Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08SANJOSE833
2008-10-22 19:29:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy San Jose
Cable title:  

PROSECUTIONS POSSIBLE, BUT NOT LIKELY IN DOMINICAN

Tags:  PGOV KTIP CVIS CS DR 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXYZ0002
PP RUEHWEB

DE RUEHSJ #0833/01 2961929
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 221929Z OCT 08
FM AMEMBASSY SAN JOSE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0201
INFO RUEHZA/WHA CENTRAL AMERICAN COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHDG/AMEMBASSY SANTO DOMINGO PRIORITY 1610
C O N F I D E N T I A L SAN JOSE 000833 

SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR WHA/CEN, WHA/PPC SMILLER, AND G/TIP BFLECK.

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/22/2018
TAGS: PGOV KTIP CVIS CS DR
SUBJECT: PROSECUTIONS POSSIBLE, BUT NOT LIKELY IN DOMINICAN
PROXY MARRIAGE "TIP" CASES

Classified By: Pol/Econ Counselor David E. Henifin for reason 1.4(d).

========
SUMMARY:
========

C O N F I D E N T I A L SAN JOSE 000833

SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR WHA/CEN, WHA/PPC SMILLER, AND G/TIP BFLECK.

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/22/2018
TAGS: PGOV KTIP CVIS CS DR
SUBJECT: PROSECUTIONS POSSIBLE, BUT NOT LIKELY IN DOMINICAN
PROXY MARRIAGE "TIP" CASES

Classified By: Pol/Econ Counselor David E. Henifin for reason 1.4(d).

========
SUMMARY:
========


1. (SBU) Although local media alleged in April that 400-500
Dominican women had been trafficked into Costa Rica through
proxy marriages to work in the sex trade, the story is not so
straightforward. As the complicated facts have slowly
emerged, it is apparent that the "victims" may have entered
the country over a few years, most voluntarily to work in
prostitution (which is legal in Costa Rica). There is no
evidence that the women were held against their will,
although they reportedly paid a ring for sham marriages and
transport. Recent media reports revealed the names of a main
suspect, which may jeopardize the on-going investigation.
And, because Costa Rican law does not yet define internal
trafficking in persons as a crime, there may be no legal
basis to criminally prosecute the proxy-marriage
"traffickers," even when known to police, because their
"victims" entered Costa Rica legally with visas to reunite
with their "husbands." This case may thus be more one of
smuggling rather than TIP violations.


2. (SBU) In a related development, the Constitutional Court
ruled in September that Costa Rican Consuls and Immigration
officials can scrutinize proxy marriage cases to ascertain
their bona fides. This should make it more difficult for the
sham marriage industry (and traffickers who may use this
legal artifice) to operate in Costa Rica. END SUMMARY.

======================
THE SHAM MARRIAGE SCAM
======================


3. (SBU) According to Judicial Police (OIJ) investigators,
one primary ring evidently helped a large group of Dominican
women to take advantage of the proxy-marriage mechanism in
order to work in prostitution in Costa Rica. "On-paper"
proxy (por poder) marriages are legally recognized here. The
ring helps Dominicans get into Nicaragua, and, once there,
assists them in crossing the border, allegedly with
cooperation of a willing Costa Rican immigration official or
by other illegal means. Once in Costa Rica, an attorney
"marries" the women -- via signatures only -- to drug

abusers, alcoholics, indigents, and even hospitalized mental
patients; any man who will accept as little as $10-$40 to
register himself as married. The attorney promises to
divorce the couples three years later, allowing time for the
women to obtain Costa Rican residency.


4. (SBU) The women return to the Dominican Republic, submit
their marriage certificates to Costa Rican Consuls, and
receive visas to enter Costa Rica legally based on their
marriages to Costa Rican citizens. (Only those who enter
Costa Rica legally may then petition for residency, which is
the purpose of leaving and re-entering.) Upon arrival at the
airport, the women are met by the ring and taken to clubs in
the Central Pacific region to work. The ring finds them
housing in apartments. The women sometimes take liens
against their family's property to pay the ring. This scheme
has been a long-running problem in Costa Rica and a
particular target of Immigration Director Mario Zamora.
Though other rings may possibly exist, only this one
Dominican ring is currently under investigation.

========================================
SOME, NOT MOST, MAY HAVE BEEN TRAFFICKED
========================================


5. (SBU) According to Mariliana Morales, Executive Director
of the Rahab Foundation, the primary NGO involved in
trafficking prevention, education and victim's assistance,
the 400-500 Dominican women featured in the media did not
arrive as one group or necessarily via the same trafficking
ring. Rather, this figure represented the number of
Dominican women over the last few years who entered Costa
Rica through proxy marriages to work in the sex industry.
The Rahab Foundation has worked with some Dominicans whom
Morales said definitely fit the definition of trafficking
victims.


6. (SBU) Vice Minister of Public Security Ana Duran, head of
the government/nonprofit National Anti-Trafficking Coalition,
originally told us that the Dominican case involved
trafficking victims "by definition," including a few who were
minors. In later conversations, she seemed less certain that
the women involved were actually trafficking victims. She

told us that the power to prosecute the perpetrators lies
with the judicial branch, which limited her role to seeking
information about whether the members of the smuggling ring
would be prosecuted.

