Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jun 1999
Source: Associated Press
Copyright: 1999 Associated Press
Author: Dara Akiko Williams, Associated Press Writer

3 GUILTY OF LAUNDERING MILLIONS

LOS ANGELES (AP) Two Mexican bankers and a lawyer have been convicted of
conspiring to launder millions of  dollars for a Colombian drug cartel in
what  prosecutors say is the largest such probe in U.S. history.

Three others were acquitted Thursday in the first federal trial stemming
from Operation Casablanca, a three-year sting in which agents and an
undercover informer posed as money launderers for the Cali cartel.

Dozens of people were arrested in the case that strained U.S.-Mexico
relations when Mexican officials learned that U.S. agents were working in
Mexico without notifying them.

Prosecutors say they broke a scheme in which bankers charged commissions to
accept $70 million in cartel drug money while issuing bank drafts for the
traffickers.

About 40 Mexican and Venezuelan businessmen were indicted. U.S. customs
officials seized $100 million from 14 banks and dozens of individuals who
were accused of laundering money for the Cali drug cartel in Colombia, and
the Juarez cartel in Mexico.

Convicted of conspiracy and money laundering were Jose Reyes Ortega
Gonzales, a former manager of banking operations for Bancomer in Tepatitlan,
Mexico; Manuel Barraza Leon, a Bancomer branch manager in Tijuana; and
Alfonso Labrada Gurrola, who worked at a Tijuana law firm that represented
banks.

Acquitted were Javier Alcala Navarro; Katy Kissel Belfer, a broker at CBI
International Securities in Mexico City; and Fernando Barragan Reyes, a
stock broker.

The verdicts capped a trial that ran nearly two months and featured taped
evidence allegedly showing defendants processing the illicit funds.

There are three other cases linked to the operation.

Last month, seven other defendants were indicted for laundering money for
the Cali cartel and pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy or drug
trafficking. Their sentences are pending.

The other cases involve defendants accused of working for the Juarez cartel,
and Venezuelan bankers accused of laundering millions of U.S. dollars for
undercover agents posing as narcotics traffickers.

Two of Mexico's largest banks - Grupo Financiero Bancomer S.A. and Grupo
Financiero Serfin S.A. - have since agreed to pay $500,000 in fines and
forfeit $13.6 million.

Chargers were dropped against a third Mexican financial institution, Banca
Confia, which agreed to forfeit $12.1 million seized from its U.S. holdings.

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