Port-au-Prince – NY Times: Sephardic Jew Investigated For Human Trafficking In Central America

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    Jorge [Aaron] Puello, who has been providing legal advice to a group of Americans jailed in Haiti. The police in El Salvador have begun an investigation into whether a man suspected of leading a trafficking ring involving Central American and Caribbean women and girls is also a legal adviser to many of the Americans charged with trying to take 33 children out of Haiti without permission.

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    When the judge presiding over the Haitian case learned on Thursday of the investigation in El Salvador, he said he would begin his own inquiry of the adviser, a Dominican man who was in the judge’s chambers days before.

    The inquiries are the latest twist in a politically charged case that is unfolding in the middle of an earthquake disaster zone. A lawyer for the group has already been dismissed after being accused of trying to offer bribes to get the 10 Americans out of jail.

    The adviser, Jorge Puello, said in a telephone interview on Thursday that he had not engaged in any illegal activity in El Salvador and that he had never been in the country. He called it a case of mistaken identity. “I don’t have anything to do with El Salvador,” he said, suggesting that his name was as common in Latin America as John Smith is in the United States.

    “There’s a Colombian drug dealer who was arrested with 25 IDs, and one of them had my name,” he said, not elaborating.

    “Bring the proof,” he said when pressed about the child-trafficking accusations in the brief interview, which ended when he said he was entering an elevator. Reached later, he became angry and said he had broken no laws.

    The 10 Americans have been imprisoned since Jan. 29 in the back of the same police station used by President René Préval as the seat of Haiti’s government since the earthquake. They had been told by their lawyers that at least some of them would be on their way home on Thursday. But the judge overseeing their case, Bernard Saint-Vil, recommended to the prosecutor that they be tentatively released from custody and permitted to leave the country as long as a representative stayed behind until the case was completed.

    Mr. Puello has been acting as a spokesman and legal adviser for most of the detainees in the Dominican Republic. The family of one of the detained Americans obtained independent counsel as of Feb 7.

    The head of the Salvadoran border police, Commissioner Jorge Callejas, said in a telephone interview that he was investigating accusations that a man with a Dominican passport that identified him as Jorge Anibal Torres Puello led a human trafficking ring that recruited Dominican women and under-age Nicaraguan girls by offering them jobs and then putting them to work as prostitutes in El Salvador.

    Mr. Puello said he did not even have a passport. When Mr. Callejas was shown a photograph taken in Haiti of Mr. Puello, Mr. Callejas said he thought it showed the man he was seeking. He said he would try to arrest Mr. Puello on suspicion of luring women into prostitution and taking explicit photographs of them that were then posted on Internet sites. “It’s him, the same beard and face,” Mr. Callejas said in an interview on Thursday. “It has to be him.”

    Judge Saint-Vil also said he thought that the photo of the trafficking suspect in a Salvadoran police file appeared to be the same man he had met in court. He said he intended to begin his own investigation into whether a trafficking suspect had been working with the Americans detained in Haiti.

    “I was skeptical of him because he arrived with four bodyguards, and I have never seen that from a lawyer,” the judge said in an interview. “I plan to get to the bottom of this right away.”

    The judge said he would request assistance from the Department of Homeland Security to look into Mr. Puello’s background. A spokesman for the department said American officials were playing a supporting role in the investigation surrounding the Americans, providing “investigative support as requested.”

    An Interpol arrest warrant has been issued for someone named Jorge Anibal Torres Puello, according to the police and public documents.

    There were questions about whether Mr. Puello, the adviser, who said the Central Valley Baptist Church in Idaho had hired him to represent the Americans, was licensed to practice law. Records at the College of Lawyers in the Dominican Republic listed no one with his name.

    Mr. Puello said he had a law license and was part of a 45-member law firm. But his office in Santo Domingo turned out to be a humble place, which could not possibly fit 45 lawyers. Mr. Puello’s brother Alejandro said that the firm had another office in the central business district, but he declined to provide an address.

    Mr. Puello said in the interview that he had been representing the Americans free of charge because he was a religious man who commiserated with their situation. “I’m president of the Sephardic Jewish community in the Dominican Republic,” he said. “I help people in this kind of situation. We’re not going to charge these people a dime.”

    But other lawyers for the detainees said that the families had wired Mr. Puello $12,000 to pay for the Americans’ transportation out of Haiti if they were released, and that they had been told by Mr. Puello in a conference call late Tuesday that he needed an additional $36,000. Mr. Puello said that he had not participated in a conference call.

    One lawyer for the families said that Mr. Puello had told him that he was licensed to practice law in Florida, but the lawyer said he had checked and found no such record. Mr. Puello said in the interview that he had never said he was licensed in Florida.

    Mr. Puello said that he had been born in Yonkers, N.Y., and that his mother was Dominican. He said that his full name was Jorge Puello and that he had no other names. But then in a subsequent interview he said his name was Jorge Aaron Bentath Puello. He said he was born in October 1976, and not in October 1977, which the police report indicates is the birth date of the suspect in the Salvadoran case.

    The report said the police had found documents connected to the Sephardic Jewish community in a house in San Salvador where the traffickers had held women.


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    33 Comments
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    joe shmoe
    joe shmoe
    14 years ago

    oh when is all this negative publicity gonna stop! I hope he’s right and the truth will come out asap for we all are gonna be the consequences for articles of this like. anti semitism doesn’t differenciate between jewish individuals. once things like this get published, doesn’t even have to truly be even accused, we suffer for it already. hitler ym”sh blamed the jewish bankers and brought it on us all. there are many just waiting for the slightest even assumption to pounce on us.

    hashem yirachem v’yishmor.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Strangest story ever!

    anon
    anon
    14 years ago

    The article states clearly that his mother is Dominican.
    He is in fact not Jewish.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Sounds like a blood libel story to me.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    In Mr. Puello’s own words: “I’m president of the Sephardic Jewish community in the Dominican Republic,” he said. “I help people in this kind of situation. We’re not going to charge these people a dime.”

    murray
    murray
    14 years ago

    I agree with all your possible senarios, but please explain how one can be a Dominican morrano? I thought these were hidden or “secret Jews -from Spain. Did they also try to convert and diguise their identities in the Dominican Republic?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Jew or not, something is not right about this guy.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    The DR opened their doors to jews escaping the nazis, they have a special relationship with the jews and they ALWAYS need to be remembered for harboring many of our brothers in a time when few others would

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Sr. Puello is an honest and honorable man. The American missionaries thought they were doing a good thing and are only guilty of dumbness. Funny how religious zeal lowers ones I.Q.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    I was once stopped in Israel going back to US at passport control. My name hit the panic button because they were looking for a drug dealer with my name. The head of security came running. I told him to please call my uncle, who I knew must be friends with him. He looked at me funny and I said I’m sure you know my uncle and his phone number. I just called him to say goodbye. He walked away and came back a few minutes later. Fuhr gezinter heit, dein fetter shikt a grees.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    lots of sephardim in DR as in all of the caribbean and in latin america. this guy is probably a charlatan, using the Yarmulke to make people think he is more than he is.
    christian evangelicals are suckers for the yarmulke.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Havi dohn es kol odom l’kaf zchus. Where do all these negative people come from? Do you also look at yourself with the same rah and tzar ayin as you look at others? Or are you jealous because this guy is making tons of money and you think, oh man why didn’t I think of that.

    Pennywhistler
    Pennywhistler
    14 years ago

    1) It’s probably not worth replying to someone who cannot tell the difference between a Marrano and a moron. FYI – a ball is not a bell, either.

    2) There is an awful lot of accusing and defending going on around here, considering that we don’t actually know what happened yet, much less who was actually involved.

    Simeon, the son of Rabban Gamliel, said: “All my days have I grown up among the wise and I have not found anything better for a man than silence. Studying Torah is not the most important thing – rather fulfilling it. And whoever is profuse of words occasions sin.” — Pirke Avot 1:17

    And Rabbi Akiva said: Silence is a fence to wisdom. — Pirke Avot 3:17

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    who says this guy is really jewish – think about that guy from lakewood who was not really jewish but told everyone they were….