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News (Media Awareness Project) - Spain: Judges To Be Grilled About Drug Fugitive
Title:Spain: Judges To Be Grilled About Drug Fugitive
Published On:2002-01-05
Source:Guardian, The (UK)
Fetched On:2008-01-25 00:43:44
JUDGES TO BE GRILLED ABOUT DRUG FUGITIVE

Spanish prosecutors began investigating three judges and a prison
psychiatrist yesterday after one of the country's most notorious alleged
drug traffickers was allowed out of prison on bail and immediately skipped
the country. Carlos Ruiz Santamaria, whom the prosecution want jailed for
60 years and fined UKP280m on charges of smuggling drugs into Spain,
disappeared late last month after paying an UKP18,000 bond to get out of
prison.

Outraged politicians, newspapers and the police blame the judges.

But a psychiatrist had recommended his release because he was suffering
severe depression and the three judges in the national court in Madrid -
roughly equivalent to Britain's high court - gave him bail on humanitarian
grounds.

Mr Ruiz, who was to be tried on January 14, disappeared shortly Christmas
and is now believed to be in Portugal or Latin America.

Mr Ruiz, alias El Negro, said to head one of Spain's biggest drug gangs,
was charged with smuggling 11 tonnes of cocaine into the country.

The police claimed that he was the contact man in Spain for at least two
big Colombian drug rings, the Bogota and and Costa cartels.

He allegedly hired Spanish fishing boats to carry the drugs into Spain and
was in charge of their distribution, they said.

Spain has become one of the main points for bringing Colombian cocaine into
Europe, thanks to the close ties between traffickers in the north-western
region of Galicia and the South American cartels.

The psychiatrist at Madrid's Valdemoro prison diagnosed Mr Ruiz as
suffering from extreme depression and said there was a risk that he might
commit suicide. He had lost 15kg in prison and suffered from wild mood swings.

He was considered dangerous and had threatened those who were arrested with
him.

The judges ignored the protests of the prosecution, who said that his
alleged depression could be treated in a prison hospital, and released him
on December 22.

The decision was criticised by Spanish newspapers, which predicted that he
would disappear.

He was meant to report to the police and attend an out-patients'
psychiatric unit, but has not been seen since his release.

The prosecutors have been ordered by the general council of the judicial
system, which oversees judges, to look into the case.
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