Pubdate: Tue, 23 Nov 1999
Source: Philadelphia Daily News (PA)
Copyright: 1999 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc.
Contact:  http://www.phillynews.com/
Forum: http://interactive.phillynews.com/talk-show/
Author: Jim Smith, Daily News Staff Writer

TROOPER PLEADS GUILTY TO DRUG DEAL

Pennsylvania State Trooper Antonio Romero Jr. was a turncoat in the war on
drugs. A "narc" working out of the Belmont Barracks in Philadelphia, Romero
last year helped a convicted drug dealer with ties to Colombian traffickers
escape from state police custody in hopes of getting a $3 million payoff
that never arrived.

Romero, 32, of Leithgow Street near George, also had stolen nealy 50 pounds
of marijuana - evidence that he had been entrusted to transport for the
state police in 1997 and 1998.

The pot was sold on the streets of Philadelphia by Romero's cousin, Jose L.
Davila, for about $750 a pound, and profits, estimated to be $30,000 to
$35,000, were shared equally by the two men.

Romero pleaded guilty yesterday in federal court to attempted extortion,
conspiracy to sell marijuana, using a telephone to facilitate a drug deal
and related charges.

Romero's sentencing guidelines called for a prison term in the range of
seven to nine years, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Ewald Zittlau, the case
prosecutor. He will be sentenced March 10 by U.S. District Judge Robert F.
Kelly.

Romero came under suspicion last year after convicted Colombian drug
trafficker Mario Rojas Jr. escaped from the custody of Romero and other
troopers who were guarding Rojas at a local hotel.

Rojas had agreed to inform on other drug dealers at the time. The drug
trafficker and Romero shared teen-age memories. They had attended Cardinal
Dougherty High School together.

While they reminisced, the drug dealer offered the trooper $3 million to
let him go.

The trooper agreed and gave the drug dealer a key to a set of handcuffs
that the troopers were using to secure the hotel room's door from the
inside to prevent Rojas from fleeing when the guard detail wasn't in the room.

Free of his handlers, Rojas fled to South America, reneging on his $3
million payoff promise. Earlier this year, Davila, the trooper's cousin,
told a trusted associate that Romero was upset that he hadn't been paid for
helping Rojas escape. The associate was an FBI informant.

To nail the cousin, the FBI dreamed up a sting operation that led to
Davila's arrest.

He informed on Romero.

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