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Bout said he was a vegetarian, ate salad, drank a lot of water, slept and listened to classical music, the official said. Thomas Harrigan, DEA chief of operations, told The Associated Press that the arrest, extradition and prosecution of Bout were "a victory for us all." He said the case was especially important because "of the access Mr. Bout had to weapons" and his ability to spread them to remote parts of the world. "We go where the evidence takes us," Harrigan said, noting that what started as a drug probe grew into an international weapons smuggling investigation that took agents halfway around the globe. At the news conference, Harrigan said evidence would show that Bout "said he preferred murdering Americans." He predicted tens of thousands of people could have died if Bout made the weapons deliveries he promised. "For Viktor Bout, justice will finally be served," he said. Bout has been accused of supplying weapons that fueled civil wars in South America, the Middle East and Africa, with clients ranging from Liberia's Charles Taylor and Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi to the Taliban government that once ran Afghanistan. He was an inspiration for an arms dealer character played by Nicolas Cage in the 2005 film "Lord of War." He was arrested in March 2008 at a Bangkok hotel after a DEA sting operation using informants who posed as officials of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, also known as the FARC, classified by Washington as a narco-terrorist group. Bout was charged with conspiracy, accused of agreeing to smuggle missiles and rocket launchers to the FARC, and conspiring to kill U.S. officers or employees. If convicted, he could face a maximum penalty of life in prison and a mandatory minimum of 25 years in prison. Bharara said Bout offered to supply more than 700 surface-to-air missiles, 5,000 AK-47 assault rifles and millions of rounds of ammunition, along with ultralight airplanes that could be outfitted with grenade launchers and missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles with a range of more than 200 kilometers. "It was an arsenal that would be the envy of some small countries," he said. Authorities said the evidence against Bout was strong, with his words captured on audiotapes, some in Spanish, besides e-mails and information gleaned from his co-defendant, Andrew Smulian, who pleaded guilty in July 2008 to conspiring with Bout to deliver weapons to the FARC. The indictment labels Bout an international weapons trafficker who assembled a fleet of cargo planes to transport weapons and military equipment to various failed states and to insurgents in Third World countries from the 1990s until his arrest in Bangkok in March 2008. Estimated to be worth $6 billion, Bout had remained in a Thai jail as his supporters fought to prevent him from landing in U.S. custody. Bout insists he's a legitimate businessman.
[Associated
Press;
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