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Old 07-02-06, 10:23 AM
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news Ex-President Aristide is main focus of investigation of bribes from drug traffickers

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Drug probe targets Jean-Bertrand Aristide: Haiti's ex-president is main focus of investigation of bribes from drug traffickers, but paper trail is lacking.
? This is the first of two parts.
Jean-Bertrand Aristide was a modern-day Moses to Haiti's poor masses, a former Catholic priest who rose to the presidency by promising to wash away the country's bloody and corrupt past.
But since his ouster as president in 2004, U.S. authorities have been investigating detailed accounts alleging that Aristide and several top aides sought and took millions of dollars in bribes from drug traffickers in Haiti, The Miami Herald has learned.
So far, a federal grand jury probe in Miami has led to 22 convictions of mostly Haitian drug traffickers, ex-police officers and a high-ranking politician close to Aristide. Although the exiled former president is a main target of the ongoing investigation, he has not been charged.
The allegations against the ex-president come from numerous sources, but the evidence has not risen to a level to press a case against Aristide, say U.S. law enforcement officials, who have been hampered by a lack of financial records.
Still, The Miami Herald has learned from interviews with about 20 law enforcement officials, defense lawyers and others involved in the case that Aristide has been accused of being at the center of his country's narco-trafficking and money-laundering activities from 2001 to 2004.
Authorities have gathered evidence, including testimony by cooperating defendants convicted in the case, alleging that:
? Soon after he took office in early 2001, Aristide held a meeting at his Port-au-Prince home with his presidential security chief, two government security advisors, the national police chief and a district commander to organize a scheme to shake down Colombian and Haitian drug smugglers for kickbacks for both his personal and political activities.
? Drug traffickers bribed Aristide to turn a blind eye to shipments of Colombian cocaine through Haiti, directly paying him hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash during regular visits to his home.
? Convicted drug kingpin Beaudouin ''Jacques'' Ketant personally delivered $500,000 a month in a suitcase to Aristide's home, he told authorities. He said the suitcase had a combination lock set to 7-7-7 at Aristide's request because that was his favorite number.
? Traffickers gave Aristide $200,000 to buy a helicopter in 2002, but the president pocketed the money and instead used government funds to rent a helicopter from Miami-based Biscayne Helicopters. Those same traffickers also bought a $75,000 ambulance in Miami that was shipped to Haiti for the president's private charitable Aristide Foundation.
? Traffickers spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on carnival festivities in February 2002 that were arranged by the Aristide government. They also paid for some of Aristide's July birthday celebrations, his Lavalas Family Party and his foundation.
? At Aristide's direction, some of the traffickers' bribes helped buy weapons smuggled into Haiti to equip national police officers as well as pro-Aristide street gangs that harassed his opponents during his second term as president, between 2001 and 2004, according to former Haitian law enforcement officials and drug traffickers who are cooperating with U.S. investigators.
ACCUSERS CALLED `LIARS'
Lawyer for Aristide calls
accusations `inconceivable'
Aristide's longtime lawyer, Ira Kurzban, said he does not believe the allegations against the former president.
Speaking generally, Kurzban said that the federal prosecution is politically motivated and that the U.S. government's witnesses are ''liars'' seeking to reduce their prison sentences by fingering the former president in their money-laundering and cocaine enterprise.
''It is inconceivable to me that Aristide would do anything for personal gain,'' Kurzban said, commenting on the ex-president's character. ``He was not a person interested in money.''
So far the U.S. investigation has been built on testimony from many of the 22 mostly Haitian cocaine smugglers, police officers and others convicted in Miami in the past 2 ½ years. The probe, spearheaded by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) with help from the Internal Revenue Service, has focused on cocaine smuggling during Aristide's second presidential term.
The investigation continues as the Haitian government carries out its own separate inquiry into the Aristide administration and foundation records, so far concluding that the president had looted government coffers, Haitian government records show. The interim government that replaced Aristide two years ago filed suit in Miami last year to recover ''tens of millions of dollars'' allegedly stolen by the former president and others from Haiti's treasury and its phone company. Neither the Haitian investigation nor the civil suit alleges drug trafficking.
