American Desperado (65 page)

Read American Desperado Online

Authors: Jon Roberts,Evan Wright

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Criminals & Outlaws, #Personal Memoirs

BOOK: American Desperado
9.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

In 1982 the Federal Reserve Bank reported that Miami banks had taken in more than $2 billion of cash that couldn’t be accounted for by lawful economic activity.
§
The CIA used banks in Panama to launder money and secretly finance its activities throughout Central America in the 1980s. Noriega, who emerged as one of the Agency’s top money-laundering facilitators in Panama, offered similar services to drug smugglers, as outlined in Larry Collins’s July, 23 1991,
New York Times
story “Banker of Choice to the Company.”
66
Dear Mr. Roberts: I am delighted to inform you that at the last membership meeting of the National Republican Reelection League, your name was placed in nomination by Representative Ted Jones, and you were accepted for membership.
—letter from the National Republican Reelection
League
*
to Jon, 1984

J
.
R
.:
I’ve never met a politician who didn’t put his hand out when I met him. One night in 1983, after I started running the Cartel’s money flights, I took Toni out to Joe’s Stone Crab. I’m sitting there with Toni and Bryan when the maître d’ brings over a bottle of wine. I
ask who sent it, and he points to an older man at a corner table surrounded by guys in suits. “Representative Ted Jones.”
*

I said, “What’s the congressman drinking?”

The maître d’ named a shit wine, and I told him to send the congressman two bottles.

Then a man in a suit came over from the congressman’s table. He told me the congressman would like to meet me.

I’d lived by Senator Smathers on Indian Creek, and he’d never caused any trouble, but he was retired. This congressman was still on the job, which meant he had power to do bad things. Sending his goon over to get me made me uptight.

I went to his table. Congressman Jones stood. He was not a big guy, but he stuck his hand out with confidence. When I told him my name, he said, “I know all about you.”

That made me sweat a little. Then he laughed and said it was a pleasure meeting me, but he couldn’t accept my “generous gift”—of the shit wine I’d sent to his table. He could give me a gift, but I couldn’t give him one. That was the rule. He handed me his card and said to call him anytime.

“Okay. Nice meeting you,” I said.

I got back to my table as fast as I could. I didn’t like a congressman saying he knew about me. I couldn’t enjoy the rest of my crabs. I noticed when the congressman left that his goons were carrying the unopened bottles of wine I’d sent. Somebody could accept gifts.

I
STARTED
getting letters asking me to donate money to Congressman Jones and the National Republican Reelection League. They were form letters, but they made me uptight. I never gave out my address. I wasn’t registered to vote.

I went to my lawyer, Danny Mones, and showed him the letters. He told me to relax. The congressman probably got intrigued when
he saw me with Bryan and Toni and asked the waiters about me. Getting my address would have been easy.

“So what do I do with these goddamn letters?”

“Send these cocksuckers their money,” Danny said, laughing. “This congressman’s extorting you. Now that he knows who you are, you can’t tell him no. He’s got a good racket.”

I had Danny send a check in my name for $5,000—the maximum amount allowed. Danny said, “Now you got to call him. Tell him you’re happy to help him out.”

I called the number on the congressman’s card and got a flunky. I told him I’d made a contribution. A couple days later the congressman calls me and thanks me. Next, he asks if I like fishing. Before I know it, I’ve agreed to meet the congressman and some of his friends for a fishing trip on Hilton Head Island in South Carolina.

When I told Danny Mones, he got very excited. “This is good. You should bring some cash money.”

“How much?”

“Fifty thousand dollars is good for a U.S. congressman. It’s not a fortune, but it shows you’re sincere.”

I flew to Hilton Head with Bryan and a tackle box with $50,000 in it. When I went to the marina, one of the congressman’s flunkies was waiting in the restaurant. He told me the congressman had had some business come up. I put the tackle box on the table and said, “Too bad. I brought something for him.”

“I’ll make sure he gets it.”

