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Worldwide Cocaine Trafficker Pleads Guilty
and Agrees to Forfeit Millions
TAMPA—United States Attorney A. Brian Albritton, in conjunction with the United
States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida, announces that Fabio Enrique
Ochoa-Vasco (age 48, of Colombia, South America) today pleaded guilty to drug trafficking
charges in three federal cases. Ochoa-Vasco faces a minimum mandatory sentence of
10 years, with a maximum penalty of life, in federal prison.
In 1989 and 1990, Ochoa-Vasco was indicted in two separate drug trafficking cases
in the Southern District of Florida, Miami. In 2004, a grand jury in the Middle District of
Florida indicted Ochoa-Vasco in a third drug trafficking case, charging him and twelve other
defendants with distributing more than five metric tons of cocaine. Ochoa-Vasco remained
a fugitive on all three indictments until the United States Attorney's Office for the Middle
District of Florida negotiated his surrender in January 2009. Prior to that time, a $5 million
reward had been offered for his capture, and he was alleged
to be one of the largest cocaine traffickers in the world.
According to the plea agreement filed in the Middle District of Florida, Ochoa-Vasco
has been a cocaine trafficker since 1978 and became the leader of his own world-wide
cocaine trafficking organization in 1986. Thereafter, he conspired with others to import
multi-ton quantities of cocaine into the United States through Mexico and other countries.
Ochoa-Vasco’s drug trafficking organization operated and distributed the cocaine through
a vast network of "go fast" and fishing vessels, as well as airplanes and ground
transportation vehicles. According to court documents, Ochoa-Vasco used airplanes to fly
cocaine into the Bahamas and then used speed boats to transport the cocaine into the
Florida Keys and other places.
In the plea agreement, Ochoa-Vasco agrees to forfeit in more than $15 million in
cash, property, and assets that he and others acquired during their cocaine trafficking
operations.
United States Attorney A. Brian Albritton stated, "The successful prosecution and
conviction of Ochoa-Vasco evidences the resolve of the United States to seek out drug
kingpins and dismantle their cocaine trafficking organizations from the top down. The
pursuit of Ochoa-Vasco spanned nearly two decades and sends a message to drug
trafficking organizations that their leaders cannot insulate themselves from prosecution
because the United States will not stop its pursuit until the very heads of the organization
are put in prison."
This case was investigated by the Department of Homeland Security, U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal
Investigation (IRS-CI), the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the Federal Bureau
of Investigation (FBI). It is part of Operation Panama Express, a federally approved
Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force investigating maritime cocaine smuggling
organizations operating out of Colombia, South America. The cases are being prosecuted
by Assistant United States Attorney Matthew H. Perry. Press Releases | Tampa Home
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