Alleged frontman for Vice President of Venezuela purchased $16.5 million Miami mansion

Samark López and his wife enjoyed a lavish lifestyle in Miami, despite decrying the United States as an evil empire.

Gerardo Reyes 2020
Por:
Gerardo Reyes.
Miami mansion purchased for $16.5 million by company controlled by alleged Venezuelan "frontman" Samark Lopez
Miami mansion purchased for $16.5 million by company controlled by alleged Venezuelan "frontman" Samark Lopez
Imagen Univision Investiga

A businessman identified by the Trump administration as a frontman in a drug trafficking scheme with Venezuela's Vice President Tareck El Aissami, purchased a $16.5 million home in Miami last year - in cash.

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The nine bedroom, Mediterranean-style mansion in the exclusive Gables Estates, was purchased by a company run by Venezuelan businessman, Samark López, according to property records examined by Univision Investiga.

Last week, the United States government identified López, as the "key frontman" for El Aissami in a drug trafficking and money laundering scheme.

López, 42, appeared to have sought to cloak his ownership of the mansion at 325 Leucadendra Drive using a corporation he controls, according to property records. However, the Miami corporation's address is identical to that of another luxury apartment seized from López, by the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

The Gables Estates mansion was not listed by OFAC when it announced the seizure of López's properties.

López has strongly denied OFAC's allegations. His wife did not return messages to her phone and email from Univision.

A source close to the purchase of the property told Univision that López submitted documents regarding the source of his funds before the sale was finalized. Sources also said the mansion was occupied until a few days ago by López's wife, Loisinette Leiva, and the couple's three children.

Miami mansion of Samark Lopez
Miami mansion of Samark Lopez

The Univision Investiga team identified the residence thanks to a jogging route that Leiva shared with her friends on Instagram that began and ended at the address in the exclusive Gables Estates neighborhood.

Some photos and videos posted on Leiva's social media websites provide an ironic insight into the lavish social life the couple enjoyed in Florida, despite their close ties to Venezuela's government which constantly eviscerates the United State as an "evil" imperialist empire that exploits poorer countries.

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"Nobody leaves here without taking a tequila," Leiva can he heard shouting at her birthday celebration on the luxury yacht, Waku.

In two different photographs, López appears wearing Richard Mille wrist watches, one in gold valued at $665,000 and another black, worth $350,000.

Un reloj de $627,000, viajes, yates, son parte del álbum familiar.
Un reloj de $627,000, viajes, yates, son parte del álbum familiar.
Imagen Univision

In other images, several friends of the couple appear aboard an executive plane that according to sources belongs to López and was sometimes used to party in the Bahamas. Another video shows friends of the family serving Venezuelan tamales in a corridor of the mansion.

López was also a member of the swanky Trump Doral golf club in Miami where membership costs $50,000, the Miami Herald reported.

OFAC included a $9 million Gulfstream 2 jet in its list of assets seized from López.

The Gables Estates mansion has a movie theater, marble floors, elevator and a pier facing a lake. It was purchased on April 18, 2016 for $16.5 million, double the price it was sold for in March 2014.

A la pareja se le ve en grandes celebraciones.
A la pareja se le ve en grandes celebraciones.
Imagen Univision

López is a businessman with lucrative Venezuelan government contracts in the oil and food sectors.

He was identified by OFAC along with El Aissami in connection to international drug trafficking.

Additonal reporting by Margarita Rabin, Daily Camacaro, Peniley Ramirez and Juan Cooper.

In pictures: Tareck El Aissami, the meteoric rise of a radical Chavista.

El Aissami is named on a list of government officials linked to drug trafficking, according to the Treasury Department, resulting in the freezing of his U.S. assets.
El Aissami during the inauguration of the new director of the state-owned oil company PDVSA, Jan 17, 2017.
El Aissami, then Minister of Interior, with Russian president Vladimir Putin, during a visit to Venezuela in 2010.
El Aissami, with Wilson Ramos, Venezuelan baseball player with the Washington Nationals. Ramos was rescued by Venezuelan authorities in 2011 after he was kidnapped.
El Aissami shows items confiscated in a raid of a drug lab on the Colombian border in 2011.
El Aissami (Ieft), with the former National Anti-drug Organization (ONA) Néstor Reverol, examining a seized drug plane in January 2010. A few months later both men were named by Venezuelan drug trafficker, Walid Makled, of being involved in his cocaine operations.
As Minister of Interior El Aissami created Venezuela's Bolivarian Intelligence Service (SEBIN) to replace ther former 'political police' DISIP.
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El Aissami is named on a list of government officials linked to drug trafficking, according to the Treasury Department, resulting in the freezing of his U.S. assets.
Imagen Wikicommons