"Socalj" for Borderland Beat
The former agent, Paul Campo, worked for the DEA for about 25 years, the indictment said, first as a DEA Special Agent in New York and eventually rising to become a high-level official — the Deputy Chief of the Office of Financial Operations. He retired in January 2016 and now runs a private consulting business, according to the indictment.
Campo laundered about $750,000 for the cartel by converting cash into cryptocurrency, and agreed to launder far more — $12 million in all, according to the indictment. He also provided a payment for about 220 kilograms of cocaine on the understanding that the drugs had been imported into the United States, the indictment said.
Paul Campo has been charged with narco-terrorism conspiracy, conspiracy to distribute narcotics, conspiracy to provide material support to a terrorist organization and conspiracy to commit money laundering.
![]() |
After these initial meetings, CAMPO and SENSI together met with CS-1 on several occasions. During these conversations, CAMPO and SENSI agreed to launder money for CS‑1 by, among other things, converting cash into cryptocurrency and making investments in real estate. CAMPO and SENSI further advised CS-1 about fentanyl production and explored procuring commercial drones and military-grade weapons and equipment for CJNG, including AR-15 semi-automatic rifles, M4 carbines, M16 rifles, grenade launchers, and rocket-propelled grenades. As part of these discussions, CAMPO and SENSI often boasted about and relied heavily on CAMPO’s prior federal law enforcement experience and expertise regarding financial investigations and drug cartels.
![]() |
| Robert Sensi of Global Asset Tracking |
Regarding the drones, in one meeting, CS‑1 explained to CAMPO, “what we do with the drones, we put explosives and we just send it over there, boom”; in another conversation, CS‑1 asked SENSI how much C-4 explosive the drones could carry, to which SENSI responded, in sum and substance, approximately six kilograms, which is enough to “blow up the whole f------ . . . I don’t want to say.”
As part of the scheme, CAMPO and SENSI agreed to launder approximately $12,000,000 of CJNG narcotics proceeds; laundered approximately $750,000 by converting cash into cryptocurrency; and provided a payment for approximately 220 kilograms of cocaine on the understanding that the payment would trigger the distribution and sale of the narcotics worth approximately $5,000,000, for which CAMPO and SENSI would (i) receive directly a portion of the narcotics proceeds as profit; and (ii) receive a further commission upon the laundering of the balance of the narcotics proceeds.
“As alleged, Paul Campo and Robert Sensi conspired to assist CJNG, one of the most notorious Mexican cartels that is responsible for countless deaths through violence and drug trafficking in the United States and Mexico,” said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton. “As part of that support, the defendants laundered hundreds of thousands of dollars they believed to be CJNG drug proceeds, agreed to launder millions more, and even agreed to use their financial expertise to facilitate cocaine trafficking right here in New York City. By participating in this scheme, Campo betrayed the mission he was entrusted with pursuing for his 25-year career with the DEA. CJNG is a violent and corrupting criminal enterprise that New Yorkers want broken. I commend the extraordinary efforts of the DEA in aggressively pursuing CJNG and those who support their deadly and corrupt efforts, no matter who they may be.”
“The indictment of former Special Agent Paul Campo sends a powerful message: those who betray the public trust—past or present—will be held to account to the fullest extent of the law,” said DEA Administrator Terrance C. Cole. “The alleged conduct occurred after he left DEA and was unrelated to his official duties here, but any former agent who chooses to engage in criminal activity dishonors the men and women who serve with integrity and undermines the public’s confidence in law enforcement. We will not look the other way simply because someone once wore this badge. There is no tolerance and no excuse for this kind of betrayal.”
According to the About page of his Global Financial Consultants company:
Prior to the establishment of GFC, Paul Campo had a 25 year career as a Special Agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration. He was appointed Deputy Chief of the Office of Financial Operations in February of 2013. In this capacity, Mr. Campo oversaw in excess of 17 million dollars in agency funding and was responsible for worldwide money laundering operations. He employed cutting-edge technologies to enhance existing programs, as well as created, developed and implemented new bi-lateral enforcement programs with the Government of Mexico and other Latin America Countries.
He represented DEA before Congress, the banking industry, money service businesses (MSBs), Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC), Department of Justice (DOJ), United States Treasury, the National Security Council, as well as foreign, federal, state and local law enforcement officials. He has presented and/or moderated at several conferences for the International Criminal Police Organization (INTERPOL), Financial Action Task Force (FATF), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), FinCen, the Federal Reserve, Association of Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialists (ACAMS) Bankers, the Canadian AML Institute, the Bank Secrecy Act Advisor Group and various Department of Defense (DOD) components relative to threat finance and drug money laundering.
