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Semi-Submersible Vessel Crew Sentenced
Tampa, Florida—U.S. Attorney A. Brian Albritton announces that U.S. District Judge
Virginia M. Hernandez Covington today sentenced Silvio Orejuela Ceron (age 53, of
Colombia) to 14 years in federal prison for operating a self-propelled semisubmersible
(SPSS) vessel loaded with approximately five tons of cocaine. Ceron had
pleaded guilty to a Superseding Indictment charging him with conspiring to operate and
operating an SPSS vessel with intent to evade detection and two drug counts. His
sentence arises in part from a prior felony drug conviction in the United States.
Judge Covington also today sentenced Ceron's co-defendants, Adolfo Obregon (age
52, of Colombia), and Ricardo Victoria (age 40 of Colombia), to 11 years and three
months each on related charges. A fourth co-defendant, Eladio Angulo (age 40, of
Colombia), had previously been sentenced to five years and 10 months. Obregon,
Victoria, and Angulo had pleaded guilty earlier this year.
The charges against Ceron and his co-defendants were brought pursuant to the
Drug Trafficking Vessel Interdiction Act of 2008, which was signed into law last October in
response to the sharp increase in South American narcotics traffickers' deployment of
SPSS vessels to smuggle cocaine.
According to court documents, on February 28, 2009, USS UNDERWOOD sighted
an SPSS vessel stopped dead in the water northwest of Isla Gorgona, Colombia, in the
Eastern Pacific Ocean. The vessel was 60 feet long, sloped on both ends, and painted
blue, with an extremely low profile and no lights. It flew no flag, displayed no home/hailing
port, and did not have any registration numbers.
USS UNDERWOOD launched a Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachment
(LEDET) to intercept the SPSS vessel. By the time the LEDET reached the vessel, the
defendants had scuttled it by opening valves used to cool the engine with sea water. A
cooperating witness later reported that the forward half of the SPSS vessel had been
nearly entirely loaded with bales containing cocaine.
This is the second time Ceron has been interdicted in the Pacific Ocean and
prosecuted in the Middle District of Florida for drug smuggling. According to court
documents, on December 18, 2000, USS MCCLUSKEY caught Ceron and six others on
a stateless "go-fast" vessel carrying 737 kilograms of cocaine. Ceron served 70
months in federal prison for that offense before being deported to Colombia.
This case was investigated by OCDETF's Panama Express Strike Force, comprised
of agents and analysts from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Drug Enforcement
Administration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, United States Coast Guard
Investigative Service, and Joint Interagency Task Force South. It was prosecuted by
Assistant United States Attorney Christopher F. Murray.
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