Difference between revisions of "2007 Yucatan Gulfstream drug crash"
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{{event | {{event | ||
− | |wikipedia= | + | |wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rendition_aircraft#N987SA |
|image=yucatan-coke-crash.jpg | |image=yucatan-coke-crash.jpg | ||
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==Official narrative== | ==Official narrative== | ||
− | A Gulfstream II business jet (tailnumber '''N987SA''') crashed in the Yucatan, Mexico, with 3. | + | A Gulfstream II business jet (tailnumber '''N987SA''') crashed in the Yucatan, Mexico, with between 3 and 6.3 tonnes of cocaine on board. Although the plane had formerly used by the CIA for '[[extraordinary rendition]]' to [[Guantanamo Bay]] it had been sold multiple times since it was used by the CIA, and it was owned by [[Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman]]'s [[Sinaloa Cartel]] when it crashed. Former CIA ownership is just a coincidence, which - like other such drug planes crashes - provides no evidence that the [[CIA/Drug trafficking|CIA is involved in drug smuggling]]. |
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+ | ==Background== | ||
+ | [[Wikipedia]] claims that "The aircraft departed Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport in Florida, USA, on September 18 for Cancun, Mexico, then flew on to Colombia to pick up the load of cocaine from the [[Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia|FARC]] rebel group before returning to Mexico. Bribes paid to local civil aviation officials in Cancun were supposed to allow the aircraft and its cargo to avoid customs on arrival, but only minutes from landing, Bermúdez personally phoned co-pilot Muñoz and demanded the crew divert to Manzanillo, over 1500 km to the west, on Mexico's Pacific coast. The flight had been tracked by the [[Mexican Air Force]] since it entered Mexican airspace and a heavy military presence was waiting for them on the ground at Cancun. When the Gulfstream deviated from its approach to Cancun, Mexican Air Force aircraft which had been shadowing it moved in to intercept. Trapped, the Gulfstream crew put their aircraft into orbit over the town of Tixkobob near Mérida in northwestern Yucatan for almost two hours before finally crash-landing in the jungle." | ||
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+ | ==The crash== | ||
+ | [[image:yucatan-coke.jpg|300px|thumbnail|right]] | ||
+ | On September 24, 2007, Gulfstream II, [http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=20070924-0%3E&lang=fr/ N987SA ], c/n 172, crashed in the [[Yucatan]], Mexico, carrying at least 3 tons of [[cocaine]], with at one source suggesting as many as 6 tonnes.<ref name="noticaribe.com.mx">[http://www.noticaribe.com.mx/cancun/2007/11/investigan_pgr_en_el_aeropuerto.html Cancún: Investigan PGR en el aeropuerto]</ref><ref>[http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=bc5_1190728764 LiveLeak.com - Huge Cocaine Haul As Plane Crashes In Jungle]</ref> One source suggested that the flight was "being chased by Mexican military helicopters for flying illegally into Mexican airspace".<ref>https://cranialgas.wordpress.com/2007/09/30/cia-aircraft-with-32-tons-of-coke-crashes-in-yucatan/</ref> | ||
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+ | The pilot was [[Edic Muñoz Sanchez]]<ref name=usa>http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/world/2007-09-27-mexico-drug-plane_N.htm</ref> and the co-pilot was [[Omar Alfredo "el Piolo" Jácome del Valle]].<ref name="diariolaestrella.com">[http://www.diariolaestrella.com/2009/05/25/88262/colombiano-compra-a-policias-en.html Diario La Estrella | 05/25/2009 | Colombiano ‘compra’ a policías en México y crea narcoimperio]</ref> Mexican soldiers reached the crash site the next day and arrested the occupants, who were too badly injured to flee. They also recovered 132 bags containing the cocaine.<ref>News, "''Mexican Aircraft Force Down Drug Running Gulfstream II''", Air Forces Monthly, Stamford, Lincs, UK, Number 236, November 2007, page 14.</ref><ref>[http://www.cronica.com.mx/nota.php?id_nota=326003 La Crónica de Hoy | La PGR detiene a dos tripulantes del narcoavión]</ref> | ||
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==Plane history== | ==Plane history== | ||
[[image:N987SA.jpg|300px|right]] | [[image:N987SA.jpg|300px|right]] | ||