He provided briefings to the Attorney General, members of Congress and staffers on several of DEA’s enforcement programs. He participated in numerous executive level briefings for high ranking foreign officials, U.S. Ambassadors and Ministry officials visiting DEA Headquarters from all around the world. He Co-Chaired the Strategic Alliance Agency/Proceeds of Crime Working Group which monitors current international money laundering crime threats and international criminally complicit MSBs.
Prior to his assignment in the Office of Financial Operations, Mr. Campo held several key positions within DEA. He was the Acting Chief of the Office of Congressional Affairs from 2004 to 2005. In that capacity, Mr. Campo was the principal advisor to then Administrator Karen Tandy on all congressional related matters. Mr. Campo was promoted and became a member of DEA’s Executive Staff as an Executive Assistant for the Office of Chief Counsel from 2005 to 2008. While on Executive Staff, Mr. Campo was involved with the implementation of the agency policies and procedures that impacted DEA’s mission. From 1998 to 2003, Mr. Campo held a variety of positions, to include Acting Regional Director for the Europe and Africa regions while assigned to DEA offices in Rome and Milan, Italy. While assigned to the Embassy in Rome and then the Consulate in Milan, Mr. Campo was responsible for all enforcement actions in the region as well as serving as the Consulate General’s personal advisor to all issues concerning narcotics trafficking.
Early on in his career, Mr. Campo spent many years as a field agent assigned to the New York Division’s multi-agency Southeast Asian Heroin Task Force, where he excelled in the disruption of violent heroin trafficking activities. In 1996, he was assigned as a back-up supervisor in the New York Drug Enforcement Task Force, the agency’s oldest and most successful state and local cooperative initiative.
Prior to the establishment of GFC, Paul Campo had a 25 year career as a Special Agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration. He was appointed Deputy Chief of the Office of Financial Operations in February of 2013. In this capacity, Mr. Campo oversaw in excess of 17 million dollars in agency funding and was responsible for worldwide money laundering operations. He employed cutting-edge technologies to enhance existing programs, as well as created, developed and implemented new bi-lateral enforcement programs with the Government of Mexico and other Latin America Countries.
He represented DEA before Congress, the banking industry, money service businesses (MSBs), Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC), Department of Justice (DOJ), United States Treasury, the National Security Council, as well as foreign, federal, state and local law enforcement officials. He has presented and/or moderated at several conferences for the International Criminal Police Organization (INTERPOL), Financial Action Task Force (FATF), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), FinCen, the Federal Reserve, Association of Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialists (ACAMS) Bankers, the Canadian AML Institute, the Bank Secrecy Act Advisor Group and various Department of Defense (DOD) components relative to threat finance and drug money laundering.
He provided briefings to the Attorney General, members of Congress and staffers on several of DEA’s enforcement programs. He participated in numerous executive level briefings for high ranking foreign officials, U.S. Ambassadors and Ministry officials visiting DEA Headquarters from all around the world. He Co-Chaired the Strategic Alliance Agency/Proceeds of Crime Working Group which monitors current international money laundering crime threats and international criminally complicit MSBs.
Prior to his assignment in the Office of Financial Operations, Mr. Campo held several key positions within DEA. He was the Acting Chief of the Office of Congressional Affairs from 2004 to 2005. In that capacity, Mr. Campo was the principal advisor to then Administrator Karen Tandy on all congressional related matters. Mr. Campo was promoted and became a member of DEA’s Executive Staff as an Executive Assistant for the Office of Chief Counsel from 2005 to 2008. While on Executive Staff, Mr. Campo was involved with the implementation of the agency policies and procedures that impacted DEA’s mission. From 1998 to 2003, Mr. Campo held a variety of positions, to include Acting Regional Director for the Europe and Africa regions while assigned to DEA offices in Rome and Milan, Italy. While assigned to the Embassy in Rome and then the Consulate in Milan, Mr. Campo was responsible for all enforcement actions in the region as well as serving as the Consulate General’s personal advisor to all issues concerning narcotics trafficking.
Early on in his career, Mr. Campo spent many years as a field agent assigned to the New York Division’s multi-agency Southeast Asian Heroin Task Force, where he excelled in the disruption of violent heroin trafficking activities. In 1996, he was assigned as a back-up supervisor in the New York Drug Enforcement Task Force, the agency’s oldest and most successful state and local cooperative initiative.







No one, NOBODY with Mexican DNA should be trusted!
ReplyDeleteP E R I O D.
You must be proud of yourself!
DeleteIdiot.
Delete@ 2:26
DeleteYou SHOULD be ashamed of yourself and your people but I know most of “you” are PROUD of your dysfunction, immorality and violent behavior.
They never criticize the Mexican-Americans when they work the cartel.
DeleteThey criticize them if they can’t speak Spanish or if they’re disconnected from the culture but they stay quiet when they handle assets for the cartel or they will just say that it’s the gringos/gabachos/estadonidenses etc.
11:20
DeletePendejo.
Trump is out of hand.
Trump would say otherwise. Campos is a us citizen to have that clearance, no?
Delete11:20 mexicans should NOT trust the gabachos, as Kiki Camarena learned too late.
DeleteBut seriously, cubans hondurans,salvadorans, peruvians panamanians, chileans,uruguayans, guatermalans, every latin american country has helped american criminals turn their latin-american countries into republicas bananeras, helped by guerrillas, drug traffickers, religion etc. Yet we are not ashamed or protesting the arrest of one more mexican criminal nor getting butt hurt, after all, he asked for his ass reaming, most probably for not sharing the goodies with his prosecutors, problem is if El Mencho sent him 12 million dollars to turn into crypto and his money ended on the hands of some crypto-clepto.
6:34
DeleteYou must be proud of yourself!
How do you know he has Mexican dna? What even is Mexican dna ? If that dna is mostly European is it still not be trusted?
Delete@11:20@6:34
DeleteYou should be ashamed of yourself and your junky bloodline. Go back home honky
7:12 Mr Campo is a product of DEA, a white founded intitution, and he has been found doing his shit, why don't you go for the whites and the americans instead of "mexicans"?
DeleteMost mexicans are famously non criminals, live with very little, ask for nothing, and give their all to work for whatever they get while you only work your mamadora to smear, bitch!
Why is the second picture the Joker?
DeleteToo smart for his own good.
ReplyDeleteThis article is a great example of greed. This scumbag former agent was a successful business man and had tons of money already. Not only did he have money he also had friends and connections with powerful people within our government. All of this represents enormous power. It wasn't enough for this greedy guy. He needed more and made a deal with the devil. Greedy and stupid. Nuff Said!!!
ReplyDeleteI want Nuffy on the DEA. Smarter than those guys.
DeleteNuffy is smarter than the average bear 🙂
DeleteAnd leave the devil alone!
DeleteYup!
DeleteTe amo nuff said
Delete10:00 AM Nuff Said!!! On ls goats 🐐
DeleteI Approve This Masssage!!!
DeleteBe careful, too much attention to the Nuffster will get sol jello.
DeleteI think this guy dated Nuffy briefly!
ReplyDeleteNuffy was dating Buffy you silly goose🫠
DeleteMuff Diver le pone nutella y repollo y a veces hasta frijoles cuando se echa sus clavados.
DeleteFun fact:
DeleteNuffy and Buffy are cousins!
He voted for Barak Obama ,Joe Biden and Kamala Harris
ReplyDelete12:39 if so, how many more years are you going to give him for his wrongful voting?
DeleteGreedy gringo
ReplyDeleteDonde está el apellidó gringo?
Delete7:04
DeleteEl apellido "Campo" es de Europa, España. El apellido no es nativo de Mexico.
More like greedy Hispanic.
DeleteMany are saying I heard he's first cousin with Rigo Humberto, but I started the trend of the Grand Marquis bigly they're saying, I'm the best that's drive in carro Grand Marquis and it was not Rigo Humberto!
Deletecorruption in the US government, how could this be? but yall are saints lol atte; tu mami.
ReplyDeleteUn hispano con cara de judío e un italiano muy gringos los vatos no?
DeleteThe penalty should be life w/out parole for any law or former law enforcement!
ReplyDeleteIf the penalty was getting salamied I but nobody, but nobody, would commit this crime, except for Nuff.
Delete4:23 Thanks dude. I will be using salamied from now on.
DeleteTrump will pardon him!
Delete"Hey, must be the monaaay."
ReplyDeleteDon Jr got ripped off on a pack from Colombia so Trumps going to bomb Colombia
ReplyDeleteSounds like a reverse sting either way fry him
ReplyDeleteI’m guessing he is of Hispanic origin
Not really, no period kid.
