DARK ALLIANCE: DAY TWO
by Gary Webb
Mercury News Staff Writer
IF THEY'D BEEN IN a more respectable line of work, Norwin Meneses,
Danilo Blandon, and ''Freeway Rick'' Ross would have been hailed as geniuses
of marketing.
This odd trio-a smuggler, a bureaucrat and a driven ghetto teenager-made
fortunes creating the first mass market in America for a product so hellishly
desirable that consumers will literally kill to get it: ''crack'' cocaine.
Federal lawmen will tell you plenty about Rick Ross, mostly about the evils
he visited upon black neighborhoods by spreading the crack plague in Los
Angeles and cities as far east as Cincinnati. On Aug. 23, they hope, Freeway
Rick will be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
But those same officials won't say a word about the two men who turned Rick
Ross into L.A's first king of crack, the men who, for at least five years,
supplied him with enough Colombian cocaine to help spawn crack markets in
major cities nationwide. Their critical role in the country's crack explosion,
a Mercury News investigation found, has been a strictly guarded secret-until
now.
To understand how crack came to curse black America, you have to go into
the volcanic hills overlooking Managua, the capital of the Republic of Nicaragua.
During June 1979, those hills teemed with triumphant guerrillas called Sandinistas-Cuban-assisted
revolutionaries who had just pulled off one of the biggest military upsets
in Central American history. In a bloody civil war, they'd destroyed the
U.S.-trained army of Nicaragua's dictator, Anastasio Somoza. The final assault
on Somoza's downtown bunker was expected any day.
In the dictator's doomed capital, a minor member of Somoza's government
decided to skip the war's obvious ending. On June 19, Oscar Danilo Blandon
Reyes gathered his wife and young daughter, slipped through the encircling
rebels and flew into exile in California. Blandon, the then 29-year-old
son of a wealthy slumlord, left a life of privilege and luxury behind. Educated
at the finest private schools in Latin America, he had earned a master's
degree in marketing and had become the head of a $27 million program financed
by the U.S. government. As Nicaragua's director of wholesale markets, it
had been his job to create an American-style agricultural system.
Today, Danilo Blandon is a well-paid and highly trusted operative for the
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Federal officials say he is one of
the DEA's top informants in Latin America, collecting intelligence on Colombian
and Mexican drug lords and setting up stings. In March, he was the DEA's
star witness at a drug trial in San Diego, where, for the first time, he
testified publicly about his strange interlude between government jobs -
the years he sold cocaine to the street gangs of black Los Angeles.
Dealer says patriotism for Nicaragua was motive
A stocky man with salt-and-pepper hair, a trim mustache and a distinguished
bearing, Blandon swore that he didn't plan on becoming a dope dealer when
he landed in the United States with $100 in his pocket, seeking political
asylum. He did it, he insisted, out of patriotism. When duty called in late
1981, he was working as a car salesman in East Los Angeles. In his spare
time, he said, he and a few fellow exiles were working to rebuild Somoza's
defeated army, the Nicaraguan national guard, in hopes of one day returning
to Managua in triumph. Like his friends, Blandon nursed a keen hatred of
the Sandinistas, who had confiscated the Blandon family's cattle ranches
and sprawling urban slums. His wife's politically prominent family-the Murillos,
whose patriarch was Managua's mayor in the 1960s - lost its immense fortune
as well.
''Because of the horror stories and persecution suffered by his family and
countrymen, Blandon said he decided to assist his countrymen in fighting
the tyranny of the (Sandinista) regime,'' stated a 1992 report from the
U.S. Probation and Parole Department. ''He decided that because he was an
adept businessman, he could assist his countrymen through monetary means.''
But the rallies and cocktail parties the exiles hosted raised little money.
"At this point, he became committed to raising money for humanitarian
and political reasons via illegal activity (cocaine trafficking for profit),''
said the heavily censored report, which surfaced during the March trial.
That venture began, Blandon testified, with a phone call from a wealthy
friend in Miami named Donald Barrios, an old college classmate. Corporate
records show Barrios was a business partner of one of the ex-dictator's
top military aides: Maj. Gen. Gustavo ''The Tiger'' Medina, a steely eyed
counterinsurgency expert and the former supply boss of Somoza's army. Blandon
said his college chum, who also was working in the resistance movement,
dispatched him to Los Angeles International Airport to pick up another exile,
Juan Norwin Meneses Cantarero. Though their families were related, Blandon
said, he'd never met Meneses-a wiry, excitable man with a bad toupee-until
that day.
''I picked him up, and he started telling me that we had to (raise) some
money to send to Honduras,'' Blandon testified. He said he flew with Meneses
to a camp there and met one of his new companion's old friends, Col. Enrique
Bermudez. Bermudez-who'd been Somoza's Washington liaison to the American
military-was hired by the Central Intelligence Agency in mid-1980 to pull
together the remnants of Somoza's vanquished national guard, records show.
In August 1981, Bermudez's efforts were unveiled at a news conference as
the Fuerza Democratica Nicaraguense (FDN)-in English, the Nicaraguan Democratic
Force. It was the largest and best-organized of the handful of guerrilla
groups Americans would know as the Contras.
Bermudez was the FDN's military chief and, according to congressional records
and newspaper reports, received regular CIA paychecks for a decade, payments
that stopped shortly before his still-unsolved slaying in Managua in 1991.
Reagan's secret order not enough to fund Contras
White House records show that shortly before Blandon's meeting with Bermudez,
President Reagan had given the CIA the green light to begin covert paramilitary
operations against the Sandinista government. But Reagan's secret Dec. 1,
1981, order permitted the spy agency to spend only $19.9 million on the
project, an amount CIA officials acknowledged was not nearly enough to field
a credible fighting force.
After meeting with Bermudez, Blandon testified, he and Meneses ''started
raising money for the Contra revolution.'' ''There is a saying that the
ends justify the means,'' Blandon testified. ''And that's what Mr. Bermudez
told us in Honduras, OK?'' While Blandon says Bermudez didn't know cocaine
would be the fund-raising device they used, the presence of the mysterious
Mr. Meneses strongly suggests otherwise.
Norwin Meneses, known in Nicaraguan newspapers as ''Rey de la Droga'' (King
of Drugs), was then under active investigation by the DEA and the FBI for
smuggling cocaine into the United States, records show. And Bermudez was
very familiar with the influential Meneses family. He had served under two
Meneses brothers, Fermin and Edmundo, who were generals in Somoza's army.
Somoza himself spoke at the 1978 funeral of Edmundo Meneses, who was slain
by leftists shortly after his appointment as Nicaragua's ambassador to Guatemala,
hailing him as an anti-communist martyr.
A violent death-someone else's-had also made brother Norwin famous in his
homeland. In 1977 he was accused of ordering the assassination of Nicaragua's
chief of Customs, who was gunned down in the midst of an investigation into
an international stolen car ring allegedly run by Norwin Meneses. Though
the customs boss accused Meneses on his deathbed of hiring his killer, Nicaraguan
newspapers reported that the Managua police, then commanded by Edmundo Meneses,
cleared Norwin of any involvement.
Despite that incident and a stack of law enforcement reports describing
him as a major drug trafficker, Norwin Meneses was welcomed into the United
States in July 1979 as a political refugee and given a visa and a work permit.
He settled in the San Francisco Bay Area, and for the next six years supervised
the importation of thousands of kilos of cocaine into California.
It arrived in all kinds of containers: false-bottomed shoes, Colombian freighters,
cars with hidden compartments, luggage from Miami. Once here, it disappeared
into a series of houses and nondescript storefront businesses scattered
from Hayward to San Jose, Pacifica to Burlingame, Daly City to Oakland.
And, like Blandon, Meneses went to work for the CIA's army. At the meeting
with Bermudez, Meneses said in a recent interview, the Contra commander
put him in charge of ''intelligence and security'' for the FDN in California.
''Nobody (from California) would join the Contra forces down there without
my knowledge and approval,'' he said proudly. Blandon, he said, was assigned
to raise money in Los Angeles. Blandon testified that Meneses took him back
to San Francisco and, over two days, schooled him in the cocaine trade.
Meneses declined to discuss any cocaine dealings he may have had, other
than to deny that he ever ''transferred benefits from my business to the
FDN. Business is business.''
