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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Frontline: Drug Traffickers - Carlos Toro
Title:US: Frontline: Drug Traffickers - Carlos Toro
Published On:2000-10-12
Source:Frontline
Fetched On:2008-09-03 05:47:51
DRUG TRAFFICKERS

CARLOS TORO

Who was Carlos Lehder? What was his role in the Medellin cartel? What did
he do for the Ochoas?

Carlos knew about these forces, the Ochoas, the Gachas and the Escobars. He
knew they needed him, so he went in there on his own. Carlos Lehder
approached Pablo Escobar and he told him, he is the one who said to
Escobar, we have to change the way we're doing business, and they had a
goal. The goal was we are going to make cocaine the drug of the 1980s; and
they succeeded. And secondly, he said, we are going to rule this country;
and they succeeded. Right after that, the Ochoa daughter got kidnapped.
Carlos was the mastermind of the movement to go after the kidnappers. It
was well funded and there were killings everywhere, so serious that the
kidnappers took him seriously. Carlos earned that elevation in his power
when they saw that he had tremendous capabilities of getting organized and
doing things. They saw that he was a man that could transport anything. He
had alternative routes and he had connections where to scramble
frequencies. He had radio people. Carlos became the most important
ingredient of the whole pie.

And that's how the cartel got started. Carlos was a very good pilot. Carlos
can fly anything. He can fly a helicopter, he can fly a Citation, a Turbo
Commander, you name it. And he knew the islands extremely well. In addition
to that, he had the charisma to convince these people in the islands and
Cuba and other surrounding neighbors to support him and to give him what he
needed: refueling opportunities; the protection of his people as they
unloaded cocaine and needed refuge overnight; and so on and so forth.

When did you get involved?

I came in with a very specific job description. My job was to be the
diplomat. My job was to be the P.R. man. He knew I was good at it. He knew
I spoke languages, and he knew I could go and hold the prime minister's
hand and make him listen to us that we needed more cooperation. We were
going to Nicaragua, or going to Cuba, going wherever necessary, go to talk
to the airplane people. Go talk to the police, go talk to purchase jet fuel.

I saw myself as an asset to Carlos. My fear always was, I don't want to be
part of a criminal organization where I'm going to be exposed to drugs.
When he told me, in his promise, that Carlos, you're going to be my P.R.
man, you'll never be exposed to drugs, money laundering, violence, none of
the assassinations. Whatever happens with the drug cartel, you are going to
be my right-hand man in doing public relations work. And that's how it
started. I started going to Nassau, meeting with the attorneys, meeting
with the bankers, meeting with the prime minister's son. But it's
inevitable. In this line of work, you'll get involved.

Give me a sense of the mission.

The sense of the mission was, I was going to help my friend iron some
troubles that he had there, to get his operation going.

Did you take bribe money to politicians?

I took money to politicians, took money to bankers, to attorneys, to police.

How did you meet the Ochoas?

Yes, the Ochoas. I made a trip to the island, before I was active. I was a
guest. I made a trip to the island. I worked as a cameraman for CBS in New
York City at the time. Carlos and I went into a room and he introduced me
to the Ochoas. In those days, before I joined to actively to work with him,
I had no perception of what was going on, and to me it was immaterial. It
was really insignificant to me, the Ochoas. I knew they were big people and
they were well known in the Colombian scenery of the drug trade, but I was
not impressed. I had my closest friend as my ally. It was not important.
But they were there and he introduced me, and we had a little private
conversation. He indicated to me how important his alliance with them was,
because they will be the source of cash in the USA to keep the machinery
going here.

There's a certain audacity to having an island. You're like a hard target.
You're not flexible, you're not low profile.

Carlos liked publicity. Carlos liked the image. Carlos had no problem with
the world knowing he was a drug dealer. Carlos had no problem with it. He
saw it as a legal enterprise. In his mind, it was a way of making money.
You have to understand for many years, he had the support of the Colombian
government and he saw it as a way of conducting the corporation.

Did he ever fear the DEA when he was operating on the island?

That was always the greatest fear. The DEA was the greatest fear. The DEA
was indeed the only force capable of going there that could put us out of
business, and put us in jail and extradite us and do whatever was
necessary. The American government, though the DEA.

But they didn't.

Why they didn't, I don't understand because DEA know about the operations.
That was the paranoia that kept the group so well armed and so well
protected. There were contingency plans of blowing airplanes and blowing
the airstrip and dynamiting the whole thing, if we knew of a DEA plane or
helicopter trying to land on the island. We have plans of escape and we
have boats and speedboats and cigar boats and all kinds of equipment, as
plan B or plan C to evacuate.

He also could operate on that island because he bought the government, correct?

