Pubdate: Sun, 16 Apr 2000 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2000 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Address: PO Box 120191, San Diego, CA, 92112-0191 Contact: (619) 293-1440 Forum: http://www.uniontrib.com/cgi-bin/WebX Website: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Author: Sandra Dibble, Union-Tribune Staff Writer MEXICAN AGENTS' DEATHS NO ACCIDENT Drug Fighters Slain Before Vehicle Crash TIJUANA -- Three Mexican anti-drug agents whose bodies were found late Tuesday off a treacherous mountain road were slain before their car rolled into a ravine, the Mexican Attorney General's Office said yesterday. The findings rule out the possibility that the deaths were accidental, as some authorities suggested after the bodies were found yards from their crashed Chevrolet Lumina. The victims worked for the Feads, an elite anti-drug unit of the Mexican Attorney General's Office, and were investigating the Arellano Félix drug cartel. They had been cooperating closely with U.S. officials, and their deaths shocked law enforcement officials on both sides of the border. The group's leading member was José Patiño Moreno, 48, a special prosecutor assigned to the unit since March. Killed with him were Oscar Pompa Plaza, 41, also a special prosecutor, and army Capt. Rafael Torres Bernal, 29. They had participated in the investigation that led to last month's detention in Tijuana of Jesús "Chuy" Labra Aviles, alleged to be the financial mastermind of the Arellano Félix brothers. Patiño had also been investigating a group of suspected drug traffickers in Mexicali, the Campos Salcido brothers, and had carried out search warrants on 12 of their properties. Colleagues began to suspect foul play after Patiño missed a meeting at 10 a.m. Monday at the Feads office in Tijuana. All three men died as a result of head injuries, the Attorney General's Office found, reaching the same conclusion as the Baja California Medical Examiner's Office, which conducted the initial autopsy. The men's injuries included multiple fractures of the cranium, face and lower jaw, as well as multiple fractures of the thorax, the Attorney General's Office reported. The findings "are not compatible with the kinds of injuries produced in an accident involving motor vehicles," the report said. The agents' car was found about 200 yards down a steep ravine, off a descending two-lane road whose dangerous curves have claimed scores of lives in recent years. Investigators with the federal highway patrol in Baja California initially concluded that the agents' car had been speeding and ran off the road, pointing to skid marks on the road and nearby dirt shoulder. But the Attorney General's Office discounted those findings, saying that the light skid marks were in the wrong direction. The vehicle's ignition was turned on and the car was in drive when it ran off the road, the Attorney General's Office said. But it said the position of the front tires showed that "no effort was made to prevent the car from leaving the asphalt and thus plunging into the void." Patiño's back bore tire marks, which likely injured his thorax and other organs, the report said. But the tire track was not caused by the Lumina, leading investigators to conclude that "it was another type of tire that caused the mark and injuries, and showed that the injuries were caused at a different time and place than the one being investigated." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk