts
in New York, New York.
Immediately following
their guilty pleas today, Judge MORENO sentenced GILBERTO and MIGUEL
RODRIGUEZ-OREJUELA, 67 and 62 years old, respectively, to 87 months'
imprisonment on the money-laundering charges, to run concurrently with
the sentence of 360 months' imprisonment he previously imposed on the
cocaine trafficking charges in the SDFL Indictment.
The charges in
the SDNY Indictment were the result of a joint Organized Crime Drug
Enforcement Task Force ("OCDETF") investigation entitled "Operation
Dynasty" which involved the United States Attorney's Office for
the Southern District of New York, the United States Drug Enforcement
Administration ("DEA"), OFAC, the Colombian National Police
("CNP"), and the Colombian Fiscalia Money Laundering Section.
Mr. GARCIA praised
the investigative efforts of the DEA, the FBI, the New York State Police,
the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation Division, the
Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
the New York City Police Department, OFAC, the CNP, and the Colombian
Fiscalia Money Laundering Section and thanked the U.S. Attorney’s
Office in the Southern District of Florida for its cooperation in this
matter. Operation Dynasty is being prosecuted by the Office's International
Narcotics Trafficking Unit. Assistant United States Attorneys BOYD
M. JOHNSON III, GLEN G. MCGORTY, and KEVIN R. PUVALOWSKI are in charge
of the prosecution. |