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"David" is a black peso broker, who buys and sells currency between Colombia
and Florida. This is the edited transcript of an interview conducted in 2000.
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What has your work been? What's your role in the process?
As a business--to buy money, and sell it for a profit. The money side is a
completely separate business than the drugs. We never got involved into the
drug side of the business, only receiving the money, processing it, selling it,
and making a profit.
So if someone said to you that you were a drug trafficker, what would your
response be?
I didn't know what they were talking about. I think nobody ever told me that
when I was doing that, even to a point that when somebody gave me money and
told me, "This is from the sale of drugs," I wouldn't take it. I would back
out.
But you knew?
Maybe I knew, maybe I didn't. But I didn't want to know. So if you came to me
with a box of money and you told me that this is from the sale of X or whatever
it is, from drugs, I would just tell you see you later. Go on to the next.
So there is a separation between the world of drug movement and drug sales,
and dealing with the money afterwards?
In some people, yes. Some people are involved in both. But my case, I had
them completely separate.
You're a businessman in the sort of arbitrage, or the buying and selling of
currency?
Buying and selling of currency, yes.
You were doing this mostly in Colombia, or in Florida?
Between the two countries, in Florida and in Colombia, I would travel back and
forth, make the bills there, receive the money here or have someone else
receive them. Process the money, and sell it in Colombia, and make the
difference or profit, and that was it. Pay the person that sold it to me in
pesos.
You say that, in a sense, you were insulated from the drug side of the
business. But the money is what the business is all about.
Yes, I was insulated. But money--that's what it's all about, yes.
So is there the same kind of danger involved in the business?
Of the money? Of course. Yes. Because once I receive the money, I have
bought it already. If I receive $1 million in New York, or two or three,
that's mine. It was up to me to pay him in pesos whatever the exchange rate we
negotiated at the time.
Did you ever have a problem delivering the pesos?
No. That's why we would move a lot of money, because they would trust us, even
though sometimes I had trouble with the dollars, that we would pay there. So
you had to have a cushion, or a little bit of money put aside for problems that
we had sometimes.
What kind of problems?
One time we had people travelling from L.A. to Miami. They would be stopped at
the airport, the money was taken, and they had to sign a receipt like for
$300,000, $400,000, and that was it. Then you had to go and claim the money in
LA. And I wouldn't do that. I would leave there. Cases like that. Or one
time they went into my office, and they stole close to a million dollars from
the office. So I had to pay that too.
I understand. Who stole? Criminals? Or cops?
You don't want to know. I think they were cops.
But you still had to pay the pesos at the other end?
Yes. Because it was a business. We buy the dollar, sell it, make a profit,
and pay them in the pesos. So once I got it, it was my responsibility. It was
mine.
But you can't declare bankruptcy. So it's not a normal business?
Bankruptcy is not an option. So, no, I guess it's not a normal business. When
you look at it that way, it's not. In Colombia, if you declare bankruptcy, and
you owe a lot of people, even in a legit business, you're going to get killed
anyway. It's not that easy to declare bankruptcy in some countries.
You first got involved in this in the late 1970s. What attracted you to the
business? Was it just because it was easy?
It wasn't because it was easy; it was the amount of profit involved, and being
trusted by people there with a large amount of money. You would make a nice
profit, with a large volume.
But before, you were telling me that the business was a lot easier back
then. How? Why?
Because the banks were involved in the US. They used to help you set up
accounts. They used to help you with their report forms. You know they would
report do that form that you have to fill for the IRS for a company name that
used to be based in Panama or Aruba or one of those places. So the IRS would
get a report, but from a foreign company, not from persons here. And they used
to charge a large fee. So they would protect you, in a way.
These are US banks?
Yes, US banks. Either way, during the day, boxes of money inside a bank. They
would have rooms set up with counting machines and even employees from the
bank, and if you did it at night, you would drop them into the night deposit.
You mean you would just go to a night deposit and dump a bunch of cash in
the night deposit?
Yes, in little bags wrapped around with the amount outside, yes.
So you were saying that the US is, in some ways, the easiest country to
launder money in. Why is that?
I think it's the easiest country to open accounts. In a lot of countries, they
required reference letters, passport, cellular ID. They even get your
fingerprints. And here, it's very easy to open an account. If you give me a
passport, I could go and open 200 accounts or more, even to this day, in 200
different banks.
Just make up a Social Security number?
I don't think you need a Social Security number here to open a bank account.
If you are a foreigner, you can put a 9-9-9-9-9 number. That's all you need.
Show them a passport, and you're on your way.
Why is a bank account so important?
To deposit cash or checks. If you open 200 accounts and you deposit less than
$5,000 a month, you're doing a million dollars in one month. Or if you deposit
a combination of checks and cash, then you can deposit a lot more.
Sounds like a lot of work, a lot of driving around town.
That's right. You get to know the town. But it works that way. And you don't
even go to the same bank. If you have a bank account in a bank here that has a
lot of branches, every day you probably go to a different branch so you don't
look suspicious to anybody in the bank.
Do you have a staff of people working for you, or do you do it on your
own?
With a staff of people. The same staff that would do checks and would do the
deposits and everything.
So it's basically a small industry of money? How would you describe this
business?
It's like a small industry. It's a business. You buy dollars, sell them for a
profit, and you pay at a set price before you get it. If the guy that you are
buying the money from doesn't like your price, he will go to somebody else that
will give him a better price. So it's not like you are doing it for him all
the time. It's like to the best price you can get.
Where do you negotiate over price?
In Colombia.
So you have an office set up in Colombia?
Yes, an office. Somebody is running the office that would pay the pesos and
handle all the accounts and everything.
And was there a sign on the door that there was a peso-dollar
exchange?
Oh, no. Those are the smaller guys, the ones that have the exchange houses.
They buy smaller checks. They buy the $100 that people send you money orders,
for families. There is a lot of money that goes down to our country from
relatives here in this country, stuff like that.
But I'm trying to understand the people who are in your part of the
business. Do you have like a marketplace, where you all meet? Or is there an
exchange place? Or is it underground?
No, they know that you are in the business, and the businesses there need US
dollars. They know that your checks are good, and you could sell them a check
for $200, $300, $400, any amount.
So really, you're servicing the Colombian business community?
That is correct, yes.
How would you explain this to someone who knows nothing about how the
business works?
First of all, the person that you deal with is not here, it's in Colombia. So
they tell you that they're going to take to your office or to your place of
business one million, to say a figure. You receive it in your office, and then
you start processing an output. And it's a business.
How would people deliver the money to you?
It would be in boxes, shopping bags, suitcases. A car. They would give you
the keys and take the car and leave it back here. Or take the car and don't
even bring it back.
And the people who would show up?
You would get a call there--Jose would call you and is going to give you a
million dollars. So you would get a call on the phone or the beeper, and they
would tell you, "Hey, my name is Jose, I have a million, where do you want to
meet?" Or in a lot of instances, I used to receive the people in my office.
They would just come to my office and drop the money. That was probably the
safest way.
And then you have this pile of cash in your office?
Yes. . . . You receive the money, let's say you buy X amount. You start
processing it-- go to a bank, deposit it through your staff or different people
that work for a fee. And then you notify your Colombian office that you have
processed, say, half. You tell them you have a certain amount in that account,
certain amount in that other account, so you can sell a check for $50,000 from
this account, one for $20,000 from the other account. And that way they state
selling the dollars to businesses there. At the end of that transaction, you
make a profit, and then you convert it into dollars, or you leave it in pesos
in Colombia.
And the profit comes from the difference between . . .
From the difference between what you buy it for and what you sell it for. The
differences are always different; it depends on the buyer. The more they buy,
the cheaper you sell it to them. So if you're a tourist and you want to travel
to the US, and they know that you have dollars, if you want to buy a couple of
thousand dollars, it's one price. And you're a business, you want to buy
$50,000, it's a different price, a lower price. It's a competitive market.
Is there a contract once you come to a deal?
Yes. You receive the money, that's your contract, and you pay it, you make the
difference.
Who do you pay the pesos to?
To whoever the person that sells them to you--not necessarily the drug dealers.
Sometimes it had already changed hands. It happens, a middleman. The market
has various layers to it. It's different all the time. That's the way it
always works.
Before you were doing this, there were other ways. First, you moved the
money by bringing it to banks, and they helped you. But that stopped. Why did
it stop?
They started making it difficult for banks on the forms that they have to fill
for the IRS, so the banks stopped doing the business. And so you would make
checks, then you buy cashier checks, buy money orders, deposit it in smaller
amounts in the banks. Then you still could do up to $9,000 a day in each
account. Then they changed that again. Because then they started saying,
okay, now is not less than ten; it's ten in a month. Then you would do up to
ten in a month in an account. But they kept changing the rules, and you kept
changing with the rule-changing.
In the early days, did you have a favorite banker than you went to
see?
Yes, they knew you. You would sit with even the president of the bank. I
think you were considered a special customer, because of the fee they were
charging for the account.
So you remember that it changed, so that you no longer could sit with the
president of the bank?
I think in the early 1980s. After that, we started shipping in bulk. After
the banks didn't want to see you any more, or they didn't want to see anybody
for a fact. . . . Then the IRS started checking more on the banks. Then you
would either ship small checks to our country, foreign banks, or ship the money
in bulk.
You'd just put a box together and ship the money in bulk?
No. You'd get a big container, a 20-foot, 40-foot container--something that
you could sell easy in any country. And half of container was full of
goods--could've been televisions or refrigerators--and then one refrigerator in
the middle would be not a refrigerator. It was all money.
Where would you ship that?
To a couple of the Arabian countries or Panama. It was very easy from
the free zones in those countries, to go to a bank with a huge box and just
deposit there. They had no laws or anything. They would welcome your
business, with no questions asked.
What's the largest amount of money anyone ever delivered to you in the
United States?
Twelve million. It would fill a whole closet in a hotel room. And there were
hundreds, twenties, fifties, fives. Some singles.
You received that because you had a contract to turn it into pesos?
Yes. Yes, I bought that money. Then I started processing it. It used to take
sometimes a couple of months to process $12 million.
On a $12 million exchange like that, how much money would you make?
About $600,000 to 700,000.
That was leftover cash that you could keep?
Or in pesos, there. Sometimes I would sell up to the point where I knew that I
had enough pesos to cover the debt, and I would keep the difference.
Weren't you a little nervous have $12 million in your closet?
I used to stay in different places. I always have somebody watching. Yes, I
was nervous.
So how do you process this $12 million to make it disappear?
At that time, it was a little tougher with the banks, so you would buy cashier
checks, money orders, while you have what they used to call here the "smurfs."
You would give less than ten each person. You would have a contingent of
persons buying checks. They would come back to another room where they would
leave the checks, and go out with some more money--always less than ten--just
in case.
So basically, in the end, this buying and selling of money is the way most
of the money related to drugs is moved back to Colombia?
Back then it was the way, and it changed a little bit over the times. A lot of
the monies move that way still, but a lot of people they still ship it down in
different ways. You can buy a tractor and just find a place where you put do a
box inside, and put one, two, three million inside the tractor, or another
piece of equipment. . . .
Why ship it in bulk, rather than go through a broker?
They got a little bit sophisticated at the end, and a lot of the people that
were probably involved in drugs started getting involved in the money. They
would make more money that way. So they wanted to see their dollars. And
usually when you sell currency, you probably get a little more pesos for it
than checks.
So there are some people who have an integrated system?
Yes, they do both. . . .
Is this process illegal in Colombia?
Money exchange, in a way, it's what is called the black market. It is kind of
illegal there, yes. . . . Because the Colombian government would not sell you
US dollars. Only if you have an import license, or if you were a tourist, you
want to come to the US, they would sell you up to $2,000 per person. . . .
How important is this drug money--to business in Colombia?
A lot of businesses need their dollars to operate. I think it's very hard to
buy US dollars, unless you have an import license, and then you got to pay too
many duties, and then the paperwork is very complex in Colombia. To import
anything, it's not easy.
So this was a way for business to get around regulations? Do they,
therefore, feed off the narcotics business, in a sense?
They do it to get around regulations from the Colombian government, yes. They
feed off the narcotics business without accepting it, yes. They never knew
anything about the narcotic business. Between businesses and what we were
doing--that we had our businesses selling money--you don't talk about drugs or
anything like that. You talk about US dollars, amount, what you would sell it
for, what they would pay for it. It's a regular business.
Is it expanding?
I don't really know anymore what the numbers are. I don't know if it's
expanding or getting smaller. But as long as there are people who consume, I
guess the drugs are going to come in, and the money business is still going to
be alive for people that. . . .
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