Cicilia was arrested for his part in the illicit operation in 1987 during Miami's narcotics heyday when Republican presidential hopeful Rubio was just 16. He is pictured addressing a crowd in Waterford Township, Michigan, last week
In 1989, Tabraue's success crumbled when he was found guilty of 61 counts of racketeering and sentenced to 100 years in prison.
When federal agents arrested him they found four safes in his mansion which held an Uzi and a MAC-10 submachine pistol.
His wife also tried to throw away $50,000 in cash when he was arrested
After 12 years he was released. He is now married still keeps his exotic animals in a sanctuary.
Cicilia, according to interviews and court records, referred to cocaine as a 'pretty thing' and would walk around in paisley suits.
Delbert Woodburn, a Miami-Dade narcotics detective, told the Post: 'It was a very large operation. Planes from Colombia were coming into the Bahamas and the Keys, landing at small airports, dropping drugs into the Everglades.'
Like Rubio's family, Cicilia also immigrated from Cuba to the United States. In the 1970s he started dating Barbara Rubio while they were at a Miami high school together.
The families became intertwined because of their heritage and would often celebrate the holidays together.
The head of the ring was Mario Tabraue, an eccentric man who kept leopards in the grounds of his mansion, which was given the nickname 'Playboy Mansion' by federal agents. Pictured today, he still runs an animal sanctuary in Florida
In 1983, Cicilia joined Tabraue's operation. He flourished on the scene, donning sunglasses and wearing his paisley suit sleeves rolled up.
Larry A. Loveless, the lead DEA agent in the investigation into the racket, said in a recent interview that it looked like he has just walked off the set of Miami Vice.
Michael Fisten, a homicide detective who worked on the case and is writing a book about it, told the Post: 'Mario was the kingpin, and Orlando was his second in command. He always had large amounts of cash on him.'
He was based out of Tabraue's business in southwest Miami, Zoological Imports Unlimited, which DEA agents called 'the pet store', where he kept a giraffe, a cheetah and rare birds.
A young Rubio would often do work at Cicilia's house, such as washing their dogs and building animal cages, so he could get tickets to see his beloved Dolphins.
It was the same house that was put under surveillance in the build-up to Cicilia's arrest.
Rubio's spokesman, Todd Harris, told the Post Rubio 'was just 16 at the time of the arrest and views this as a private family matter involving events that occurred almost 30 years ago.'
The candidate denied the chance to be interviewed. He also denied helping his brother get an early release from prison.
Rubio was not involved in Cicilia's wrongdoing.
According to the sanctuary’s website, owners Mario and Maria Tabraue bought five acres of land south of Miami more than a decade ago to create a habitat for exotic animals
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