News
Release
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 22, 2010
Erin Mulvey
Public Information Officer
212 337-2906
Top
FARC Commander Sentenced To 27 Years
In Prison For Conspiring To Import Tons
Of Cocaine Into
The United States
JUL
22 -- (Manhattan, NY) - JOHN P.
GILBRIDE, the Special Agent-in-Charge of
the Drug Enforcement Administration's New
York Field Division ("DEA") and
PREET BHARARA, the United States Attorney
for the Southern District of New York,
and, announced that GERARDO AGUILAR RAMIREZ,
a/k/a "Cesar," a former front
commander in the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias
de Colombia (Revolutionary Armed Forces
of Colombia, or "FARC"), was
sentenced today to 27 years in prison for
conspiring to import ton-quantities of
cocaine into the United States. The FARC
-- which has been designated by the U.S.
State Department as a Foreign Terrorist
Organization – is Colombia's main
leftist rebel group and is the world's
leading cocaine manufacturer, responsible
for the production of nearly two-thirds
of the cocaine imported into the United
States. AGUILAR RAMIREZ was sentenced by
United States District Judge THOMAS F.
HOGAN in District of Columbia federal court.
DEA
Special Agent-in-Charge JOHN P. GILBRIDE
stated: "Gerardo Aguilar Ramirez conspired
to manufacture and distribute thousands of
kilograms of cocaine in the United States
to fuel the FARC's narco-terrorist mission.
Ramirez violently commanded the 1st Front
for over 10 years until his arrest and today
he has been sentenced and will pay for his
crimes against American and Colombian citizens
who have seen the damages of cocaine trafficking
and abuse throughout both our nations. I
commend the diligent and brave work of the
U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District
of New York, the Organized Crime Strike Force,
DEA's Bogota Country Office, and the Colombian
government."
According
to the Superseding Indictment filed in District
of Columbia federal court, other documents
filed in this case, and statements made in
court:
The
FARC, which occupies large swaths of territory
in Colombia, is a hierarchical organization
which, at its height during the time of the
conspiracy, was comprised of 12,000 to 18,000
members. At the lowest level, the FARC is
made up of 77 distinct military units, called
Fronts, organized by geographical location.
These in turn are grouped into seven "blocs."
AGUILAR
RAMIREZ was the commander of the FARC's 1
st Front and was ultimately responsible for
all of that Front's criminal activities.
Among other things, AGUILAR RAMIREZ conspired
with others to manufacture and distribute
thousands of tons of cocaine in Colombia,
with the knowledge and intent that such cocaine
would be imported into the United States.
In
late 2001 or early 2002, the FARC leadership,
including AGUILAR RAMIREZ, participated in
a meeting in which they further resolved,
among other things, to: increase cocaine
trafficking routes overseas, including to
the United States; establish better ways
to exchange cocaine and cocaine paste for
weapons; and to pay more to campesinos for
cocaine paste.
AGUILAR
RAMIREZ was captured on July 2, 2008, while
holding three American hostages – KEITH
STANSELL, THOMAS HOWES, and MARC GONSALVES.
These three men, and United States citizen
TOM JANIS, were captured by the FARC in February
2003, after their plane crashed in FARC-occupied
territory in the Colombian jungle. JANIS
was executed, and the remaining three men
were held hostage by the FARC for over five
years until they, and several Colombian hostages,
were freed in a Colombian military operation
on the date of AGUILAR RAMIREZ's capture.
Subsequently, on July 16, 2009, AGUILAR RAMIREZ,
50, was extradited to the United States.
AGUILAR RAMIREZ was originally charged in
a hostage-taking conspiracy as well as a
narcotics importation conspiracy, but the
Colombian Supreme Court approved AGUILAR
RAMIREZ's extradition on narcotics charges
only.
On
December 16, 2009, during his guilty plea
proceeding, AGUILAR RAMIREZ acknowledged
that from approximately 1998 through July
2, 2008, he was the commander of the 1 Front
st of the FARC and that he led and directed
other members of the 1 st Front in the manufacture
and distribution of ton quantities of cocaine,
knowing and intending that the cocaine would
be imported into the United States.
Manhattan
U.S. Attorney PREET BHARARA stated: "Today,
Gerardo Aguilar Ramirez -- a FARC commander
and cocaine kingpin -- was brought to justice
for his role in leading the FARC's worldwide
cocaine empire. The incarceration of narco-terrorists
like Aguilar Ramirez helps to choke the international
drug trade. This Office will continue to
work with our partners at the DEA to incapacitate
dangerous narco-terrorists who seek to pour
drugs into the United States."
The
investigation resulting in these charges
was led by the United States Attorney's Office
for the Southern District of New York, working
with the New York Organized Crime Drug Enforcement
Strike Force (which consists of agents and
officers from the DEA, the New York City
Police Department, the United States Internal
Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Division,
the Department of Homeland Security's Bureau
of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the
New York State Police) and the DEA's Bogota,
Colombia, Country Office. The investigation,
conducted under the auspices of the Department
of Justice's Organized Crime Drug Enforcement
Task Force Program, involved unprecedented
cooperation from the Colombian government.
Mr. BHARARA praised all the law enforcement
partners involved in the investigation, and
thanked the Department of Justice Criminal
Division's Office of International Affairs,
as well as Criminal Division's Narcotic and
Dangerous Drug Section attachés in
Bogota for their involvement in the extradition
process.
This
case is being prosecuted in the District
of Columbia by the United States Attorney's
Office for the Southern District of New York.
Special Assistant United States Attorneys
PABLO QUIÑONES and RANDALL JACKSON,
of the Office's Terrorism and International
Narcotics Unit, are in charge of the prosecution. |