An International drug smuggler Diosdado Cabello, serving currently as Venezuela’s National Assembly president, is a leading target of U.S Department of Justice and the F.B.I investigations into alleged drug trafficking and money laundering by senior officials in the South American nation.
The Brazilian 2003 awards called "Rigged & Fraud", considered as you socially going out after a difficult and stress worked day to drink two beers at the local Brazilian bar "buteko" and at the end your bill calls to pay just one plus service tips.
In Brazil's democratic garbage its well known as "two for one criminal election" throughout an EDR- Venezuela's Smartmatic Corps electronic voting machine used mainly as tool to subvert Democracy and gain illegal power, as former Brazilian illiterate and unschooled president, who doesn't even know how to write and either speaks properly his own language. A criminal individual who have dissipated his left pink finger playing "knife fillet fingers, a "leader mastermind" of an underground criminal organization called Sao Paulo's Forum, who has alliance with Colombia's FARCS drug outlaws.
A suspicious criminal individual who is harboring and supporting to the fullest, what's so commonly recognized as Bolivarian Communist and Criminal expansion within South America's is currently receiving illegal weapons and drugs originated from within Venezuela's territory.
Lula's best criminal associates and drug smugglers, Diosdado Cabello, Jose David Cabello and Giuseppe Yoffreda to a business meeting, including a quick stop by at Lula's JBS meat company located in Sao Paulo under his son administration with plans to overstay in Brazil's territory until March 12th, 2015.
The biggest and favorite dream party for 220 million Brazilian tax payers, who are outrage of being robbed by criminal scumbags and douchebags, requesting to the U.S Federal agents to take them down hard on the ground and place them in Federal Jail, since the Brazilian existing laws are corrupted to the core in favor of them.
The World has been heard in regards to FIFA'S 20 years of criminal soccer corruption and now its time to initiate a major scumbag clean up in Brazil and Venezuela. Since Brazil has spent 97% of tax payers funding to built twelve biggest "Bird Toilets", it won't be difficult to turn from an ouside toilet to a Federal maximum scums security Jail.
The U.S Department of Justice prosecutors are investigating several high-ranking Venezuelan officials, including the president of the country’s congress, on suspicion that they have turned the country into a global hub for cocaine trafficking and money laundering, according to more than a dozen people familiar with the probes. The U.S elite unit of the Drug Enforcement Administration in Washington and federal prosecutors in New York, including Miami are building cases using evidence provided by former cocaine traffickers, informants who were once close to top Venezuelan officials and defectors from the Venezuelan military, these people say.
A leading target, according to the U.S Department of Justice officials and other American authorities, is National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello, considered the country’s second most-powerful man. There is extensive evidence to justify that he is one of the heads, if not the head, of the cartel,” said the U.S Department of Justice official, speaking of a group of military officers and top officials suspected of being involved in the drug trade.
“He certainly is a main target.”
Representatives of Mr. Cabello and other officials didn’t return phone calls and emails requesting comment. In the past, Venezuelan authorities have rejected allegations of high-ranking involvement in the drug trade as an attempt by the U.S. to destabilize the leftist government in Caracas. In an appearance on state television Wednesday, Mr. Cabello said he solicited a court-ordered travel ban on 22 executives and journalists from three Venezuelan news outlets that he has sued for publishing stories about the drug allegations earlier this year. “They accuse me of being a drug trafficker without a single piece of evidence and now I’m the bad guy,” Mr. Cabello said. “I feel offended, and none of them even said they’re sorry.” The U.S President administration isn’t directing or coordinating the investigations, which are being run by federal prosecutors who have wide leeway to target criminal suspects. But if the probes result in publicly disclosed indictments of Mr. Cabello and others, the resulting furor in Venezuela would likely plunge relations between the two countries into their most serious crisis since the late populist Hugo Chávez took office 16 years ago.
The U.S Department of Justice authorities say they are far along in their investigations. But they say any indictments that may result might be sealed, making them secret until authorities can make arrests, something that would be difficult if not impossible unless the suspects travel abroad. The investigations are a response to an explosion in drug trafficking in the oil-rich country.
Under pressure in Colombia, where authorities aggressively battled the drug trade with $10 billion dollars in U.S aid since 2000, many Colombian traffickers moved operations to neighboring Venezuela, where U.S. law-enforcement officials say they found a government and military eager to permit and ultimately control cocaine smuggling through the country.
Most of the high-end traffickers moved to Venezuela in that time,” said Joaquín Pérez, a Miami attorney who represents key Colombian traffickers who have acknowledged operating out of Venezuela.
