LIMA, Peru — Vladimiro Lenin Montesinos, a dreaded Peruvian spymaster, who once worked closely with the CIA and built an empire of corruption, was flown back to the Peruvian capital on Monday after being caught in Venezuela with the help of the FBI.
A Peruvian National Police airplane that left Caracas early Monday touched down shortly before 10 a.m. local time at the National Police air base Montesinos was whisked to a waiting helicopter.
Montesinos, 55, faces a slew of charges including money laundering, drug trafficking, illegal arms dealing and directing death squads, and analysts say former accomplices might want him dead to prevent him from revealing their roles in a decade of illicit activity that infected all branches of Peru's government during the past decade.
Peru's interior minister, Antonio Ketin Vidal, who also arrived in the plane, on Sunday praised the work of several intelligence agencies, including the FBI, for Montesinos' capture.
The apprehension of Montesinos came after dozens of arrests in Peru of top military commanders, politicians and media executives believed to have illicit ties to the former spymaster.
In the late 1970s, Montesinos, then an army captain, was accused of selling classified information about Peru's Russian-supplied armaments to U.S. intelligence officials. He was court-martialed, dishonorably discharged and spent a year in a military prison.
U.S. diplomatic officials have balked at the suggestion from Peruvian lawmakers that Montesinos was a CIA operative during his years as ex-President Alberto Fujimori's security adviser. However, they said that Montesinos, as de facto head of Peru's intelligence service, was the liaison for U.S.-Peru counter-narcotics efforts.
The FBI, which helped track Montesinos down, in February arrested Peruvian police Col. Manuel Aybar Marca, accused of helping engineer Montesinos' escape from Peru last October as Fujimori's government crumbled amid scandal.
Also in February, another Montesinos associate, Peruvian arms dealer Victor Venero Garrido, agreed to return to Peru to face charges of embezzling $100 million in public pension funds rather than fight extradition from Miami. He has been cooperating with authorities here, helping to untangle a 10-year web of corruption reputedly spun by Montesinos.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was almost casual in informing reporters of Montesinos' capture during an Andean summit on Sunday.
"Fortunately, we have captured Vladimiro Montesinos alive," Chavez said. Montesinos would be deported "faster than a rooster crows," he said.
Suspicious neighbors and people whom Montesinos had hired tipped off police to the Peruvian's whereabouts, Chavez said. Agents moved in when it appeared Montesinos was about to leave.
Ketin Vidal told Peru's Channel 5 television by telephone that Montesinos' physical appearance hadn't changed since he vanished in October, contrary to reports that Montesinos underwent plastic surgery to disguise himself.
"He has the physical characteristics very similar to what we all know. He doesn't have a beard, or anything additional," Ketin Vidal said, adding that Montesinos "was received in good physical condition."
Peruvian Foreign Minister Javier Perez de Cuellar thanked Chavez for arresting "a delinquent drug trafficker." Peru had offered $5 million for information leading to Montesinos' arrest.
Peruvian President Valentin Paniagua and President-elect Alejandro Toledo also had words of praise.
Peruvian investigators detailed what they say was a huge criminal network in which Montesinos, as Peru's spy chief, controlled politicians, courts, military officials and businessmen through bribery and blackmail. He allegedly paid off congressmen and judges to ensure Fujimori's 2000 re-election to a third term.
In September, videos appeared on television showing Montesinos bribing an opposition congressman to support Fujimori's government. As the number of incriminating videos grew, Montesinos fled to Panama, which denied him asylum. He returned to Peru, and vanished in October.
In November, Fujimori fled to Japan as Peruvian lawmakers declared him "morally unfit" for office.
Montesinos' trail led to Costa Rica, Aruba and finally Venezuela in December, according to statements by three Peruvian army officers and Costa Rican officials. He allegedly used a false Venezuelan passport bearing the name Manuel Antonio Rodriguez Perez.
Until Sunday, Chavez's government insisted it had no knowledge of Montesinos' whereabouts. Months of rumors had Montesinos in Colombia, Ecuador and Cuba.