Checkout Time at the Hotel Del Rey
For three decades a yellow corner building in downtown San José was Central America’s most famous casino, brothel, and rumor mill. The biggest rumor of all: that it was a watering hole for the CIA. Here is the myth — and the surprisingly real history hiding underneath it.
For thirty years, if you stood on the corner of Avenida 1 and Calle 9 in downtown San José at two in the morning, you could watch the whole strange ecosystem of Costa Rica’s underground walk past a single doorway. Sunburned American bookmakers in golf shirts. Off-duty cops. Tour operators. Poker grinders down from Vegas. Lonely retirees. Cocaine salesmen. The occasional war correspondent. And somewhere in that crowd, the legend always insisted, a man with a flat-top haircut and a government pension who never quite explained what he did for a living.
The building they were all filing into was the Hotel Del Rey — a four-story corner pile with a casino on the ground floor, a hundred-odd rooms upstairs, and a bar called the Blue Marlin that made it, for a generation of travelers, the single most infamous address in Central America. It was a hotel, a casino, a sportsbook hangout, and the throbbing heart of the city’s legal sex trade, all at once. Locals and expats called the surrounding blocks “Gringo Gulch.”
It was also, according to a rumor that has never quite died, a hangout for the Central Intelligence Agency.
This is an article about that rumor: where it came from, why it stuck to this particular building, what is verifiably true, what is almost certainly myth, and the genuinely astonishing real history — the secret airstrips, the fugitive financiers, the bombing on the river — that the legend grew up around like coral on a wreck. Because the strange thing about the Del Rey’s spy reputation is not that it’s a wild exaggeration. It’s that the wild parts actually happened a few miles and a few years away, and the hotel simply inherited the ghosts.
Part I · The House That Big John Built
The Del Rey’s reputation was built in the 1990s, but the bones of the operation were older. The complex grew out of a cluster of properties beside Parque Morazán, including the celebrated Key Largo bar — a restored Victorian mansion from the turn of the 20th century that had been San José’s original “gringo pickup joint” since the mid-1970s, and which the Costa Rican government would eventually declare a protected historic building. Around that core, an American expatriate named John Clark Emerson — universally known as “Big John” — assembled the hotel, the casino, and the bar that became a brand unto itself.
By the late 1990s the Del Rey was world-famous in a very particular demimonde. Prostitution between consenting adults is legal in Costa Rica (pimping and trafficking are not), and the Blue Marlin became the most visible marketplace for it on the continent — written up in guidebooks, profiled by travel writers, and traded as a punchline and a destination in equal measure. Upstairs were the hotel rooms; downstairs, a 24-hour casino and a bar that, on a good night, held a parliament of the entire foreign demimonde of San José.
The Blue Marlin also sat at the crossroads of another only-in-Costa-Rica industry. By the early 2000s, San José had become the undisputed world capital of offshore sports betting, home to somewhere between 200 and 300 books taking tens of billions of dollars in American wagers a year. Cigar Aficionado sent a writer down in 2004 and found a city of expatriate bookmakers, line-makers, and “money movers,” many of whom had arrived a step ahead of trouble back home. The Blue Marlin itself shared its name with one of those early sportsbooks, run by one of the first half-dozen American bookies to set up in the country. The Del Rey was where that whole floating world came to drink.
“If, as the author Nicholas Pileggi once wrote, Las Vegas is a morality car wash, then Costa Rica is the morality car wash of the morality car wash.” — Cigar Aficionado, “An Off Shore Bet,” 2004
That is the crucial context for everything that follows. The Del Rey wasn’t a spy bar. It was a gringo bar — a place where Americans who had reasons to be far from American jurisdiction gathered in one well-lit room. And in 1990s San José, “Americans with reasons to be far from home” was a category that overlapped, at the edges, with some very real intelligence history.
Part II · The Land of the Friendly Fugitive
To understand why a CIA legend could attach itself to a San José casino, you have to understand what Costa Rica had been advertising itself as for half a century: a stable, peaceful, army-less democracy (it abolished its military in 1948) wedged between the wars of its neighbors — and a remarkably comfortable place to disappear into if you were a foreigner with money and a complicated past.
The patron saint of that tradition was Robert Vesco, the American financier who fled the United States in the early 1970s after looting an investment empire and allegedly trying to buy his way out with a secret contribution to Richard Nixon’s campaign. Vesco landed in Costa Rica and, for a while, effectively bought protection: the country passed legislation so transparently designed to shield him that Costa Ricans simply called it “the Vesco Law.” When a new president repealed it in 1978, Vesco moved on — eventually to Nicaragua and then Cuba — but the template was set. Costa Rica was where an American on the run could buy a nice house, a measure of safety, and a barstool.
By the time the offshore bookmakers arrived two decades later, the country had a well-worn groove for exactly this kind of person. Which is why, when you sat in the Blue Marlin and someone leaned over to tell you the quiet guy by the slot machines “used to be Agency,” it was the most natural story in the world to believe. The town was full of people who used to be something.
