Los Angeles Times

Indictment ties Trump ally to drug traffickin­g

Tons of cocaine were imported into U.S. on behalf of Honduran president, charges say.

- By Tracy Wilkinson Times staff writer Molly O’Toole contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — Even as the Trump administra­tion moved ahead with a controvers­ial immigratio­n agreement with the Honduran government, U.S. law enforcemen­t has indicted another senior Honduran official on drug-traffickin­g charges that implicate the country’s president.

In charges filed Thursday in federal court in Manhattan, prosecutor­s accuse a former commander of the Honduran police of conspiring to import tons of cocaine into the United States and illegally using weapons and “destructiv­e devices” to “violently protect” politicall­y connected trafficker­s.

Known as El Tigre — the Tiger — Juan Carlos Bonilla Valladares long enjoyed U.S. support even as evidence of human rights atrocities and drug running mounted against him.

The indictment alleges that Bonilla was operating on behalf of President Juan Orlando Hernandez and his brother Tony, who was found guilty in the same court late last year of running a multimilli­on-dollar “state-sanctioned” narcotics traffickin­g network.

The president, who has denied wrongdoing, has continued to maintain close relations with the White House and has been received in the Oval Office by President Trump on several occasions.

The reason appears to be Hernandez’s willingnes­s to cooperate with controvers­ial U.S. immigratio­n measures.

One of those is an agreement signed in September in which Honduras pledged to accept non-Honduran migrants removed from the United States after being denied a chance at claiming asylum there.

On Thursday, the Trump administra­tion took a step toward implementi­ng that agreement by publishing it in the Federal Register.

The move comes as U.S. border authoritie­s, citing coronaviru­s guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, move to quickly expel thousands of Mexican, Honduran, Salvadoran and Guatemalan migrants, including, for the first time, asylum seekers and unaccompan­ied children.

The Trump administra­tion appears to be moving toward relying more heavily on Honduras to take the migrants it doesn’t want. Guatemala recently stopped accepting them after officials there said more than 100 of its nationals deported from the U.S. had tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

Normally, deportees must be returned to their home countries. But the administra­tion has pressured some Central American nations to accept designatio­n as “safe third countries.”

The strategy has drawn heavy criticism from migrant rights advocates.

“This would be illegal and inhumane at any time because Honduras is incredibly dangerous and lacks a functionin­g asylum system,” Yael Schacher, senior U.S. advocate for Refugees Internatio­nal, said in a statement. “In the midst of a global pandemic, with Honduras on lockdown and under a state of emergency, it is absolutely unconscion­able.”

Last week, Trump announced he was providing ventilator­s to Honduras and El Salvador as they begin to grapple with COVID-19 cases — and pointedly left Guatemala off the list.

Critics of the Trump administra­tion were quick to note the dichotomy between how it deals with the Honduran president on immigratio­n and how federal prosecutor­s view him.

“Today’s news [reflects] the disconnect and contradict­ions within the administra­tion,” said Adriana Beltrán, director of citizen security at the Washington Office on Latin America. “The rhetoric by the [White House] and U.S. officials painting Hernandez as a strong partner is counterpro­ductive and damaging in terms of helping Honduras strengthen the rule of law and tackle corruption and other issues that are driving migration.”

The State Department did not respond to a request for comment.

Bonilla, 60, operated within Honduran security services from 1985 to 2016 — a period that included de facto military rule, the U.S.backed, Honduras-based war against Nicaragua’s Sandinista government and more recent years of rampant corruption.

Hernandez has been president since winning election in 2013. He won a controvers­ial second term in 2017.

Geoffrey S. Berman, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in a statement that Bonilla was operating on behalf of the Honduran president and the president’s brother when he “oversaw the transshipm­ent of multi-ton loads of cocaine bound for the U.S., used machine guns and other weaponry to accomplish that, and participat­ed in extreme violence, including the murder of a rival trafficker, to further the conspiracy.”

“Now Bonilla Valladares has been marked as an outlaw and charged with crimes that could send him to a U.S. prison for life,” the statement said.

Efforts to reach Hernandez, Bonilla or his attorney for comment were not immediatel­y successful.

Bonilla, speaking to La Tribuna newspaper in Honduras, said he was surprised by the indictment and would be happy to testify in court. He said he had never engaged in drug traffickin­g and could document a long history of cooperatio­n with U.S. authoritie­s.

Human rights activists and others who have followed the long, tortured history of Honduras and its relationsh­ip with Washington cheered the indictment.

“For years, I and others warned U.S. administra­tions that General Bonilla was not to be trusted, based on reports implicatin­g him in drug traffickin­g and other crimes, including murder,” Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) said in a statement. “Those warnings were ignored, and our Embassy treated him as a credible partner. That was inexcusabl­e.”

Leahy called for the State and Defense department­s to reconsider delivering aid to a government “whose leaders are involved in corruption and violations of human rights.”

Dana Frank, an emeritus professor of history at UC Santa Cruz who has written extensivel­y on Honduras, said the indictment offered “further and sickening evidence” that Hernandez “not only took funds from drug trafficker­s and arms dealers in exchange for his election, but promoted a known death squad leader to the very top of the police at their behest.”

 ?? Rodrigo Abd Associated Press ?? HONDURAN PRESIDENT Juan Orlando Hernandez won reelection in 2017 amid allegation­s of fraud.
Rodrigo Abd Associated Press HONDURAN PRESIDENT Juan Orlando Hernandez won reelection in 2017 amid allegation­s of fraud.

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