Precisely. He operated on the island from the beginning because he had the
blessing of the Bahamian government. They were funneling tons of money, and
don't ask me dollar amounts, because I was not active with him them. I knew
of his operation. I didn't know in those days, I didn't know precisely how
much money he was paying the Bahamian government. But the First Family of
the Bahamian government was getting lots of money--not only through Carlos'
pockets, but through a fund created by the cartel, by the Ochoas, by the
Escobars, by the Gachas. They joined in money funding for the Bahamian
government and other governments to be on retainer, and always fed
moneywise in the eventuality of anything happening.

The Bahamian government gave Carlos a promise. We will advise you. You will
get a wink from us, a signal, when things are getting too hot and you need
to move out of there. So, you might lose the island, but you and your
people will be safe. We'll tell you when to get out of there. And they
believed in their promise and they lived day after day and they partied
like in heaven because they knew that nothing was going to happen. There
was going to be a phone call and we're going to get out of here on time.
That was the foundation of, it's going to be okay. We can be wild, we can
be loud and we can be seen. We are not going to be touched because whatever
happens, if the DEA is coming towards us, they are going to find an empty
island and that's how it happened. They did.

There was an incident where he even put pamphlets on an airplane?

It was in 1977, I believe. The Bahamian government had to do what it had to
do. The Bahamian government was very explicit, like Fidel Castro or anybody
else was part of this bribe game, which is Carlos. Sometimes we have to
make an arrest. It's going to look good on us, it looks good for everybody,
so there are going to be times when we cannot control one of your boys
screwing up and getting caught with a kilo of cocaine or on thing or the other.

Well, then there was the incident with the DC-3. People got arrested and
Carlos was furious at the Bahamian government for not releasing five
Colombians, close friends of his, right away. I didn't recall because I was
not close to the case, but the Bahamian government had to do what they had
to do. They went and proceeded through the legal process to put people in
jail and to indict them and put them in jail, whatever. Carlos went crazy.
He got on one of his airplanes and he took boxes of money in cash and he
started to throw those things out of an airplane all over Nassau, cash,
paper money, as a mockery to the government, like who gives a hell? It was
the most stupid thing I ever heard in my life. And this is what started to
break the camel's back, because he was no longer seen as a serious person.
The clown, that side of his personality was quite evident, and you just
lose credibility.

Tell me about the parties.

Orgies. Five males, ten females and everybody runs naked and everybody
switch partners and everybody drinks and smokes marijuana and alcohol and
three days of Sodom and Gomorrah. I recall one of my first visits to the
island--this is a long time ago. This was well after we purchased the
island that we were there, that I went as a guest. And I remember,
specifically, getting out of the airplane, the plane hasn't even stopped
taxiing on the runway, and this Land Rover pulls up, and who's driving the
Rover? A very beautiful naked woman is driving the Rover, and she's going
to welcome me. So when you open the door to the plane and you find this
beautiful lady naked, you say, wow, this is the place to be.

What was your typical day like?

I would get up in the morning, have breakfast with my very close associates
at the cartel and plan the activities of the day. The three of us could
most likely be going to the Bahamas. I would fly to the Bahamas almost on a
daily basis in my effort to secure landing strips. That was my ultimate
goal, to secure refueling facilities, to find equipment, airplanes. I would
go to Wichita, Kansas, negotiate with the airlines manufacturer about
putting an extra tank on an airplane so we make it all the way to the
mountains of Missouri, instead of having to put a load down in the Bahamas
where it is already getting hot. And I will meet with pilots and engineers,
trying to come up with techniques that would make our operation more
smooth, more productive, in a short period of time. And I spend endless
hours on the telephone with all kinds of people, with bankers. The
operation of Carlos Lehder became entangled with other businesses.

Legitimate businesses?

No. There was the purchase of weapons. I had to meet one day with a
gentleman who came from Colombia on his way to Germany to purchase weapons
that Carlos wanted to donate to the M-19 movement, because they were
protecting the growers of marijuana and other crops.

You say you dealt with bankers a lot. These were legitimate banks?

Oh, legitimate banks. Bank of Colombia, Bank of Populaire. Panamanian
banks, Nova Scotia.

What was your involvement with Manuel Noriega?

I had no personal contact with Manuel Noriega, only that we would fly to
Panama, where we would meet with members of his very close allies in the
banking industry. Manuel Noriega was benefiting a great deal from money
laundering, even more so than from direct cocaine transportation. Manuel
Noriega was always saying that he would welcome us into his country with
drugs, but he never did it. He would promise that you can bring a load, but
it was empty promises. He always, at the very last minute, when we were
ready to bring a load and we didn't find any other sources, and we called
Mr. Noriega, he'd say, "Yes, by all means. Put the deal together, let me
know what the logistics are, which coordinates, where are we going to land
it, and I'll have my army take care of you."

Yes. And Carlos would call me and says, "Listen, don't worry about it. Take
a couple of days off." I'd say, "Why, Carlos? Noriega is going to come
through for us." And he never did. He will make promises that, yes, we can
bring the load tomorrow. So I have to go and look for alternative ways of
bringing loads of cocaine into the United States.

So he didn't really help you ship cocaine north, but he helped you hide the
money.

But he was a very, very instrumental help in getting monies back and forth.

How much money did you make altogether?

Personally? Believe it or not, when things started to break down, Carlos
owed me a tremendous amount of money. I could not collect because he went
into hiding. I really walked out of this deal very much in debt. I was
using my own credit cards to do things relevant to the operation, so they
were legitimate. And I had houses and automobile leases, and it was all in
the name of Carlos Toro, and a company that I used to own in Florida that
was a legitimate business. But I used that business as a front many times
to acquire tools and planes and automobiles and things like that.

But you never had a pot of money sitting in a bank somewhere, or invested
in stocks or bonds?

I should have, but I didn't.

So you lived the high life, but you didn't save any money.

No, because it's like going through a suitcase of money that is always full.

I don't understand. What exactly was the use of the island? I don't
understand why you don't just fly it into the United States. What is the
purpose, and then what did you do with it once you got it to the United States?

I'll try to explain it very simply. We had a number of airplanes that can
only go a certain range with a certain weight and a certain capacity of
flying speed and so forth; physics. The ideal thing would be to buy a 747
and load it with 20,000 keys of cocaine and bring it into Miami airport.
That's wonderful. Now how can you get away with that? Impossible. We had
the means to do it. We had the means to buy a 747; we didn't do it, because
we knew we couldn't do that. We couldn't get away with it.

So we had to find alternative ways of doing it, which is a small private
aircraft that will bring 1,000 kilos at a time. And when you leave out of
Colombia on, let's say, a King Air or a 640, you can only go so far when
you have 1,000 keys of cocaine, a pilot, copilot, and maybe another man
with weapons trying to save the load, That plane would be able to fly as
far as somewhere in the Caribbean, air drop the load to a waiting boat, and
go and refuel somewhere. That plane cannot go back to Colombia without
refueling. That plane will have about 50 gallons of fuel left, and that's
not enough to make it safe to Colombia. Once we get it to the island on the
Bahamas, we're home pretty much. Then we fly an American airplane out of
Florida somewhere, or somewhere in the United States, and do the second leg
of the trip. We would unload the Colombian airplane, put the cocaine
somewhere overnight, or for a few hours, and give the pilot enough fuel to
go back to Colombia. Once he gets to Colombia he can land anywhere on the
coast and refuel. Load the second airplane, and the flight from any of the
Bahamian islands to the American coast is not very long; we could do that
with minimal gas or fuel.

Then you flew them into the United States.

The drugs would land at an airstrip either at Atlanta, in Georgia, or in
Florida. From there we would transport the drugs. There were many ways of
doing it, and there were many plans that we executed at different times,
depending on how we were prepared, and what we expected and
anticipated--from RVs, to just private automobiles in several shipments,
you name it. We masqueraded the whole thing so we looked pretty clean.

Where did those drugs go then?

The drugs went to a stash house. We had a house where the drugs were
welcome. We would take the load, and the load comes with a shipping
manifesto, just like any other shipping company. We had a bill of lading.
And we had the name of the parties that were the recipients of that
cocaine--that would be the distributors. And that all came coded. No
specific names. But we knew who they were, because we knew the codes, of
course.

. . . Then we'll call someone, and say, "The shipment is here." He'll tell
us where to bring it. . . . So we'll do the same thing that we did with
exchanging money. We'll bring a vehicle with 100 kilos, and exchange
automobiles. And this man will then take his load, his 100 kilos, and take
it to San Francisco, California, or to New York. How he got it there,
that's his problem. The nickel-and-dime thing was not our game. We were not
interested in street dealing. And we didn't care. We brought the whole
load, and we delivered it to those people who had already paid us for the
load.

In terms of the big players, you moved the drugs for the Ochoas and who else?

And Escobar. And Gacha for a while, but he disappeared.

And what happened?

What happened was that things started to go wrong for everybody. The
government of Colombia changed, Carlos goes in hiding. Carlos is being
chased out of his own country. Carlos made some serious mistakes in his
political campaign, statements that he made. He made admissions of being a
drug dealer publicly to the press. . . . He lost every credibility as a
political figure. He was seen as a clown and he was running. He went in
hiding into the jungles of Chile for a while and things got ugly.

So Carlos is on the run. What happens to you?

Carlos is on the run, obviously. Needless to say, the DEA had been pursuing
Carlos and had extensive information on him, intelligence and what not, and
there came a time when things were very difficult for everybody. I, myself,
and many other members of the CCQ were targeted as candidates for some very
serious indictments. I had an attorney in Florida to represent me in some
legal matters by the name of Fred Graves. Fred Graves, knowing intimately
my connection with the drug cartels, suggested that we contact the Drug
Enforcement Administration. Fred Graves knew a gentleman by the name of
Michael McManus. Michael McManus, at the time, was working out of the Ft.
Lauderdale office and I believe he had known Fred years back and were
friends, personal friends.

My friend and lawyer Fred insisted that I meet with McManus. Of course, I
was very skeptical. Why am I going to talk to a DEA agent, how am I going
to trust a DEA agent? And Mr. McManus and I arranged through my lawyer a
meeting at an empty house that Fred had somewhere in Lauderdale. Mr.
McManus and some other female agent of the DEA met with me personally and I
said, "Okay, we got some problems here and we can be of help to you. What
can you do for me?" Mr. McManus recruited me. I went to work with him
starting that day. Needless to say, I sort of signed my death penalty, but
it was important.

Are you living in fear of being murdered?

Not as much as I did some years back. This has happened a long time ago.
There is one thing about the Colombian drug trade. They are relentless if
somebody becomes an enemy. That fear will never go away.

Did you deal with the Ochoas in Florida?

Yes. The Ochoas were the source of our cash flow. Let me give you an
example. We brought a lot of cocaine in. . . . The load is secure in Ocala,
Florida, where it ended up in the United States. We had an airstrip in
Ocala. Once we landed airplanes in Ocala and I got confirmation through my
radio, then I will proceed to pay the pilots. The pilots don't get paid
unless the load made it safely to the United States.

I would call the Ochoas and they would meet me at a mall down here in the
neighborhood around here. . . . And we would meet at a shopping center in
South Miami, somewhere, south Florida. We would go inside and we would have
a cup of coffee at the mall. I had previous knowledge of what he was
driving, so I would try to park my car next to his car and we'd just
exchange car keys. I'll drive his car, he keeps my car, so we don't have to
get a suitcase of money out in the middle of a parking lot at three o'clock
in the afternoon.

There was never a question about the money being there and every penny
being accounted for--never. We had the machines that the banks used to
count money and we would use those machines only when we were paying
somebody that was not in our organization, somebody that we knew would
count the money. But the money that came from the Ochoas, it was good as
gold. And I would take that money, I would take suitcases of money:
$600,000, $1,000,000, $1,200,000, and I would bring it to the house. I
would call my pilots and I would give them whatever money was due to them.
It's a very expensive operation.

Ochoa told me that he'd made tens of millions in selling cocaine. Does that
jibe with your experience, or is that an underestimation?

No, it's an underestimation. There is no question in my mind that the
Ochoas have amassed at least a billion dollars in assets from the business
of drug trade.

How can you be sure of that?

Because I was part of a group that was associated with him. Carlos was a
close partner. The Ochoas were instrumental in producing enough cocaine to
export tons, and I'm talking not 20 or 30 tons, but tons and tons of
cocaine to this country. They did it through Lehder and through many other
sources. We were not the only transportation source they had. We were the
prime transportation source at the time, but the Ochoas, and the Escobars
continued after Carlos went into hiding, and they continued operating after
I joined DEA. . . .

Do you think they continue today?

I'm not a witness of it, but in my opinion, I have no question about it. I
would not doubt it for one minute.

Do you think the drug war per se can be won by Americans?

Never. More even now . . .

So what the DEA does is a waste of time?

Those people will have a job forever, and let me tell you why, especially
with what is happening in Colombia now. Colombia is now ruled by the
leftist guerrillas and the FLN and the internationals and all this FARC. .
. This is not a criticism of the government, but it's a reality. We have a
government that is totally helpless. The government has to rule and live by
the threat of fear. Our government does not appear as an independent
government. Colombia now is really ruled entirely by the narcotraffickers
and the socialist traffickers, and these people have more weapons, more
training, more guts, than any Colombian army put together.

And I don't think the Colombians are ever going to accept foreign aid in
terms of military assistance to Colombia, which would be the only way to
win the war. I think what we are looking at is--the war is just beginning.
In my opinion, a new phase of the drug war is about to begin, and is just
beginning. Because these groups are well formed, well financed, well
trained, and they own the territory.

[part of a series]

Campaign for the Restoration & Regulation of Hemp's HempTV website now has
the full, two part, total of almost 4 hours of video of the PBS Frontline
"Drug Wars" available on the web for free video streaming using the Real
Player 8.

To watch Part one of Drug Wars, go here:

http://www.crrh.org/hemptv/docs_drugwars1.html

To see part 2, go here:

http://www.crrh.org/hemptv/docs_drugwars2.html

Click this link for an index to this series:
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00.n1551.a01.html
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