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Jeff Farrell and Paul Keany - The Cocaine Diaries: A Venezuelan Prison Nightmare

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Jeff Farrell and Paul Keany The Cocaine Diaries: A Venezuelan Prison Nightmare

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It wont happen to me. Thats what I thought when I got on the plane to Venezuela. But it did I got caught.Caught smuggling half a million euros worth of cocaine, Paul Keany was sexually assaulted by Venezuelan anti-drugs officers before being sentenced to eight years in the notorious Los Teques prison outside Caracas. There he was plunged into a nightmarish world of coke-fuelled killings, gun battles, stabbings, extortion and forced hunger strikes until finally, just over two years into his sentence, he gained early parole and embarked on a daring escape from South America . . .Aided by his extensive prison diaries, Keany reveals the true horror of life inside Los Teques: a shocking underworld behind bars where inmates pay protection money to stay alive, prostitutes do the rounds and vast amounts of cocaine are smuggled in for cell-block bosses to sell on to prisoners for huge profits. The Cocaine Diaries is a remarkable story, told by Keany with honesty, courage and even humour, despite knowing that every day behind bars might have been his last.

Jeff Farrell and Paul Keany: author's other books


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About the Authors

Paul Keany was born in Oxford, England, to Irish parents. In his late teens he joined the Royal Navy as an apprentice electrical engineer. After three years of dull toil on dry land he went AWOL and followed his parents to Dublin, where they had retired. He never left and has called it home for the past 30 years. In his last career he ran a one-man plumbing business till it hit the rocks in the recession. What he did to try to clear his debts can be found in the pages of this book. An aspiring novelist, he hopes itll be the first book of many. He has two children Katie and Daniel from a previous marriage.

Jeff Farrell is an independent journalist. He spent three years working as a stringer in South America, reporting across the region for media including The Guardian , the Daily Telegraph , the Miami Herald and Irish national broadcaster RT. He first interviewed Paul Keany in the notorious Los Teques prison, Venezuela and Farrell is glad he got his story and made it out alive. For now he has returned to his home city of Dublin, where he craves a new adventure after months chained to his laptop writing Keanys story. He is a former staff journalist with Independent News and Media plc. He holds an MA in Journalism and is a member of the International Federation of Journalists. This is his first book. http://jefffarrelljournalism.com/

THE COCAINE DIARIES

A Venezuelan Prison Nightmare

Paul Keany with Jeff Farrell

To my family especially my children Katie and Daniel and friends Thanks to - photo 1

To my family, especially my children, Katie and Daniel, and friends. Thanks to you all for standing by me. Also to Father Pat and Viviana: I owe you my life. To anyone thinking of smuggling coke for easy money dont do it. You might end up dead.

Paul Keany

To the many great people I met during my travels in Venezuela: the horrors in this story show the tragic side of your country, not your strength in spirit and wonderful hospitality. Que la verdad les haga libres .

Jeff Farrell

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I WOULD LIKE TO THANK JEFF FARRELL FOR HIS HARD WORK IN PUTTING THIS book together with me, and for quickly getting a publisher on board. Thanks to the Irish Council for Prisoners Overseas for their help. Big thanks also to all my friends for support with the escape fund: Barry Fitz, Dave Riley, Pat Keany, Kev Cummins and Big Frankie.

Paul Keany

I WOULD LIKE TO THANK FATHER PAT FOR HIS HELP IN CLINCHING THE interview with Paul Keany inside Los Teques, a meeting that sowed the seeds for this book; to Rory Carroll of The Guardian for a roof over my head in Caracas, and endless journalistic advice I owe you a big one; to Paul Keany for always being at my beck and call for interviews; to Dermot Deely for a place to write in Dublin; to my mother, Noeleen, for getting the manuscript to the publisher and always having positive words; to all my family hopefully this time I have something to show for yet another epic adventure abroad the real job awaits!; to Donal Allman for feedback on an early draft; to Ciaran Cassidy of RTs Documentary on One for last-minute editing on the radio version of the story to ensure it was sanitised enough for a daytime audience, and overall excellent production work; to my book editor Karyn Millar; to the universe for the coincidence of myself and Keany being on the same flight home without it this book wouldnt exist; and to everyone else theres no space to mention.

