CoventryCat86
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I'm planning the 1st Annual Denver Cigar Festible. That is, if I can find out what a festible is.
Where you gettin' the hair shirts?
I'm planning the 1st Annual Denver Cigar Festible. That is, if I can find out what a festible is.
As per Van55's tip off... probably the final chapter in the Vitasea timeline (Doug Hiner = Vitasea):
Jury indicts Port Charlotte man accused of smuggling Cuban cigars
Customs agents find stash of 28,000 stogies
BY PAT GILLESPIE • PGILLESPIE@NEWS-PRESS.COM • MAY 24, 2008
The discovery of more than 28,000 Cuban cigars and 42 bottles of Cuban rum landed a Port Charlotte man in federal court this week.
Douglas Hiner, 68, charged with importing illegal Cuban merchandise and conspiracy to do the same, was indicted Wednesday and appeared in federal court Thursday.
He was released on a $50,000 bond.
“It’s kind of crazy,” Hiner said Friday, “that Cuban cigars are of such importance to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.”
He then referred calls to his attorney, Assistant U.S. Public Defender Russell Rosenthal.
On May 13, the United States Coast Guard and Customs and Border Patrol Marine Interdiction agents intercepted a 53-foot sailboat in Hillsborough and Pinellas counties that was carrying 361 Cuban cigars and cigarettes, according to a U.S. Attorney’s Office press release.
During the investigation, agents found a North Fort Myers storage facility in which Hiner allegedly stored the cigars and rum, according to the press release.
“This isn’t someone coming back with a box of Cohibas,” said Chief Assistant U.S. Attorney Douglas Molloy.
“We don’t go after people unless they’re making a lot of money.”
Molloy said an investigation shows Hiner wasn’t selling the cigars in this area. Cuban exports are illegal in the United States because of the country’s trade embargo with the communist country.
In a separate indictment earlier this year, Martin Sengseis, 43, was indicted on a charge of importing Cuban cigars and rum. Also indicted was John Genaro, but charges against him were dropped by prosecutors.
On Feb. 21, 2008, according to a federal complaint, Sengseis and Genaro were aboard a 51-foot sail boat that ran aground near Fort Myers Beach.
When Coast Guard agents searched the boat, they found 364 boxes of Cuban cigars, 45 bottles of Cuban rum, 30 pounds of Cuban coffee and 100 cartons of Cuban cigarettes, according to court documents.
In both cases, the men allegedly traveled from Havana, Cuba to Florida’s west coast.
Ex-Omahan caught with Cuban contraband
BY TODD COOPER
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
The former Omahan smuggled thousands of cigars on his boat, the Vitamin Sea.
Tuesday, he took his medicine.
Douglas Hiner, a longtime property developer in Omaha, was sentenced in a federal courtroom in Fort Myers, Fla., to three years of probation for smuggling more than 27,000 cigars and 42 bottles of rum from Cuba.
For Hiner, the sentence smelled as sweet as one of the Cohibas he smuggled.
"I'm very relieved," Hiner said Tuesday evening by phone from his Fort Myers apartment. "I had moved everything out of my apartment and into a storage locker. Basically, I thought I was going to jail."
Hiner said he awoke with those thoughts at 2 a.m. Tuesday and couldn't go back to sleep.
Then he arrived at the courtroom Tuesday afternoon to find that the official who performed his presentence investigation was recommending prison. The reason: Though Hiner had no felony record, authorities placed the value of the smuggled cigars at more than $200,000.
But Hiner had a few things going for him. In return for his guilty plea, prosecutors said they wouldn't oppose probation. About a dozen people wrote letters on his behalf, including a few of his former friends from Omaha, he said. And U.S. District Judge John E. Steele was firm but fair, Hiner said.
The sentencing capped Hiner's remarkable run from rags to riches to rags. One of several "mom-and-pop" building renovators, Hiner had built a small fortune rehabilitating old Omaha buildings. At one point, he accumulated more than 300 rental units and listed his net worth at $6.5 million in SEC filings.
Known for his audacious personality, he then expanded, building affordable housing units in small cities across Nebraska and Kansas in the 1990s.
Many of those projects stalled after accountants discovered that someone had been steering funds from new projects to pay bills on the old. Hiner blamed his former partner, Peter Spoto, who was indicted for bank fraud and has since fled to Australia.
But the result was devastating for Hiner. In 2005 he filed for bankruptcy, listing $930 in assets and $28 million in debts.
In the early 2000s, Hiner had begun sailing to Cuba to take medical supplies that had been donated by Omaha-area hospitals. On his way back, he took something else: cigars.
What started out as a lark for friends had become a moneymaking venture. Hiner advertised his wares on Internet sites.
But in May, U.S. Coast Guard agents found the loot on his boat and in a nearby delivery truck.
Hiner admitted his guilt immediately but remained defiant about the U.S. ban on trade with Cuba.
"Obviously, I wasn't a good smuggler," he said. "But it was a victimless crime. Essentially it was a political crime."
However, Hiner said he is finished with smuggling. He said he has never felt lower than when he was packing his belongings for prison.
He turns 69 on Friday and said he has virtually no job opportunities. He lives on $700 a month in Social Security and food stamps.
He's now a felon. He can't get a passport or travel out of the country. He can't own a gun. But as usual, he's cooking stuff up.
He recently sold the Glass Front Bar — the building that he and his former girlfriend renovated into a home — near 13th and William Streets in Omaha.
Hiner said he made about $80,000 from the sale — a lot less than he had hoped but enough for him to maybe dabble in flipping houses in Fort Myers.
Oh, and he has one other enterprise in mind: Hiner said he continues to gaze fondly at the Vitamin Sea, which still bobs in the waters near Fort Myers. Authorities seized the boat and everything on it.
Now, Hiner says he wants to bid on the 20-year-old, 53-foot-long sloop — in part because he doesn't believe anyone else will.
So what would he do with it?
"Live on it," he said. "I can tell you this — I certainly won't be going to Cuba."
• Contact the writer: 444-1275, todd.cooper@owh.com
Contact the Omaha World-Herald newsroom
Vita-Sea mug shot
http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2008/may/24...rs-southwest-f/
edited to fix link
Jim
Vita-Sea mug shot
http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2008/may/24...rs-southwest-f/
edited to fix link
Jim
Wow. I sure didn't see him looking like that, LOL.
What started out as a lark for friends had become a moneymaking venture. Hiner advertised his wares on Internet sites.
He only got probation! Lets have a festible!