Handout
photo chart courtesy of the US Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control shows
the 2013 Los Cachiros drug trafficking cartel
|
To hear him tell it in
court, he has the blood of 78 people on his hands and allegedly shipped 20 tonnes
of cocaine to the United States.
AFP report continues:He also laundered millions of dollars, and, once imprisoned in America, started spilling the beans -- and terrifying powerful people back home in his native Honduras.
From
2003 to 2013, Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga and his brother Javier, along with
their parents and other siblings, led a violent drug cartel called Los
Cachiros, in Tocoa on the Atlantic coast of Honduras, a country with one of the
world's highest murder rates.
But
the brothers feared getting killed when the US Treasury Department put the
names of their whole family on a black list in 2013 and the government of
Honduras began seizing assets from them.
So
Leonel Rivera started secretly recording conversations with accomplices such as
Fabio Lobo, son of former president Porfirio Lobo, who served from 2010 to
2014.
He
did this first on his own and later in cooperation with the US Drug Enforcement
Administration starting in 2013.
Leonel
Rivera, who turned 40 on Tuesday, is a man of short stature with a thin
moustache and arched eyebrows that make him look angry all the time.
Along
with his brother he cut a deal with the US prosecutors in New York under which
the pair landed in prison more than two years ago -- but the rest of their
family did not.
His
mother, father, sister and a second brother live in the United States,
presumably under a new identity and under the protection of the US government.
- 'A little window' -
US
authorities said this week that Leonel Rivera will be sentenced by Judge John
Koeltl on April 14.
Thanks
to his revelations, the authorities in Honduras learned that the Cachiros gang
had at least 22 contracts with the Lobo government, prosecutors in Honduras
said Wednesday.
They
also said they would investigate the government officials named by Leonel
Rivera.
"This
is what makes the Cachiros case so interesting, because it's a little window
into the way organized crime and elites intersect in places like
Honduras," said Steven Dudley, co-director of Insight Crime, a think tank
that studies organized crime in the Americas.
"This
is important because it sends the message that impunity is not total, that
there is some accountability somewhere, there exists some system that is
willing to hold even the highest powers accountable," said Dudley.
"But
does that transfer into real change? I am not sure yet."
- 22 meetings -
From
December 5, 2013 to September 21, 2015, Leonel Rivera met with US prosecutors
22 times to give them information and negotiate the terms of his plea bargain,
according to court documents seen by AFP.
The
two brothers surrendered to the DEA in January 2015, Leonel in the Bahamas and
Javier in Miami.
In
April 2016, they each pleaded guilty to charges including murder, leading a
drug trafficking gang and conspiring to ship illegal drugs into the US.
The
Cachiros gang took delivery of drugs from Colombia, which arrived either in
planes or speedboats, and took it overland to Guatemala. From there it would
move on to Mexico and then the US, Leonel Rivera said in his first testimony
against Fabio Lobo on March 6.
He
said that in exchange for bribes the cartel was protected by the former
president, his son, his brother Ramon "Moncho" Lobo, the current
Security Minister Julian Pacheco, by the legislator Antonio Hernandez, brother
of President Juan Orlando Hernandez, and by dirty cops and military people.
All
of these people deny the charges, except for Fabio Lobo, who was arrested by
the DEA in Haiti in 2015. He has pleaded guilty to charges of drug trafficking
and will be sentenced on May 30.
- 'Deal with the devil' -
If
convicted Leonel Rivera could face life in prison but his fate depends on judge
Koeltl.
His
plea bargain, signed April 14 of last year, calls for the charges against him
to be dropped if he tells the truth, does not commit more crimes and testifies
when the government asks him to.
The
US government could also grant him a so-called "5K1" card that calls
for a reduced sentence and perhaps entry into a witness protection program.
"It's
the deal with the devil," said a lawyer close to the case. "This guy
has admitted to 78 murders" but the judge has complete discretion when it
comes to deciding on his sentence.
In theory, "he could walk out of his sentence" meaning walk out of court and start life anew with an assumed identity, the lawyer said.
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