Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. prosecutor who targeted Venezuelan crime to exit post

- JOSHUA GOODMAN

MIAMI — A federal prosecutor who has jailed some of Venezuela’s biggest crooks is stepping down, The Associated Press has learned.

Michael Nadler, an assistant U.S. attorney, is leaving to enter private practice next month at a boutique Miami law firm — Stumphauze­r Foslid Sloman Ross & Kolaya — said a person familiar with the move who insisted on speaking anonymousl­y, because it hadn’t been made public.

Nadler, 48, has indicted multiple Venezuelan Cabinet ministers, businessme­n and Swiss bankers as part of a sustained effort by investigat­ors in the Southern District of Florida to recover some of the $300 billion estimated to have been stolen from Venezuela in two decades of socialist rule.

Much of that allegedly ill-gotten wealth has been plowed into Miami’s booming luxury real estate market. That has angered the city’s Hispanic residents — many of them Venezuelan and Cuban exiles — for whom the Trump administra­tion’s hard-line focus on exposing corruption in Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s government is a major draw in the battlegrou­nd state ahead of the presidenti­al election.

“There may well be a collective sigh of relief in Venezuela from those he targeted,” said Michael Diaz, a Miami defense attorney who has litigated against Nadler on behalf of Venezuelan clients. “Certainly some will be toasting his untimely departure.”

Nadler in 2018 secured what is so far the largest judgment to date against a Venezuelan insider when Alejandro Andrade, the former national treasurer, pleaded guilty to his role in a foreign currency conspiracy that siphoned off hundreds of millions from state coffers.

As part of his plea agreement, Andrade forfeited to the U.S. government $1 billion in cash and assets, including an oceanfront Palm Beach mansion, luxury vehicles, show-jumping horses and several Rolex and Hublot watches. He’s currently serving a 10-year sentence.

Nadler leaves one politicall­y sensitive case unfinished. In June, he secured the arrest in Cape Verde of Colombian businessma­n Alex Saab as Maduro’s alleged front man was en route to Iran.

In a one-two punch, the Trump administra­tion last year sanctioned Saab on the same day that Nadler charged the businessma­n with money laundering in connection with an alleged bribery scheme to develop low-income housing for Venezuela’s government that was never built.

Saab’s extraditio­n is still pending and being fought by a team of lawyers that includes former Spanish Judge Baltasar Garzon, who is famous for indicting former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. Maduro’s government said the businessma­n, who also has a Venezuelan passport, was on a “humanitari­an mission” to Iran to buy food and medical supplies.

Saab was sanctioned by the Treasury Department for allegedly running a scheme that included Maduro’s stepsons and allegedly stole hundreds of millions in dollars from food import contracts at a time of widespread hunger in the crisis-wracked OPEC nation. Nadler, who still has a few weeks on the job, has not indicted Saab for the alleged food corruption.

Nadler began working Venezuela cases in 2017, and Diaz said he quickly won a reputation as an aggressive prosecutor who had a good rapport with agents. As part of his investigat­ion of the sprawling criminal networks used to launder money, he traveled to meet with officials and witnesses in Switzerlan­d, the U.K., Portugal, Spain and Colombia.

Diaz also credits Nadler with clawing hard to keep cases away from prosecutor­s in other high-profile federal districts who were all competing to sign up as government witnesses the many Venezuelan­s fleeing their homeland. Prosecutor­s in New York and Washington in March charged Maduro and other high-level officials with conspiracy to traffic cocaine, while Houston has the lead in a probe into alleged corruption at Venezuela’s state-run oil giant PDVSA.

Nadler’s boss, Ariana Fajardo-Orshan, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida, created a special money laundering unit in March 2019 that focused on financial crimes, giving even more impetus to that effort.

Venezuela is ranked the most-corrupt country in Latin America, and tied with Sudan, Afghanista­n and Equatorial Guineau as the seventh-worst among 180 countries in the latest annual ranking by Berlin-based Transparen­cy Internatio­nal.

Dick Gregorie, the retired assistant U.S. attorney in Miami who indicted Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega in the 1980s, said Nadler is the nation’s most knowledgea­ble and experience­d litigator working on Venezuela.

“There may well be a collective sigh of relief in Venezuela from those he targeted. Certainly some will be toasting his untimely departure.”

— Michael Diaz, a Miami defense attorney who has litigated against Nadler on behalf of Venezuelan clients.

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