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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY REPORT MARCH 1996:
FINANCIAL CRIMES AND MONEY LAUNDERING
United States Department of State
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
ENFORCEMENT: SIGNIFICANT CASES
JOAQUIN GUZMAN-LOERA Drug Trafficking Organization: As a result of a
three-year multi-agency Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force
investigation, a Federal indictment was unsealed in San Diego on
September 28 1995, charging twenty-two members of the Guzman-Lorea
Organization, including Joaquin Guzman-Lorea (currently in custody in
Mexico in connection with the killing of Cardinal Posadas Ocampo), with
conspiracy to import over eight tons of cocaine, as well as money
laundering. The indictment also sought forfeiture of more than
$700,000,000 worth of money and property. This intensive OCDETF
investigation involved cooperation among Federal (DEA, IRS, Customs, and
the INS) and local law enforcement agencies in San Diego, Los Angeles,
San Antonio, Tucson, Newark and Chicago.
OPERATION GREEN ICE, PHASE II: On April 3, 1995, eighteen indictments
charging 80 United States, Mexican and Colombian defendants with money
laundering conspiracy and substantive counts were unsealed in San Diego,
climaxing an international drug money laundering investigation. The
operation operated on three fronts, the first to target casas de cambio
check cashing institutions operating along the Southwest Border; the
second, the creation of DEA "store fronts" purporting to launder drug
proceeds, whose purpose was to identify drug money launderers and
financial institutions receiving the proceeds; and the third, the use of
the front to identify Colombian money brokers. Arrests of 42 of the
indicted individuals were made in Colombia, Canada, Los Angeles,
Houston, Chicago and New York. Seizures totalled in excess of 15
million dollars, seven tons of cocaine and 16 pounds of heroin.
OPERATION CORNERSTONE: This two-year investigation culminated on June 2, 1995, with the unsealing of a nine count indictment charging 59
individuals (including six criminal defense attorneys) with
racketeering, drug trafficking and money laundering offenses. The
investigation involved the United States Attorney's Office for the
Southern District of Florida, the US Customs Service and the Drug
Enforcement Administration. The investigation targeted the narcotics
trafficking and related illegal activities of the Rodriguez-Orejuela
faction of the Cali Cartel, which was responsible for at least 80
percent of the cocaine exported to the United States from Cali, and the
indictment specifically charged the importation of more than 200,000
kilograms of cocaine into the United States.
DISTRICT OF IDAHO: A plane was seized and forfeited in connection with
the tracking of approximately $1 million laundered by the Steven
Saccoccia international money laundering organization, out of
Providence, Rhode Island, and New York City, through various front
company bank accounts in Los Angeles, through an aircraft broker's
account in Denver, and ultimately to Boise. The plane was scheduled for
delivery to Cali, Colombia, and was seized just days before the pilots
were due to fly it out. The government sought forfeiture on the grounds
that the plane was property involved in a money laundering transaction
and that it was being purchased, by a Colombia broker, for the Cali
Cartel to be used in the air shipment of cocaine. The aircraft was
fitted in Boise with the latest in expensive avionics, including a
global navigation system and other amenities useful for international
trafficking. This case required substantial inter-agency cooperation,
with assistance provided by agencies all over the country and successful
sharing of information and resources.
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS: A defendant's cooperation resulted in
the forfeiture of more than $10 million in planes and drug money. The
defendant, a Colombian national who operated a fleet of cargo aircraft
that functioned as the "air wing" of the Colombian cartels and were used
to smuggle at least 20 tons of cocaine into the United States, Canada,
and Central America, was also sentenced to eight years in prison for
narcotics importation conspiracy. The results of his cooperation also
included the seizure of four 727s and a Convair 500 cargo plane in
Colombia and the grounding of 26 other aircraft valued at $20 million at
the Cali airport.
EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA: A forfeiture judgment was ordered against six defendants in the amount of $300,000 each after their
convictions for conspiracy to distribute cocaine and marijuana, and
other related drug trafficking offenses. The organization successfully
smuggled over 50,000 pounds of marijuana and over 500 kilograms of
cocaine from Mexico through Arizona to the District. The investigation
has resulted in the arrest and conviction of a total of 23 defendants
with four fugitives at large. Additional results include the forfeiture
of 17 pieces of real property valued at more than $4 million, the
seizure or forfeiture of United States currency totaling $589,005, the
seizure of four motor homes and 17 motor vehicles, the seizure of more
than 2,100 pounds of Mexican marijuana and five kilograms of cocaine,
and the issuance of two separate forfeiture judgments totaling $20
million and $1.8 million, respectively.
WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON: A shopping center and drug proceeds of over $4.5 million were ordered forfeited to the United States. The
defendant in the case was also sentenced to life imprisonment and fined
$4 million on his trafficking and money laundering convictions. The
defendant was the head of a criminal organization responsible for
importing methamphetamine ("ice") from Korea and distributing it in the
United States. The defendant delivered over 800 kilograms of "ice" to
his distributors in the Seattle/Tacoma and Los Angeles areas, who then
transported the "ice" to Hawaii, where it was sold.
PANAMA MONEY LAUNDERING DEFENDANT EXTRADITION: In the first money laundering-predicated expulsion from Panama, on October 27, 1995, Israel
Mordok, one of two fugitives from a nine count 1992 indictment unsealed
in 1994 in the Southern District of New York charging money laundering
(domestic and internationally-exported currency structuring) violations,
was arrested, stripped of his Panamanian resident status and then
immediately deported from Panama to the S.D.N.Y. where he pled guilty.
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT: FinCEN responded to a federal agency request
from Brownsville, Texas concerning importations at Brownsville and
Denver of $1 billion and $500 million in Certificates of Deposit issued
by a Mexican financial institution. FinCEN research identified the
Mexican company securing the CDs as a provider of Short Term Business
Credit. The courier was identified in DEA files as potentially involved
in money laundering activities and one of the US Companies was
potentially identified as a subsidiary of a Connecticut holding company,
originally incorporated in Delaware in August 1994. This investigation
is ongoing.
ARGENTINA REQUEST: FinCEN received a request seeking support in an
investigation concerning subjects of an Argentinean Federal Court of
Criminal and Correctional Affairs investigation involving the Bank of
Commercial Credit International (BCCI) liquidation process. Research
and analysis revealed financial activity on three bank account numbers
submitted with the Argentinean request. Queries of the BSA database
revealed case related CMIRs totaling $30,322 and CTR activity that
totaled $409,250. Financial research also produced several previously
unknown bank accounts, new leads, and elements common to the requester s
investigation.
RUSSIAN ORGANIZED CRIME: FinCEN provided support to a Federal
investigation involving Russian organized crime in the New York City
area. Bank Secrecy Act transactions were discovered as well as property
assets. In addition, FinCEN was able to organize and link the requester
s subjects with associates and additional businesses. The case research
provided enabled the investigator of this case to better understand and
correlate his agency s intelligence.
SECURITIES FRAUD: FinCEN provided analytical support to a large
securities fraud investigation at the State Police level. This
investigation was a multi-state, joint investigation looking into the
activities of numerous employees and officers of investment firms.
FinCEN discovered over two million dollars in Currency Transaction
Reports, over two million dollars in Currency Transaction Reports by
Casinos, and approximately seven million dollars in property ownership
records.
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