Miami Herald

Third suspect in assassinat­ion of Haiti’s president is brought to Miami for court appearance

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES AND JAY WEAVER jcharles@Miamiheral­d.com Jweaver@miamiheral­d.com

A former Haitian senator who faces new U.S. charges in the assassinat­ion of the country’s president attended a key meeting with Colombian commandos on July 6, the day before the former soldiers allegedly assassinat­ed Jovenel Moïse at his suburban home outside Port-au-Prince, according to a criminal complaint filed in Miami federal court.

The former senator, John Jöel Joseph, who had been detained in Jamaica before being brought to Miami on Friday, acknowledg­ed to FBI agents in a January interview that he had met with certain co-conspirato­rs just before they “embarked on the mission to kill President Moïse,” according to an affidavit filed with the complaint.

Joseph also admitted in the interview that he helped obtain vehicles and tried to get firearms for the co-conspirato­rs’ “operation” targeting Haiti’s leader, the affidavit says. Joseph’s goal was to become the prime minister under Moïse’s successor following the leader’s removal from office.

Joseph’s admission jibes with that of a Haitian police investigat­ion that placed him at a meeting with one of the four men police claim had gained access to the president’s bedroom as part of “a delta team.” Haitian police also identified a gang leader as among the people Joseph had contact with before the assassinat­ion.

On Monday, Joseph agreed to be detained before trial in Miami federal court, telling a magistrate judge the case was “very sensitive” and “I trust the American justice system.”

Joseph was transferre­d Friday to Miami from Jamaica, where he had been jailed on an immigratio­n violation. At his first appearance in federal court, Joseph said he served in the Haitian Senate from 200915 and worked as a political and security consultant — but that he had not been employed during the past year.

“I’m in a very difficult situation,” Joseph told Magistrate Judge Lauren Louis. “I was in jail.”

Louis assigned a private attorney, Brian Kirlew, to represent Joseph because of his lack of means to pay for a lawyer. Kirlew said his client agreed not to seek to be released on bond after federal prosecutor Andrea Goldbarg indicated that she was going to ask the judge to detain Joseph before trial based on two factors: risk of flight and danger to the community.

Joseph, who also uses the last name John on his passport, was charged with the same offenses as two defendants who were brought to Miami this year in connection with the July 7 assassinat­ion. The U.S. is running a parallel investigat­ion to Haiti’s investigat­ion into the president’s killing.

Those defendants, Mario Antonio Palacios Palacios, a former Colombian soldier, and Rodolphe Jaar, a Haitian businessma­n and convicted cocaine trafficker, are both accused of conspiring to commit murder or kidnapping outside the United States and providing material support resulting in Moïse’s death. Palacios has pleaded not guilty, while Jaar is believed to be cooperatin­g with U.S. authoritie­s.

All three defendants in the assassinat­ion plot are being held at the Federal Detention Center in Miami.

JOHN JÖEL

JOSEPH AGREED TO BE DETAINED BEFORE TRIAL, TELLING A MAGISTRATE JUDGE THE CASE WAS ‘VERY SENSITIVE’ AND ‘I TRUST THE AMERICAN JUSTICE SYSTEM.’

They face up to life in prison if convicted.

Joseph, according to an exhaustive Haitian police investigat­ive report first obtained by the Miami Herald, provided four rental vehicles that were used by former Colombian soldiers in the assassinat­ion and participat­ed in meetings with chief suspects in the weeks leading up to the killing. He is identified by sources as a critical suspect who can help shed light on what happened. FBI and Homeland Security investigat­ors have said that the plan initially was to “capture” Moïse but then turned into an assassinat­ion.

The question of why that happened remains unclear as are the connection­s to the Miami area.

Joseph is suspected of meeting with an unnamed Haitian-American co-conspirato­r, who is in custody in Haiti and collaborat­ed with a Miami-area security company and its principals in recruiting Colombian commandos to execute the deadly plot against Moïse, according to federal sources familiar with the case. The co-conspirato­r, James Solages, flew to Miami in late June to discuss the coup plans with the principals of CTU, the Miami security firm, sources told the Miami Herald. Then Solages returned to Haiti and met with Joseph and other co-conspirato­rs before the July 7 assassinat­ion of the president.

After spending months hiding in Haiti, Joseph fled to Jamaica, where he was being detained on an immigratio­n violation for illegally entering the country by boat. He, his wife and their two sons were arrested at a home in St. Elizabeth Parish in early January.

Two weeks ago, a court in Kingston cleared the way for Joseph’s extraditio­n after he agreed to come to the U.S. and after the chief prosecutor in Jamaica decided not to move forward with the case.

Joseph’s family members are still in Jamaica, where they are seeking political asylum.

There are currently about 40 suspects in jail in Haiti, including 18 former Colombian soldiers who stormed the presidenti­al compound in the hills above Port-au-Prince in the middle of night. They are accused of shooting the president many times and leaving his wife, Martine, for dead. She survived.

 ?? ?? Ex-Sen. John Joël Joseph after his arrest in Jamaica
Ex-Sen. John Joël Joseph after his arrest in Jamaica

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