ASUNCIÓN, Paraguay — The undercover brokers ducked right into a squat brick home in a residential neighborhood.
The constructing — secretly rented by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration — was now the headquarters of what had turn out to be certainly one of Latin America’s most vital drug-trafficking investigations. It was not going properly.
The handful of American and Paraguayan brokers had been assigned to search out the person on the heart of a brand new transnational drug cartel dispatching boatloads of cocaine to Europe. The brokers had been sealed off from the remainder of the police to keep away from leaks. However after months of labor, they nonetheless knew little about their goal, besides that he was harmful and well-connected.
Then, at some point in 2021, the brokers bought a tip. The person on the heart of the brand new cartel was about to board a personal jet at Silvio Pettirossi Worldwide Airport, simply outdoors Asunción, the capital.
Half two of a two-part story
As they watched the passengers, one of many males in line stood out. His tattoos matched those they’d heard about on wiretaps of cartel members. When he was requested for his identification, the person took out a Bolivian passport. The brokers had been instantly certain the doc was false. They searched his biometric information, and the title of an Uruguayan nationwide popped up. Sebastián Marset.
“After we heard the title ‘Marset,’ we puzzled: ‘Who is that this man?’” recalled a senior Paraguayan official. “The very first thing we did was Google him and the primary hit was this soccer participant.”
The brokers noticed that their goal had till not too long ago been a midfielder on Deportivo Capiatá, a workforce that performed not removed from their rented workplace. Marset had used his wealth and energy to meet a boyhood dream of enjoying skilled soccer, though his expertise fell far wanting the extent required.
Phrase unfold amongst high-level Paraguayan officers, a few of them soccer fanatics, who puzzled if they’d unwittingly watched their goal play.
“I couldn’t imagine that on the heart of this large felony group, the chief was a failed soccer participant,” mentioned Cecilia Pérez Rivas, the justice minister.
Investigators mentioned they didn’t simply need to detain Marset on the airport, so that they allowed him to board the aircraft; the objective was to construct a case to dismantle his cartel. Over the next months, Paraguayan brokers started trailing him.
They adopted him as he drove an armored Toyota Land Cruiser to Asunción’s La Galería shopping center, the place he met alleged Brazilian drug trafficker Marlon Santos Silva Beiño; in a white BMW to a pastry store, the place he met Alberto Koube Ayala, the Paraguayan businessman who investigators mentioned was accountable for laundering a few of Marset’s drug proceeds. Neither Beiño nor Ayala could possibly be reached for remark.
They chronicled the way in which Marset created shell corporations throughout Latin America’s non-public sector, paying for publicity in native media so the companies appeared authentic, investigation paperwork present. Marset touted his success as a music producer (“a legend of live performance manufacturing,” mentioned an article on an Ecuadorian information website) or the proprietor of a luxurious automobile dealership (“high quality service for each sort of automobile,” mentioned a Paraguayan auto journal) or the benefactor of a martial arts studio known as Crew Power Coaching Middle (its slogan: “To Struggle Is to Dwell”).
Investigators began to really feel as in the event that they had been chasing a Zelig-like determine who gave the impression to be in a number of locations on the identical time. They struggled to discern which of his companies existed solely on paper and which had been actual. They puzzled what had turn out to be of his soccer profession after he disappeared from Capiatá.
“He’s clearly very sensible,” mentioned one Paraguayan investigator. “And he’s additionally a sociopath.”
In the future, two undercover brokers adopted a silver Lamborghini via the residential sprawl on the fringe of Asunción. The brokers drove an unmarked truck they’d seized in a earlier operation, maintaining a distance from their goal.
Over a two-way radio, they reported their coordinates again to headquarters, one agent recalled. They relayed what they had been seeing: Marset had inexplicably detoured via the potholed roads of a no-name neighborhood.
Then the brokers watched as he pulled up in entrance of a soccer stadium and turned off the engine.
One of many brokers, clearly bowled over, picked up the radio to report the discovering: “He discovered one other workforce.”
II
Marset’s latest toy was a second-division workforce known as Rubio Ñu. Its stadium was about 20 miles from Capiatá.
The workforce performed in a middle-class neighborhood in Paraguay’s capital, filled with die-hard however perpetually disillusioned Rubio Ñu followers. Some had painted their properties within the workforce’s colours, inexperienced and white. Many had been the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of Rubio supporters. The stadium confirmed indicators of decay. The grass on the sector was patchy.
Followers traded rumors in regards to the man within the Lamborghini. He arrived with a small group of males, all of their 20s and 30s, some with Uruguayan accents. Nearly instantly, he began funneling cash to the workforce.
“We had been like, ‘What’s going on right here?’” mentioned one neighbor, who lives throughout the road from the stadium and spoke on the situation of anonymity for safety causes. “Lots of people had been scared. It was like a bunch of mafiosos had descended on us.”
Inside a number of weeks of Marset’s arrival, he employed a development workforce to construct a brand new locker room. This time, he practiced with the workforce, however didn’t play in video games.
After observe, he deployed the identical anodyne one-liners that he utilized in texts to the drug traffickers who labored for him:
“All the time be one step forward my bro,” he wrote.
Marset appointed his brother Diego Marset as an middleman between his drug-trafficking group and the workforce, investigators mentioned. Diego went on a recruiting spree, including 11 veteran gamers. He couldn’t be reached for remark.
The brokers realized that as Sebastián Marset moved between soccer groups, he was additionally enjoying with methods the game could possibly be used to show illicit funds into clear money. He was increasing, they wrote in a 500-page Paraguayan report, “the universe of soccer inside his cash laundering scheme.”
At Rubio Ñu, investigators famous, Marset’s focus was on shopping for and promoting gamers — one of many oldest types of laundering cash via sport.
Officers at Rubio Ñu declined to remark.
It could later turn out to be clear what Marset had in thoughts, in keeping with investigators: He recognized a workforce in Europe with its personal connections to transnational crime. He would promote his Paraguayan gamers there. Transferring Latin American gamers to middling European groups for inflated charges — fronted by the vendor, not the client, or by recording pretend transactions — has turn out to be an more and more frequent approach of laundering drug cash, officers say.
“They purchase a Colombian participant from a really low-level soccer workforce after which take him to play within the Croatian Soccer League. However they promote him for 100 instances or 200 instances greater than what he price,” mentioned a Colombian police official, referring to 1 case through which Albanian drug traffickers laundered cash via soccer transfers, offering money for the transaction.
By August 2021, the American and Paraguayan investigators had been getting nearer to arresting their goal. That they had provide you with a reputation for his or her investigation, “A Ultranza,” which suggests “At All Prices.” It was already the largest anti-narcotics investigation in Paraguay’s historical past. That they had sufficient documentation to supply at the very least 50 indictments concentrating on Marset and his associates, investigators mentioned.
Then in September 2021, Marset vanished once more.
The People acquired contemporary intelligence: He was not hiding in Paraguay. He had evaded the surveillance. This time, he had left the continent.
III
When the Uruguayan diplomat stepped via the excessive partitions of Al Wathba jail, surrounded by the Emirati desert, he defined to guards that he had come for a consular go to with a brand new detainee from his nation.
The guards requested for the prisoner’s title.
“Marset,” the diplomat mentioned, earlier than strolling into the holding cell.
Marset was sleeping on the ground of the jail with a blanket, in solitary confinement, in keeping with an Uruguayan diplomatic cable.
One of many world’s most elusive drug traffickers had lastly been caught. Nevertheless it hadn’t been for trafficking medicine. Marset was detained on the Dubai airport, the place authorities mentioned he had used a pretend Paraguayan passport.
“He had lastly slipped up,” mentioned a Paraguayan official.
U.S. officers made a case to their Emirati counterparts: In the event that they didn’t strictly implement his detention till an arrest warrant could possibly be issued by Paraguay, Marset would bribe or finagle his approach out of custody.
They had been proper. From his jail cell, Marset started a marketing campaign to acquire a brand new passport and safe his launch, an effort later documented by Uruguayan and Paraguayan authorities. For causes that stay unclear, Paraguay was unable or unwilling to subject an arrest warrant after studying of Marset’s detention.
The Uruguayan authorities, in the meantime, acknowledged Marset as a menace but additionally failed to forestall his launch.
“A narco,” Uruguay’s chief consul, Pauline Davies, wrote of Marset in a WhatsApp message to the nation’s ambassador to the United Arab Emirates, Álvaro Ceriani, on Sept. 21. The message was a part of a trove of paperwork collected by Uruguayan investigators and offered to The Washington Submit.
“A really harmful and heavy drug trafficker,” Guillermo Maciel, Uruguay’s deputy inside minister, wrote to Carolina Ache, the nation’s deputy international minister on Nov. 3.
Marset employed high-profile attorneys who organized conferences with senior Uruguayan officers, paperwork present. The workforce was well-connected: Marset’s high authorized adviser, Alejandro Balbi, was the president of Nacional, certainly one of the nation’s most well-known soccer golf equipment. Balbi declined to remark.
Marset utilized for a brand new Uruguayan passport to be delivered to him in Dubai.
By November, regardless of the warnings in regards to the hazard he posed, the brand new passport was being processed. Neither Uruguay’s International Ministry nor its Inside Ministry, which grants passports, intervened, in keeping with Uruguayan investigators.
Whereas he waited to be launched, utilizing a cellphone he had obtained, Marset sought revenge.
He allegedly ordered gunmen to kill Mauricio Schwartzman, the person accountable for securing the Paraguayan passport that had landed Marset in jail, investigators mentioned. Two males utilizing a 5.56-caliber rifle and a 9mm pistol confronted Schwartzman in entrance of his luxurious residence in Asunción and shot him useless.
Paraguayan investigators later heard over their wiretaps that the gunmen had been ordered to hold out the hit by the “massive boss” of a cocaine-trafficking group, apparently alluding to Marset.
“In accordance with the massive boss, it was [Schwartzman’s] fault that the passport had issues,” the affiliate mentioned.
A high-profile Paraguayan prosecutor, Marcelo Pecci, was assigned to research the case. Pecci later informed journalists he believed Schwartzman might have been executed by one of many individuals focused within the joint U.S.-Paraguayan investigation into Marset’s cartel.
Lower than a 12 months later, in Might 2022, Pecci can be killed on his honeymoon at a personal seashore resort in Colombia. Simply hours earlier, his spouse had introduced that she was pregnant. Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, mentioned Marset was accountable for the killing. (Marset subsequently denied any function within the killing when questioned by a Uruguayan journalist.)
However lengthy earlier than that slaying, with Marset detained, investigators had one other query to reply: What was Marset doing in Dubai within the first place?
They’d later discover pictures of him dressed as a sheikh with a hawk on his biceps, on the high of the Burj Khalifa skyscraper along with his spouse, on a desert tour with alleged Bolivian drug trafficker Erland Ivar García López. Actual property data reviewed by The Submit present that Marset owned greater than $18 million value of actual property in Dubai. Emirati officers didn’t reply to requests for remark.
When investigators obtained Marset’s flight data, they realized that Dubai hadn’t been his closing vacation spot. He had been planning a visit to Greece.
“We began to ask: ‘What enterprise did he have in Greece?’” mentioned a Paraguayan investigator.
IV
Trikala F.C. is a workforce based mostly in central Greece, 200 miles northwest of Athens, a longtime fixture within the Greek Tremendous League 2. Its low-slung stadium, the place solely a handful of followers sit throughout residence video games, is a brief stroll from an Early Bronze Age acropolis.
The workforce’s fan base had diminished not solely as Trikala continued to lose however as its hyperlinks to organized crime and match-fixing had been uncovered. Earlier this 12 months, its former proprietor, Christos Gialia, was shot greater than a dozen instances with a Kalashnikov rifle and burned in his automobile in a mafia-style killing. He had beforehand been arrested on prices of arms and drug trafficking. The workforce’s president, Sakis Karatzounis, was convicted of drug trafficking in 2017 after being present in possession of 20 kilos of cocaine, and served 4 years in jail.
Trikala F.C. generally recruited international coaches, who had been shocked by what they realized. In 2021, the workforce employed David Magrone, a former member of the teaching employees at Tottenham Hotspur in England’s Premier League. Magrone left after 10 days, telling soccer journalists that he was scandalized.
“It’s probably the most amateurish and unprofessional surroundings I’ve ever stepped into,” Magrone mentioned in an interview with FTBL, an Australian soccer web site. “It was just like the wild wild West and I don’t say that frivolously.”
Magrone mentioned he was conscious of the workforce’s doable involvement in match fixing. However Trikala’s illicit actions appeared to run deeper.
A number of weeks after Magrone’s departure, in September 2021, an SUV arrived at Trikala’s stadium carrying 4 Paraguayan gamers and several other coaches and trainers. One coach, Manuel Caceres, instantly began paying the workforce’s Greek workers in money, in keeping with Trikala gamers, and commenced speaking about plans to purchase the workforce. Caceres couldn’t be reached for remark.
The gamers and employees had been baffled, whilst they relished the sudden wave of latest assets.
“Why did they arrive from Paraguay to speculate on the opposite aspect of the Atlantic, in Trikala? It was an honor for us, okay, however isn’t it bizarre?” Zissis Katsandonis, the workforce supervisor, mentioned in an interview. “However regardless of the workforce requested them for, we bought. Garments, gear. Every little thing was ordered instantly. All paid for.”
The Paraguayans would distribute wads of money within the locker room, mentioned Giorgos Panagiotou, Trikala’s normal secretary. “Come, guys, to the altering rooms and take it,” he recalled them saying.
What the Greek gamers and officers didn’t know was that the Paraguayans had been dispatched by Sebastián Marset, who was en path to Greece when he was detained in Dubai. After his arrest, in keeping with a wiretapped dialog, he had despatched his associates as an alternative.
Two of the gamers and Caceres, the coach, had come from Marset’s final Paraguayan workforce, Rubio Ñu. They had been among the many males Marset’s associates had been grooming, promising money in the event that they performed properly. Marset, investigators realized, provided every of them $200,000 in the event that they had been prepared to be transferred to an obscure Greek workforce. They accepted.
Paraguayan investigators say Marset hoped to make use of Trikala to launder money and create a foothold in Greece to increase his drug-trafficking community. The Greek anti-narcotics police mentioned they had been unaware of Marset’s connection to the workforce, maybe due to how shortly it dissolved. Along with his detention in Dubai, Marset’s Trikala scheme fell aside, investigators mentioned.
On the finish of 2021, the Paraguayan gamers and coaches left as abruptly as they’d arrived.
“Not less than it was sudden for me. I didn’t know something,” mentioned Katsandonis, the supervisor. “All of them left Trikala earlier than Christmas. I don’t know the place they went after that.”
Two of the gamers, apparently broke, returned to Paraguay on a authorities repatriation flight, accompanied by migrant deportees.
V
On Jan. 10, 2022, Interpol wrote a message to Uruguay’s International Ministry: “We’d admire in case you might present us with an replace on its state of affairs and particulars of the place [Marset] is at present.”
Each the U.S. and Paraguayan investigators had assumed their goal was nonetheless detained in Dubai.
However the Uruguayan International Ministry responded two days later: “The Consulate delivered the passport to the holder and we now have not had any details about the citizen since then.”
Marset was a free man.
“With the affect of his wealth and connections, he gained,” mentioned a U.S. official.
A few month later, on Feb. 22, Paraguayan authorities carried out Operation A Ultranza, based mostly on their multiyear investigation into Marset’s group. Twenty-four of his associates had been arrested, most of them on drug-trafficking and money-laundering prices. Police raided luxurious properties and airplane hangars. They seized 9 non-public jets, 4,000 head of cattle, 13 tractors and three yachts — in complete, greater than $100 million in belongings.
Erico Galeano, the Paraguayan senator whose soccer workforce had welcomed Marset, was accused of cash laundering. However the authorities’s help for Galeano was clear: Weeks after his arrest, he was invited to a small soccer recreation on the president’s residence.
On March 7, Interpol issued a world arrest warrant in Marset’s title. However by then, he was as soon as once more a fugitive. Information broke in Uruguay about how he had managed to safe a brand new passport from a jail in Dubai.
The fallout was virtually quick. First the international minister resigned. Then the inside minister and certainly one of his chief advisers. However Uruguay’s president, Luis Lacalle Pou, mentioned the issue was Uruguay’s legal guidelines, not corruption inside his authorities.
“Will we like {that a} drug trafficker has a passport? After all not,” Lacalle Pou mentioned at a information convention. “However that’s the present legislation.”
VI
The cellphone buzzed within the newsroom of Channel 4, certainly one of Uruguay’s hottest broadcasters. It was a textual content message from a South African quantity.
The sender launched himself as Sebastián Marset.
It was August 2022, months after his launch from the Dubai jail. Marset despatched a video message to reporters, who aired it on the nightly broadcast of “Telenoche.” He was fuming in regards to the prices in opposition to him and his associates.
“They haven’t any proof of something of what they are saying. Nothing,” he mentioned within the video, through which he wears sun shades and a face masks.
U.S., Paraguayan and Uruguayan officers had been looking for him as soon as once more. The medicine flowing from Bolivia to Uruguay and on to Europe had elevated. Investigators believed he was nonetheless operating the operation, from wherever he was.
Then the tip arrived.
Marset was in Bolivia. However he wasn’t simply hiding there.
He was enjoying for an additional skilled soccer workforce.
VII
The gamers of the Leones del Torno, a workforce in a second-tier Bolivian league, had been on their twentieth and closing 100-yard dash.
Carlos Villegas, a lanky 25-year-old Colombian ahead, completed first. He put his fingers on his knees and turned, he recalled in an interview, to look at his teammates trundle throughout the road, struggling within the Bolivian warmth. It was Might 2023.
As at all times, among the many slowest gamers was a good-looking, tattooed Brazilian named Luis Amorim.
There was one thing odd about Amorim, Villegas thought. He was off form and sluggish on the sector. However he was at all times impeccably dressed and drove a rotation of shiny SUVs — Land Cruisers and BMWs — throughout Santa Cruz, the place the Leones had not too long ago moved.
Whereas Villegas struggled to scrape by on his $500-a-month wage, portray properties to make additional money, Amorim was seemingly flush. Villegas wanted to know: How had his teammate discovered monetary success whereas languishing within the decrease rungs {of professional} soccer? He determined he would ask.
After observe, Villegas sidled as much as Amorim on a bench subsequent to the sector.
“How did you do it, man?”
Amorim responded passionately, however obliquely — in surprisingly excellent Spanish for a Brazilian.
“It’s all about work. It’s good to work and work and work. You may’t ever quit,” Villegas recalled Amorim saying.
Villegas walked away from the dialog feeling impressed and a little bit confused.
“He by no means informed me what he did to make the cash,” Villegas later mentioned in an interview. “And after I came upon, it was a shock.”
Amorim was a pseudonym.
Marset had arrived in Santa Cruz — Bolivia’s monetary capital — in late 2022, renovating a mansion within the heart of town, putting in safety cameras close to the entrance entrance. He launched himself into town’s elite circles. He hung out with a former Miss Bolivia and her husband. He sponsored occasions for Carnival, together with an exhibition soccer recreation with highly effective enterprise executives. And most notably, he bought the Leones del Torno, a workforce that performed within the small city of El Torno, an hour outdoors town.
Marset moved the workforce to Santa Cruz. He constructed a cutting-edge athletic coaching complicated with an artificial turf area on the finish of a dust highway. He employed a former star participant from the nationwide workforce, Gualberto Mojica, to teach the workforce. And as soon as once more, he compelled his approach onto the beginning lineup.
With legislation enforcement from throughout the Western Hemisphere searching for him, Marset had chosen to not disguise in a distant outpost. He had come to Bolivia’s largest metropolis — often called a sanctuary for drug proceeds, investigators say — sure that he might bribe authorities to not seize him.
For over a 12 months, Marset gave the impression to be proper; he expanded his actual property empire in Santa Cruz, both unnoticed or ignored.
On the soccer area, Marset wore the quantity 23, David Beckham’s quantity at Actual Madrid and Galaxy. The title on the again of his blue jersey was solely “Luis.” His expertise had not improved.
“He wasn’t good,” mentioned a Uruguayan participant on the Leones, Lucas Casavieja.
“After I handed him the ball, loads of the time he missed it,” mentioned Villegas. “I bought offended with him, like, ‘What are you doing?’”
In Might 2023, Bolivian authorities bought a name from the Paraguayan anti-narcotics police. The Paraguayans had tracked down Marset in Santa Cruz, they usually wanted the Bolivians to behave.
The Bolivian police say they started surveilling Marset’s mansion. They flew a drone overhead. They posted officers round his tony neighborhood. Marset was hiding along with his spouse and 4 kids, who had been additionally utilizing false names. He had managed to enroll certainly one of his sons within the revered coaching program of Blooming, a soccer workforce in Bolivia’s first division.
Finally, police held a planning session to announce the operation, dubbed “Leon 23” after Marset’s workforce and quantity. They deliberate to take down Marset’s total community.
Dozens of officers bought to his home on the morning of July 29, forcing their approach inside. However Marset and his household had been gone.
A manhunt commenced: 3,000 Bolivian law enforcement officials had been dispatched. They positioned 158 checkpoints throughout the nation to maintain Marset from escaping.
The police finally arrested 39 individuals, together with the Leones del Torno coach, two of Marset’s teammates and the workforce’s grounds supervisor. They seized the workforce’s soccer area, 35 properties, 9 plane, 77 vehicles, 81 weapons and 1,315 head of livestock and poultry — a complete of $27 million in belongings.
Leones del Torno had been suspended from Bolivia’s soccer federation. Former workforce officers couldn’t be reached for remark.
Officers and neighbors in Santa Cruz would later inform The Submit that Marset had fled days earlier than the operation started. Neighbors reported seeing individuals loading vehicles outdoors Marset’s residence.
“The operation wanted to be earlier,” Jhonny Aguilera, Bolivia’s deputy inside minister and former nationwide police chief, mentioned in an interview. “We all know that in hindsight.”
Marset’s teammates and coach had been charged with “felony affiliation.” Their interrogation interviews yielded little: He was merely “one other participant,” they mentioned. “An investor” or a “businessman.”
However Bolivian officers mentioned they had been capable of hyperlink Marset’s attraction to the Leones to 2 information factors — his obsession with soccer and the extra sensible query of what to do along with his drug proceeds.
“The target was clearly to launder cash,” Aguilera mentioned of Marset’s funding in Leones del Torno.
IX
A number of weeks after Marset’s disappearance, Jessica Echeverría, a lawyer in Santa Cruz with a big following on social media, acquired a message from a quantity she didn’t acknowledge.
When she opened it, there was a video with Marset’s face within the heart of the body. Echevarría pressed play. She heard Marset clarify how he had been tipped off in regards to the Bolivia operation.
“Because of the assistance of the director of the anti-narcotics police, I managed to depart,” Marset mentioned within the video. “He informed me that the minister had already issued an arrest warrant in opposition to me.”
A number of weeks later, he despatched out one other video to native reporters. It was recorded from inside a automobile.
“I’m too sensible for you,” he mentioned, taunting the Bolivian police. “It’s to not say that you’re very silly; it sounds a little bit higher to say that I’m simply smarter.”
He threatened to disclose the corrupt Bolivian officers who had allowed him to dwell freely and escape unhurt: “If I open my mouth, it will get difficult.”
The query of the place Marset was hiding turned a parlor recreation amongst Latin American officers. Not less than a number of starry-eyed followers additionally waited for him to reemerge, hoping he could possibly be lured by certainly one of his weaknesses.
“Between soccer and lovers, I’m gripped by the hope that Don Marset will return,” crooned Bolivian singer Belén Ortiz in her music “King of the South.”
After which, in November, Marset gave a tv interview.
An Uruguayan tv anchor, Patricia Martín, mentioned she had taken two helicopters to satisfy him — the primary to a spot that was “half jungle” and the second to a home in a clearing. Marset opened the door, she mentioned; a soccer recreation was enjoying on the lounge tv. He wore a $1,100 Louis Vuitton inexperienced sweater and a gold watch and spoke vaguely about his capacity to elude seize.
“I’ve individuals to do what I have to do,” he mentioned.
Marset’s lawyer, Santiago Moratorio, who helped organize the tv look, wouldn’t say the place it befell, or provide any hints about his shopper’s latest hiding place.
On Wednesday, after months of radio silence, Marset’s spouse, Gianina García Troche, was detained on the Madrid airport in a joint operation of Interpol and the Spanish authorities. She had flown to Spain from Dubai, Uruguayan and Paraguayan officers mentioned.
Moratorio mentioned she wasn’t detained and insisted that she had turned herself in. “She was bored with operating from a criminal offense she didn’t commit,” he mentioned.
Marset stays at massive, the goal of an ongoing manhunt, one of the crucial in depth in latest South American historical past.
Moratorio did share one element from the go to he made with the journalist to Marset’s undisclosed location.
Earlier than the tv interview was recorded, Moratorio mentioned, Marset issued another order: Let’s play some soccer. His guests, guards and associates shaped two groups and the sport kicked off.
That is the second of a two-part sequence. Click on on this hyperlink to learn the primary half, “A double life: The cocaine kingpin who hid as an expert soccer participant.”
About this story
Design and improvement by Kathleen Rudell-Brooks and Yutao Chen. Enhancing by Peter Finn, Reem Akkad, Jennifer Samuel and Joseph Moore. Video enhancing by Jon Gerberg. Analysis by Cate Brown. Copy enhancing by Anne Kenderdine and Martha Murdock.
Lucas Silva in Montevideo, Uruguay; Aldo Benítez in Asunción; Elinda Labropoulou in Athens; Yiannis Tsakarisianos in Trikala, Greece; Samantha Schmidt in Bogotá, Colombia; and Fernando Durán Arancibia in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, contributed to this report.
Credit for high illustration: Illustrations by Kathleen Rudell Brooks/The Washington Submit; Inside Ministry of Uruguay; Bolivian nationwide police; Paraguayan investigators; Uruguay nationwide police; iStock; Video: Sebastián Marset; Cruceña Soccer Affiliation; TikTok/@ktm_paxor; Bolivian nationwide police.
The Washington Submit reviewed property data from the Dubai Land Division, in addition to publicly owned utility corporations, to substantiate that Marset owned property within the United Arab Emirates. The info was obtained by the Middle for Superior Protection Research (C4ADS), a nonprofit group based mostly in Washington, D.C., that researches worldwide crime and battle, and shared with the Norwegian monetary outlet E24 and the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Challenge (OCCRP), which coordinated an investigative venture with dozens of media shops around the globe. You may be taught extra in regards to the collaboration at #DubaiUnlocked.