To this day, the 52-year-old Aristide remains intensely popular in Haiti and has expressed a desire to return home from exile in South Africa after the recent election of President René Préval, once an Aristide ally. That would upset Haiti's domestic politics and Préval's relations with the U.S. and French governments, which regard Aristide as a destabilizing factor in Haiti.
CLAIMS UNSUPPORTED
Probers report absence
of incriminating records
While several witnesses have testified against the former president in the U.S. drug-trafficking probe, investigators have told The Miami Herald that they have yet to uncover bank records and other financial statements that support the claims. The absence of such documents to solidify their case against Aristide has prevented authorities from seeking a federal indictment in Miami, U.S. law enforcement officials said.
Efforts to reach Aristide for comment on this story failed. Kurzban, who represented the Haitian government as its lawyer from 1991 to 2004, said he did not believe that the ex-president would agree to an interview.
Kurzban, who still speaks on Aristide's behalf, said that while people in Haiti were well aware of the country's drug-trafficking problem, it came as a ''shock'' to him when he learned that Aristide and others in his government became targets of a U.S. criminal investigation.
He said that, if anything, Aristide cooperated with the federal government in the crackdown on cocaine smuggling in 2003, including allowing Ketant to be turned over to U.S. authorities. He said that money donated to the Aristide Foundation went to the poor for relief programs such as rice subsidies.
Haiti, an impoverished country where cash and corruption go hand in hand, has long been a significant transit point for Colombian cocaine headed for U.S. streets. From there, it sometimes is smuggled directly to the United States. Another route: from Haiti to the Dominican Republic, west to Puerto Rico and then to the U.S. mainland.
During Aristide's second term as president, an estimated 10 percent of all cocaine smuggled into the United States flowed through the Caribbean corridor, especially Haiti, according to a 2006 federal report by the National Drug Intelligence Center.
Shortly after the Aristide government turned over Ketant to U.S. officials, the U.S. government broadened its drug investigation by looking into the Aristide leadership.
It was during a 2004 sentencing in federal court in Miami that Ketant accused Aristide of turning Haiti into a ''narco-country'' and being a ''drug lord.'' Not under oath at the time, Ketant was sentenced to 27 years in prison and ordered to pay $30 million in fines and forfeitures.
Behind the scenes, he began to cooperate as a key witness for prosecutors, providing details on his alleged payoffs to Aristide and others in exchange for a free hand to ship cocaine through Haiti to the United States. His testimony triggered some of the indictments against the 21 others on money-laundering or cocaine-smuggling charges, U.S. law enforcement officials said.
Another major witness was Aristide's former security chief, Oriel Jean, who was convicted last year in a separate federal case of money-laundering and sentenced to three years. He fingered the same drug traffickers, police officials and politicians -- including Aristide.
And during his testimony at two Miami trials last year, he linked Aristide to at least two people implicated in Haiti's drug trade and the U.S. investigation.
In sworn testimony at those trials, Jean said he was introduced in late 2001 or early 2002 to one drug lord, Serge Edouard, by Hermione Leonard, then the director of the national police's Port-au-Prince district and a woman who was close to Aristide.
''She told me that the president is aware that she has contacts'' with major drug traffickers, he testified at Edouard's trial, without elaborating. Leonard, wanted by the DEA, is believed to be hiding in the Dominican Republic.
Jean also testified at trial that he and Aristide approved a national security ID card for Edouard in 2002. He testified that the security badge allowed Edouard to travel throughout Haiti without being stopped by police. Edouard was convicted in that trial on drug charges and is serving a life sentence.
Defense attorneys for Ketant and Jean declined Miami Herald requests to interview their clients.
Ketant also has told authorities that among other drug traffickers who paid off Aristide and members of his inner circle were Ketant's brother, Hector, and Gilbert Horacious, according to sources familiar with the case. Ketant said Horacious was a longtime friend of Aristide's who introduced him and other traffickers to the Haitian president, according to sources familiar with the case.
