Pubdate: Mon, 13 Mar 2000 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2000 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: PO Box 120191, San Diego, CA, 92112-0191 Fax: (619) 293-1440 Website: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Forum: http://www.uniontrib.com/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Sandra Dibble, Union-Tribune Staff Writer ALLEGED CARTEL FIGURE SEIZED Tijuana Businessman Is Linked To Arellanos March 12, 2000, TIJUANA - In what may be the strongest blow yet against the powerful Arellano Felix drug cartel, soldiers and federal agents yesterday detained Jesus "Chuy" Labra, a Tijuana businessman reputed to be a family member and close adviser to the cartel. The Tijuana-based cartel, run by four brothers, is considered one of the most violent and aggressive trafficking groups in Mexico. Authorities say it controls the region's lucrative drug trade to the United States. Labra, 50, has long been suspected of being a key figure in the organization, but official attempts to tie him to the Arellanos have failed. Labra's lawyer said last night that his client was being held at a Mexican air force base in Tijuana after five hours in detention at the federal Attorney General's Office in the city's Rio Zone. Authorities also detained a nephew of Labra's, Marco Antonio Labra, and two companions, said the lawyer, Gustavo Galvez Reyes. Neither Mexican nor U.S. authorities would confirm the detentions. But Labra was taken away in full view of nearly 200 people watching a football game on the campus of the city's elite public high school, Preparatoria Federal Lazaro Cardenas. "The weapons were pointed everywhere," said Alfredo Escobedo Ortiz, director of civil protection for the Baja California government and director of a league that brings together students who play American football. Labra's attorney claimed U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents participated in the arrest in violation of Mexico's constitution. "They were speaking English and had Anglo-Saxon characteristics," Galvez said. "They were coming in and out of the Attorney General's Office without even identifying themselves." The raid occurred about 11:45 a.m. during halftime of a game between high school junior varsity teams from rival clubs, Los Leones and Los Guerreros, Escobedo said. Soldiers and agents in civilian dress were among the 30 to 40 heavily armed men who descended on the campus and took Labra and the three others away. "They never told us the motive for the detention," Galvez said. He described Labra as a businessman with no criminal record. "He has no ties to any kind of illicit activities; he has never had any problems." Sirens blared as the detainees were driven across the city to the air force base. Witnesses said masked federal anti-drug agents carrying automatic weapons escorted the convoy. Late last night, there were reports of shots being fired at the Attorney General's Office. There were no reports of injuries. The DEA has described the Arellano brothers as being responsible for the transportation, importing and distribution of tons of cocaine, marijuana, heroin and methamphetamine into the United States. They have also been implicated in the deaths of police, prosecutors, judges and drug dealers. One of the brothers, Ramon, was named to the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list in 1997. In a 1996 interview with the Mexico City newspaper El Universal, a federal police commander in Tijuana said Labra was an uncle of the Arellano brothers. The commander, Ernesto Ibarra Santes, told the newspaper Labra "is the one who charges fees to 20 smaller bands of drug traffickers that operate in the city." Ibarra Santes was assassinated in Mexico City five days after the interview. Despite his reputed ties to the Arellanos, Labra has lived openly in Tijuana. In 1993, a team of agents seized a ranch on the outskirts of the city where Labra was believed to have kept a private zoo of 270 exotic animals, including a camel and a lion. In 1996, a team of federal agents searched Labra's residence in a well-to-do Tijuana neighborhood as part of a series of raids aimed at finding the Arellano brothers. But the agents came away empty-handed. Labra's detention comes amid a high-profile effort against drug traffickers following the Feb. 27 assassination of Tijuana Police Chief Alfredo de la Torre Marquez. On Wednesday, Baja California's attorney general announced the detention of seven of de la Torre's suspected killers. He said they were members of a hit squad working for a drug lord from the Pacific coast state of Sinaloa. At least 14 other killings are attributed to the group, which is said to include at least two former police officers and possibly two currently on the force. Authorities say the gang was working for the drug organization headed by Ismael "Mayo" Zambada, who they say wanted to destabilize the Tijuana area in an attempt to move in on the Arellanos. Although claims by Labra's lawyer that the United States participated in the arrest could not be confirmed last night, Charles La Bella, a former chief federal prosecutor in San Diego, said he would not be surprised that the DEA was involved if Mexican officials had asked for help. Such a request was made late last year when the FBI joined Mexican soldiers and law enforcement officers at a ranch outside Juarez, Mexico, to search for the bodies of people killed by drug traffickers. Some Mexican politicians were outraged by U.S. participation in the investigation, saying it undermined Mexican sovereignty. But Mexican Attorney General Jorge Madrazo Cuellar said he had no regrets about asking for help from the United States and would do it again if necessary. "I am not going to leave any corner of this country to the sovereignty of drug traffickers," he said. Although La Bella said he is not familiar with Labra's history, he saw the arrest as a positive sign that U.S. and Mexican officials are getting closer to the Arellanos. "It's a step," La Bella said. "Let's see what they do with him." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D