− | Similarly to [[N900SA]], another DC-9 caught in Mexico with tonnes of cocaine, the plane changed hands multiple times before being used to smuggle cocaine to the US from South America. The paper trail suggests that after being owned by [[Air Rutter International]] for nearly a decade, it changed hands at two or three times in the weeks leading up to the crash.<ref name=mcc/><ref name=madcow/> | + | Similarly to [[N900SA]], another DC-9 caught in Mexico with tonnes of cocaine, the plane changed hands multiple times before being used to smuggle cocaine to the US from South America. The paper trail suggests that after being owned by [[Air Rutter International]] for nearly a decade, it changed hands at two or three times in the weeks leading up to the crash.<ref name=mcc/><ref name=madcow/> At the time of the crash, the business jet was registered to Donna Blue Aircraft Inc, which had acquired it using money from the trust of the company Powell Aircraft. |
===CIA use=== | ===CIA use=== | ||
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===Powell Aircraft Title=== | ===Powell Aircraft Title=== | ||
A bill of sale was reportedly produced stating that on September 16, 2006, it was sold on to two Americans, [[Clyde O'Connor]] and [[Greg Smith]] for $2 million, though the [[FAA]] stated that they had not received the change of ownership paperwork.<ref name=mcc>http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2007/09/28/20104/drugs-on-crashed-plane-belonged.html</ref> Over the next two days, money from the Americans trust company [[Powell Aircraft Title]] was used to acquire the aircraft for the [[drug trafficker]] [[Pedro Antonio "The Architect" Bermúdez Suaza]].<ref name="diariolaestrella.com"/> | A bill of sale was reportedly produced stating that on September 16, 2006, it was sold on to two Americans, [[Clyde O'Connor]] and [[Greg Smith]] for $2 million, though the [[FAA]] stated that they had not received the change of ownership paperwork.<ref name=mcc>http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2007/09/28/20104/drugs-on-crashed-plane-belonged.html</ref> Over the next two days, money from the Americans trust company [[Powell Aircraft Title]] was used to acquire the aircraft for the [[drug trafficker]] [[Pedro Antonio "The Architect" Bermúdez Suaza]].<ref name="diariolaestrella.com"/> | ||
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==Fallout== | ==Fallout== |
Revision as of 12:14, 11 December 2015
Date | September 24, 2007 |
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Location | Yucatan, Mexico |
Description | A plane used by the CIA for rendition, which later crashed in the Yucatan, Mexico, with 6 tonnes of cocaine. |
Contents
Official narrative
A Gulfstream II business jet (tailnumber N987SA) crashed in the Yucatan, Mexico, with between 3 and 6.3 tonnes of cocaine on board. Although the plane had formerly used by the CIA for 'extraordinary rendition' to Guantanamo Bay it had been sold multiple times since it was used by the CIA, and it was owned by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman's Sinaloa Cartel when it crashed. Former CIA ownership is just a coincidence, which - like other such drug planes crashes - provides no evidence that the CIA is involved in drug smuggling.
Background
Wikipedia claims that "The aircraft departed Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport in Florida, USA, on September 18 for Cancun, Mexico, then flew on to Colombia to pick up the load of cocaine from the FARC rebel group before returning to Mexico. Bribes paid to local civil aviation officials in Cancun were supposed to allow the aircraft and its cargo to avoid customs on arrival, but only minutes from landing, Bermúdez personally phoned co-pilot Muñoz and demanded the crew divert to Manzanillo, over 1500 km to the west, on Mexico's Pacific coast. The flight had been tracked by the Mexican Air Force since it entered Mexican airspace and a heavy military presence was waiting for them on the ground at Cancun. When the Gulfstream deviated from its approach to Cancun, Mexican Air Force aircraft which had been shadowing it moved in to intercept. Trapped, the Gulfstream crew put their aircraft into orbit over the town of Tixkobob near Mérida in northwestern Yucatan for almost two hours before finally crash-landing in the jungle."