Venezuela doesn’t produce coca, the leaf used to make cocaine, nor does it manufacture the drug. But the U.S. estimates that about 131 tons of cocaine, about half of the total cocaine produced in Colombia, moved through Venezuela in 2013, the last year for which data were available. The U.S Federal Prosecutors aren’t targeting Nicolás Maduro, who has been in power since Mr. Chávez’s death two years ago. The U.S. law-enforcement officials say they view several other Venezuelan officials and military officers as the defactor leaders of drug-trafficking organizations that use Venezuela as a launchpad for cocaine shipments to the U.S. as well as Europe.
It is a criminal organization,” said the Justice Department official, referring to certain members of the upper echelons of the Venezuelan government and military. Mildred Camero, who had been Mr. Chávez’s drug czar until being forced out abruptly in 2005, said Venezuela has “a government of narcotraffickers and money launderers.” She recently collaborated on a book, “Chavismo, Narcotrafficking and Militarism,” in which she alleged that drug-related corruption had penetrated the state, naming more than a dozen officials, including nine generals, who allegedly worked with smugglers.
Tarek El Aissami, second from left, a former Interior Minister and currently governor of Venezuela’s Aragua state, received payoffs to facilitate drug shipments, a former Venezuelan official told U.S. investigators. Mr. El Aissami said the accusations are ‘worthless. The Law-enforcement officials in the U.S. said that they have accelerated their investigations in the past two years, a period that has seen Venezuela’s economy worsen dramatically. Rampant crime has spiked, making Venezuela the continent’s most violent country and spurring people to emigrate.
The deepening crisis has made it easier for U.S. authorities to recruit informants, say those working to enlist people close to top Venezuelan officials. Colombian and Venezuelan drug traffickers have also arrived in the U.S., eager to provide information on Venezuelan officials in exchange for sentencing leniency and residency, U.S. officials say. Since the turmoil in Venezuela, we’ve had greater success in building these cases,” said a federal prosecutor from New York’s Eastern District who works on Venezuelan cases. In January, U.S. investigators made a major catch when naval captain Leamsy Salazar defected and was brought to Washington. Mr. Salazar, who has said he headed Mr. Cabello’s security detail, told U.S. authorities that he witnessed Mr. Cabello supervise the launch of a large shipment of cocaine from Venezuela’s Paraguaná peninsula, people familiar with the case say.
Mr. Cabello has publicly railed against his former bodyguard, saying he didn’t head his security detail and calling him “an infiltrator” who has no proof of his involvement in drug trafficking. “Our conscience is totally clear,” he said in a radio interview. Rafael Isea is another defector who has been talking to investigators, people familiar with the matter say. A former Venezuelan finance minister and governor of Aragua state, Mr. Isea fled Venezuela in 2013. People familiar with the case say Mr. Isea has told investigators that Walid Makled, a drug kingpin now in prison, paid off former Interior Minister Tarek El Aissami to get drug shipments through Venezuela. Almost a year after leaving the country, Mr. Isea was accused of committing “financial irregularities” during his days as governor by Venezuela’s attorney general, and by Mr. El Aissami, who succeeded him as governor of Aragua. Today, Rafael Isea, that bandit and traitor, is a refugee in Washington where he has entered a program for protected witnesses in exchange for worthless information against Venezuela,” Mr. El Aissami said recently on Venezuelan television.Mr. Isea has rejected the accusations as false, politically motivated and meant to discredit him Walid Makled, a convicted drug dealer shown here as Colombian authorities handed him over to Venezuela, had boasted of having 40 Venezuelan generals on his payrol.
