• Contact
  • Legal Pages
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • DMCA
    • Cookie Privacy Policy
    • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
No Result
View All Result
Friday, December 5, 2025
The American News
ADVERTISEMENT
No Result
View All Result
The American News
No Result
View All Result

Who is the mysterious Arcangel Pretel and why did he disappear after the assassination in Haiti? | Univision News Latin America

by theamericannews
August 8, 2024
in Haiti
0
Who is the mysterious Arcangel Pretel and why did he disappear after the assassination in Haiti? | Univision News Latin America
300
SHARES
1.9k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Imagen CTU Security website

Antonio ‘Tony’ Intriago, is president of CTU Security, the firm in South Florida that hired the Colombian ex-soldiers in Haiti. “We represent manufacturers of security and protection products and wholesalers of many different brands of high quality bulletproof vests and many other protective equipment,” thr company says on his website.

Pretel allegedly claimed to have worked for the FBI and invited agents to visit the office of CTU “on a number of occasions and the agents were made aware of the actions of CTU and the upcoming [Haiti] business plan,†the lawyers say.

But he never revealed his true identity. “Our client … was duped and mislead by a number of people. We are still investigating as to who did what and when,” Intriago’s lawyers told Univision. “All we know is that some people who were introduced to our client weren’t who they said they were,” they added.

The Haiti contract

In 2020, the company was approached to provide security for a redevelopment project led by a Haitian-American pastor, Christian Sanon, with the backing of wealthy investors. The contract promised lucrative rewards down the road when a new, more business-friendly government took power after elections scheduled for later in 2021. CTU Federal Academy secured a loan of $172,000 for the operation, including transportation and lodging for the Colombians in Haiti.

Screenshot of a video of Christian Sanon posted on his YouTube channel.

Imagen You Tube

Screenshot of a video of Christian Sanon posted on his YouTube channel.

Using his connections, Pretel recruited the security team by reaching out to former Colombian soldiers.

Pretel never apparently visited Haiti, possibly due to travel restrictions related to the special immigration status sometimes afforded to foreign informants for U.S. law enforcement agencies, according to source familiar with the case. He may also have been in the Witness Protection Program, a highly secretive system designed to provide high risk informants with new identities in the United States for the rest of their lives.

The FBI declined to comment about its relationship with Pretel.

Bolivia trip

Pretel did organize a business trip for CTU Federal Academy in October last year to Bolivia, according to the caracol jail interviews. The trip, which occured shortly before hotly contested elections, also involved security contracts, using Pretel contacts with officials at the Ministry of Defense.

But it came to nothing after the government was defeated in the elections on October 18. Several top officials of the outgoing government, including the Defense Minister, either fled Bolivia or were arrested on corruption charges and their alleged role in a coup plot.

Almost no public photographs of Pretel exist, except for one in which he was photographed next to a private jet at Fort Lauderdale executive airport alongside Sanon and Intriago, before one of two trips his business partner made to Haiti.

This photo is believed to have been taken on 22 June as Pastor Christian Sanon prepared to board a private plane to fly to Haiti with his partner Antonio Intriago of CTU Security. From left to right, Walter Vientemilla, Worldwide Capital, Christian Sanon, Arcangel Pretel, Antonio Intriago and another unknown man.

Imagen Courtesy of the Investigative Unit of El Tiempo newspaper, Bogota.

This photo is believed to have been taken on 22 June as Pastor Christian Sanon prepared to board a private plane to fly to Haiti with his partner Antonio Intriago of CTU Security. From left to right, Walter Vientemilla, Worldwide Capital, Christian Sanon, Arcangel Pretel, Antonio Intriago and another unknown man.

At first the plan was simply for the Colombian team to provide security for the group of investors, led by an evangelical Haitian-American pastor – and would-be presidential candidate – Christian Sanon.

‘Orders of Day’ issued by CTU Federal Academy seen by Univision show the soldiers being assigned guard duty.

Intriago’s lawyers say their client believed the security contract was fully legitimate and above board. Intriago made no secret of it, writing a letter to the U.S. embassy to explain his presence in Haiti. During one visit to Haiti in late May, he tried to visit the U.S. embassy to brief officials, according to a source familiar with the visit. He was turned away as he had not made a prior appointment.

The State Department declined to comment.

But the plan quickly fell apart over money. Sanon had installed himself in a fancy hotel, but bills weren’t being paid. The Colombians complained they weren’t getting fed properly. Some were sleeping on the floor, without mattresses, until Pretel sent $300 to Capador to buy some.

Murderers for hire? What was the role of 21 Colombian former soldiers in the assassination of Haiti's president?

Change of plan

Suddenly, and inexplicably, the plan changed. Pretel issued new orders, according to audio tapes of interviews with some of the jailed Colombians by agents investigating the assassination, which were revealed exclusively by Caracol TV in Colombia last month.

They were now going to go to the president’s house armed with an arrest warrant. “Gabriel tells me that we are going to support the Haitian authorities with the arrest,” said Capt. German Rivera, one of the Colombians captured who met Pretel in Cali in the 1990s.

In reality, the plan was to kill the president. The order allegedly came from Pretel and a well-connected former Haitian justice ministry official, Joseph Felix Badio, according to the Caracol jail tapes.

Most of the Colombians fell in line, believing the mission was sanctioned by the U.S. government. Pretel would send selfies to Rivera via whatsapp, showing him entering U.S. government buildings for high level meetings, according to Rivera.

Two of the Colombians abandoned the mission at the end of June after learning that the real intention was an assassination, according to the Caracol tapes.

“There’s a lot here that doesn’t ring true. The FBI doesn’t do this sort of thing,†said Mike Vigil, former DEA head of international operations, referring to a possible U.S. government link to the assassination. U.S. government agencies have a duty to inform if they know someone’s life is in danger, especially the president of another country, he explained.

Besides Moise was considered a U.S. ally.

However, sometimes informants engage in actions behind the U.S. back. “Every agency has informants who play both sides of the fence and they do things DEA and FBI don’t approve of. We sometimes dance with the devil but we can’t get the information we need without these guys,†added Vigil.

Pretel was not the only U.S. government informant linked to the assassination of Moise. “Either Mr Pretel went rogue or some heads are going to roll at the FBI and DEA,†said Regina de Moraes, a criminal immigration attorney who represents DEA informant, Joseph Vincent, a Haitian-American jailed in Haiti as a suspect in the assassination.

Who are the U.S. drug informants caught up in the Haiti assassination?

The assassination

Shortly after 1.30am on the morning of July 7, a team of six Colombian former soldiers stormed the residence of president Jovenel Moise, according to the Caracol tapes and the Haitian judicial police report. They met virtually no resistance. Badio is accused by several witnesses of having bribed members of the Presidential Guard with $80,000 to facilitate the mission, according to the Haitian police report.

The Colombians allegedly entered Moise’s bedroom and shot him 12 times, killing him instantly and also wounding his wife.

At least 44 people, including 18 Colombian former soldiers and several Haitian police were arrested after the murder. The motive for his killing is still unclear, and mystery also surrounds who the intellectual authors were. Agents from the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) are helping in the investigation.

Haitian authorities issued an arrest warrant for Badio, but he has also vanished.

A police wanted poster for Joseph Felix Badio, a former Justice Ministry official who is one of the chief suspects in the assassination of President Jovenel Moise.

Imagen Haitian National Police.

A police wanted poster for Joseph Felix Badio, a former Justice Ministry official who is one of the chief suspects in the assassination of President Jovenel Moise.

Badio is suspected of conspiring with other Haitian politicians. The suspicion has even fallen on the prime minister, Ariel Henry, due to two phone calls he took from Badio, lasting a total of seven minutes, placed barely three hours after the assassination from the vicinity of the crime scene. Henry has not explained what was said in those calls.

Prosecutor tries to link Haiti's prime minister to assassination, gets fired

After the assassination Pretel never severed his communications with the Colombians. Instead, he appears to have tried to assist their getaway.

The supposed rescue

After allegedly killing the president, they allegedly fled in rented cars, carrying boxes of money they had found in the residence. Supposedly, the plan was for the soldiers to head to the presidential palace where a new president would be sworn in, according to the jail tapes.

But their escape route was blocked by police reinforcements who had rushed to the scene in a belated effort to save the president.

“Gabriel (alias Arcangel) was telling me that they were already going to clear the road because the police had two pickups blocking the road and behind the vans were armored cars,” said Rivera.

The Colombians were forced to take to foot, before hiding in a house, where they say they waited for instructions from Pretel.

Communicating via whatsapp, Pretel tried to reassure the security team that a rescue was being organized with the help of the U.S. government.

“He told us later that the U.S. embassy was mobilizing, that they were going to bring, I don’t know how many U.S. soldiers, to get us out,” one of the former soldiers, Jheyner Carmona, told investigators.

Those messages, now in the hands of investigators, appear to show Pretel coordinating their movements, according to persons familiar with the chat. “He’s running the show. He’s the maestro who’s supposedly going to save these guys,†according to one source who has reviewed the messages.

Haitian police hunting for assassins of President Jovenel Moise, July 7, 2021.

Imagen VALERIE BAERISWYL/AFP via Getty Images

Haitian police hunting for assassins of President Jovenel Moise, July 7, 2021.

For the next 36 hours the Colombians hid, waiting to be rescued. Later that day the Colombians came under heavy fire from Haitian police, using tear gas and grenades. Capador and two others were killed.

The rest of the group, led by Rivera, were guided by Pretel to the Taiwanese embassy nearby, which was empty. They spent the night there in constant communication waiting for word from Pretel on their next move.

But the help never came. The next morning, the police raided the house and the Colombians, by now almost out of ammunition, surrendered.

Suspects in the assassination of Haiti's President Jovenel Moise are shown to the media, along with the weapons and equipment they allegedly used in the attack, at the General Direction of the police in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Thursday, July 8, 2021.

Imagen Joseph Odelyn/AP

Suspects in the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moise are shown to the media, along with the weapons and equipment they allegedly used in the attack, at the General Direction of the police in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Thursday, July 8, 2021.

Vanishing act

Pretel’s name surfaced soon after the assassination as a possible suspect. But no arrest warrant was issued for him in Haiti or Colombia.

Intriago immediately offered his full cooperation to FBI agents investigating the case, handing over his phone records and computer.

Two weeks after the assassination, the FBI executed search warrants at addresses for Intriago and Pretel, and one other man, the investor who lent money to CTU Federal Academy.

Soon after Pretel moved out of his modest two-bedroom apartment just west of Miami airport.

A public records data search by Univision turned up no trace of him, including property or phone records. Univision was able to contact his former landlord who confirmed he had recently moved out of the apartment.
The landlord was unaware of his involvement in Haiti. When he moved in Pretel told the landlord he had previously worked for the U.S. military.

Back in Colombia, the relatives of the detained soldiers want to know why Pretel lured their loved ones into such a shady scheme.

“I would like to ask him what his intentions really were,” said Yenni Capador. “He should show his face and tell the world what really happened that day. He should explain to each one of us what happened,” she added.

Source link : http://www.bing.com/news/apiclick.aspx?ref=FexRss&aid=&tid=66b515354fc74db59cf3d32f97815144&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.televisa.com%2Funivision-news%2Flatin-america%2Fwho-is-the-mysterious-arcangel-pretel-and-why-did-he-disappear-after-assassination-in-haiti&c=17184547670761607277&mkt=en-us

Author :

Publish date : 2024-08-08 06:00:00

Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.

Tags: AmericaHaiti
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Mexico Rejects Ukraine’s Request to Arrest Russia’s Putin During Visit

Next Post

Larger cruise ships pose environmental concerns

Next Post
Larger cruise ships pose environmental concerns

Larger cruise ships pose environmental concerns

Heartbreaking Tragedy Exposes Critical Failures in America’s Pedestrian Safety
America

Heartbreaking Tragedy Exposes Critical Failures in America’s Pedestrian Safety

by Caleb Wilson
December 4, 2025
0

In a vibrant U.S. city, a tragic event has cast a spotlight on the critical shortcomings of America's pedestrian safety...

Read more
Uncover the Caribbean’s Best-Kept Secret: The Island Everyone is Talking About for Its Safety!

Uncover the Caribbean’s Best-Kept Secret: The Island Everyone is Talking About for Its Safety!

December 4, 2025
Antigua and Barbuda Poised to Shine as the Caribbean’s Second Fastest Growing Economy!

Antigua and Barbuda Poised to Shine as the Caribbean’s Second Fastest Growing Economy!

December 4, 2025
Exciting News: Aruba Reopens Its Borders to Latin America on December 1!

Exciting News: Aruba Reopens Its Borders to Latin America on December 1!

December 4, 2025
Urgent Warning: US Tariffs Could Jeopardize Bahamas’ Trade and Tourism!

Urgent Warning: US Tariffs Could Jeopardize Bahamas’ Trade and Tourism!

December 4, 2025
Barbados Welcomes a Tourism Boom as the US Overtakes the UK in Visitor Numbers for 2025!

Barbados Welcomes a Tourism Boom as the US Overtakes the UK in Visitor Numbers for 2025!

December 4, 2025
Peak Re Launches Thrilling New Venture in North America!

Peak Re Launches Thrilling New Venture in North America!

December 4, 2025
Bolivia’s Political Landscape Transforms: Centrist Candidate Surges as Voters Turn Away from Socialism

Bolivia’s Political Landscape Transforms: Centrist Candidate Surges as Voters Turn Away from Socialism

December 4, 2025

Bolsonaro’s Conviction: What It Means for U.S.-Brazil Relations

December 4, 2025
Turks & Caicos Islands Triumph Over British Virgin Islands in Epic Rugby Clash!

Turks & Caicos Islands Triumph Over British Virgin Islands in Epic Rugby Clash!

December 4, 2025

Categories

Archives

December 2025
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
« Nov    
  • Blog
  • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
  • Contact
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • The American News

© 2024

No Result
View All Result
  • Blog
  • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
  • Contact
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • The American News

© 2024

Go to mobile version

1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 * . *