Ketant's brother was fatally shot in Haiti in 2003, and Horacious was gunned down last year in the Dominican Republic. Shortly after Aristide fled the country on Feb. 29, 2004, hundreds of thousands of dollars in rotted $100 bills were found hidden in his home, according to U.S. news reports. U.S. federal investigators analyzed some of the bills but could not figure out where the money had come from.
ASSOCIATES ACCUSED
Several are alleged
to have laundered money
While investigators have struggled to piece together a paper trail leading directly to the former president, they have identified several people in his government who allegedly helped launder drug money for him.
The Miami Herald has learned that the Ketant brothers and other major traffickers made cash contributions to the Aristide Foundation through one of its high-ranking members.
According to traffickers and U.S. law enforcement officials, Aristide allegedly ordered Port-au-Prince district police chief Leonard to pass any seized drugs on to Edouard and other Haitian traffickers for resale. The smugglers, in turn, donated some of the tainted proceeds to the Lavalas party or the foundation, they said.
Aristide also instructed Haitian Sen. Fourel Célestin, who represented the Jacmel area southwest of the capital, to solicit donations from drug traffickers for Lavalas, according to convicted drug smugglers, ex-police officers and U.S. law enforcement officials.
Convicted last year after a plea deal with Miami prosecutors, Célestin admitted taking a $200,000 bribe to help secure the release of two detained Colombian traffickers. Célestin is now cooperating with prosecutors.
Under federal law, prosecutors would not have to prove that Aristide was personally involved in moving loads of cocaine to the United States -- only that he allowed traffickers to use his country and received kickbacks in return. If Aristide comes under a U.S. indictment, the threat of extradition to the United States might keep him from pushing to return to Haiti, according to legal observers. It may also keep Préval from worrying too much about the prospect of his former mentor's return.
After February's presidential election, Préval said that Aristide, like all Haitians, could legally come home. But he added a cautionary note, saying Aristide ''must decide whether he wants to return, if there are legal and other actions'' pending against him.
************************************************** ************************************************** *****************************
Coming Monday: A two-year-old corruption investigation of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide is stalled in Haiti, with millions of dollars in blocked funds gone from Haitian banks.
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Old 07-03-06, 09:00 AM
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Old 07-03-06, 12:31 PM
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news Part 2 of Aristide main focus of Investigation: Aristide probe at a standstill

Aristide probe is at a standstill
A 2-year-old corruption investigation of Haitian ex-President JeanBertrand Aristide is stalled in Haiti's legal system.
? This is the second of two parts.
Shortly after Jean-Bertrand Aristide was ousted as president in 2004, Haiti's interim government announced with fanfare that it would get to the bottom of alleged corruption in his administration. And for a while, it looked as though it would.
Four blistering reports from two government investigative commissions alleged that Aristide embezzled more than $20 million of his country's meager public funds for the benefit of his private charities, his political party and several private firms that existed only on paper.
But two years later, the investigations have stalled, mired in Haiti's dysfunctional legal system, polarized politics, and uncertainty over the willingness of newly elected President René Préval to pursue the case against his one-time mentor.
Aristide also is under investigation by a federal grand jury in Miami, which has been reviewing allegations of ties to narco-traffickers, U.S. law enforcement officials say. The U.S. probe -- sparked by the rampant flow of cocaine through Haiti -- has resulted in 22 convictions of Haitian smugglers, ex-police officers and others.
But the legal wrangling in Haiti has turned so chaotic that the top corruption investigator, Jean-Yves Nol, was himself jailed for six days in May, accused of illegally trying to block a judge's order releasing about $8 million from bank accounts of the charitable Aristide Foundation and other foundation-related accounts that had been frozen by investigators. The money was eventually released, Nol said.
Investigative Judge Jean Ostrict Hercules, who signed the release order and is the head a three-judge panel in charge of deciding whether to pursue criminal charges against Aristide based on the investigative reports, told The Miami Herald that such funds cannot be frozen indefinitely.
Hercules refused to discuss the merits of the reports alleging Aristide embezzlements, saying only that his panel has been unable to move the investigation forward because it has yet to receive approval from an administrative board that must first rule that public funds have been mishandled.
Separately, the hope of pursuing Aristide through a civil lawsuit filed in Miami last November also appears to be waning. The suit, based on two of the most damning investigative reports, has not led to any concrete actions. Lawyers for the Haitian government have asked for more time, arguing that they have been unable to serve a summons on Aristide because he is in exile in South Africa.
Former interim Prime Minister Gérard Latortue says the real cause of the delay has been a fight over money with the Chicago law firm handling the lawsuit. The firm, Winston & Strawn, did not reply to requests for comment.
''They made an arrangement for us to give them $250,000 and the rest of the money . . . they would get from the frozen assets,'' Latortue said. But now, he added, 'Each time, they come and do a blackmail and say, `You have to give us the money -- or nothing.' ''
OFFICIALS REACT
Préval told The Miami Herald last week that he has asked top officials to ''look into'' the suit and the investigative reports on Aristide.
Former interim Justice Minister Henri Dorleans, investigator Nol and others involved in the corruption probes all insist that the Haitian investigation is ongoing. ''I am determined to finish,'' Nol said. ``I love my country. . . . Somebody has to fight.''
But the probes' future will depend largely on Préval. In Haiti's highly politicized legal system, he will have a strong voice on whether the allegations will be pursued or allowed to wither away. Préval, under pressure from Aristide allies and foes, has not said what he plans to do.
From the day the U.S.-backed interim government was installed after Aristide's ouster in 2004 amid a violent rebellion, it has insisted that proving Aristide embezzled public funds was its priority.
It created two commissions -- Nol's Central Unit for Economic and Financial Investigations, known as UCREF for its French acronym, and the Administrative Investigative Commission -- to probe Aristide's handling of funds back to 2001, the start of his second term.
All government agencies, the Central Bank and the state-owned telecommunications company, Teleco, were ordered to audit their books. Latortue at one point even demanded that a warrant be issued for Aristide's arrest.
No such warrant was ever issued. And after four reports to Hercules' three-judge panel -- two by each of the commissions -- not one person has testified before Hercules' panel. Haitian investigative judges act like U.S. grand juries, reviewing investigators' reports and deciding whether to file charges.
Dorleans defended the interim government's role in the Aristide case and blamed the lack of progress on the absence of a ruling by the administrative board known as the Superior Court of Auditors and Administrative Disputes. The board, whose 10 members were appointed by Aristide, began only in February to consider whether public funds were mishandled.
Board President Julien Simon told The Miami Herald that his agency received the four reports only in December, and has been unable to find financial documents substantiating the allegations.
Haitian investigators argue that because of the lack of documents, they need to question people linked to some of the allegations. But they cannot do so without an order from Hercules' panel.
MOVEMENT OF FUNDS
The reports by UCREF base its allegation of embezzlement and money laundering on the elaborate movement of public funds -- funneled to three paper companies and four humanitarian organizations and then swished among them to make the origin and destination of the money difficult to trace.
The investigators reported that of the $21 million diverted from government accounts, about $2.4 million went directly to charities tied to Aristide and his Lavalas Family political party -- allowing him to take credit for humanitarian works and strengthening his image as a champion of the poor.
''The judges have been dragging their feet by not going further with the findings of the UCREF and Administrative Investigative Commission reports,'' said former interim Justice Minister Bernard Gousse, who oversaw the investigations before he was forced to resign last summer amid complaints that he was too focused on prosecuting Aristide.
''It's not politically motivated when you go after people who stole money from the state,'' Gousse told The Miami Herald. ``Now those people [Aristide supporters] are powerful enough to put a brake on the investigation and furthermore to have the main investigator arrested. . . . The world is upside down. Prosecutors cannot be the victims.''
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