Maximiliano Davila: Turned law enforcement into a cocaine trafficking machine | Convirtió la fuerza de la ley en una máquina de tráfico de cocaína

By Paulo Lizarraga, Vision 360:

Drug Trafficking

DEA concludes that Dávila used his position as anti-drug chief to fuel drug trafficking

U.S. judicial authorities condemned in a report the “abhorrent” and “unsurprising” conduct of Bolivia’s former anti-drug czar, who is set to appear for the first time before the country’s justice system today.

Dávila fue mostrado a los medios de comunicación a finales de enero de 2022, cuando fue aprehendido. Foto: Archivo

Dávila was presented to the media at the end of January 2022 when he was apprehended. Photo: Archive

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) issued a report revealing the illicit activities of Maximiliano Dávila, the former director of Bolivia’s Special Force to Fight Drug Trafficking (FELCN). According to the report obtained by Visión 360, the DEA considers that the former anti-drug czar of Bolivia “fueled drug trafficking” instead of fighting it.

DEA Administrator Anne Milgram stated, “Maximiliano Dávila Pérez was supposed to fight drug trafficking, but instead, he fueled it,” as noted in the report.

“As head of Bolivia’s anti-narcotics agency, he turned law enforcement into a cocaine trafficking machine, seeking to flood our streets with this poison. His betrayal of public trust ends now,” Milgram asserted in the document.

Additionally, according to the report, District Attorney Damian Williams alleged that Dávila “abused his position” as the head of Bolivia’s anti-drug agency “to assist the very drug traffickers he was supposed to investigate and arrest.”

Life Sentence

Maximiliano Dávila Pérez, referred to in the DEA reports as “Macho,” was extradited from Bolivia to the United States and faces federal charges of drug trafficking and weapons possession and use in connection with the importation of cocaine.

Both the transport of controlled substances to the U.S. and the possession of weapons for illicit purposes carry minimum sentences of 10 years and a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. Dávila faces the possibility of spending the rest of his life in a U.S. prison.

This afternoon, he is scheduled to appear for the first time in the Southern District of New York. The session will be presided over by the Honorable Robyn F. Tarnofsky, and the case will be handled by District Court Judge Denise L. Cote.

“Abhorrent” Conduct

In the document, District Attorney Damian Williams condemned the “abhorrent” and “unsurprising” behavior of the former anti-drug czar.

“Along the way, (Dávila) sought to use Bolivian law enforcement agents to protect and participate in the transport of massive quantities of cocaine. While this behavior is abhorrent, unfortunately, it is not surprising,” Williams stated in the file.

Dávila was apprehended in early 2022 after his name surfaced in a DEA report that also mentioned other FELCN authorities, such as Omar Rojas Echeverría, referred to in the investigation as the “Bolivian Pablo Escobar.”

The aforementioned served as the director of the anti-drug force during Evo Morales’ administration and was an ally of the former president. Dávila’s extradition to the U.S. has raised suspicions that it could implicate the former president in the transport of controlled substances.

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