Lessons over, Blandon said, Meneses gave him two kilograms of cocaine (roughly
4 pounds), the names of two customers and a one-way ticket to Los Angeles.
''Meneses was pushing me every week,'' he testified. ''It took me about
three months, four months to sell those two keys because I didn't know what
to do. . . . In those days, two keys was too heavy.''
At the time, cocaine was so costly that few besides rock stars and studio
executives could afford it. One study of actual cocaine prices paid by DEA
agents put it at $5,200 an ounce. But Blandon wasn't peddling the FDN's
cocaine in Beverly Hills or Malibu. To find customers, he and several other
Nicaraguan exiles working with him headed for the vast, untapped markets
of L.A.'s black ghettos.
Uncanny timing made
marketing strategy work
Blandon's marketing strategy, selling the world's most expensive street
drug in some of California's poorest neighborhoods, might seem baffling,
but in retrospect, his timing was uncanny. He and his compatriots arrived
in South-Central L.A. right when street-level drug users were figuring out
how to make cocaine affordable: by changing the pricey white powder into
powerful little nuggets that could be smoked-crack.
Crack turned the cocaine world on its head. Cocaine smokers got an explosive
high unmatched by 10 times as much snorted powder. And since only a tiny
amount was needed for that rush, cocaine no longer had to be sold in large,
expensive quantities. Anyone with $20 could get wasted.
It was a ''substance that is tailor-made to addict people,'' Dr. Robert
Byck, a Yale University cocaine expert, said during congressional testimony
in 1986. ''It is as though (McDonald's founder) Ray Kroc had invented the
opium den.''
Crack's Kroc was a disillusioned 19-year-old named Ricky Donnell Ross, who,
at the dawn of the 1980s, found himself adrift on the streets of South-Central
Los Angeles. A talented tennis player for Dorsey High School, Ross had recently
seen his dream of a college scholarship evaporate when his coach discovered
he could neither read nor write.
At the end of tennis season, Ross quit high school and wound up at Los Angeles
Trade-Technical College, a vocational community college where, ironically,
he learned to bind books. But a bookbinding career was the last thing Ross
had in mind. L.A. Trade-Tech had a tennis team, and Ross was still hoping
his skills with the racquet would get his dreams back on track.
''He was a very good player,'' recalled Pete Brown, his former coach at
L.A. Trade-Tech. ''I'd say he was probably my No. 3 guy on the team at the
time.'' To pay his bills, however, Ross picked up a different racket: stolen
car parts. In late 1979, he was arrested for stealing a car and had to quit
the trade while the charges were pending.
'Freeway Rick' hears about popularity of jet-set drug
During this forced hiatus, Ross said, a friend home on Christmas break from
San Jose State University told him about the soaring popularity of a jet-set
drug called cocaine, which Ross had only vaguely heard about. In the impoverished
neighborhoods of South Central, it was virtually non-existent. Most street
cops, in fact, had never seen any because cocaine was then a parlor drug
of the wealthy and the trendy.
Ross' friend-a college football player-told him ''cocaine was going to be
the new thing, that everybody was doing it.'' Intrigued, Ross set off to
find out more.
Through a cocaine-using auto upholstery teacher Ross knew, he met a Nicaraguan
named Henry Corrales, who began selling Ross and his best friend, Ollie
''Big Loc'' Newell, small amounts of remarkably inexpensive cocaine.
Thanks to a network of friends in South-Central and Compton, including many
members of various Crips gangs, Ross and Newell steadily built up clientele.
With each sale, Ross reinvested his hefty profits in more cocaine. Eventually,
Corrales introduced Ross and Newell to his supplier, Danilo Blandon. And
then business really picked up.
''At first, we was just going to do it until we made $5,000,'' Ross said.
''We made that so fast we said, no, we'll quit when we make $20,000. Then
we was going to quit when we saved enough to buy a house ...'' Ross would
eventually own millions of dollars' worth of real estate across Southern
California, including houses, motels, a theater and several other businesses.
(His nickname, ''Freeway Rick,'' came from the fact that he owned properties
near the Harbor Freeway in Los Angeles.)
