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Angie Sanclemente Valencia is escorted by police after being arrested in Buenos Aires
Angie Sanclemente Valencia is escorted by police after being arrested at a youth hostel in Buenos Aires Photograph: Marcos Brindicci/Reuters
Angie Sanclemente Valencia is escorted by police after being arrested at a youth hostel in Buenos Aires Photograph: Marcos Brindicci/Reuters

Colombian model arrested on suspicion of drug smuggling

This article is more than 13 years old
Model who evaded Argentinian police for five months is said to be mastermind of drug-smuggling ring

A Colombian model accused of leading a drug-trafficking gang that persuaded pretty young women to smuggle cocaine to Mexico was arrested yesterday after evading Argentinian police for five months.

Angie Sanclemente Valencia had been hiding out in Buenos Aires since December, when airport police caught a 21-year-old Argentinian woman with 55kg (121lb) of cocaine in her baggage boarding a flight to Cancún. That led to arrests of six other alleged gang members who were said to have named Colombia's former Coffee Queen as a ringleader.

Argentina's media quickly dubbed Sanclemente the "Narco Queen", but two officials involved in the case said that her specific role in the smuggling ring has not been established.

"When they organised the trafficking of cocaine to Mexico, she participated in the meetings," said one of the sources, both of whom agreed to discuss the case on condition they were not identified because the investigation was still open.

Police were able to determine Sanclemente's identity because she had made quite an impression upon her arrival in Argentina, flying first class with a Pomeranian dog, the other official said.

The 30-year-old model was captured yesterday in a hostel for foreigners in the fashionable Palermo neighbourhood, said Maximiliano Lencina, an airport police spokesman. He declined to discuss the evidence, but said Sanclemente "was an important figure in the organisation" that allegedly recruited pretty young Argentinian women to smuggle cocaine on flights to Cancún.

Police guessed she was still in Argentina: she declared her innocence on Facebook, where she posted pictures of Buenos Aires dated after Interpol issued a warrant for her arrest, and her mother arrived in the country weeks ago to help with her defence.

"She is no drug trafficker, nor is she the queen of cocaine," Jeannette Valencia, her mother, declared after the arrest. "There are bad intentions – a plot against her. She will prove her innocence," Valencia told reporters after police prevented her from entering her daughter's room.

Judicial authorities already rejected a request for special treatment from Guillermo Tiscornia, her lawyer, who said Sanclemente had not turned herself in for fear that in a common prison her looks would expose her to rape or other mistreatment.

"I feel great anguish and desperation. I can't rest, I'm very sad that the Argentines have treated me so badly, wiping away the trash with me. I don't deserve this," Valencia told the Colombian newspaper El Tiempo.

Sanclemente, a native of Barranquilla, Colombia, won her country's National Coffee Queen beauty pageant in 2000. Then 21, she was forced to give up her crown when it was discovered she was married at the time in violation of pageant rules.

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