logo
Ex-agents question role of Trump's DEA pick in violent overseas incidents

Ex-agents question role of Trump's DEA pick in violent overseas incidents

Yahoo29-04-2025

Years ago, the Drug Enforcement Agency was shaken by a pair of particularly deadly overseas incidents: a botched operation by a US-vetted Colombian police squad that left 10 local officers dead, and a cartel's brutal retaliation in a small Mexican town that killed dozens.
In both Colombia and Mexico, according to CNN interviews with more than a dozen former DEA officials, key figures in those cases worked with an agent named Terrance Cole – who now is President Donald Trump's nominee to run the agency.
The exact nature of Cole's role in those incidents has never been made public, in part because the DEA has declined to release two internal reports that former officials told CNN were produced in the wake of the bloodshed in Colombia and Mexico.
Now, former DEA officials have sent an unsigned letter to lawmakers asking them to publicly question Cole about his actions in those cases and more broadly raising concerns about his record at the agency. Roughly a dozen former DEA officers contributed, the lead author said, about half of whom spoke with CNN. Most of the critics who spoke with CNN spent decades in the DEA and reached executive-level positions; several worked directly with Cole, though none had firsthand knowledge of his actions in Colombia or Mexico.
Sen. Dick Durbin, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee that will hold Cole's confirmation hearing on Wednesday, has been speaking with some of those critics, his staff said.
'I can confirm that Sen. Durbin's staff has been in contact with multiple concerned parties about Terry Cole's nomination,' said a spokesman for Durbin, Josh Sorbe. 'As with all nominees, the Senator will continue to scrutinize Cole's record and looks forward to the opportunity to further examine his record at his hearing.'
Three former DEA agents who support Cole, however, told CNN that neither internal report found fault with Cole, and that he bore no blame for violent deaths in countries on the front lines of the drug wars. Those agents declined to share the internal reports with CNN to verify those findings. The Cole critics who spoke to CNN had not reviewed those reports.
Cole, 55, who left the agency in late 2019 for the private sector and now serves as Virginia Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin's secretary of Public Safety and Homeland Security, did not respond to requests for comment. A DEA spokesperson also declined to comment, referring queries to the White House. The DEA has previously defended its actions in the lead-up to the Mexican incident, blaming the violence solely on cartel leaders.
Trump has touted Cole's work in Virginia overseeing 11 state public safety agencies with more than 19,000 employees.
'Terry Cole is the perfect choice to deliver on President Trump's mandate to end drug distribution in the United States,' said Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman. 'His nomination of Terry Cole proves his unwavering commitment to making our country safe again and anybody who says otherwise isn't prioritizing the well-being of Americans.'
The letter to lawmakers about Cole – who spent 22 years with the DEA – is the latest challenge in a bumpy White House effort to fill a key job in its campaign to rein in Mexico's powerful drug cartels. Trump's first nominee to lead the DEA, Chad Chronister, a sheriff in Florida's Tampa Bay region, quickly withdrew from consideration.
The first of the deadly overseas incidents noted in the letter came in 2006 in Bogota, where Cole was stationed as a special agent, according to his online resume. An elite group of 10 anti-narcotic Colombian police officers, who were polygraphed by the DEA as part of its vetting process and worked directly with Cole, according to agents who served with him, were gunned down by a platoon of Colombian soldiers later convicted of working for drug traffickers.
Five years later, Cole was working in the DEA's field office in Dallas, supervising a probe into the leadership of the powerful Zetas drug cartel in Mexico, according to agents who worked with Cole at the time and press reports. In early 2011, the Zetas carried out a mass murder that was later the subject of a yearlong investigation published jointly by ProPublica and National Geographic. That report found that the border region violence was sparked when DEA officials shared intelligence produced by an agent Cole supervised with Mexican federal police, who then leaked it to the cartels.
Cole's defenders told CNN that he was not at fault in the Mexico or the Colombia case.
'He's worked in two of the toughest places in the world when it comes to drug-trafficking investigations – in Colombia and Mexico – where bad things happen every day,' said Matt Donahue, who worked as Cole's supervisor for several years in Colombia, but who'd taken another job in New York when the police officers were killed.
The detractors, though, say Congress has a responsibility to demand a more public accounting of his record.
'There's bad luck, but how many times do you have lightning strike twice?' a former DEA agent said.
Cole was in his early 30s when he came to work as a special agent in the Bogota office in 2002 after a nearly five-year stint in Oklahoma, according to his online resume.
Colombia was no Oklahoma. The country was steeped in drug-related violence as well as a long-running civil war. Its former president, Andrés Pastrana, sought US help in neutralizing its all-powerful cartels. As the US poured billions into Colombia's war, DEA agents vetted and trained Colombian police, who often did the dirty work of apprehending traffickers and seizing drugs.
Donahue, Cole's former boss in Colombia, said Cole was not directly in charge of the anti-narcotics unit that ended up in the middle of the deadly raid. Rather, he said, Cole worked alongside the squadron as a colleague with a handful of other agents. He frequently flew from Bogota to the unit's headquarters in Cali, where they listened to wiretaps and exchanged information. Cole and the other DEA agents also helped train the officers and coordinated classes on how to conduct investigations and handle informants, Donahue said.
On May 22, 2006, 10 members of that unit headed for a psychiatric facility in Jamundi after an informant told them a 220-pound stash of cocaine was nearby. Wearing green police vests and ballcaps, the officers arrived with the 37-year-old civilian informant – and were greeted with a hail of bullets, according to a detailed report published in Semana, a weekly magazine in Colombia.
Twenty minutes after the attack began, all 10 officers – plus the informant – were dead. Most were shot at close range; some were killed by grenades.
The attack was carried out by a platoon of military soldiers. Fourteen of them and a colonel were later convicted of aggravated homicide – prosecutors said they'd acted on orders from drug traffickers, according to media reports.
US coverage of the debacle was sparse and often didn't mention the role of the DEA. But a Semana story published days after the massacre said Cole was among the first officials to arrive at the crime scene that evening. DEA agents flew to Cali after the killings on a Colombian military flight with local officials, said a White House official speaking on the condition of anonymity.
'In an unusual event, this man wept in public,' the Semana article said. 'After a few minutes, he managed to say: 'This has to be explained. Nothing must be hidden from us or from Colombia.''
In the letter to US senators, the former DEA agents allege that Cole failed to properly oversee the unit before the killings and that he personally missed the deadly raid because he was 'distracted.'
Cole's defenders strongly reject this contention.
'It's easy to sit back and say that now 20 years later,' Donahue said. He added, 'I don't think (the letter) has any credibility because it's anonymous.'
The White House said Cole had no direct role in the failed operation.
'(The) DEA had nothing to do the operation that resulted in the massacre,' said the White House official, adding that the agency had 'no knowledge of the police operation. This was a Colombia national police operation.'
A Colombian military report on the massacre did not mention the DEA, the White House official said.
A former DEA agent who said he worked on and reviewed the agency's own internal report on the incident said it found no fault with Cole. That agent told CNN he no longer has access to the report. He added that because the police unit was embarking on a routine seizure operation, it wasn't unusual for Cole not to ride along.
'It wasn't a capture operation, which would be something like, yeah, you'd definitely cancel your vacation plans if you had good intel to go capture one of the top guys,' the former agent, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a confidential report, told CNN.
David Gaddis, the DEA's regional director in Colombia at the time, said Cole had no fault in the operation. The DEA only provided support to the vetted units, and it wasn't the DEA's decision to carry out an operation.
'The DEA only provides the intelligence, and it's up to the Colombians to decide when an operation is doable,' Gaddis said.
Another former official who worked in Colombia years after the 2006 attack also said it wasn't out of the ordinary for a Latin American police unit's DEA liaison to be absent on the day of such a raid. 'They're policemen – they have their own sovereignty, their own responsibilities, and they have their own chain of command for reporting,' that agent told CNN.
The deaths deeply impacted Cole, his colleagues said. Another former DEA official who worked with Cole in Texas said Cole kept a memorial of the slain unit in his Dallas office.
'That can't be something that he's responsible for,' the former official said. 'I'm friends to this day with people I worked with 35 years ago in these countries. … It would've hit him hard, just like it hit me hard when guys I worked with were killed.'
Cole left Colombia for a brief stint in Afghanistan before taking a job in 2007 in the Dallas office as a group supervisor who later oversaw a probe into Mexican drug cartels.
About four years later, the Dallas office received a promising lead out of Mexico with big implications, according to the ProPublica story. The broad details about the case described in the article were confirmed to CNN by Dan Salter, Cole's former supervisor from the Dallas office, and a former DEA official who said he reviewed an internal report on the case.
An agent named Richard Martinez, whom Salter confirmed was a direct report of Cole's, had gotten a breakthrough tip from a source about the violent Zetas cartel: trackable IDs for BlackBerry phones belonging to two alleged leaders of the cartel, Omar and Miguel Treviño. Martinez, who was named agent of the year in 2011, passed the cell phone IDs to his superiors in Dallas.
Salter said that in general, when Martinez had intelligence, Cole coordinated with him and other superior officers before anything was passed on to the DEA's Mexico City office and then to foreign counterparts. 'It wouldn't have gone without my concurrence,' Salter said.
Salter ultimately decided to share that information with the DEA's office in Mexico City, according to the White House official, who said he 'followed standard protocol.'
Both Donahue and the White House official said it was Mexico City's DEA unit – not Cole's in Dallas – that signed off on passing the tip to the Mexican federal police.
Soon after the tip was shared with the Mexican officials, all hell broke loose: The kingpins unleashed a torrent of violence on the town of Allende – possibly in a frenzied hunt for those helping the DEA. Operatives with the Zetas arrived in 50 trucks and, in a rampage that lasted weeks and spread to other towns, ProPublica reported, terrorized the region. When it was over, authorities estimated at least 28 people were presumed dead or missing. Some estimates put the toll as high as 300.
Ernest Gonzalez, the assistant US attorney who worked on the case, told ProPublica he was upset that DEA management decided to pass the numbers to Mexico. 'It was a great opportunity,' he told the publication. 'But it was squandered because it wasn't done correctly.'
Now a federal judge in Texas, Gonzalez did not return multiple emails and calls to his office from CNN. Martinez died in 2019.
Cole's critics say his precise role in handling Martinez's intelligence should be made public and question whether he should have fought to keep it from Mexican authorities.
But Salter told CNN that Cole did nothing wrong. 'Terry did not act unilaterally,' he said.
Salter added that the decision to forward the intel would have been routine and that the DEA had never had issues before sharing information with their Mexican colleagues.
'We did it almost every day,' Salter said. 'Never had we had an issue until this horrible event.'
Salter said that while he doesn't remember any objections from Martinez and Gonzalez to passing the intel in this specific case, there were times when opinions on such matters differed.
'What you typically have in an investigation is you have case agents and prosecutors sometimes that are – they like to hold information tight because they think of the worst possible thing,' he said.
But one former high-ranking DEA official who spoke to CNN said that in his view, it was far from routine to share such particularly sensitive intelligence with Mexican officials.
'Nobody ever wants to get other people killed,' said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he said he still works with the government and fears retribution from Cole. 'Now does it happen sometimes? Yeah, but if you're reckless about it, it'll happen more often.'
The DEA produced a 32-page internal report on the Allende killings – though not until after political pressure mounted following the ProPublica report, said a former DEA official who has a copy of the report. The official said the report concluded that while the leak occurred, it wasn't the reason for the mayhem. Rather, he said, the agency concluded the Zetas were incensed about recent drug and money seizures.
'They kept seeing all these seizures in the Dallas area, in Chicago – all this money but no one was going to jail,' said the official, who declined to provide the report to CNN and asked to remain anonymous due to the report's sensitivity. 'So, they started suspecting people.'
Donahue, meanwhile, said if he had been in Cole and Salter's position, he too would have passed the tip on to the DEA's Mexico City office, which he said is 'standard operating procedure.'
'You gotta weigh your risks and all that,' he said. 'But if you're going to go after people like (the Zetas leaders) … you gotta pass intelligence.'
In past interviews, DEA officials have stressed that, the Treviño brothers, the alleged Zetas cartel leaders behind the killings, were eventually apprehended. They were among 29 Mexican cartel operatives extradited to the United States in March.
Cole is not able to comment on the Allende incident because of the ongoing criminal case involving the Treviños, the White House officials said.
'The DEA's official position is: That's squarely on Omar and Miguel Treviño,' Russ Baer, a DEA spokesman, told ProPublica in 2017. 'They were killing people before that happened, and they killed people after the numbers were passed.'
With a day to go before Cole's confirmation hearing, it's unclear whether he will face resistance from the GOP-controlled Senate.
The critics who sent the unsigned letter to lawmakers say their concerns go beyond Cole's role in the two overseas cases. They note that in two decades at the DEA, he did not rise past the level of upper-middle management, although he now occupies a Cabinet position under Virginia Gov. Youngkin.
'And now we're skipping over all the way to letting him run the organization,' said a former high-ranking DEA official. 'He doesn't have the leadership abilities.'
But more broadly, those critics say lawmakers owe the public a chance to learn more about what Cole did before the Mexico and Colombia incidents.
'Cole has demonstrated, at a minimum, two clear operational failures (Colombia and Mexico) resulting in two of the most consequential failures of DEA and resulting in the murder of law enforcement partners and civilians,' the letter to lawmakers states. 'Cole has clearly shown an INABILITY to run complicated enforcement operations.'
The former high-ranking DEA official said he fears what Cole's confirmation to become the next administrator would mean for the agency.
'The administrator sometimes has to push back against the administration for what's good for the agency, and you are not going to see that,' he said. 'You're going to see a lot of people retire.'
Donahue and Salter strenuously disagree that he is unfit to lead the agency, which is headed on an interim basis by veteran DEA official Derek Maltz.
'(Cole) had some of the biggest seizures of all time in Colombia,' Donahue said, noting that Cole's busts also led to crucial extraditions of suspects to the United States. 'He was really engaged.'
CNN's Evan Perez contributed to this report.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elon will lose fight with Trump, Musk's father tells Russia
Elon will lose fight with Trump, Musk's father tells Russia

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Elon will lose fight with Trump, Musk's father tells Russia

Credit: Tsargrad TV Elon Musk will lose his fight with Donald Trump and made a 'mistake' by challenging him, his father has said. Speaking at a political conference in Moscow, Errol Musk claimed his billionaire son was suffering 'PTSD from the White House' and blamed his row with the US president on 'stress'. 'Trump will prevail – he's the president, he was elected as the president. So, you know, Elon made a mistake, I think. But he is tired, he is stressed,' he told Russian media. Last week, Elon Musk and Mr Trump traded insults after the Tesla chief executive denounced the president's sweeping new tax and spending Bill as 'a disgusting abomination'. He also called for the president's impeachment and claimed the Republican was 'in the Epstein files' – US government intelligence documents on Jeffrey Epstein, the late paedophile financier. In response, Mr Trump threatened to cancel US government contracts with Mr Musk's companies, which include SpaceX. Errol Musk told Izvestia, a Russian daily newspaper: 'You know they have been under a lot of stress for five months – you know – give them a break. 'They are very tired and stressed, so you can expect something like this.' Despite the pair's war of words, Mr Musk said he still believed his son's relationship with the president could be mended, describing the row as 'just a small thing' that would 'be over tomorrow'. He made the comments during an appearance at Future Forum 2050, a conference attended by Kremlin heavyweights and led by Alexander Dugin, a Russian ultra-nationalist philosopher often described as Vladimir Putin's 'brain'. Errol Musk was also pictured sitting next to Sergei Lavrov, Russia's foreign minister. At one point he praised Putin as a 'very stable and pleasant man' and blamed Western media for projecting 'nonsense' about Russia. It came as Stephen Bannon, Mr Trump's former chief strategist, claimed that in April Elon Musk had a physical altercation with Scott Bessent, the US treasury secretary, down the corridor from the Oval Office. Mr Bannon said: 'President Trump heard about it and said: 'This is too much,'' according to The Washington Post. A source told the newspaper that concerns were also raised over Mr Musk's alleged drug use. Mr Musk, the world's richest man, helped bankroll Mr Trump's 2024 presidential campaign. He was then hired to head the new Department of Government Efficiency, controversially tasked with downsizing the federal workforce and slashing spending. The tech entrepreneur stepped back from the role late last month, ending a turbulent 130-day stint in the administration. On Saturday, the US president said his relationship with Mr Musk was over, and warned there would be 'serious consequences' if Mr Musk switched his allegiance to the Democrats and funded rival candidates. Credit: Reuters Delighting in the row, Russian MPs have offered political asylum to the South African-born businessman. Last week, Dmitry Novikov, the deputy chairman of the state Duma committee on international affairs, said Moscow would welcome him to the country 'if he needs it'. Senior Putin allies have also mockingly offered to help mediate between the two men. 'We are ready to facilitate the conclusion of a peace deal between D and E for a reasonable fee and to accept Starlink shares as payment. Don't fight, guys!' said Dmitry Medvedev, the former Russian president, referring to Mr Musk's satellite internet network. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

White House budget request slashes funding for tribal colleges and universities
White House budget request slashes funding for tribal colleges and universities

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

White House budget request slashes funding for tribal colleges and universities

In President Donald Trump's budget request, he's proposing slashing funding for tribal colleges and universities, including eliminating support for the country's only federally funded college for contemporary Native American arts. If the budget is approved by Congress, beginning in October, the more than $13 million in annual appropriations for the Institute for American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico, would be reduced to zero. It would be the first time in nearly 40 years that the congressionally chartered school would not receive federal support, said Robert Martin, the school's president. 'You can't wipe out 63 years of our history and what we've accomplished with one budget,' Martin said on Friday. 'I just can't understand or comprehend why they would do something like this.' The college, founded in 1962, has provided affordable education to thousands of Native artists and culture bearers, including U.S. poet laureate Joy Harjo, painter T.C. Cannon and bestselling novelist Tommy Orange. It's the only four-year degree fine arts institution in the world devoted to contemporary Native American and Alaskan Native arts, according to its website. Martin said he has spoken with members of Congress from both major political parties who have assured him they'll work to keep the institute's budget level for the next fiscal year, but he worries the morale of students and staff will be affected. Martin said he also spoke with staff in the office of U.S. Rep. Tom Cole, a member of the Chickasaw Nation and chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. Cole, a Republican and former member of IAIA's board of trustees and a longtime advocate in Congress for funding that supports tribal citizens, was unavailable for comment. Breana Brave Heart, a junior studying arts and business, said the proposal shocked her and made her wonder: 'Will I be able to continue my education at IAIA with these budget cuts?' Brave Heart said she started organizing with other students to contact members of Congress. 'IAIA is under attack," she said, "and I need other students to know this.' Martin said that amid the Republican Trump administration's crackdown on federal policies and funding that support diversity, equity and inclusion, trust responsibilities and treaty rights owed to tribal nations have also come under attack. 'It's a problem for us and many other organizations when you've got that DEI initiative which really is not applicable to us, because we're not a racial category, we're a political status as a result of the treaties," he said. 'We're easily identified as what this administration might refer to as a 'woke'.' Democratic Sen. Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico said the cuts are another example of the Trump administration 'turning its back on Native communities and breaking our trust responsibilities.' "As a member of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, I remain committed to keeping IAIA fully funded and will continue working with appropriators and the New Mexico Congressional Delegation to ensure its future,' Luján said in a statement to The Associated Press. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The congressional budget bill includes roughly $3.75 trillion in tax cuts, extending the expiring 2017 individual income tax breaks and temporarily adding new ones that Trump campaigned on. The revenue loss would be partially offset by nearly $1.3 trillion in reduced federal spending elsewhere, namely through Medicaid and food assistance. A Jan. 30 order from the Interior Department titled 'Ending DEI Programs and Gender Ideology Extremism' stated that any efforts to eradicate diversity, equity and inclusion in the department's policy should exclude trust obligations to tribal nations. However, earlier this year, several staff members at the other two congressionally chartered schools in the country — the Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Haskell Indian Nations University in Kansas — were laid off as part of Trump's push to downsize the federal workforce. In a lawsuit filed in March, both institutions reported that some staff and faculty were rehired, but the Bureau of Indian Education notified those people that might be temporary and they may be laid off again. 'It shows what a president's values and priorities are, and that's been hard,' said Ahniwake Rose, president of the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, an organization that represents more than 30 Tribal Colleges and Universities. "That's been hard for our staff, our students, our faculty to see that the priority of the administration through the Department of Interior might not be on tribal colleges." In its budget request this year, the Interior Department is proposing reducing funding to the BIE's post secondary programs by more than 80%, and that would have a devastating affect on tribal colleges and universities, or TCUs, which rely on the federal government for most of their funding, said Rose. Most TCUs offer tribal citizens a tuition-free higher education, she said, and funding them is a moral and fiduciary responsibility the federal government owes tribal nations. In the many treaties the U.S. signed with tribal nations, it outlined several rights owed to them — like land rights, health care and education through departments established later, like the BIE. Trust responsibilities are the legal and moral obligations the U.S. has to protect and uphold those rights. The Interior Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

