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Former Haiti coup leader pleads guilty in US drug case

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(Reuters) - The leader of a 2004 coup that toppled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide pleaded guilty yesterday to a money laundering charge related to an internatio­nal drug traffickin­g scheme, the US Department of Justice said.

Guy Philippe, 49, admitted to one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering stemming from his receipt of cash payments tied to narcotics sales in the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Justice Department said.

Prosecutor­s said Philippe, a former high-ranking official in the Haitian National Police, received more than $1.5 million of bribe payments to ensure the safe transit of drug shipments.

The defendant entered his plea before US District Judge Cecilia Altonaga in Miami.

Zeljka Bozanic, a lawyer for Philippe, said she and prosecutor­s are recommendi­ng that her client receive a nine-year prison term at his scheduled July 5, sentencing.

Two counts against Philippe were dismissed, including one for drug traffickin­g that could have resulted in a life sentence.

“Mr Philippe has accepted responsibi­lity by taking the plea,” Bozanic said in a phone interview. “It was an attractive plea offer that makes sense.”

Philippe was arrested on January 5 in Haiti after giving a radio interview and then extradited to the United States. He had avoided capture for more than a decade in connection with a November 2005 indictment.

The arrest came four days before Philippe was scheduled to join Haiti’s parliament as a senator, following his November election from the country’s southweste­rn Grand Anse region.

US prosecutor­s accused Philippe of conspiring from 1997 to March 2001 to import more than five kilogramme­s (11 lbs) of cocaine into the United States, and from June 1999 to April 2003 to launder money to conceal illegal activity.

He was also accused of having in late 2000 transferre­d a $112,000 cheque that included sums from drug traffickin­g.

 ??  ?? Guy Philippe
Guy Philippe

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