The congressman called me a few days later and apologized for not making the fishing trip. The flunkies in his office set up several more trips. He never showed. I always brought tackle boxes of money. On my third or fourth trip, the congressman’s flunky took my tackle box and said, “It’s better from now on if you don’t have contact with us.”

That was fine with me. These shakedowns were an aggravation.

B
UT THE
Republican bigwigs I’d sent my check to weren’t done with me. They said that I was now a member of the Reelection League.
They invited me to a luncheon in Washington for all the people like me who they were squeezing so we could shake hands with Vice President Bush. It almost made sense that I should meet Bush. We had people in common. Don Aronow and General Noriega were both friends of his. Why not me?

I flew up with Bryan. The lunch was being held at a Marriott banquet room. Inside, a couple hundred stooges milled around in suits with name tags, waiting to get their handshake with the vice president. Bryan just wanted food. As we were walking into the main room, three guys came up to me. They looked like FBI agents. The hair stood up on my neck. I’m thinking,
This whole thing has been a scam to entrap me
, but the main FBI-looking asshole smiles and says, “Jon? You’ve got a lot of friends. They told us about you.”

His asshole buddies all smile like he cracked a joke. He says, “Do you mind if we talk?”

I leave Bryan in the banquet room. We walk out in the hall. One of his guys mentions my friendship with Representative Ted Jones, and they all smile again. These are the happiest government assholes I’ve ever seen.

“I barely know the guy,” I say.

“What do you think about the war in Nicaragua?”

“I don’t follow the news.”

One of the government assholes says, “Well, Jon. There are problems in Nicaragua. Some real bad guys have taken over. Other people want to fight them—‘freedom fighters’—and they need our help. But Congress passed a law that says nobody can help them.
*
We don’t think that’s right.”

“That’s very interesting. But what’s this got to do with me?”

“We want you to help.”

“You want me to help freedom fighters?” I’d never heard a more insane idea.

“Would you be willing to meet some friends of ours in Miami?”

What could I say?

Bryan was in a bad mood when I got back to the banquet room. The food they served to League members wasn’t up to his standards. We flew back to Miami that afternoon to get a decent meal.

I never did get to shake the vice president’s hand.

A
WEEK
later I met two new guys at the Fontainebleau Hotel to talk about helping the freedom fighters in Nicaragua. We met in the lobby. One of the guys looked like Steve McQueen. The other one was older. I told the older guy to get away from me. I’d only talk to one of them.

My uncle Joe used to tell me that when you meet people connected to the government, you should only talk to one guy. Two guys from the government can make up lies against you and claim you said things that you didn’t. If you go to court, they’ll back each other up. Even if they record you on a wire, if it’s only one guy you talked to, you can claim that there’s things you said that the wire didn’t pick up, which make you look less guilty. Government assholes usually come to you in pairs. If you can separate them, not only does it give you more protection, but it also makes the guy who gets left out feel like a jerk. The more you can make people from the government envy and mistrust one another, the better.

I walk outside with the guy who looked like Steve McQueen, and he says, “You have friends in high places.”

“All that’s got me so far is shakedowns and shitty banquet food. What do you want?”

“I work for an agency that thinks you can help us.”

“With the freedom fighters?”

“We need someone who can help with airplanes.”

“Bro, I’m not a pilot.”

“We want you to work with Barry Seal.”

His naming a smuggling pilot I worked with makes me uptight.

“Relax,” he says. “We don’t care about your business. Here’s my question: Are you a true American and a good American?”

I say, “Stop with the American shit. Just talk frank and tell me what the fuck is going on here.”

He says, “We’re going to give you a great deal on planes. We have some C-123s.
*
You can put twenty thousand pounds of anything you want in them.”

“What do you want me to carry in them?”

“Guns to help the freedom fighters in Nicaragua.”

“Why me?”

“You’re a smuggler.”

It made sense. If you’re a good guy who works for the government, and you need to break the law, you need to hire somebody like me who does illegal things. It was logical, but I wanted to know who had told these assholes I was a smuggler. When I asked him, he gave me an answer.

“Ricky.”

“Ricky?”

“Ricky. He says you might remember him as ‘Albert’s guy.’ ”

Albert San Pedro’s “guy” was Ricky Prado, who’d helped kill Richard Schwartz. This about knocked me over. I knew Ricky had left Miami. What could he have to do with these assholes? Was he an informant?

The Steve McQueen look-alike said, “Ricky and I work together helping the freedom fighters in Nicaragua. We get them guns.

Ricky says you’re reliable. He thinks you could be a good asset.”

This was a lot of information to take in. Ricky used to move
coke and cash for Albert and me, but I’d never talked to him about smuggling. Albert knew what I did, and he and Ricky were still very close.
*
You never imagine that a guy you’ve worked with on the street will end up in the government. It’s dirty. Ricky could tell anybody in the government anything he knew about me from the street. Maybe he’d obtained immunity for things he did with me in the past because he worked for these guys, but I didn’t have that.

First these rats shake me down for contributions to the Republican fund. Next they want me running guns. This was worse than dealing with my uncle Joe in the Mafia.

T
HE NEXT
time I met the Steve McQueen look-alike, I picked the coffee shop at the Best Western Thunderbird Hotel as the location. It was my uncle Jerry Chilli’s domain. He had a crew of old, bent-nose wiseguys who’d sit in the coffee shop playing gin all day long. I felt secure there.

The government guy explained that they wanted me to set up a company that could get the C-123 planes to Barry Seal. The government had weapons in Texas that I had to deliver to Seal so he could fly them to a landing strip in Nicaragua. They’d give us radio codes for the planes so we could fly back into the United States with no problem. I’d get $100,000 for every load we delivered, to cover costs, including what I paid Barry.

I still had one question. “Why did they send a congressman after me in the restaurant?”

“Jon, we don’t send congressmen out to recruit guys. That was a coincidence. We were going to talk to you before you met him. It doesn’t hurt that he thinks you’re a good American.”

“Do I get any protection here because of my helping you?”

“Now, we all know you’re a good American. I think that’s a lot.”

Tackle boxes of cash to the congressman and several checks to the Republican League, and that’s what it bought me. I’m a good American.

I
WENT
to see Barry Seal in Louisiana and laid it out. “Barry, there’s government guys who want to give me some C-123 military cargo planes so we can fly guns on them to some freedom guys in Nicaragua.”

Barry said, “Get the fuck away from me, Jon. There’s something very wrong here. Forget about this.”

Barry usually liked a big challenge. It appealed to his blowhard personality. I was taken aback. I explained to him that I didn’t think I had any choice in the matter. I had a U.S. congressman extorting money from me. I had other guys twisting my arm, calling me a good American.

Barry laughed. He said, “Okay, Jon. I’m no stranger to this kind of work.
*
Let’s get the C-123s up here. But I have one condition.”

“What is it?”

“If I fly guns, I’m not moving coke with you.”

I thought his condition was weird at the time, but I let it pass.

D
ANNY
M
ONES
helped set up a dummy company to take the C-123s from the government and get them to Barry in Baton Rouge. I got the codes for the radios from a guy I met at a gas station outside Homestead Air Force Base.

The codes changed every week, so every time Barry flew to Nicaragua and back, I had to drive to Homestead and get new ones.

The guns would come from a National Guard armory in Corpus Christi, Texas.

They were going to be in two rental trucks parked
outside a shopping center near the armory. The trucks were from a company called ATI.

Before our first run, the Steve McQueen–looking asshole said, “You need to bring drivers who aren’t going to be drunk or fucked up.”

I was a little offended. My drivers had moved thousands of kilos of coke all across the country for years, and I’d never had a problem. I didn’t like being treated like a stooge.

Other books

With This Kiss by Victoria Lynne
Weekend Getaway by Destiny Rose
La Venganza Elfa by Elaine Cunningham
Falling For Disaster by Sterling, K.
Birdie For Now by Jean Little
The Creeping by Alexandra Sirowy