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In addition to Mr. El Aissami, other powerful officials under investigation include Hugo Carvajal, a former director of military intelligence; Nestor Reverol, the head of the Nat
การเอายานานาชาติสดาโดมาคา Cabello ให้บริการขณะนี้เป็นประธานสมัชชาแห่งชาติของประเทศเวเนซุเอลา เป็นเป้าหมายชั้นนำของอเมริกากรมยุติธรรมและสืบสวน F.B.I เป็นเงินฟอก โดยเจ้าหน้าที่ระดับสูงในประเทศอเมริกาใต้และการค้ายาเสพติดที่ถูกกล่าวหา รางวัล 2003 บราซิลเรียกว่า "Rigged และทุจริต" เป็นคุณสังคมจะออกหลังจากความยาก และความเครียดทำงานวันดื่มเบียร์สอง ที่บราซิลท้องถิ่นแถบ "buteko" และสิ้นสุดที่เรียกเก็บเงินของคุณลงจ่ายเพียงหนึ่งบริการเคล็ดลับ ในขยะประชาธิปไตยของบราซิล รู้จักกันเป็น "สองสำหรับเลือกหนึ่งทางอาญา" ตลอดการ EDR - เวเนซุเอลาของ Smartmatic หน่วยอิเล็กทรอนิกส์เครื่องใช้เป็นเครื่องมือในการลงคะแนนเสียง subvert ประชาธิปไตย และได้รับอำนาจที่ไม่ถูกต้อง เป็นบราซิล illiterate และ unschooled ประธาน คนไม่ได้รู้วิธีการเขียน และถูกต้องหรือพูดภาษาของเขาเอง บุคคลทางอาญาที่มี dissipated นิ้วสีชมพูเขาซ้ายเล่น "มีด fillet fingers เป็น"ผู้นำบงการ"ขององค์กรอาชญากรรมใต้ดินเรียกว่าเปาของฟอรั่ม ที่มีพันธมิตรกับโคลัมเบีย FARCS ยาเพลิดเพลินสงสัยก่อการร้ายแต่ละคนเป็น harboring และสนับสนุนอย่างเต็ม สิ่งได้ดังนั้นโดยทั่วไปยอมรับว่าเป็นคอมมิวนิสต์โบลีวาร์แห่ง และขยายทางอาญาภายในอเมริกาใต้ในปัจจุบันได้รับอาวุธผิดกฎหมายและยาเสพติดที่มาจากภายในอาณาเขตของประเทศเวเนซุเอลา สมาคมสุดทางอาญาของ Lula และยาสมัก Cabello สดาโดมาคา Jose David Cabello และจูเซ Yoffreda การประชุมธุรกิจ อย่างรวดเร็วรวมถึงหยุดโดยที่ของ Lula JBS เนื้อบริษัทอยู่ภายใต้การดูแลบุตรของเขากับแผนการโอเวอร์สเตย์ในอาณาเขตของประเทศบราซิลจนถึงวันที่ 12 มีนาคม 2015 เปา ความฝันที่ใหญ่ที่สุด และชื่นชอบปาร์ตี้สำหรับ 220 ล้านภาษีของบราซิลรายงานผู้ชำระ ที่ข่มขืนของถูกปล้นโดยทางอาญา scumbags และ douchebags ขอเพื่อตัวแทนสหพันธ์อเมริกานั้นลงยากบนพื้นดิน และวางพวกเขาในคุกของรัฐบาลกลาง เนื่องจากกฎหมายที่มีอยู่บราซิลหายไปหลักสามารถพวกเขา โลกมีการได้ยินในปี 20 ของฟีฟ่าของฟุตบอลทางอาญาทุจริตและขณะนี้เวลาในการเริ่มต้น scumbag ที่สำคัญล้างในบราซิลและเวเนซุเอลา เนื่องจากบราซิลใช้ 97% ของเงินทุนเพื่อสร้างสิบสองที่ใหญ่ที่สุด "นกห้อง" รายงานผู้ชำระภาษี มันจะไม่ยากที่จะเปลี่ยนจากน้ำ ouside มีความปลอดภัยสูงสุด scums กลางคุก The U.S Department of Justice prosecutors are investigating several high-ranking Venezuelan officials, including the president of the country’s congress, on suspicion that they have turned the country into a global hub for cocaine trafficking and money laundering, according to more than a dozen people familiar with the probes. The U.S elite unit of the Drug Enforcement Administration in Washington and federal prosecutors in New York, including Miami are building cases using evidence provided by former cocaine traffickers, informants who were once close to top Venezuelan officials and defectors from the Venezuelan military, these people say. A leading target, according to the U.S Department of Justice officials and other American authorities, is National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello, considered the country’s second most-powerful man. There is extensive evidence to justify that he is one of the heads, if not the head, of the cartel,” said the U.S Department of Justice official, speaking of a group of military officers and top officials suspected of being involved in the drug trade.“He certainly is a main target.” Representatives of Mr. Cabello and other officials didn’t return phone calls and emails requesting comment. In the past, Venezuelan authorities have rejected allegations of high-ranking involvement in the drug trade as an attempt by the U.S. to destabilize the leftist government in Caracas. In an appearance on state television Wednesday, Mr. Cabello said he solicited a court-ordered travel ban on 22 executives and journalists from three Venezuelan news outlets that he has sued for publishing stories about the drug allegations earlier this year. “They accuse me of being a drug trafficker without a single piece of evidence and now I’m the bad guy,” Mr. Cabello said. “I feel offended, and none of them even said they’re sorry.” The U.S President administration isn’t directing or coordinating the investigations, which are being run by federal prosecutors who have wide leeway to target criminal suspects. But if the probes result in publicly disclosed indictments of Mr. Cabello and others, the resulting furor in Venezuela would likely plunge relations between the two countries into their most serious crisis since the late populist Hugo Chávez took office 16 years ago.The U.S Department of Justice authorities say they are far along in their investigations. But they say any indictments that may result might be sealed, making them secret until authorities can make arrests, something that would be difficult if not impossible unless the suspects travel abroad. The investigations are a response to an explosion in drug trafficking in the oil-rich country.Under pressure in Colombia, where authorities aggressively battled the drug trade with $10 billion dollars in U.S aid since 2000, many Colombian traffickers moved operations to neighboring Venezuela, where U.S. law-enforcement officials say they found a government and military eager to permit and ultimately control cocaine smuggling through the country. Most of the high-end traffickers moved to Venezuela in that time,” said Joaquín Pérez, a Miami attorney who represents key Colombian traffickers who have acknowledged operating out of Venezuela.Venezuela doesn’t produce coca, the leaf used to make cocaine, nor does it manufacture the drug. But the U.S. estimates that about 131 tons of cocaine, about half of the total cocaine produced in Colombia, moved through Venezuela in 2013, the last year for which data were available. The U.S Federal Prosecutors aren’t targeting Nicolás Maduro, who has been in power since Mr. Chávez’s death two years ago. The U.S. law-enforcement officials say they view several other Venezuelan officials and military officers as the defactor leaders of drug-trafficking organizations that use Venezuela as a launchpad for cocaine shipments to the U.S. as well as Europe. It is a criminal organization,” said the Justice Department official, referring to certain members of the upper echelons of the Venezuelan government and military. Mildred Camero, who had been Mr. Chávez’s drug czar until being forced out abruptly in 2005, said Venezuela has “a government of narcotraffickers and money launderers.” She recently collaborated on a book, “Chavismo, Narcotrafficking and Militarism,” in which she alleged that drug-related corruption had penetrated the state, naming more than a dozen officials, including nine generals, who allegedly worked with smugglers. Tarek El Aissami, second from left, a former Interior Minister and currently governor of Venezuela’s Aragua state, received payoffs to facilitate drug shipments, a former Venezuelan official told U.S. investigators. Mr. El Aissami said the accusations are ‘worthless. The Law-enforcement officials in the U.S. said that they have accelerated their investigations in the past two years, a period that has seen Venezuela’s economy worsen dramatically. Rampant crime has spiked, making Venezuela the continent’s most violent country and spurring people to emigrate. The deepening crisis has made it easier for U.S. authorities to recruit informants, say those working to enlist people close to top Venezuelan officials. Colombian and Venezuelan drug traffickers have also arrived in the U.S., eager to provide information on Venezuelan officials in exchange for sentencing leniency and residency, U.S. officials say. Since the turmoil in Venezuela, we’ve had greater success in building these cases,” said a federal prosecutor from New York’s Eastern District who works on Venezuelan cases. In January, U.S. investigators made a major catch when naval captain Leamsy Salazar defected and was brought to Washington. Mr. Salazar, who has said he headed Mr. Cabello’s security detail, told U.S. authorities that he witnessed Mr. Cabello supervise the launch of a large shipment of cocaine from Venezuela’s Paraguaná peninsula, people familiar with the case say.
Mr. Cabello has publicly railed against his former bodyguard, saying he didn’t head his security detail and calling him “an infiltrator” who has no proof of his involvement in drug trafficking. “Our conscience is totally clear,” he said in a radio interview. Rafael Isea is another defector who has been talking to investigators, people familiar with the matter say. A former Venezuelan finance minister and governor of Aragua state, Mr. Isea fled Venezuela in 2013. People familiar with the case say Mr. Isea has told investigators that Walid Makled, a drug kingpin now in prison, paid off former Interior Minister Tarek El Aissami to get drug shipments through Venezuela. Almost a year after leaving the country, Mr. Isea was accused of committing “financial irregularities” during his days as governor by Venezuela’s attorney general, and by Mr. El Aissami, who succeeded him as governor of Aragua. Today, Rafael Isea, that bandit and traitor, is a refugee in Washington where he has entered a program for protected witnesses in exchange for worthless information against Venezuela,” Mr. El Aissami said recently on Venezuelan television.Mr. Isea has rejected the accusations as false, politically motivated and meant to discredit him Walid Makled, a convicted drug dealer shown here as Colombian authorities handed him over to Venezuela, had boasted of having 40 Venezuelan generals on his payrol.
.
In addition to Mr. El Aissami, other powerful officials under investigation include Hugo Carvajal, a former director of military intelligence; Nestor Reverol, the head of the Nat
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