The crash
On September 24, 2007, Gulfstream II, N987SA , c/n 172, crashed in the Yucatan, Mexico, carrying at least 3 tons of cocaine, with at one source suggesting as many as 6 tonnes.[1][2] One source suggested that the flight was "being chased by Mexican military helicopters for flying illegally into Mexican airspace".[3]
The pilot was Edic Muñoz Sanchez[4] and the co-pilot was Omar Alfredo "el Piolo" Jácome del Valle.[5] Mexican soldiers reached the crash site the next day and arrested the occupants, who were too badly injured to flee. They also recovered 132 bags containing the cocaine.[6][7]
Plane history
Similarly to N900SA, another DC-9 caught in Mexico with tonnes of cocaine, the plane changed hands multiple times before being used to smuggle cocaine to the US from South America. The paper trail suggests that after being owned by Air Rutter International for nearly a decade, it changed hands at two or three times in the weeks leading up to the crash.[8][9] At the time of the crash, the business jet was registered to Donna Blue Aircraft Inc, which had acquired it using money from the trust of the company Powell Aircraft.
CIA use
The same aircraft, under tail number N987SA, was used for 'extraordinary rendition' to Guantanamo Bay. Logs show that it flew to Guantanamo Bay from Washington, D.C. twice and from Oxford, Connecticut once. Wikipedia suggests that "is likely that the purpose of these flights was to ferry CIA and Pentagon interrogators to Guantanamo to question detainees".
Air Rutter International
William Cripe, who runs Air Rutter International (later JetFlite International) in Long Beach, California said he leased the plane for a year until it was sold, using it in his charter service. He said the plane didn't fly to Cuba or to the Caribbean while his company operated it.[8]
Donna Blue Aircraft
On August 30, 2006, it was sold by New York real estate developer and thoroughbred horse owner William Achenbaum to Donna Blue Aircraft, a Florida-based front company owned by two Brazilians, Joao Luiz Malago and Eduardo Dias Guimaraes. [8] Their website contained numerous typos, used "John Doe" as if it were an ordinary American name, and was summarised by Daniel Hopsicker as "such a clumsy half-hearted effort that it defeats the purpose of helping aid the construction of a plausible 'legend', or cover, and ends up doing more harm than good..."[9][10]
Powell Aircraft Title
A bill of sale was reportedly produced stating that on September 16, 2006, it was sold on to two Americans, Clyde O'Connor and Greg Smith for $2 million, though the FAA stated that they had not received the change of ownership paperwork.[8] Over the next two days, money from the Americans trust company Powell Aircraft Title was used to acquire the aircraft for the drug trafficker Pedro Antonio "The Architect" Bermúdez Suaza.[5]
Fallout
A week later, the head of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGAC) in Cancun was found shot dead after being kidnapped from a soccer match. He had refused the cocaine-carrying Gulfstream permission to land at Cancun.[1][11]
Rating
An important piece of the puzzle that fits together with other reports of CIA planes involving large shipments of money and drugs. Wikipedia doesn't even give this event its own page.
References
- ↑ a b Cancún: Investigan PGR en el aeropuerto
- ↑ LiveLeak.com - Huge Cocaine Haul As Plane Crashes In Jungle
- ↑ https://cranialgas.wordpress.com/2007/09/30/cia-aircraft-with-32-tons-of-coke-crashes-in-yucatan/
- ↑ http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/world/2007-09-27-mexico-drug-plane_N.htm
- ↑ a b Diario La Estrella | 05/25/2009 | Colombiano ‘compra’ a policías en México y crea narcoimperio
- ↑ News, "Mexican Aircraft Force Down Drug Running Gulfstream II", Air Forces Monthly, Stamford, Lincs, UK, Number 236, November 2007, page 14.
- ↑ La Crónica de Hoy | La PGR detiene a dos tripulantes del narcoavión
- ↑ a b c d http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2007/09/28/20104/drugs-on-crashed-plane-belonged.html
- ↑ a b http://www.madcowprod.com/10092007.html
- ↑ http://web.archive.org/web/20071015063314/http://donnablueaircraft.com/
- ↑ Cancún Informa 新聞, ラジオ,テレビ: Identifican a uno de los verdugos de Soladana