Part III · The Southern Front
Here is where the legend stops being smoke. In the 1980s — a decade before the Del Rey hit its stride — Costa Rica was a genuine theater of American covert action, and San José was genuinely crawling with intelligence officers, contract pilots, mercenaries, fundraisers, and the journalists chasing all of them.
The Reagan administration was waging a not-so-secret war against the Sandinista government of neighboring Nicaragua, arming and funding the rebels known as the Contras. Honduras, to Nicaragua’s north, was the “Northern Front.” Costa Rica, to the south, became the Southern Front — and when the U.S. Congress cut off official funding through the Boland Amendment, the operation went underground, run off the books out of the White House basement by a National Security Council staffer named Lt. Col. Oliver North. The whole apparatus would eventually explode into the Iran-Contra affair.
The man holding it together on the ground in Costa Rica was the CIA’s own station chief in San José, Joseph Fernandez — who operated under the pseudonym Tomás Castillo. A Cuban-American protégé of the legendary CIA officer Dewey Clarridge, Fernandez threw in with North’s secret network, coordinating the aerial resupply of the southern Contras flown by retired Air Force general Richard Secord‘s private logistics outfit, blandly named “the Enterprise.” Fernandez was eventually indicted in 1988 — the first time a sitting CIA station chief had ever been criminally charged for acts committed in the line of duty. The case collapsed in 1989 only because the Attorney General refused to declassify the evidence his defense required. He later went into business with Oliver North.
That is not conspiracy theory. That is the official record of the Independent Counsel. The CIA’s top officer in Costa Rica really was running a covert war out of San José, and really was charged with crimes for it.
The infrastructure of that war is well documented. A clandestine airstrip was bulldozed onto the remote Santa Elena peninsula in Guanacaste, on land linked to North’s network, and used to resupply the rebels until it was exposed in September 1986. The main overland staging area was the cluster of farms owned by an American rancher named John Hull, an asset of the operation who was later named in U.S. Senate hearings, charged in Costa Rica, and fled the country.
And then there were the drugs. The 1989 report of the Senate subcommittee chaired by John Kerry — the “Kerry Committee” — concluded that there was substantial evidence of drug trafficking by Contra suppliers, Contra pilots, and mercenaries who worked with the Contras, some of whom used the same planes and the same airstrips. The CIA’s own Inspector General would later examine the allegations at length. The phrase that hung over the whole Southern Front — guns flown north, cocaine flown back south — remains one of the most contested in modern American history, but the official paper trail documenting trafficking by people connected to the operation is real and public.
Part IV · The Bomb on the River
If you want the single event that fused “Costa Rica,” “the CIA,” and “things that happen in the dark” into one permanent knot in the national imagination, it is the La Penca bombing.
On May 30, 1984, the Contra commander Edén Pastora — the charismatic former Sandinista hero turned rebel, known as Comandante Cero — called a press conference at a remote jungle camp called La Penca, on the Nicaraguan bank of the Río San Juan. A man posing as a Danish photographer set down a camera case packed with explosives and slipped away. The blast killed several people, including the American journalist Linda Frazier and Costa Rican press, and wounded many more. Pastora, the apparent target, survived.
Two of the journalists wounded that day, the American Tony Avirgan and his partner Martha Honey, spent years investigating the attack and concluded it was the work of a CIA-linked network tied to the Southern Front. In 1986 the public-interest law firm the Christic Institute filed a sprawling $24-million civil racketeering suit on that theory, naming a roster of figures connected to Oliver North. It was, for a moment, the case that promised to blow the whole “secret team” into the open.
And then it fell apart. The lawsuit was thrown out and the Christic Institute was hit with sanctions. Decades later, the story flipped again: in 2009 a Swedish journalist who had been at La Penca revealed he’d been steered to the bomber by a Sandinista intelligence contact, and investigators came to identify the “photographer” as an Argentine leftist militant — pointing not at the CIA but at a Sandinista false-flag operation against Pastora.
The most important thing about La Penca isn’t who planted the bomb. It’s that for forty years, no one could be sure — and into that uncertainty, every rumor in San José could be poured.
That is the engine of the whole Del Rey legend in miniature. When a real, documented, lethal covert war leaves its central mystery unsolved, the suspicion doesn’t dissipate. It seeps into the surrounding city and attaches to its most colorful landmarks. The Del Rey, by the 1990s, was the most colorful landmark of all.
Part V · The Spy Bar That Wasn’t (Quite)
So: was the Hotel Del Rey a CIA hangout? Here is the honest answer, and it has three parts.
First, the timing doesn’t fit the cleanest version of the legend. The hot phase of the covert war — Fernandez, North, Santa Elena, La Penca — ran from roughly 1983 to 1987. The Del Rey’s reign as the gringo capital of San José was a 1990s and 2000s phenomenon. By the time the casino’s neon was its brightest, Iran-Contra was already a congressional hearing and a set of memoirs. The building that the legend paints as a wartime operations lounge mostly came into its own after the war it supposedly served.
