Pubdate: Tue, 29 Feb 2000 Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX) Copyright: 2000 Star-Telegram, Fort Worth, Texas Contact: http://www.star-telegram.com/ Forum: http://www.star-telegram.com/comm/forums/ Author: Ricardo Sandoval - Knight-Ridder News Service POLICE CHIEF'S KILLING MIGHT HURT MEXICO; ITS DRUG-WAR STATUS MAY BE DEBATED TIJUANA, Mexico -- The slaying of Tijuana's police chief over the weekend could not have come at a worse time for Mexico: Tomorrow, President Clinton sends Congress his list of countries that are certified as U.S. allies in the war on drugs, and Mexico will be on the list. That will kick off another round of debate in Washington, with some lawmakers expected to argue that Mexico does not merit certification because it has not done enough to stop the flow of illicit drugs. However, because Mexico is the United States' second most important trading partner, congressional analysts say Clinton is unlikely to decertify the country, even though drug seizures are down and authorities have had little effect on drug-related violence or corruption. Each year, U.S. presidents must certify the anti-drug efforts of countries where drug trafficking and production have been a problem. Decertification can lead to trade sanctions and a loss of economic aid. The police chief of Tijuana was gunned down Sunday in an ambush that bears the marks of organized crime, only days after Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo promised to get tough on drug smugglers in the booming border area. Alfredo de la Torre, police chief in the city just across the border from San Diego, was killed as he drove alone toward his office from church. Gunmen in sports utility vehicles opened fire on his Suburban. Initial police reports said more than 100 shots were fired before his vehicle swerved across a quiet thoroughfare into a palm tree. Tijuana is home to the Arellano-Felix drug organization, Mexico's second-largest drug cartel. It's also one of the country's biggest transfer points for U.S.-bound drugs, including cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamines, drug enforcement officials say. Drug dealers have not been tied to de la Torre's slaying, but his killing was strikingly similar to the 1995 slaying of a police chief that was linked to drug gangs. It even happened on the same road. The de la Torre killing raises "concerns [in Washington] that Mexico finds itself in a position where this kind of violence occurs, and no one in an official capacity can seem to bring those responsible to justice," said a U.S. analyst who works with congressional committees on drug issues and who spoke on condition that he not be named. "The Mexican effort against drug smugglers amounts to no more than stopping cars for random searches," said Jesus Blancornelas, editor of the Tijuana weekly newspaper Zeta and the survivor of an assassination attempt by drug cartel hit men in 1998. "There is no real federal investigation or intelligence effort against drug lords." Street skirmishes between drug gangs in Tijuana have killed at least two dozen people in recent weeks, authorities say. In all, 80 slayings have been reported this year in Tijuana, site of the busiest border crossing in the world. What's worse, U.S. officials say privately, is Mexico's seeming inability to mount a police response. They say that ineptness has led to the escape of high-profile drug suspects such as Mario Villanueva, the former governor of Quintana Roo state, on Mexico's border with Belize, as federal investigators were about to arrest him on charges of aiding drug smugglers. On Friday, Zedillo assigned top members of his administration to discuss the law-enforcement problem with authorities in Tijuana's state, Baja California, this week. "Organized crime has brought an onslaught of violence and an atmosphere of intimidation that has naturally and justifiably caused indignation among the people" of Baja California, Zedillo said in a speech two days before de la Torre's slaying. Every day, U.S. Customs Service agents in Tijuana intercept about a dozen cars concealing drugs, customs officials say. And they say that for every vehicle they catch, another 10 make it through the border checkpoint. "We've had some success" against drug smugglers, U.S. Customs Service Commissioner Ray Kelly said last week as he supervised agents stripping enough marijuana and cocaine from the tire rims or tool compartments of several vehicles to fill two shopping carts. Trained dogs, which roam the vehicles lined up to cross into San Diego, sniffed out the drugs. "But despite what you see here, there's plenty of stuff that still comes through," Kelly said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart