Pubdate: Tue, 18 Jun 2002
Source: Independent  (UK)
Copyright: 2002 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/209
Author: Jason Bennetto Crime Correspondent

BEHIND BARS: COLOMBIANS IN AUKP50M DRUG MONEY SCAM

The final member of a Colombian gang working in London for a drugs cartel 
was jailed yesterday for his part in laundering AUKP50m from cocaine sold 
on the streets of Britain.

Thirteen gang members have now been convicted and jailed after a three-year 
Customs & Excise investigation, codenamed Uproar, into the biggest 
operation of its kind brought to court.

The gang operated through corrupt bureaux de changes, couriers and complex 
electronic money transfers between accounts in the UK, Isle of Man, the US 
and Colombia.

Reporting restrictions on the long-running case were lifted at Kingston 
Crown Court, south London, yesterday after the final defendant, Juan Manuel 
Salgado, 50, a Colombian-born naturalised British citizen, pleaded guilty 
to laundering AUKP2.3m and was jailed for five years.

The vast sums a " AUKP50m was laundered in three years and returned to the 
notorious Cali cartel in Colombia a " and highly organised network reveal 
that South American gangs have a firm hold on the British cocaine market. 
Customs worked with the CIA as well as other agencies to track the gang. 
Over three years up to April 2000, the launderers, who had no contact with 
drugs, "cleaned" the proceeds from more than 2,500kg (5,500lb) of cocaine 
sold in Britain.

Customs did not attempt to go after the drug dealers in this case but they 
believe most of the cocaine was smuggled via a freighter from Colombia to 
Spain and into Britain via Dover.

The gang was headed by Luis Edwardo Hurtado, 39, another Colombian-born 
naturalised British citizen, who owned the World Express bureau de change 
in Camberwell, south London, and used a network of runners to collect money 
from drug traffickers. It was moved around the streets of London in 
rucksacks, holdalls and plastic carrier bags to be changed, hundreds of 
thousands of pounds at a time, at a series of bureaux. Hurtado, of Kilburn 
in north London, was jailed for eight years after pleading guilty last year 
to laundering AUKP13m. In total, the gang members were jailed for 60 years.

The gang aroused suspicions in 1998 when the National Criminal Intelligence 
Service began to receive reports of unusually large amounts of notes being 
bought by several bureaux from currency wholesalers. One of these was "7 
Day Change", a small glass cubicle in a sweet shop on Bayswater Road, 
London, run by Chantana Platt, 55, a Thai-born naturalised British citizen.

There, customs officers found a tatty notebook with the title "handy book" 
and a black cat on the front in which she had recorded, in Thai, 
transactions with Hurtado totalling $16m (AUKP10.8m). Platt admitted her 
part in the scam and was sentenced to seven years and a niece pleaded 
guilty to helping and was jailed for six months.

Undercover officers also watched Hurtado change AUKP100,000 into dollars 
and followed him and his business partner, Mario Giraldo Lopez, 54, to the 
Royal Garden Hotel in Kensington in September 1999. Lopez went into a room 
with a rucksack and came out empty-handed. The room was rented by a 
Colombian, Yolanda Roa Jimenez, 50, an air stewardess for Avianca, 
Colombia's national airline. She was stopped at Heathrow before a flight to 
Bogota with $132,400. Roa Jimenez and Lopez were each jailed for three years.

In March 2000 Hurtado's associates Benjamin Colorado, 41, and Ruben Dario 
Perez, 27, both Colombians, arrived in the UK and were followed. They were 
seen changing pounds for dollars at a bureau de change near Victoria 
Arcade, central London. Its owner, Indian-born Suresh Chopra, of Palmers 
Green, north London, was jailed for three years.

When the gang was arrested by 100 customs officers in April 2000, Hurtado 
had a bag with $382,000 (AUKP258,500). Customs seized $1m and AUKP253,000 
at various addresses, including $500,000 at a London flat that was the 
counting house, owned by John Serna Munera, 35, a Colombian national. 
Munera was jailed for six years.

Hurtado's brother-in-law and right-hand man Byron Carrera, 34, an 
Ecuadorian, is serving six-and-a-half years. Through his money laundering, 
Hurtado kept a low profile, living in a rundown council flat, and Carrera 
lived next door.

Investigators believe Hurtado has more than just the prison term on his 
mind. Paul Evans, chief investigation officer of Customs, said: "When 
Hurtado was arrested he was crying his eyes out. It wasn't because we 
arrested him, it was because he was worried about how he was going to repay 
the money we seized to the cartels.

"If you lose AUKP1,000, someone is going to shoot your legs off. Money is 
central. The cartels will be coming after them to demand their money."

How the cartels 'clean' the profits from cocaine

With millions of pounds in cash being handed over to drug dealers in 
Britain every month, the Colombians had to devise methods of making the 
money "clean" and getting it back to South America undetected.

The "dirty" sterling was often laundered for dollars at London-based 
bureaux de change owned by gang members. Customs uncovered at least six 
methods of returning the dollars to Colombia, from complex financial deals 
to stuffing a bra full of cash.

One of the main techniques was to place cash in UK bank accounts and then 
wire the money to accounts in Miami, New York and Bogota. A web of accounts 
were set up that included Colombian residents holding money in the Isle of 
Man. An associate of the Cali cartel set up an account in Miami where an 
estimated $1m (AUKP700,000) of drugs money was laundered every day.

Another technique was for black market brokers based in Colombia to use 
"dirty" money to buy life insurance policies that would then be cashed in 
for "clean" money.

At least one flight attendant for Avianca, the Colombian national airline, 
was used to smuggle money. On a flight to Bogota she was found with 
$132,400 in a false compartment in her bag, in her bra and in a torch.
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