Orlando Cicilia is a realtor based in Miami, FL. Cicilia is married to Barbara Rubio, the older sister of U.S. Senator Marco Rubio.
Drug ring
The federal indictment alleged that the ring had been in operation for some 10 years, smuggling $75 million worth of cocaine and marijuana into Louisiana and Florida. It also alleged that members of the ring had become aware that one of their group, Larry Nash, had become an informer for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms. Nash was murdered, and his body was cut up with a chainsaw and burned. Cecilia, described as a "second-tier associate" of the drug ring's kingpin, Mario Tabraue, was sentenced to 25 years in prison; Cecilia was released in 2000, after serving 12 years and also being an informant. Mario recently appeared, commenting on the murder, in the Netflix series Tiger King.
Cicilia's wife, Barbara, is the sister of Marco Rubio, who was in high school at the time Cicilia was arrested. In 2011, Rubio, was a United States Senator whose name was frequently mentioned as a Vice-Presidential nominee on the Republican ticket, and Univision wanted one of its star journalists, Gerardo Reyes, to tape an in-depth Rubio interview. In the course of negotiations over the interview, Rubio's staff learned that Univision had uncovered the details of Cicilia's history as a drug dealer, and asked Univision not to broadcast it, arguing that it was an unfair intrusion into the lives of private citizens. Reyes argued that since Rubio had made his personal story part of his political campaigns, it was legitimate to explore how the arrest had shaped Rubio's life and career. Ultimately, Rubio refused to do the interview, and, in July 2011, Reyes broadcast the story of Cicilia's arrest on Univision. Three months later the Miami Herald ran a detailed report on Cicilia's arrest and Rubio's attempt to kill the Univision story by Marc Caputo and Manny Garcia "The inside story: Univision's war with Rubio over immigration and drug story" on page one. The Herald alleged that Univision had offered to kill or soften the story about the Senator's brother-in-law if Rubio would do an interview with Jorge Ramos on Al Punto. Writing in the Columbia Journalism Review, Erika Fry concludes that several aspects of the Herald's assertion that Univision offered a quid pro quo, "don't add up."