Daily Sabah (Turkey)

US security firm in hot water over role in Haiti assassinat­ion

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FINDING people with military experience for a job in Haiti looked like a good opportunit­y for a small private security company with a history of dodging debts and declaring bankruptcy.

Antonio “Tony” Intriago, owner of Miami-based CTU Security, seems to have jumped at the chance, hiring more than 20 former soldiers from Colombia for the mission. Now the Colombians have been killed or captured in the aftermath of the July 7 assassinat­ion of Haitian President Jovenel Moise, and Intriago’s business faces questions about its role in the killing.

On Wednesday evening, Léon Charles, head of the Haiti’s National Police, accused Intriago of traveling to Haiti numerous times as part of the assassinat­ion plot and of signing a contract while there, but provided no other details and offered no evidence.

“The investigat­ion is very advanced,” Charles said.

A Miami security profession­al believes Intriago was too eager to take the job and did not push to learn details, leaving his contractor­s in the lurch. Some of their family members back in Colombia have said the men understood the mission was to provide protection for VIPs. Three Colombians were killed and 18 are behind bars in Haiti, Colombia’s national police chief, Gen. Jorge Luis Vargas, told reporters in Bogota. Colombian diplomats in Haiti have not had access to them.

Vargas has said that CTU Security used its company credit card to buy 19 plane tickets from Bogota to Santo Domingo for the Colombian suspects allegedly involved in the killing. One of the Colombians who was killed, Duberney Capador, photograph­ed himself wearing a black CTU Security polo shirt.

Nelson Romero Velasquez, an exsoldier and attorney who is advising 16 families of the Colombians held in Haiti, said Wednesday that the men had all served in the Colombian military’s elite special forces and could operate without being detected, if they had desired. He said their behavior made it clear they did not go to Haiti to assassinat­e the president.

“They have the ability to be like shadows,” Romero Velasquez said.

The predawn attack took place at the president’s private home. He was shot to death and his wife wounded. It’s not clear who pulled the trigger. The latest suspects identified in the sweeping investigat­ion included a former Haitian senator, a fired government official and an informant for the U.S. government.

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