Pubdate: Mon, 05 Aug 2002
Source: Hartford Courant (CT)
Copyright: 2002 The Hartford Courant
Contact:  http://www.ctnow.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/183
Author: Will Weissert, Associated Press

MEXICO'S DRUG TRADE REORGANIZES

MEXICO CITY -- A new breed of crime leaders seems to be taking over 
Mexico's drug trade as the country's biggest gang reorganizes itself, U.S. 
and Mexican investigators say.

In contrast to the brutal and flamboyant kingpins of the past, the new 
bosses are said to be keen on building alliances among gangs, delegating 
some of their organizations' responsibilities to key underlings and staying 
out of the limelight.

The result likely will be a multibillion-dollar illicit industry that's 
less violent - but more efficient and even harder to stop, officials say.

"The era of the big drug lord is over," said Mario Estuardo Bermudez, 
Mexico's top anti-drug prosecutor. "Instead of one leader, they now build 
an automated organization with regional managers who can cover more 
territory and create zones of influence in practically the whole country."

The White House estimates that about half of the $65 billion in narcotics 
that Americans buy each year come through Mexico.

Until recently, the world of Mexican drugs was dominated by the Arellano 
Felix brothers, known for their lavish lifestyles and fierce tempers. But 
in February, police in the resort city of Mazatlan gunned down the gang's 
feared enforcer, Ramon Arellano Felix. A month later, authorities captured 
his brother Benjamin, the gang's operations chief.

As the Arellano Felix gang tries to overcome those blows, other smugglers 
are moving to seize a piece of the action in the first major shake-up in 
the drug business since 1997.

U.S. and Mexican investigators predict no one man will rise to fill the 
void. Instead, a number of bosses - all at least loosely affiliated with 
the Juarez cartel - are stepping to the forefront.

Based just across the border from El Paso, Texas, the Juarez organization 
was once so powerful that it paid Colombian suppliers up to $30 million a 
cocaine shipment, then transported enormous amounts of narcotics from 
Mexico to a small army of distributors in New York, Chicago, Houston and 
Los Angeles.

Drug agents had thought the group might collapse after the death of its 
leader, Amado Carillo Fuentes, following botched plastic surgery in July 
1997. Instead, control fell to his brother, Vicente, who expanded the 
organization's operations, opening a control center in the eastern border 
city of Reynosa to supplement the Ciudad Juarez headquarters.

Bermudez said Carillo Fuentes also has formed a strong alliance with the 
leader of the Gulf cartel, Osiel Cardenas, which has allowed his family to 
gain control of key smuggling posts on the Yucatan Peninsula, including the 
resort city of Cancun.

"Several arrests have put the Gulf cartel in a difficult position," 
Bermudez said in an interview at his heavily guarded Mexico City office. 
"It needs alliances with the Carillo Fuentes organization."

Luis Astorga, a sociologist at the National Autonomous University who 
studies the drug trade, said Carillo Fuentes has become the most powerful 
man in modern Mexican trafficking.

"After his brother died, he built a cartel that is very rich and that works 
with other drug organizations instead of fighting with them," Astorga said.

Another rising leader is Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada, who was a low-ranking 
enforcer in the Juarez cartel but now heads a group of free-lance smugglers 
based in Mazatlan, in the western state of Sinaloa.

A former farmer with extensive agricultural and botanical knowledge, 
Zambada has worked to increase his gang's production of heroin, U.S. 
officials say.

Known as an accomplished alliance-builder, Zambada has remained close to 
the Carillo Fuentes family while maintaining independent ties to Colombian 
cocaine smugglers. U.S. officials say Zambada helped the Arellano Felix 
organization set up its headquarters in the border city of Tijuana before a 
disagreement over drug payments made Zambada a chief Arellano Felix target.

Bermudez said Zambada has an informal nonaggression pact with Joaquin 
Guzman, who controls another Sinaloa-based drug gang once headed by the 
now-jailed Hector Luis Palma.

U.S. and Mexican agents are also watching Juan Esparragoza, an important 
adviser to Carillo Fuentes who they say acts as a "narco-diplomat" in 
smoothing over problems between the gangs.

Donald Thornhill of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's San Diego 
field office said authorities are expecting the rising crop of bosses to 
"sit back and quietly get rich."

"Whoever is next in line we expect to keep a much lower profile," Thornhill 
said. "They understand that having a lot of heat on them is not a good thing."

Last year, all the major drug smugglers except the Arellano Felix gang 
gathered at least twice to forge a working truce, according to one 
participant, other associates of smugglers and government officials, all of 
whom agreed to discuss the matter only if given anonymity.

Bermudez denied knowledge of the meeting, but said the new group of drug 
lords "has determined that it is more convenient to exchange information 
and provide support to one another."

"In the grand scheme of things, the cartels have realized that violence 
doesn't have many benefits," he said.

But the shift in Mexico's drug-smuggling leadership won't pass entirely 
without bloodshed, officials say. Bermudez said Zambada and other drug 
lords are trying to shoot their way into the Arellano Felixes' lesser 
strongholds in Sinaloa, Jalisco and Michoacan states, all key areas for 
growing marijuana and opium poppies.

Investigators say that decentralized gangs will be harder to stop because 
authorities will have to split their resources among dozens of major suspects.

Bermudez said Zambada and others have safe houses across Mexico and can fly 
coast-to-coast or abroad at a moment's notice. He said gang leaders rely 
heavily on plastic surgery to disguise their identities, with some going 
under the knife every few years.
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