Pubdate: Thu, 14 Dec 2000 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2000 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: James Pinkerton DRUG TRAFFICKERS NABBED, REWARD POSTED FOR LEADER HARLINGEN - Federal agents Thursday began arresting suspected members of a drug-trafficking gang and offered a $2 million reward for the ringleader, a notorious Matamoros drug lord who threatened to kill two federal agents during an armed standoff last year. Prosecutors at the U.S. District Court in Brownsville unsealed a federal indictment Thursday charging Matamoros drug kingpin Oziel Cardenas-Guillen with two counts of drug trafficking and three counts of assault on a federal officer. At the same time, FBI, U.S. Customs and Drug Enforcement Administration agents were out arresting 57 of 100 suspects linked to Cardenas' trafficking cartel. The arrests included six Houston residents, a U.S. Justice Department spokeswoman said. Arrest warrants were issued for people from northern Mexico; the Dominican Republic; Brownsville; McAllen; Chicago; Columbus, Ohio; Memphis, Tenn.; Louisville, Miss.; and New York, authorities said. "They're running," Assistant U.S. Attorney Jesse Rodriguez said of the remaining members of the Matamoros-based trafficking organization known as the Gulf Cartel. The cartel has smuggled a lot of marijuana and cocaine into the United States, authorities said. The drugs are smuggled across the U.S.-Mexican border on rafts or in cars or cargo trucks and the turned over to others for distribution. "They are major players in the Matamoros and Reynosa area. They're responsible for transporting marijuana and cocaine from the Rio Grande Valley to various points in the United States," said Jody Young, a federal prosecutor assigned to the investigation in Brownsville. Federal authorities have long believed Cardenas assumed control of the cartel when its former leader Juan Garcia Abrego was brought to Houston and prosecuted in federal court for drug crimes. Cardenas also recruited remaining gang members of a now defunct drug cartel from Juarez, Mexico, authorities believe. "Through the indictment and $2 million reward announced today, we are turning the tables on a predator who has terrorized the public and targeted the police," U.S. Customs Service Commissioner Raymond Kelly said. The indictment charges that Cardenas and seven members of his gang surrounded two U.S. federal agents and a drug informant as they sat in a car on a Matamoros street. During the tense Nov. 9, 1999, standoff, Cardenas and his pistoleros pointed gold-plated guns and an assault rifle at the car and threatened to kill the agents, according to the indictment. The standoff ended when the FBI and DEA agents showed their credentials and warned the gang of the consequences of their actions. The indictment against Cardenas, returned in March, was kept secret to give Mexican authorities an opportunity to arrest the drug lord in Matamoros, prosecutors said. "We were assisting the Mexican authorities in their efforts to try and locate and arrest him there in Mexico. They were not successful," said Rodriguez. So the indictment was made public Thursday. "The $2 million (reward) was put up by the U.S. State Department and we hope to be able to apprehend him," said Young. Since the investigation of Cardenas' organization began, 34 members of the gang have been indicted and agents have seized 8 tons of marijuana and 600 pounds of cocaine, authorities said. Authorities believe the investigation is hurting the cartel. "Certainly the number of arrests and the number of seizures of drugs and currency will disrupt and slow down the organization," Young said. The arrests Thursday were part of a trafficking investigation that began in 1996 and targeted drug routes operated by the Juarez cartel. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek