Pubdate: Fri, 22 Dec 2000 Source: Metroland (NY) Copyright: 2000Metroland Contact: 4 Central Ave., 4th Floor, Albany, NY 12210 Website: http://www.metroland.net/ametroland_home.html FYI - LAWYERS, DRUGS AND MONEY The managers of Voxel Dot Net Inc., a small Internet-service provider in Troy, hardly imagined that they would ever become embroiled in an international dispute over drug trafficking. But this month, that's exactly what happened. Last Thursday (Dec. 14), Voxel was contacted by representatives of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, a Washington, D.C. law firm representing the Mexican bank Banamex. Through a lawsuit filed in federal District Court in New York City, Banamex is waging a legal battle to discredit media reports indicating that its president, Roberto Hernandez Ramirez, is a drug trafficker whose activities are allegedly protected by powerful politicians in both Mexico and the United States. Since last April, Voxel has provided Internet access to the Narco News Bulletin, a news service that seeks to expose the alleged hypocrisies of the U.S.-led war against drugs--which enters its next phase in January with the start of a military operation in southern Colombia targeting coca growers. Akin Gump reportedly asked Voxel to dismantle the Narco News Web site (www.narconews.com), but the company refused, citing free speech concerns. "This has the makings of a huge, huge case," said Raj Dutt, the corporate spokesman for Voxel in Troy. Dutt said he could not comment specifically on any legal action that might be taken against his company. "We're not being held responsible. We are the host" of Narco News, he said. Dutt added that the news bulletin was "providing a public service" and that Voxel would continue providing Internet access "until we get a court order basically telling us to take the site down." "I'm not authorized to speak to the press on behalf of our client," said Akin Gump spokesman Tom McLish, who has been attempting to serve the legal papers related to a lawsuit brought against the Narco News publisher, former Boston Phoenix political writer Al Giordano. In July, Narco News translated a series of articles published in Por Esto!, Mexico's third-largest daily newspaper, which documented how the Hernandez property in the state of Quintana Roo has become a prime shipping point for Colombian cocaine. The paper went so far as to call the Hernandez ranch, located on Mexico's Caribbean coast, "the cocaine peninsula." Hernandez filed lawsuits against the editor and publisher of Por Esto!, along with several of the paper's reporters, to force a retraction of its investigative stories. But top Mexican judges ruled against him, saying the stories were "based on the facts," according to Narco News. Other Mexican papers have reported how Hernandez hosted a private reception at his ranch this year that was attended by newly elected Mexican President Vincente Fox, U.S. ambassador to Mexico Jeffrey Davidow and President Bill Clinton. - --- MAP posted-by: GD