|
Fish tale was one of many stretches
November 29, 1998
By Bill Moushey, Post-Gazette Staff Writer
Drug-sniffing dogs had scoured the boat and found not a whiff of cocaine.
Coast Guard helicopters, airplanes and balloons had tracked the 37-foot
"Nevada" after it left Colombia, but their surveillance tapes turned up no
sighting of drugs, either, nor was there evidence any had been thrown overboard.
In court, Orlando Perez explained why. Dolphins got it, he said.
Dolphins?
"After the cocaine was thrown overboard into the water, dolphins showed up and
they started playing with it, and they would sink it," Perez said.
"Dolphins like Flipper?" asked Assistant U.S. Attorney Bruce Pearson.
"Yes, just like Flipper. . . . Then there was a larger package or bag with several
packages of cocaine inside. It was wrapped in a blanket, and, incredibly, a much larger
dolphin came out, and it flipped and fell on top of that bag, and he also sank it in such
a way that when the Navy helicopter began hovering around, they couldnt find the
cocaine," Perez said.
Everyone in the Miami courtroom erupted in laughter, except for Ramon Roque Osorio, who
was on trial for smuggling the cocaine.
Osorio had told federal agents that hed signed on as a seaman and mechanic with
Perez in August 1990 to help deliver the 37-foot vessel from Miami to its new owner in
Puerto Rico.
Mechanical problems forced it off course several times. It was finally towed to a
Colombian port after drifting without power for eight days in the Carib-bean, Osorio said.
Thats when the Coast Guard started watching it.
Osorio had invoices and receipts to confirm the mechanical problems and the repairs,
and when the Coast Guard first questioned Perez on Jan. 11, 1990, he confirmed everything
that Osorio had said. He insisted no drugs had been on board and no drugs had been thrown
overboard.
When he changed his story, he first said there were 500 kilograms of cocaine on board,
then 300, finally 94.
There was one very good reason why Perez changed his story and lied. Federal agents had
implicated him in another cocaine trafficking case with a man named Julio Nunez, who had
become a government witness. Agents told Perez he could earn a lenient sentence if he
would finger other drug dealers.
Offering up Osorio reduced his sentence to six months. Nunez, whod also been
implicated in two murders, got the same.
Osorios attorneys didnt learn of the deal until after Osorio was convicted
and sentenced to 17 years in prison.
Perez was the only witness to implicate Osorio.
This is a clear case of the government fabricating testimony, coercing witnesses to
cooperate against an innocent man and using confidential informants to set up a drug
conspiracy, Osorio said.
"I dont mind doing time if I did something, but youre letting major
drug dealers, people who have committed murders, go in exchange for me," he said.
"What kind of baloney is that?"
|