GOP leadership unleashes fury on Dem governor ahead of blockbuster congressional hearing
GOP leadership unleashes fury on Dem governor ahead of blockbuster congressional hearing

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

GOP leadership unleashes fury on Dem governor ahead of blockbuster congressional hearing

FIRST ON FOX: House Republican leadership slammed Democratic Gov. Tim Walz ahead of a blockbuster congressional hearing addressing sanctuary city policy this week. GOP Whip and Minnesota Rep. Tom Emmer wished Walz "good luck" before the former vice presidential candidate is set to testify alongside Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul at a House Oversight Committee hearing on Thursday. "From hurling outrageous insults against ICE agents to offering a multitude of taxpayer-funded benefits to illegal aliens in Minnesota, Tim Walz's immigration agenda can be summed up easily: pro-illegal alien, anti-Minnesotan," GOP Whip Emmer told Fox News Digital. "If Tim Walz thinks he will be able to defend his abysmal record before Congress, then he's even more of a buffoon than I thought. I only have one thing to say to Timmy as he heads to Washington this week: GOOD LUCK." Handful Of House Democrats Join Republicans In Sanctuary City Crackdown Emmer paired his comments to Fox News Digital with a new video slamming Walz's various immigration policies titled "Protecting Illegals, Not Minnesotans: That's the Walz Way." Read On The Fox News App The three "sanctuary governors" will face a barrage of questions from members of the committee this week, as anti-ICE riots raged in Los Angeles over the weekend and the Trump administration continues to ramp up deportations across the country. Though the term "sanctuary city" is not legally defined, illegal immigrants will flock to the mainly Democrat-led regions to reduce the likelihood of deportation. Sanctuary cities often refuse Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) requests for information, like arrests or releases, and typically deny ICE detainer requests to hold jailed illegal migrants beyond their release date. California Republicans Slam Newsom, Bass For Letting La Burn With Riots Amid Trump Immigration Blitz House Oversight Chairman James Comer, R-Kentucky, said in a media advisory for the upcoming hearing that "The governors of these states must explain why they are prioritizing the protection of criminal illegal aliens over the safety of U.S. citizens." "Sanctuary policies only provide sanctuaries for criminal illegal aliens." Comer explained. "Former President Biden created the worst border crisis in U.S. history and allowed criminal illegal aliens to flood our communities." "The Trump Administration is taking decisive action to deport criminal illegal aliens from our nation but reckless sanctuary states like Illinois, Minnesota, and New York are actively seeking to obstruct federal immigration enforcement." 'Sick Puppy' Tim Walz Should Never Have Been On Dems' 2024 Ticket, Trump Says The hearing is scheduled for Thursday, June 12 at 10 a.m. ET. Fox News Digital reached out to Walz but did not receive a article source: GOP leadership unleashes fury on Dem governor ahead of blockbuster congressional hearing

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store