In Miami-Dade, there is a criminal file opened in the name of the same individual for a charge of cocaine trafficking.
MIAMI, United States. – The Honduran Police arrested this Wednesday in San Pedro Sula Jorge Marcelo Manso González, a Cuban citizen “requested for extradition by the United States” for his alleged links to drug trafficking, according to local media.
The capture occurs while in Miami-DadeFlorida, there is a criminal file opened in the name of “Jorge Manso” for a charge of cocaine trafficking, according to the search in the Criminal Justice Online Case Search made by CubaNet.
The Press of Honduras reported that the Police Investigation Directorate (DPI) captured Manso González, “a Cuban citizen living in San Pedro Sula”, wanted by the US justice system for events that occurred in Miami in 2008. According to that medium, the “investigative file” links him to “a drug business (…) valued at approximately $120,000 in Miami County”, and the Honduran authorities indicated that he will be made available to the courts to initiate the proceedings. extradition procedures in accordance with current treaties.
In the same line, The Herald reported that Manso González was captured in San Pedro Sula after intelligence work, and that he faced an extradition request “for a crime related to drug trafficking.” That medium stated that the Honduran authorities are handling an “arrest warrant” issued since February 18, 2019, for events in 2008 in Miami, and added that “he fled the United States in mid-2010.”
Miami-Dade court records available in search attached by team CubaNet show that the accused, who appears as “Manso, Jorge”, was born on November 11, 1969. The system indicates that the file does not appear closed.
Although the Honduran press reports the full name as Jorge Marcelo Manso González, the Miami-Dade judicial record consulted by this media corresponds to the name “Jorge Manso.” CubaNet He did not find, in the sources consulted for this note, a published US document showing the extradition request with the full name.
The procedural movement reflected in the Miami-Dade file, however, provides a chronology consistent with the general narrative disclosed in Honduras about a case that originates in 2008 and that has not been resolved. The file also includes references to judicial documents linked to an investigation and the initial course of the process.
The search shows that the case had a schedule of hearings and procedures typical of a criminal process, with multiple summonses. For March and May 2009, the file records litigation related to “bail matters.”
