Pubdate: Wed, 11 Apr 2001 Source: La Jornada (Mexico City, Mexico) Copyright: 2001 La Jornada Website: http://serpiente.dgsca.unam.mx/jornada/ Translated: FBIS Translated Text Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Mexico MEXICAN COUNTERNARCOTICS PROSECUTOR EXPLAINS GULF CARTEL OPERATIONS The large cartels have ceased to be operative, and have transferred their structures to cells (smaller groups) through which routes, corrupt officials, and even territories for operation are being provided. These groups have even managed to move between 50 and 60 tons of drugs per month, claimed the one in charge of the Office of the Special Prosecutor for Dealing With Crimes Against Health (FEADS), Jose Luis Santiago Vasconcelos. At a press conference, the official remarked that the strongest organizations in Mexico are: that of the brothers Benjamin and Ramon Arellano Felix; that of Vicente Carrillo Fuentes and Vicente Carrillo Leyva, brother and son, respectively, of the late Amado Carrillo Fuentes; and the Gulf Cartel, controlled by Osiel Cardenas Guillen; because, he said, the Colima Cartel of the Amezcua Contreras brothers "is inoperative." Santiago Vasconcelos asserted: "The large cartels have ceased to be operative, because in that form their identification was much more rapid, their methods of movement much slower, and their organization more detectable. So, they reversed or converted their structure into operative cells. "The latter are coordinated, with intercommunication, do not operate independently, and are provided with assistance, routes, vehicles, and even corrupt officials to continue their illicit activities. This allows them a proliferation that complicates the efforts to pursue them." The director of the FEADS noted that this new type of operation has been run for approximately two years, and was discovered specifically in the Arellano Felix organization, when Ismael Higuera Guerrero, alias "El Mayel"; Jesus "El Chuy" Labra Aviles; Gilberto Higuera Guerrero, "El Gilillo"; and Rigoberto Yanez Guerrero, "El Primo" were arrested. The counternarcotics prosecutor commented: "As you can see, it is simply a distribution of the work, with territorial districts and definite obligations, with the coopting of authorities, and with a guarantee of the drug shipments and the return of the money." He explained that this conversion makes it possible to cut the size of the organizations, because they are reduced to cells, but expands the territories. In other words, there are cells that are engaged in moving around drugs ranging from 50 to 60 tons per month. As for the major organizations operating in Mexico, he claimed: "They are still the Arellano Felix brothers' cartel; the cells of what remains of the so-called Ciudad Juarez or Amado Carrillo Cartel, in which the most visible heads are Juan Jose Esparragoza Moreno, "El Azul"; Ramon Alcides Magana,"El Metro," and Ignacio "Nacho" Coronel; and, in the case of the Gulf Cartel, Osiel Cardenas. 'El June' Remanded At 2130 hours this Tuesday, the FEADS transferred Gilberto Garcia Mena, "El June," to the maximum security prison at La Palma, in Almoloya, State of Mexico. A judge with headquarters in Toluca will be the one in charge of initiating criminal proceedings against him for crimes against health in their various forms and illegal possession of firearms, as well as violation of the law against organized crime. As for the Gulf Cartel, Vasconcelos reported that among the results accrued from the operation conducted by the FEADS and the Mexican Army in the State of Tamaulipas was the successful dismantling of an important cell of that organization and the seizure of 127 firearms, four hand grenades, 2,134 packages of marijuana equivalent to over 20 tons of that drug, 18 kg of cannabis seed, and 52 vehicles; as well as the search of 18 residences, 10 of which were confiscated. He admitted that there are other leaders in the Gulf Cartel on the same level as "El June," on whom there are already concrete data, pointing out that hence this organization should not be considered to have ceased operating. He indicated that the FEADS thinks that there is a great operator in the Gulf Cartel, namely, Osiel Cardenas Guillen, whose arrest is expected soon. He observed: "That organization is not finished yet, regardless of the fact that there is already an arrest warrant for Osiel Cardenas, against whom we have already attempted various operations that have not been favorable for us to date. However, we expect to capture him soon." He added that Cardenas "is currently the visible head within the Gulf Cartel's area of influence," but added: "We have identified other drug traffickers equally important as he, who also are subject to investigation at present, as a result of the operations on what is called the Frontera Chica [little border] over in Tamaulipas." He explained: "Osiel Cardenas, besides being leader of an organization, has control over the reduction of the cartel and, therefore, upon the closure of their territory, they have begun having many problems. That is why we also are seeing so many executions in the areas." Until 1997, the Gulf Cartel operated in Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon, Veracruz, Chihuahua, Quintana Roo, Oaxaca, and Yucatan, and, as passageways for the drugs, it still controls the towns of Matamoros and Nuevo Laredo, on the Mexican side; while in the United States it controls the areas of Brownsville and Laredo, Texas. Until 1997, the U.S. authorities were of the opinion that 20 percent of the Colombian cocaine being consumed in the United States was brought into that territory by the Gulf Cartel. With regard to Gilberto Garcia Mea, the FEADS head claimed that it will be be this Wednesday, at the latest, that he is remanded to a judge, because the preliminary investigation against him is still being completed, apart from the fact that he is already facing an arrest warrant against him. In Tamaulipas, at least 10 members of the State Public Prosecutor's Office Police (PME), who are accused of being connected with the drug traffic, left their posts in the municipalities of Miguel Aleman, Diaz Ordaz, Camargo, and Mier, all near the settlement of Guardados de Abajo, where the drug trafficker, Gilberto Garcia Mena, "El June," was arrested. The police department, for its part, only confirmed the fact that there are proceedings against two agents assigned to Miguel Aleman, whose names it did not reveal, although it indicated that they were being held in Ciudad Victoria, the capital of Tamaulipas. Guillermo Narvaez Perales, deputy director of the Tamaulipas PME, gave assurance that the State Comptroller's Office is investigating two agents from the State Public Prosecutor's Office Police "for irregularities," which he did not specify, and that another member, assigned to the so-called Frontera Chica, had requested leave "for personal reasons." Meanwhile, a source from the Tamaulipas State Attorney General's Office claimed that it has not yet been specified how many agents were held for presumed connections with "El June." The informant commented that four PME commanders on the Frontera Chica have requested their transfer to other localities. Moreover, Hector Castro Lopez, the PME commander in Miguel Aleman, reported that agents under his orders located seven abandoned vehicles in various parts of the municipal main town, which had been reported stolen in Texas and are suspected of having been used by "El June's" ring. Meanwhile, Raul Rodriguez Barrera, mayor of Miguel Aleman, denied having requested leave from his position to dissociate himself from "El June," pointing out that he had not been summoned to appear before the Office of the Attorney General of the Republic. Nevertheless, sources from the Tamaulipas General Secretariat of Interior announced that the department had asked Rodriguez Barrera to request leave until his relationship with "El June" and the charges that might be brought against him have been made clear. During 15 searches in the settlement of Guardados de Abajo, where "El June" had his "general headquarters," and at other residences in neighboring municipalities, the Office of the Special Prosecutor for Dealing With Crimes Against Health found documents and photographs linking the kingpin with the mayor and with the chief of Public Safety, Zeferino Pena, whose whereabouts have been unknown since the FEADS searched his residence in the Colonia Juarez of Miguel Aleman. Formal Imprisonment Order Issued for 'El June's' Employees Leopoldo Ceron Tinajero, the third federal judge of criminal proceedings with headquarters in Toluca, State of Mexico, issued an order for the formal imprisonment of the 19 presumed members of the Gulf Cartel arrested on 2 April in Tamaulipas and confined since 4 April in the La Palma federal prison. Those in custody, who have been formally incarcerated since this Tuesday, are faced with charges against them for organized crime, crimes against health, possession of marijuana for commercial purposes, and the carrying and possession of arms intended for the Army's exclusive use. Although, in their preliminary statements, those indicted denied knowing about "El June's" illicit activities, and claimed to be "day laborers" who were taking care of a property owned by the drug trafficker, the judicial authority concluded that there was sufficient evidence for ordering their formal imprisonment. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake