Colombian drug boss pleads guilty to U.S. conspiracy charge

Suspected Colombian drug trafficker Salomon Camacho Mora (C) is escorted during his extradition to the United States in Caracas February 2, 2010. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins

By Nate Raymond (Reuters) - A Colombian drug lord known as "Papa Grande," deported from Venezuela in 2010 to face U.S. charges, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to conspiring to traffic cocaine into the United States. Salomon Camacho Mora, 70, pleaded guilty in Newark federal court to one conspiracy count, more than four years after he was captured in Venezuela, New Jersey U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman announced. Camacho at the time had a $5 million price on his head, a sum that would typically be only offered by the United States for major traffickers or senior cartel leaders. He was originally indicted in 2002, spending the next eight years as a fugitive. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has said Camacho worked with deceased cartel leader Pablo Escobar in the Cali Cartel and more recently worked for Colombia's Guajira Cartel. Prosecutors said on Wednesday that Camado admitted he and members of his drug organization bought multi-kilogram quantities of cocaine from various Colombian processing laboratories and arranged to transport the drug to Venezuelan shipping ports. Camacho and others then sold the cocaine shipments to other drug trafficking organizations operating in Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic and the United States, prosecutors said. Camacho faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison and a maximum term of life when he is sentenced March 10 by U.S. District Judge William Walls. Under his plea agreement, Camacho has agreed to forfeit $1.6 million and relinquish eight Colombian properties. (Reporting by Nate Raymond in New York. Editing by Andre Grenon)