Within a year, Ross' drug operation grew to dominate inner-city Los Angeles,
and many of the biggest dealers in town were his customers. When crack hit
L.A.'s streets hard in late 1983, Ross already had the infrastructure in
place to corner a huge chunk of the burgeoning market.
$2 million worth of crack moved in a single day
It was not uncommon, he said, to move $2 million or $3 million worth of
crack in one day.
''Our biggest problem had got to be counting the money,'' Ross said. ''We
got to the point where it was like, man, we don't want to count no more
money.''
Nicaraguan cocaine dealer Jacinto Torres, another former supplier of Ross
and a sometime-partner of Blandon, told drug agents in a 1992 interview
that after a slow start, ''Blandon's cocaine business dramatically increased....
Norwin Meneses, Blandon's supplier as of 1983 and 1984, routinely flew quantities
of 200 to 400 kilograms from Miami to the West Coast.''
Leroy ''Chico'' Brown, an ex-crack dealer from Compton who dealt with Ross,
told the Mercury News of visiting one of Ross' five cookhouses, where Blandon's
powder was turned into crack, and finding huge steel vats of cocaine bubbling
atop restaurant-size gas ranges. ''They were stirring these big pots with
those things you use in canoes,'' Brown said with amazement. ''You know-oars.''
Blandon told the DEA last year that he was selling Ross up to 100 kilos
of cocaine a week, which was then ''rocked up'' and distributed ''to the
major gangs in the area, specifically the 'Crips' and the 'Bloods,''' the
DEA report said.
At wholesale prices, that's roughly $65 million to $130 million worth of
cocaine every year, depending on the going price of a kilo.
"He was one of the main distributors down here," said former Los
Angeles Police Department narcotics detective Steve Polak, who was part
of the Freeway Rick Task Force, which was set up in 1987 to put Ross out
of business. "And his poison, there's no telling how many tens of thousands
of people he touched. He's responsible for a major cancer that still hasn't
stopped spreading."
But Ross is the first to admit that being in the right place at the right
time had almost nothing to do with his amazing success. Other L.A. dealers,
he noted, were selling crack long before he started.
What he had, and they didn't, was Danilo Blandon, a friend with a seemingly
inexhaustible supply of high-grade cocaine and an expert's knowledge of
how to market it.
''I'm not saying I wouldn't have been a dope dealer without Danilo,'' Ross
stressed. ''But I wouldn't have been Freeway Rick.'' The secret to his success,
Ross said, was Blandon's cocaine prices. ''It was unreal. We were just wiping
out everybody.''
That alone, Ross said, allowed him to sew up the Los Angeles market and
move on. In city after city, local dealers either bought from Ross or got
left behind.
''It didn't make no difference to Rick what anyone else was selling it for.
Rick would just go in and undercut him $10,000 a key,'' Chico Brown said.
''Say some dude was selling for 30. Boom-Rick would go in and sell it for
20. If he was selling for 20, Rick would sell for 10. Sometimes, he be giving
(it) away.''
Before long, Blandon was giving Ross hundreds of kilos of cocaine on consignment-sell
now, pay later-a strategy that dramatically accelerated the expansion of
Ross' crack empire, even beyond California's borders.
Ross said he never discovered how Blandon was able to get cocaine so cheaply.
''I just figured he knew the people, you know what I'm saying? He was plugged.''
But Freeway Rick had no idea just how ''plugged'' his erudite cocaine broker
was. He didn't know about Norwin Meneses, or the CIA, or the Salvadoran
air force planes that allegedly were flying the cocaine into an air base
in Texas.
And he wouldn't find out about it for another 10 years.
-Reprinted with permission from the San Jose Mercury News, August, 1996.
The San Jose Mercury News includes documents and testimony with Gary Webb's
articles at its web site: http://www.sjmercury.com/
Additional reporting for this series in Nicaragua and Costa Rica was done
by Managua journalist Georg Hodel. Research assistance at the Nicaraguan
Supreme Court was performed by journalist Leonore Delgado.
NEXT ISSUE: The impact of the crack epidemic on the black community, and
why justice hasn't been for all.
Feb-Mar-97-
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