Pubdate: Wed, 10 May 2000 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2000 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: 200 Liberty Street, New York, NY 10281 Fax: (212) 416-2658 Website: http://www.wsj.com/ Author: Jose DeCordoba Note: Write to Jose DeCordoba at HEAD TRIP A gruesome discovery yields the inside dope on mexican drug feud An Upstart Brother Rubbed Many the Wrong Way: He Paid With His Life Security Duty at the Morgue GUADALAJARA, Mexico -- On Jan. 31, a garbage picker came upon an unusual find as he poked through a Dumpster outside a chocolate factory here: a human head, wrapped in black plastic. The head, that of a man in his 40s, lay unclaimed in a box in a freezer. Two weeks later, the police found the rest of the body in the trunk of a wine-colored Chevrolet Malibu parked by a high school, and started to put the pieces together. Relatives soon confirmed that the head and the body both belonged to Rene Gonzalez Quirarte, whose younger brother Eduardo, police officials say, was the right-hand man of Amado Carrillo Fuentes, the late overlord of the Juarez cocaine cartel. The tale of how Rene lost his head, in its own surreal way, shows how the violence of Mexico's drug underworld continues to bubble up to threaten Mexico's unsteady march toward democracy and modernization. A Grisly Inventory Indeed, the first months of the millennium have been especially gruesome in Mexico, and the mayhem seems to be picking up as July's watershed presidential election approaches. In February, Tijuana's police chief was gunned down as he drove down a highway. Last month, three federal drug investigators were found dead in a car at the bottom of a Tijuana ravine. One of the victims, police say, had been run over repeatedly by a heavy truck. In the past two weeks alone, at least eight people, including a top law-enforcement official, have been mowed down in suspected drug-related killings in the state of Sinaloa. U.S. officials say that Mexican drug gangs, stronger than ever, are just flexing their muscles. But Mexican officials say the escalating violence is a direct consequence of their aggressive campaign against the country's powerful drug gangs. Indeed, just last week, after a shootout, police and soldiers captured a leading lieutenant of Tijuana's violent Arellano Felix gang. "We are not containing drug traffickers -- we are fighting them," says Attorney General Jorge Madrazo. Between Mexican seizures of drugs and U.S. seizures of cash, some drug bosses are having temporary difficulty meeting their payrolls, Mexican officials say. Some have even had to put some hard assets on the block at fire-sale prices. "This is the time to buy a mansion in Guadalajara," jokes Juan Miguel Ponce Edmondson, Mexico's director of Interpol, the international police agency. Brother to Brother Which brings us back to the macabre downfall of Rene Gonzalez Quirarte at age 46. The following account was pieced together from information from Mexican and U.S. law-enforcement officials, from police surveillance and other intelligence, and from interviews with lawyers for and family of the beheaded. The story begins, most agree, with Rene's younger brother Eduardo. Police say Eduardo, 38, has a keener nose for the drug business than did Rene. U.S. and Mexican law-enforcement officials allege that Eduardo became a top operator in Mr. Carrillo's gang. Eduardo has been indicted on drug charges in both Mexico and the U.S., but never tried; he is a fugitive. Last summer, police say, Eduardo was partying late into the night in a Mexico City club when he ran out of cash. According to police officials, Eduardo went off to an ATM. Two hold-up men, who, as it turned out, were off-duty cops, mugged him. In the ensuing gunfight, Eduardo killed one cop-turned-bandit, but was wounded in the head. People familiar with the events say Eduardo wound up in a local hospital in a coma, where he lay forgotten for three days as a John Doe until his Juarez cartel buddies tracked him down and spirited him out. Since then, law-enforcement authorities have had no idea where Eduardo is, though police intelligence reports suggest he has been slowly recuperating. Addressing the President Until his brother's setback, Rene, a civil engineer by profession, had been kept at the margin of the drug business, police officials say. One exception was in 1997, after Eduardo was identified in court and in the press as Mr. Carrillo's top lieutenant. Rene took out a full-page ad in a local newspaper addressed to President Ernesto Zedillo, in which Rene proclaimed his brother's innocence, defended the honor of his family and gave the president a cell-phone number if he wanted to discuss the matter further. (The president never called.) Last year, with his brother sidelined, Rene saw his chance to make it big, according to police intelligence and other sources. But Rene, it seems, demonstrated a poor grasp of drug-business fundamentals. Although he quickly amassed a fortune, he did so by big-footing it over other family members also alleged to be involved in the drug business and over gang members, commandeering dozens of cars, properties and cash from them, police and others say. It was partly an effort to show he was every inch the drug capo his brother Eduardo was. It didn't go over well. "The business was too much for him," says Interpol's Mr. Ponce Edmondson. Police say Rene also had an unfortunate habit of losing large shipments; several were seized by police, or lost en route under mysterious circumstances. Soon, he was up to his neck in debt, both to his own cartel colleagues and to Colombian suppliers, police say. The general, if temporary, lack of liquidity afflicting the drug business didn't sweeten the disposition of Rene's creditors. According to police intelligence, both his Colombian suppliers and his colleagues in the Juarez cartel separately decided to kill him. Sensing trouble, police officials say, Rene prepared to flee to Argentina, where his brother and the late Mr. Carrillo had bought up thousands of acres and a score of hotels and houses to weather just such a turn of events. (Mr. Carrillo died after undergoing plastic surgery in 1997.) Interpol put out an alert for Rene in Argentina. Rene's wife, Maria Araceli, told police investigators that she saw her husband for the last time on Nov. 10, when he left for work. According to transcripts of her statement, Rene called her later that day to say he wouldn't return home that night because he was too busy at work. A few days later, Rene called her again and told her not to worry, that he was traveling on business. He called again on Christmas Eve. "I asked him if he wouldn't be with us even on such a day, and he said to please understand that if it was up to him, he would be home, but that he was very busy," Mrs. Gonzalez Quirarte told police. Desperate Fund-Raising Police say they believe that during this time, Mr. Gonzalez Quirarte had in fact been kidnapped, most probably by angry Colombian suppliers. Police intelligence shows that he was desperately calling family and Juarez cartel confederates, trying to raise the $12 million demanded in exchange for his life. Many he reached out to didn't believe that he had been kidnapped, but thought that he was merely trying to hit them up for more money for himself. Others were so mad at him that they didn't care what happened to him, police intelligence shows. Still, police say he did manage to raise about $4 million. By January, he was calling home more frequently. "He said he would soon be home," Mrs. Gonzalez Quirarte told investigators. On Jan. 29, two days before the garbage picker made his gruesome discovery, the telephone calls stopped. Police say they've concluded that the kidnappers, having gotten all the money they were going to get, turned Mr. Gonzalez Quirarte over to his worst enemies -- the Tijuana-based Arellano Felix gang, longtime rival of the Amado Carrillo cartel. The Arellano Felix gang also has carried on a bloody personal feud with the Gonzalez Quirartes for years. In 1995, police say, Arellano Felix gunmen shot up Eduardo's car, wounding him, as well as his two children. "The kidnappers sold Rene's head to the Arellanos," says Interpol's Mr. Ponce Edmondson. A Sense of Things Awry Stick-thin and haggard, Sylvia Gonzalez Quirarte, Rene's older sister, says in an interview that she knows nothing about Rene or Eduardo's alleged drug dealing. She says Rene, who also called her after his disappearance, never mentioned a word about ransom demands, or even that he was in any danger, although she sensed that things weren't right. Sylvia says she has no idea who killed her brother. Death has not brought closure to Rene Gonzalez Quirarte's story. More than three months after his murder, authorities haven't yet released his body to his relatives. The Jalisco state medical examiner has now twice conducted DNA tests that he says prove the remains are Rene's. But Mexican crime annals are replete with bizarre stories of body doubles and supposedly dead criminals who manage to be born again. So neither the Jalisco state prosecutor's office nor federal authorities have seen fit to release the body. Meanwhile, rumors swirl in Guadalajara. One is that police may be trying to use Rene's remains to lure his brother, Eduardo, from hiding. Another is that narco-commandos will mount a raid on the morgue to spring the body. Indeed, Jalisco state police officers have been posted day and night at the morgue, while the army has sent military intelligence officers to reconnoiter the scene. "It's a delicate situation," says Sylvia Gonzalez Quirarte, wiping away a tear. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg