Miami Herald

‘The Ghost’ was found in Hialeah many years after $5 million bank heist

- BY DAVID J. NEAL dneal@miamiheral­d.com

Until he decided to start ripping off Hialeah jewelry stores in 2015, Anibal Mustelier lived life at least one step ahead of everyone else.

Mustelier spent 26 years eluding law-enforcemen­t agencies and “America’s Most Wanted,” earning the nickname “The Ghost.” While a fugitive, he beat a SunTrust Bank safe deposit box security system to steal $5 million in jewelry without a gun. Despite being a reputed assassin for Fidel Castro and the Medellin Cartel, neither death nor the law caught up to him as it did many in those jobs.

The law found Mustelier by accident in 2016. Death closed the gap on “The Ghost” at the Miami Federal Detention Center on Sept. 18. He was 70.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons confirmed Mustlier’s death. It didn’t give any details on the cause.

Mustelier had been at FDC Miami since 2017 when he was sentenced to 52 years for the Hialeah jewelry store robberies. From 1990 to 2016, no cop who wanted to find him — from local to Interpol and combinatio­ns of the alphabet (i.e., FBI, ATF) — could tell you any place Mustelier laid his hat.

Well, there was that time in 2001 in Kendall, but Mustelier was gone from his wife and kids by the time police arrived.

“He was hiding in plain sight. An internatio­nal fugitive hiding in plain sight,” Hialeah Police Lt. Carl Zogby said in 2016 after Mustelier’s capture.

COMING TO AMERICA AND THE 1980S

Not much is known about Mustelier’s early days in Cuba or exactly when he came to Miami.

Federal law-enforcemen­t officials interviewe­d for the Mustelier episode of Reelz Network’s “Gangsters: America’s Most Evil,” said he was reputed to have killed people for Cuban criminals before coming to the United States. The show theorizes he might have come in the 1980 Mariel boatlift, but MiamiDade County court records say he was charged with grand theft and burglary on April 20, 1979, well before Mariel.

Mustelier got probation for that, as well as a 1981 burglary and a 1987 cocaine-possession conviction. He was on probation for the latter when, the FBI believed, he tried twice to kill Francisco Condom-Gil, who was part of the Bay of Pigs invasion and had spent four years in Cuban prisons.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons online locator says Mustelier had also spent a few years in U.S. federal prison in the 1980s, when he was also arrested on a cocaine-smuggling charge in Miami-Dade County.

A fusillade of bullets as Condom-Gil exited a Little Havana nightclub on Dec. 22, 1989, managed only to wound him. A car bomb a few months later injured Condom-Gil, his wife, mother and sister-in-law, but killed no one.

The FBI wanted to talk to Mustelier. They wouldn’t get the chance for another 26 years.

THE FUGITIVE AND THE BANK

Though hiding from federal authoritie­s, Mustelier managed to organize a gang for a $5 million jewelry heist from the safedeposi­t boxes at the Brickell Avenue SunTrust Bank branch in 1995. The key member aside from Mustelier would be Harry Irizarry, who would plead guilty to conspiracy to commit theft from a bank and entering a bank with intent to commit theft.

Using threats of personal and familial harm, Irizarry and Mustelier coerced Irizarry’s girlfriend, Yanit Martinez, into getting a job at the branch. She eventually wound up in a position that she could get a locksmith into the vault to work on the safe-deposit boxes of National Pawn Holdings.

Another crony covertly incapacita­ted the car of the safe-deposit-box custodian on Friday, Nov. 15. Martinez assumed that position on Monday, Nov. 18. Mustelier’s associates walked into the branch like customers, used the keys made by the locksmith and walked out with $5 million of National Pawn Holdings jewelry.

The security cameras? They needed to be turned on by the bank employee escorting the customers into the room. That person on Nov. 18? Martinez.

Mustelier got indicted for the SunTrust job in April 1997. But, he earned fugitive status in August 1997 by evading arrest in the extortion and threats case.

KENDALL FAMILIY AND HIALEAH FRIENDS

And he wouldn’t have been found but for his choice of co-workers when he decided to get back to robbery work in earnest. One literally led cops to Mustelier’s Hialeah door.

Mustelier got 24-year-old Jose Pineda-Castro and 26-year-old Yamile DiazBernal to work with him on jewelry-store heists.

The two men broke into the store next to their target jewelry store and hid in the drywall separating the two businesses. The next day, they would burst through the wall, guns drawn and in employees’ faces, demoralizi­ng them into total compliance.

They did this in May

2015 to Luany Jewelry,

1738 W. 49th St. in Hialeah They did it in September to Ariel Jewelry, 2476 W. 60th St. They would’ve done it to another store, but Pineda-Castro knocked out the power to the strip mall.

That maladroit moment helped get Pineda-Castro caught. But his mouth got Mustelier busted.

While talking to someone with whom he hoped to do some illegal gun sales, Pineda-Castro gushed admiration about the meticulous genius thief behind the jewelry-store robberies. He didn’t know he was talking to an ATF confidenti­al informant.

Hialeah police soon were knocking at a house in the 200 block of East 21st Street. Mustelier answered and told his girlfriend, in Spanish, “Don’t worry about it. They’re here for me.”

Only when Hialeah police ran his fingerprin­ts did they learn that they had cuffed “The Ghost.”

 ?? Miami-Dade Correction­s ?? Anibal Mustelier was captured in Hialeah in 2016.
Miami-Dade Correction­s Anibal Mustelier was captured in Hialeah in 2016.

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