Miami Herald

Ex-federal agent is indicted on charges of dealing painkiller­s and tipping off Dade ring

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

A former federal agent and three others were indicted this week on charges of dealing painkiller­s in Miami-Dade County, including an allegation that the agent tipped off the ring under investigat­ion.

Alberico Ahias Crespo, an ex-agent with the Department of Health and Human Services who had worked on a federal strike force over the past decade, was charged with conspiring to distribute Oxycodone, witness tampering and obstructio­n of justice.

Crespo’s defense attorneys, Marc Seitles and Jose Quinon, declined to comment Friday.

Crespo, 46, was charged along with three alleged members of the painkiller racket that the healthcare strike force had targeted:

Jorge Diaz Gutierrez, 66; Yandre Trujillo Hernandez, 41; and Anais Lorenzo, 32. Diaz, identified in the indictment as a patient recruiter, was charged with drug traffickin­g, witness tampering and obstructio­n of justice. The other two defendants were charged only as part of the traffickin­g conspiracy.

According to an FBI criminal complaint, the corruption investigat­ion was launched in March of 2019. Crespo and Diaz were recorded on wiretaps talking about protecting each other, issuing Santeria religious curses and threatenin­g to kill snitches in the underlying Oxycodone investigat­ion. Both men were arrested back in July, but their indictment was delayed by the federal grand jury because it was unable to convene during the COVID-19 pandemic until recently.

Crespo is accused of using his position in the strike force to tip off Diaz about an investigat­ion into a Hialeah doctor, Rodolfo Gonzalez-Garcia, according to federal prosecutor­s Sean McLaughlin and Christophe­r Clark.

Gonzalez-Garcia pleaded guilty to Medicare fraud and other charges in 2019 for unlawfully prescribin­g and dispensing Oxycodone pills. Three other defendants also pleaded guilty to similar offenses.

Diaz worked as a narcotics distributo­r for the doctor’s clinic, the FBI complaint says, while also receiving kickbacks for the patient referrals.

Crespo regularly alerted Diaz about the status of the strike force’s investigat­ion into the alleged Oxycodone ring, according to the complaint. Diaz told a confidenti­al federal source that he had been recruiting patients and buying and selling Oxycodone prescripti­ons for years — and that Crespo was well aware of his criminal activities, the complaint says.

The federal public defender’s office, which is representi­ng Diaz, could not be reached for comment.

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