DeleteStraight up gachipin gallego feenalley u gat samthin not see same trans nfeanally u undarestan poitikito de tu j6ers hotito de loser y la crisis en Europa babosa locanvidiosavenenosa
DeleteEvery fuc-ing body is corrupt nowadays .... Don't let em fool u
ReplyDeleteDon’t let who fool you? Hispanics? Italians? Most feds aren’t anglos even most whites aren’t Anglos either.
Delete7:07 that fer sho' most whites are not 100% whites, and like everybody else, 99% of their genetics is APE.
DeleteAnglo Saxon
DeletePauly boy tried to get cash investments out of the pockets of other drug money managers, there are more than enough, like Bain, his company literature says it clearly, mophaka never got the fine points from the real money guys.
DeleteI am descended from an albino ape. 🐒
Delete🐙 this is priceless, in 2016 he started global financial consultants'
ReplyDeleteCheck out his profile along with the three other guys he ran it with... Omg from Albania to Mexico it has 'dirty' written all over it for those of us who know the deal.
Sweet Jesus, this is so bad. Promise the link is good but I don't know how long it's going to be up for because this is a shitshow that I hope gets a ton of traction and further investigations but we know how this works.... Sigh🐙
https://www.globalfinancialconsults.com/about.html
So many spelling errors on that page that hurts even my not-native english speaking head. :D
DeleteHas to say I can imagine that black lines gets greyed in his former job easily if not overseen actively by uppers/outsiders.
DeleteMs h's Spanish lesson of the day:
Delete"sigh" = "suspiro"
🐙mucho mucho suspiros! Oy vey!
DeleteI was surprised that NOTHING was reported about this on any of the news websites, and I checked a variety-
I mean this was a pretty significant happening , high level corruption [that most of us who read this site are well familiar with in other 'bad, evil, foreign countries [sarcasm] -and is our press now turning a blind eye as well to our own foibles? I say this as a staunch independent
I don't see many issues in straight black and white, there's many variations etc but this is dirty dirty dirty.
7:41
DeleteYou are correct, octopus girl, the whole thing stinks like 3 day old fish.
It's been reported in the mainstream press, but they certainly aren't PUSHING the story, very suspicious.
Indictment unsealed on Friday, this is too big to sweep under the rug, the story should catch fire in Monday.
Ar-15 rifles, m4 carbine and m-16's are pretty much the same thing. The only difference is 2 are fully auto and the ar is not but can be converted. An m16 has a carry handle as the other 2 which look the exact same do not. All fire 5.56 cartridge. Whoever wrote the report must not know too much about firearms.
ReplyDeleteArticle says he did things for “the cartel” …. Except it wasn’t really the 4 but actually the 3 letters!
ReplyDeleteAll of this don’t seem all that different then those that work for LE/Prosecutors And then become defense attorneys
Or politicians that flex into lobbying
Or corporate $$$ interests flexing into government
Trump just pardoned Tim Leiweke who rigged bidding on construction sites. Failed state.
ReplyDeleteTrump is doing a lot of illegal stuff and getting away with it.
DeleteBiden also pardoned many known gang members here in Los angeles before he left office. They all do it.
DeleteBiden also pardoned many known gang members here in Los angeles before he left office. They all do it.
DeleteThe Honduran president that got pardoned is pretty next level. No US president has ever pardoned anyone on that level.
DeleteBiden did not pardon gang members, 😂 lol funny Bunny.
Delete12:23
DeleteNo. They don't. Only Trump does it early in the presidency, ill advised pardons. The rest do it at the end of their presidency but Trump has gone to extremes to accommodate criminals.
To 9:52 do your research he pardoned gang members here in l.a its all over YouTube
DeleteThe USA drug war is so corrupt and it has served as rhe federal pension system since 1980
ReplyDeleteNot really, no period kid.😭
Delete6:06 cómo chingaos no...
DeleteEver heard of cuicos arresting rivals of their favorite drug traffickers because they pay?
GOBIERNO DEA, FBI Y DEMAS SON SOLO UNA URLA PARA LA GENTE ELLOS SON UN PROPIO CARTELL , SOLO QUE TODOS Y EL TONTO QUE PUSO EL PRIMER COMENTARIO ESTAN DURMIDOS NOS MIENTEN ELLOS SON LOS QUE NOS TIENEN ASI , ELLOS SON LA ELITE DESPIERTEN.
ReplyDeleteOrale El capitalized, cabron.
Delete