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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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040389
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04038900.034
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1992-09-23
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NATION, Page 24DEA Don Juan
How a coke Casanova turned 'em on and turned 'em in
One day in November 1987, Olga Gonzalez, 30, was stopped at
a traffic light in Miami Beach when a black Corvette piloted by
a man with a touch of gray hair pulled alongside. After a brief
conversation, she exchanged phone numbers with the charming
driver, Mario Rodolfo Portell. He called that night to ask her
out, and before long Gonzalez had fallen in love. It was an
affair to remember. At Portell's urging, Gonzalez arranged to
purchase a kilogram of cocaine through an acquaintance. But
federal drug agents busted her and the dealer, and she is now
serving a seven-year prison term.
Score yet another triumph for the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration's very own Casanova of cocaine. Over the past 1
1/2 years, the handsome 34-year-old Cuban emigre has used a
turn-'em-on and turn-'em-in technique to entice some 18 Florida
and New Jersey women into setting up drug deals that led to
their arrest. Instead of targeting street-level dealers and
wholesale drug salesmen, Portell promised love and occasionally
marriage if the women, most with no prior criminal record, would
only set up a cocaine buy. When the deals went down, DEA agents
were on hand to make an arrest. Defense lawyers charge that
Portell's undercover work, for which the DEA has paid him
$73,000, amounts to entrapment.
Federal prosecutors maintain that they did not have
complete knowledge of how Portell concocted his stings, which
began in 1987, after he was arrested in New Jersey for writing
bad checks. But in the case of Isabel Garcia of Elizabeth, N.J.,
her defense lawyer has collected memos from authorities in
Union County, N.J., showing that the DEA has been aware of
Portell's seductive modus operandi since at least the fall of
1987. Garcia loaned Portell $8,700, which he returned in the
form of bad checks. She claims she arranged a coke deal only
because Portell promised to repay her with the proceeds from the
sale. Last week she agreed to plead guilty to possession of
coke.
The jig may now be up for the DEA gigolo, thanks to
hair-salon owner Miriam Guzman. Portell met her when she was
sitting alone and lonely in a Florida restaurant, dated her,
borrowed money from her and asked her to set up a coke deal.
Guzman's first trial ended in a hung jury last fall. Since then
her attorney has been gathering evidence in an effort to prove
official misconduct. At a hearing to dismiss charges against
Guzman last month, Miami Federal Judge William Hoeveler posed
a pointed query: "Is there any question in anybody's mind that
this man is not only a thief but a scoundrel?" After defense
attorneys began compiling Portell's history, the DEA removed him
from its payroll. Guzman, who returns to court this week, may
not be the last woman to fall for the dashing Don Juan. But she
may be the last one he turns into a suspect statistic in the war
on drugs.