Miami Herald

She sold fancy handbags to celebritie­s. Now, Nancy Gonzalez faces short prison stint

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com

A Colombian designer whose creations were coveted by celebritie­s — including pop star Britney Spears and cast members of HBO’s “Sex and the City” — was sentenced to 18 months in prison Monday after being convicted of illegally shipping luxury handbags made of exotic reptile skins through Miami to New York.

Because she had already been incarcerat­ed for most of that time in her homeland before being extradited to the United States last August, Nancy Teresa Gonzalez de Barberi will only have to spend one to two months in prison in this country.

In November, Gonzalez pleaded guilty to conspiracy and smuggling charges in Miami federal court rather than make a plea deal because her defense lawyers and U.S. prosecutor­s were at odds over the evidence. Gonzalez, 70, will remain free on bail until June 6, when U.S. District Judge Robert Scola ordered her to surrender to prison authoritie­s.

Her lawyers, Sam Rabin and Andrea Lopez, who argued for no prison time in the United States, called Scola’s decision “very fair.” Prosecutor­s initially urged the judge to give her a prison term of almost six years before Scola revised the sentencing guidelines to a lower level based on the value of the reptile skins used in making her handbags, not on the actual price tags. Then, prosecutor­s asked him to impose a sentence of 2 1⁄2 years.

Despite the designer’s tarnished reputation, her brand name, “Nancy Gonzalez,” was once so hot among the haute-couture mavens that actor Stanley Tucci touted it in the hit movie “The Devil Wears Prada,” memoralizi­ng the handbag’s status.

Gonzalez sold her bags for more than $2,000 each to the likes of Spears, Salma Hayek and Victoria Beckham. She maintained that the merchandis­e that her company sent via Miami to high-end New York retailers was made with skins from farm-raised reptiles such as caiman and python, not from protected species — contrary to the prosecutor­s’ view of the evidence.

Gonzalez’s lawyers said her handbags, purses and wallets were made from the skins of captivebre­d caiman and python, not technicall­y from wildlife protected under internatio­nal endangered-species laws. They also noted that she had obtained proper licenses and declaratio­ns for the vast majority of her merchandis­e shipped to the United States.

Prosecutor­s with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and Justice Department disagreed, saying Gonzalez illegally imported merchandis­e made with the skins of endangered caiman and python species by using couriers to carry hundreds of her handbags without proper permits or declaratio­ns via Miami to New

York, citing the indictment filed in South Florida.

“The press of business, production deadlines or other economic factors are not justificat­ion for anyone to knowingly flout the system and attempt to write their own exceptions to wildlife traffickin­g laws,” U.S. Attorney Markenzy Lapointe said in a written statement after Monday’s sentencing.

The indictment charged the designer, her New York-based company, Gzuniga Ltd., and two employees who worked for her Colombian manufactur­ing firm.

On Monday, the judge ordered Gzuniga, which pleaded guilty along with Gonzalez, to forfeit its inventory of handbags that were previously seized by federal authoritie­s and banned the company from any activities involving commercial trade in wildlife for three years. It was also sentenced to three years’ probation.

Her associate, Diego Mauricio Rodriguez Giraldo, who also pleaded guilty, was sentenced to nearly two years but was given credit for already serving all that time in Colombia before his extraditio­n and in Miami while being detained before trial. Another associate, John Camilo Aguilar Jarmillo, also pleaded guilty in April and awaits sentencing.

The indictment accused Gonzalez, her U.S. firm, Gzuniga, and the other two defendants of soliciting friends, relatives and employees of her manufactur­ing company in Colombia to act as couriers and transport hundreds of designer handbags on themselves or in their luggage while traveling on passenger airlines to Miami Internatio­nal Airport and John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport between February 2016 and April 2019.

Another one of Gonzalez’s employees, Paola Soto, played a central role as a courier, according to prosecutor­s. She pleaded guilty in 2022 to conspiracy and smuggling charges and received an initial prison sentence of 2 1⁄2 years under a plea agreement with prosecutor­s Tom Watts-FitzGerald and R.J. Powers. However, her punishment was reduced to about nine months after she cooperated as a witness against Gonzalez and the other defendants.

Another staffer, Eric Schneider, general manager of the Gzuniga showroom in Manhattan, also pleaded guilty in 2022 to a misdemeano­r charge as he cooperated with prosecutor­s.

He was convicted of “knowingly” selling about 1,000 caiman-skin designer handbags and clutches that were made from endangered species and illegally imported from Colombia.

Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

 ?? ALEXIA FODERE For the Miami Herald | Sept. 6, 2012 ?? Nancy Teresa Gonzalez de Barberi was convicted of illegally shipping luxury handbags made of exotic reptile skins. Because she had already been incarcerat­ed in Colombia, she will only spend one to two months in prison in the U.S.
ALEXIA FODERE For the Miami Herald | Sept. 6, 2012 Nancy Teresa Gonzalez de Barberi was convicted of illegally shipping luxury handbags made of exotic reptile skins. Because she had already been incarcerat­ed in Colombia, she will only spend one to two months in prison in the U.S.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States