Second, the bar scene the spooks actually used was real — it was just a slightly older, broader scene. In the 1980s, San José’s foreign demimonde drank at places like the historic Key Largo mansion, the downtown sodas and cantinas around Parque Morazán, and the bars of the gringo hotels. That world genuinely did mix contract pilots, arms brokers, Contra fundraisers, DEA agents, fugitives, embassy people, and a swarm of foreign correspondents — because San José was the press base and logistics hub for covering and supplying a regional war. The idea that intelligence people drank in San José bars and traded information isn’t a myth at all. It’s just that the specific building everyone now names absorbed the reputation of a whole district and a whole era.
Third, the hard claims remain unproven. That the Del Rey itself was a CIA “front”; that “Big John” Emerson was an intelligence asset; that the casino laundered Agency money; that the Blue Marlin was a recruitment lounge — these are the kinds of stories that circulate forever in expat forums and travel writing and never come with a document attached. They are plausible-sounding precisely because the surrounding history is so lurid and so real. But plausible is not proven, and a good story is not a source.
Myth vs. Documented Record
The legend, in other words, is doing something very human. It is taking a true and disturbing history that was scattered across jungle airstrips, embassy back-offices, and a courtroom in Washington — history that never produced a satisfying ending — and gathering it into one walkable, photographable, drink-in-your-hand place. The Del Rey became a monument to a war it barely touched.
Part VI · Last Call
Reputation eventually became liability. As global attention to human trafficking sharpened, a venue built around an open sex market drew steadily heavier scrutiny, and the Del Rey’s brand curdled from “notorious” to “indefensible” in a lot of eyes. The offshore-gambling boom that had filled its bar moved on and thinned out under U.S. legal pressure — the era’s signature bust, the 2006 arrest of BetOnSports CEO David Carruthers as he changed planes in the United States, marked the beginning of the end of Costa Rica’s wide-open sportsbook decade.
The literal end came in March 2023, when Costa Rican tax authorities padlocked the property over unpaid tax obligations — an unglamorous finish for a building that had survived everything more dramatic. Four months later, in July 2023, John “Big John” Emerson, the American who had presided over the whole circus for decades, died. The two events together read like the closing of a ledger. The casino went dark; the man went with it.
What outlives the Del Rey is the story — and the story is more interesting, and more honest, than the simple “CIA bar” headline suggests. The truth is that a real superpower really did run a real secret war from this small, peaceful country; that the war left bodies on a riverbank and a station chief in the dock and a question mark that never resolved; and that a city which had spent fifty years learning to shelter complicated foreigners simply folded all of it into the legend of its most famous dive.
The spook in the corner of the Blue Marlin may never have existed. But he didn’t have to. In San José, in those years, he was always a reasonable thing to imagine. And that, in the end, is what the Hotel Del Rey was really selling: not the certainty of secrets, but the delicious, tropical, neon-lit possibility of them.
Frequently Asked
Was the Hotel Del Rey really a CIA hangout?
It’s an enduring local legend, not a documented fact. The Del Rey’s heyday was the 1990s and 2000s — after the 1980s Contra-era covert war. San José genuinely was full of intelligence figures in the ’80s, but no public evidence shows the hotel itself was a CIA front.
What was the Hotel Del Rey?
A four-story hotel, 24-hour casino and bar (the Blue Marlin) at Avenida 1 and Calle 9 in downtown San José — internationally infamous for gambling and Costa Rica’s legal adult sex trade, in the district nicknamed “Gringo Gulch.” Tax authorities closed it in March 2023.
Was the CIA actually active in Costa Rica?
Yes. In the 1980s, Costa Rica was the “Southern Front” of the U.S.-backed Contra war. The San José station chief, Joseph Fernandez (“Tomás Castillo”), was indicted in the Iran-Contra affair — the first sitting CIA station chief charged for line-of-duty acts.
What was the La Penca bombing?
A May 30, 1984 bombing at Edén Pastora’s press conference on the Nicaragua–Costa Rica border that killed several people, including journalist Linda Frazier. Long blamed on a CIA-linked plot; later evidence pointed to a Sandinista false-flag operation.
Who owned the Del Rey, and when did it close?
American expatriate John “Big John” Emerson ran it for decades. Costa Rican tax authorities padlocked it over unpaid taxes in March 2023; Emerson died in July 2023.
Sources & Further Reading
This article separates the documented historical record from local legend. Key references:
• Joseph F. Fernandez (CIA station chief, “Tomás Castillo”) — Wikipedia. • La Penca bombing (1984) — Wikipedia. • The Secret Airstrip Scandal — The Tico Times. • “Southern Front Contras” — CIA Inspector General report (FAS). • How John Kerry exposed the Contra-cocaine scandal — Salon. • Robert Vesco — Wikipedia. • “An Off Shore Bet” — Cigar Aficionado, 2004. • Infamous Hotel Del Rey Closed & “Big John” Emerson Is Dead — The Tico Times, 2023. • Key Largo (historic San José bar) — Wikipedia. • CIA involvement in Contra cocaine trafficking — Wikipedia.
Images: Original AI-assisted vector illustrations created for this article. Archival photographs and maps are U.S. Government works or other public-domain media via Wikimedia Commons. Allegations about specific named individuals are presented as the unverified local legend they are; documented claims are sourced to the references above.
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