Jeff Farrell

CONTENTS

AUTHORS NOTE

BECAUSE OF THE SENSITIVE NATURE OF THE REVELATIONS AND ISSUES IN this book, almost all names have been changed. Some of the inmates featured in the book, for example, are still in the Venezuelan prison system. Others involved in the welfare of prisoners want to be able to continue to visit inmates to give them support in any way they can. They have asked not to be named, fearing they would not be allowed to enter the jails again. The Venezuelan government is highly sensitive to criticisms of the deplorable and dangerous conditions in its prisons.

At times I have taken liberties with dialogue, putting quote marks around speech when it was recalled from Paul Keanys memory, so it therefore might not be totally accurate. That said, much of it is faithful and is taken from Keanys extensive diaries, which he kept on a daily basis to record his life and events inside Los Teques prison.

Jeff Farrell

PREFACE

THE PRISON COP SAT ON A CHAIR IN THE PASSAGEWAY, HIS EYES RISING UP from the floor to the gringo visitor walking towards him. Maxima, I said. He stood up slowly, not bothering to answer, and took a truncheon from the holster on his navy uniform. He rapped it three times against a steel door to my right. A hatch slid back in the centre of the door and two eyeballs peeped out. A bolt slid back. The door eased open slowly. In front of me stood a teenager, no older than 18 or 19, dressed in white tracksuit bottoms. My eyes dropped down to the long metal object dangling from his hand. It was a shotgun. It didnt make sense. Why was this prison guard not in uniform?

Visita , I said. The gun-toting teenager stood aside. I stepped past him into a hallway in the Maxima wing. It was visit day and full of life. A tall, lean guy wearing jeans and a wine-coloured shirt walked up to me.

A quien buscas? (Who are you looking for?) he asked. My eyes dropped down to his hand, which was casually holding a black revolver in front of his chest. Strange, I thought again. Another guard with no uniform. My eyes rose back up to his face.

Paul, I said. He nodded and walked off. After months of trying to get into Los Teques jail to interview a cocaine smuggler of Irish-British nationality, I was finally getting to talk to him. While I waited, I looked around. There were men, women and children sitting around on stools, chatting. Salsa music blared from a stereo in the corner, next to a Christmas tree with twinkling lights. It was Sunday, and visit day was in full swing in the prison on the outskirts of Caracas.

The minutes passed and my thoughts went back to wondering why armed prison guards would wear street clothes. Minutes earlier I had been searched at the jail gate by soldiers brandishing machine guns and my passport ID was checked. All seemed normal in a prison. I then looked back at the teenager with the shotgun. He was dancing salsa steps along to the music from the stereo, his weapon swinging back and forth. No one batted an eyelid as to why a prison cop would act so casually. Then I finally accepted the obvious: he wasnt a cop he was an inmate, and armed.

Paul Keany stepped into the passageway. Through round-rimmed glasses he gave me a questioning look that said, Who are you? I told him I was a journalist, and that Father Patrick, a Caracas-based Irish priest who visited him, had told me how to get into the jail to talk to him and hear his story. I left out the word interview so he wouldnt run off. Father Pat! Keany said, smiling now.

We sat down on a bench and started to talk. Keany was forty-five and was in the early months of an eight-year sentence for cocaine smuggling. He was arrested in Maiqueta airport attempting to board a Dublin-bound flight with a stop-off in Paris. The cops had found almost six kilos of cocaine in his suitcase. His story, he told me, wasnt original. More than 200 other gringo drug mules locked up in Los Teques had the same tale to tell. Almost everybody gets caught.

But the prisoners here, I said, changing the subject, they have guns?

He laughed, explaining that inmate jefes , or bosses, and their foot soldiers ran the cell blocks. He had to pay them a causa , protection money, every week. Without them Id be dead. Theres inmates here whod shoot me up just for being a gringo.

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