Miami Herald

Feds serve S. Florida search warrants related to killing of Haiti’s president

- BY JAY WEAVER, JACQUELINE CHARLES AND KEVIN G. HALL jweaver@miamiheral­d.com jcharles@miamiheral­d.com khall@mcclatchyd­c.com

Dozens of federal agents fanned out across South Florida on Tuesday to carry out the first search warrants related to the assassinat­ion of Haiti’s president, Jovenel Moïse, focusing on two businessme­n who Haitian authoritie­s suspect funded and trained the group of Colombians and others implicated in his killing.

Teams of FBI and Homeland Security Investigat­ions agents zeroed in on five locations in Doral, Westcheste­r and Weston to gather financial records and other documents as part of a federal investigat­ion into whether they knowingly played a supportive role in Moïse’s death at his home on July 7.

The federal investigat­ion is trying to determine whether the businesses conspired to provide “material support” that resulted in the killing of Moïse or any other lesser crimes, such as export violations, according to sources familiar with the investigat­ion.

U.S. agents have struggled with putting the pieces of the probe together because there is no indication so far that the South Florida businessme­n had any involvemen­t in the president’s death — though they have been identified by the Haiti National Police as playing a possible supportive role in the assassinat­ion. No evidence has been uncovered showing they knew anything about a plot to kill Moïse, several sources familiar with the investigat­ion told the Miami Herald.

The FBI, Homeland Security Investigat­ions and U.S. Attorney’s Office declined to comment.

The operation involved searches of the homes and offices of Antonio Intriago, the head of CTU Security in Doral, and Walter Veintemill­a, a loan broker who owns Worldwide Capital Lending Group and lives in Weston. Another search warrant was executed on West Flagler Street in Westcheste­r.

Haitian authoritie­s say they suspect Intriago of having trained Colombians, Haitians and others in a plot to kill Haiti’s

president and that Veintemill­a’s lending company provided funding to pay for the training. Haitian police say Christian Emmanuel Sanon, a doctor who has lived in Haiti and South Florida over the past 25 years, was behind the plot and wanted to take over as president.

Attorneys for Intriago said Tuesday they were surprised federal agents carried out searches of the businessma­n’s home and office because he had been cooperatin­g with them since Moïse’s assassinat­ion, including turning over his cellphone and computer to Homeland Security Investigat­ions.

“We’re doing everything we can to show our client has nothing to do with this [assassinat­ion],” said attorney Gilberto Lacayo. “Our client is not hiding. He’s trying to clear his name.”

Veteran criminal-defense attorney Joseph Tesmond, who is working with Lacayo, said the Haitian police have completely miscast Intriago in their investigat­ion.

Meanwhile, Intriago, a Venezuelan émigré, “has cooperated 100%” with federal law enforcemen­t in South Florida, Tesmond said.

Tesmond said Intriago obtained two loans from Veintemill­a’s lending company — one last year for CTU’s general operations and another for $172,000 this spring to provide security for Sanon in his quest to become Haiti’s next president. He said Sanon’s goal was to improve the lives of Haitians through infrastruc­ture projects for energy, water and other basic needs, while also pursuing the presidency in a peaceful transition of power.

Tesmond said Intriago and his company, CTU, were hoping to obtain more “security opportunit­ies” in Haiti.

Intriago has not talked publicly since Moïse’s assassinat­ion. Intriago had told members of the Venezuelan exile community that he had been a police officer before arriving in the United States. In recent years, he provided firearms training and conducted personal-security classes in South Florida and sold body-protection gear.

Robert Nicholson, a private lawyer for Veintemill­a, an Ecuadorian émigré, said his client did little more than broker a loan for CTU Security and later raised less than $200,000 from private lenders for what he thought was an effort to create renewable energy via the leadership of Sanon, a Haitian-American pastor as well as being a doctor.

Sanon was arrested in Haiti and charged with being the alleged intellectu­al author of the assassinat­ion effort. He had circulated to the U.S. State Department and the Congressio­nal Black Caucus a petition purportedl­y signed by evangelica­l leaders calling for Sanon to be made interim president of Haiti.

The searches of the

South Florida businessme­n’s homes and offices came amid concerns in Haiti that some might be trying to stymie the investigat­ion or politicize it. Two judges and two court clerks have complained about receiving “serious death threats” and pressure to change their reports from unknown individual­s over the telephone, according to sources and copies of one complaint obtained by the Miami Herald.

The two court clerks have filed a formal complaint with the Central Directorat­e of the Judicial police, which has been carrying out the investigat­ion on behalf of the Haiti National Police.

“The minister of justice has not done anything to help them,” said Pierre Esperance, who is the executive director of the National Human Rights Defense Network.

Esperance said the clerks have been asked to amend their reports to remove the names of two individual­s and to include the names of two opponents of the late president.

Esperance said in addition to the threats, there are concerns that three weeks after the president’s assassinat­ion, the case remains in the hands of the judicial police and it has yet to be transferre­d to an investigat­ive judge as required under Haitian law. Police have also not been forthcomin­g about the informatio­n, he said.

“We are concerned that they are manipulati­ng the investigat­ion to have it take on a political element,” he said.

On Monday, as the probe continued, Haitian authoritie­s arrested the coordinato­r of Moïse’s security, the man’s lawyer, Reynold Georges, confirmed to the Herald.

Georges said he doesn’t know on what basis his client, Haiti National Police Divisional Commission­er Jean Laguel Civil, had been arrested, and “perhaps they will tell me tomorrow.”

Civil, who doesn’t control any troops in the president’s multi-layered security detail but oversees those who do, is among the individual­s whom Moïse contacted in the middle of the night on July 7 after he heard shooting in the vicinity of his private residence.

At the time of his arrest, Civil had already been placed in solitary confinemen­t under orders from judicial authoritie­s, along with others responsibl­e for the president’s security.

Civil’s arrest came on the same day that Haitian authoritie­s announced they have issued an arrest warrant for a member of the country’s highest court in the investigat­ion into who killed Moïse.

Police released a wanted poster with the image of Superior Court Justice Windelle Coq Thélot seeking informatio­n about her whereabout­s but not spelling out why she is wanted in connection with the probe. In an arrest order, Thélot is accused of assassinat­ion, attempted assassinat­ion and armed robbery.

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