A federal judge in Miami sentenced a Bolivian former anti-drugs czar to 14 years in prison on drug trafficking charges, court sources said. General Rene Sanabria, who was President Evo Morales’s top anti-drug official 2007-2008, was arrested in Panama in February and extradited to Miami to face the charges.
A federal judge in Miami sentenced a Bolivian former anti-drugs czar to 14 years in prison on drug trafficking charges, court sources said. General Rene Sanabria, who was President Evo Morales’s top anti-drug official 2007-2008, was arrested in Panama in February and extradited to Miami to face the charges.
US District Judge Ursula Ungaro also sentenced Sanabria’s accomplice, Marcelo Foronda, to nine years in prison for his role in the narcotics trafficking scheme.
Witnesses said that Sanabria cried and asked Ungaro to decrease his time in prison after the District Judge read the sentence in court.
Sanabria’s lawyers said the general would appeal the sentence.
According to trial testimony by the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), in 2010 Foronda made contact with undercover US agents posing as Colombian drug traffickers who offered to distribute Bolivian cocaine in Florida.
Sanabria, who at the time headed a special police anti-drug unit, agreed to make sure the shipment was protected.
In September 144 kilos of cocaine was shipped to the port of Miami hidden in a container with zinc that was shipped through the Chilean port of Arica.
Bolivia remains the world’s third largest producer of coca –the source plant of cocaine– after Peru and Colombia.