Joseph-Michel François (; 1957 – 2017) was a colonel in the Haitian army. As Haiti Chief of National Police he participated in the 1991 Haitian coup d'état, which overthrew Haiti's elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Background
François attended US command school at Fort Bragg.
Drug charges
A convicted drug dealer told the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee that he met François in Colombia, and that François told him he was arranging a cocaine deal. United States prosecutors indicted François in March, 1997 and charged him with smuggling 33 tons of cocaine and heroin into the U.S. from his private airstrip in Haiti, while taking millions in bribes from Colombian drug lords. François denied the charges and stayed in a Honduran prison until July, 1997, when the Honduran Supreme Court turned down U.S. extradition efforts for lack of evidence and subsequently released François.
Death
Michel François died suddenly in February 2017 reportedly in Honduras. His legacy remains intertwined with Haiti’s complex political history and the human rights abuses committed during his time in power.
References
External links
- "More from the Exile Files' - The life of ex-despots isn't all jail and frozen assets". from the Haiti Support Group
