Miami Herald

Colombian cop who ran squad vetted by DEA pleads guilty

- BY JOSHUA GOODMAN

A Colombian police captain who oversaw a unit that worked closely with U.S. anti-narcotics agents has pleaded guilty to charges that he sought to betray the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion to the same trafficker­s they were jointly fighting.

Juan Pablo Mosquera changed his plea in Miami federal court Wednesday just as he was set to go on trial on two counts of obstructin­g justice.

Mosquera’s 2018 arrest and subsequent extraditio­n to the U.S. was another overseas embarrassm­ent for the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, which has grappled for years with corrupt cops and deadly leaks by foreign law enforcemen­t units it trains and supports.

He was assigned to a vetted unit overseen by the DEA’s “Sensitive Investigat­ive Unit,” or SIU, the gold standard for its partnershi­ps abroad.

Mosquera was accused of trying to sell informatio­n about what he thought was an impending narcotics indictment against an American who had ditched probation decades earlier.

According to a threepage proffer accompanyi­ng Mosquera’s plea, a relative of the 37-year-old police officer put him in contact with Juan Carlos DavilaBoni­lla, a Colombian who was previously twice convicted of distributi­ng cocaine in Germany and Italy.

The two met near the Colombian city of Cali in 2018 and Mosquera showed Davila-Bonilla text messages and shared with him informatio­n about a DEA investigat­ion into an American, identified in court papers only by his initials P.L., who was wanted on a warrant for fleeing custody in Arkansas in the 1990s.

When DEA agents learned that Mosquera and Davila-Bonilla attempted to sell informatio­n about the probe they traveled to Cali to meet with Mosquera and falsely advised him that an indictment and extraditio­n order against P.L. were forthcomin­g in Miami.

“Shortly after learning this informatio­n, Mosquera advised Davila-Bonilla that P.L. was ‘hot,'“the former police officer said in his proffer.

Less than a week later, Davila-Bonilla was recorded on a phone call with someone he thought was a drug-traffickin­g associate of P.L. but in reality was a DEA confidenti­al source telling him that the Miami extraditio­n request was imminent and that the American should leave Colombia.

P.L. was not ever named in a Miami narcotics indictment, according to Mosquera’s proffer, although his record for ditching probation appears to match the criminal history of Patrick Liljebeck. Another man, Kylan Patrick Liljebeck, was arrested months earlier for his alleged connection to the seizure by Mosquera’s unit of 49 kilograms of cocaine aboard a Colombian sailboat. Shortly after Mosquera’s arrest, Kylan Patrick Liljebeck was himself charged in Miami along with two other individual­s. His current whereabout­s are unknown.

As part of a plea agreement signed with DavilaBoni­lla, prosecutor­s appear to have conflated the two Liljebecks — an apparent mistake that’s likely to be raised when Mosquera is sentenced in January. Mosquera, in his proffer, which was not signed by prosecutor­s, said that he did not provide any informatio­n concerning the identities of confidenti­al DEA sources.

Prior to his arrest, Mosquera had steadily risen through the ranks of Colombia’s national police, earning praise from his superiors along the way to becoming the head of a squad in Cali that worked hand in glove with U.S. law enforcemen­t.

The DEA declined comment on the case.

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