U.S. charges 18 in Colombian money-laundering case

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – U.S. prosecutors have charged  18 people in an international money-laundering conspiracy that  they said moved millions of dollars of Colombian drug profits  through the United States, Colombia, Guatemala, Hungary and  other countries.

An undercover investigation named Operation Circling  Vultures has resulted in 17 arrests on charges related to  laundering drug profits for traffickers around the world. One  more suspect, Marlon Sanchez, 36, is still at large, officials  said yesterday.

“This is one of our largest drug money laundering  investigations in New Jersey, yielding hundreds of millions of  dollars in drug proceeds,” Drug Enforcement Administration  spokesman Douglas S. Collier said. “It’s significant because it  had such a global reach throughout different countries.”

An unnamed cooperating witness introduced U.S. agents to  Colombian peso brokers. Undercover agents then spent months  monitoring money-laundering operations in the United States,  Panama and Guatemala, among other locations, a statement by the  U.S. attorney’s office said.

Among those charged was Jader Gomez, who authorities allege  told undercover agents he was trying to move $200 million in  U.S. currency into Panama from Guatemala by plane and asked the  undercover agents for help.