Pubdate: Sat, 2 Nov 2002 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2002 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Ricardo Sandoval, Dallas Morning News 2 MEXICAN GENERALS CONVICTED Officers Protected Major Drug Cartel MEXICO CITY - In a high-profile case, two Mexican generals were convicted Friday of protecting the drug-trafficking operation of the late Amado Carrillo Fuentes, the ``Lord of the Skies.'' Arturo Acosta and Francisco Quiros Hermosillo were sentenced to 15 years and 16 years, respectively. The military court found that they received cars, money and jewelry from Carrillo Fuentes, who ran the Juarez cartel. Carrillo Fuentes died in a Mexico City hospital in the fall of 1997 after a botched attempt to alter his appearance through plastic surgery. The verdict, which is expected to be appealed to the Mexican Supreme Court, came after eight hours of deliberation and capped a two-year trial against the generals, who will each be given credit for two years of time served. The generals will also be tried on separate murder charges -- filed in September -- in connection with the bloody anti-insurgency campaigns of the early 1970s. Like those ``dirty war'' charges, the drug-corruption charges against the generals relied on testimony from secret witnesses. In the waning days of the trial, defense attorneys slammed the Mexican government's use of protected witnesses who also face drug-corruption charges. Dismissing as insufficient the government's evidence against them, the generals asked the court why no other drug suspect captured in Mexico in recent years has come forward to link them to the Juarez cartel. ``I am not a ruffian. I am a general,'' Quiros Hermosillo told the court this week. Friday's verdict from a war council of four ranking Mexican officers came after a military-court proceeding unusual for its openness. Mexican military justice is normally meted out in secret sessions, but this trial featured testimony replayed on television news broadcasts. The Juarez cartel was once Mexico's most virulent drug organization. Its leader, Carrillo Fuentes, was infamous for having amassed a billionaire's fortune by moving huge shipments of Colombian cocaine and heroin across Mexico in everything from cars to customized jet airliners -- hence his nickname. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk