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Did Top CIA Official Enrique "Ricky" Prado Murder in Miami?

Did Top CIA Official Enrique "Ricky" Prado Murder in Miami?
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Criminals tend to talk a lot of shit. So journalist Evan Wright wasn't exactly convinced when a former cocaine smuggler told him he once performed a contract murder with a drug-world enforcer who went on to become a CIA spy.

But when Wright researched the claim, he was stunned. Hard evidence showed a high-level spook specializing in counterterrorism was suspected by the Miami-Dade Police Department in not one, but seven murders — and was apparently protected from prosecution through his connections in the CIA.

Wright makes the allegations in How to Get Away With Murder in America, a recently released 124-page e-book. The investigation traces the journey of Enrique "Ricky" Prado from alleged mob hit man and drug dealer to his perch near the top of the CIA and then Blackwater, the private contractor that has handled much of the United States' dirty work in Iraq.

Prado appeared on Wright's radar when he was co-authoring former Medellín cartel smuggler Jon Roberts's memoir, American Desperado. The since-deceased Roberts bragged he and Prado had gunned down Richard Schwartz — famed gangster Meyer Lansky's stepson — in a North Bay Village hit in 1977. Wright unearthed documents that implicated Prado in so many murders that one investigator said he was "technically a serial killer."

Prado was the enforcer for eccentric convicted Hialeah drug trafficker Alberto San Pedro, according to Wright. Though Miami-Dade police and federal agents built cases against Prado in the murders of Schwartz and others, no charges were filed. He supposedly joined the CIA in the mid-'90s and skyrocketed through its ranks, supervising the hunt for Osama bin Laden and directing SEAL Team Six missions into Afghanistan.

Wright thought the notion of a character from Miami's criminal underworld being allowed to make such an ascent so "fantastical" that he sometimes expected Prado or the CIA to debunk his reporting. "I was almost wishing that he would say, 'Oh, here's the big mistake. You got the wrong guy,'" Wright says.

No such luck. Neither Prado, who is retired, nor the CIA responded to Wright's accusations. "I think their hope is it will just go away," he says of the bombshells in his book.

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