=======================
LAWS NEED TO BE CHANGED
=======================


7. (SBU) Legislative Assembly member Evita Arguedas (Ind)
expressed her concerns to us about what the outdated proxy
marriage law means for Costa Rican national security. She
has been pushing for legislative changes, but without much
support from fellow legislators. Arguedas asserted that the
team of Colombians who came to Costa Rica in 2007 in an
alleged attempt to assassinate then Minister of Public
Security Fernando Berrocal entered Costa Rica via proxy
marriages, as well. While the current law permits proxy
marriages, the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court
ruled in September that Consuls and Immigration officials
have the right to verify that the two parties to a proxy
marriage actually know each other and can prove cohabitation.
Vice Minister Duran believes this ruling should give Consuls
the power to deny visas to women whose marriages do not seem
to be legitimate.


8. (SBU) From time to time, the Immigration police raid
nightclubs and round up dozens of women from the Dominican
Republic and elsewhere to check their immigration status.
According to Arguedas, the Immigration police chief knows
there are organized crime rings bringing women into the
country, but he does not believe the government can prosecute
the rings as traffickers. Once the women enter Costa Rica
legally to supposedly reunite with their husbands, it raises
the question as to whether they can be technically considered
to have been trafficked, since "internal" or domestic
trafficking is not yet a crime here.


9. (SBU) Costa Rican immigration authorities tend to put more
emphasis on arresting those in an illegal immigration
status rather than identifying trafficking victims. One
Immigration official told us that in the Dominican case,
there was only one ring bringing the women to Costa Rica.
Further complicating matters, according to Arguedas the
victims themselves would have to file a "denuncia" (an
official complaint to police) claiming they had been forced
into sexual exploitation, deprived of liberty, deceived, or
were otherwise victims of trafficking.

==================================
INSIDE THE DOMINICAN INVESTIGATION
==================================


10. (C) We recently spoke to two officers in the Trafficking
Unit of the Judicial Police (OIJ) who were actively
investigating the Dominican case; they confirmed that one
ring was involved. The ring is comprised of Dominican club
owner Alejandro Ferreira, attorney Rogelio Pol Araya, and a
few other (unnamed) attorneys. Francisco Ventura Portillo,
an employee of Ferreira, is known to travel to the border at
Penas Blancas to receive women entering from Nicaragua, with
the assistance of an unidentified Immigration official. The
investigators told us that they did not detect any of the
most overt elements of trafficking, such as deception,
deprivation of liberty, abduction, etc., and they could not
confirm whether minors were involved.


11. (SBU) Once the women are in Costa Rica, the ring helps
them find housing, and the women are required to pay their
own rent. However, investigators observed them coming and
going freely, suggesting that none were held against their
will. Someone visits them every two weeks to collect money.
According to investigators, the only pressure apparently put
on the women is to repay the $3000-$5000 "fee" to the ring.
Once that debt is repaid, the women are free to leave. Some
move on to Spain after acquiring Costa Rican residency, due
to the relative ease for Costa Ricans to obtain Spanish
visas.


12. (SBU) The Dominican ring remains under investigation, and
investigators are hoping to present a "trafficking" case to
prosecutors on the basis of psychological pressure put on the
women to pay the fee or risk losing any property against
which they may have taken a lien. The prosecutor's office
will then have to determine if the evidence is sufficient to
charge the members of the ring for trafficking or for
"simple" smuggling. At this point, the case is slated to go
to the Sex Crimes prosecution unit.

========================================
JUDICIAL (AND ATTITUDINAL) COMPLICATIONS
========================================


13. (SBU) Agueda Marin of the International Organization for
Migration (IOM) told us that prosecutions are complicated in
Costa Rica due to the judicial codification system. When a
prosecutor gets a case, he or she must decide whether to
classify it as an immigration violation, a sex crime, or one
of the other pre-determined categories of crimes. Without a
significant understanding on the part of district prosecutors
of what trafficking is, and without internal trafficking
defined in the Costa Rican legal code, trafficking continues
to fall through the legal cracks. The "crime" may therefore
be held against the victim and not the trafficker; a
trafficking victim who entered the country illegally may be
deported as an illegal immigrant, with no further attention
given to prosecuting the person or ring who trafficked her to
Costa Rica. Rahab's Morales told us that another factor
prohibiting prosecutions is the "chauvinist" mentality of
many prosecutors and police who insist that women involved in
sexual exploitation "like doing that" or "asked for it."

=======
COMMENT
=======


14. (SBU) We continue to press a variety of governmental and
non-governmental agencies in Costa Rica to improve the GOCR's
actions to combat trafficking in persons. One frustrating
factor is the Costa Rica legal system's built in bias to
protect a criminal's human rights, even at the expense of
adequate prosecution or victims' protection. This is true for
crimes across the board, not just trafficking-related cases.
(On a positive note, a bill to enhance victim and witness
protection is making its way through the legislature.) Given
the already overloaded judicial system -- which can barely
investigate and prosecute homicides, robberies and drug
trafficking -- plus the mixed immigration/trafficking picture
in this particular case, it becomes difficult to expect TIP
prosecutions to materialize from the Dominican investigation.
However, the fact that Consuls now have the authority to
deny visas in proxy-marriage cases is a significant positive
step that may help close one avenue for women coming to Costa
Rica to be exploited sexually. We look forward to the visit
of Costa Rica's G/TIP reports officer to explore this and
other TIP-related issues with local officials.
CIANCHETTE