Pubdate: Tue, 01 Jul 2003 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2003 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: James Pinkerton MEXICAN DRUG GANGS STILL RUNNING RAMPANT Daring Matamoros Jailbreak Latest Sign Mexico -- On the dusty outskirts of this border town, a brazen jailbreak recently unfolded that seemed scripted by Hollywood. Spilling from late-model Suburbans, pickup trucks and even a Humvee military vehicle, nearly 50 armed men dressed like Mexican soldiers or federal police officers with black ski masks, dark combat fatigues and bulletproof vests converged on the Santa Adelaida prison at 2 a.m. They flashed false credentials and a forged court order and told jailers they were there to take custody of four inmates and transfer them to another prison. They entered without firing a shot, took the prisoners and then vanished onto the narrow roads outside the rural prison. The daring jailbreak capped a bloody year of drug killings and kidnappings in and around Matamoros. It was the second such jail escape in six months and a clear indication that drug-trafficking gangs remain rampant in the region and authorities appear powerless to stop them. Today, nearly two weeks after the Dec. 27 break, all four inmates remain at large and the identities of their liberators are unknown. Officials admit they don't have a lot of answers, but they have plenty of suspicions. Among them is the belief the jailbreak was the work of a drug cartel. "For our part, we don't know who they were," insists Mario Catarino Mendoza, the assistant director of the Santa Adelaida prison. "The only thing we can say is it was a group who had an interest in them (four inmates), but for what reason we don't know." Matamoros, the birthplace of the infamous Gulf of Mexico cartel drug trafficking ring in 1984, remains a city where criminals operate with near impunity. Despite some success by President Vicente Fox in cracking down on narcotics trafficking and corruption, Matamoros residents witnessed a violent 2002, with multiple jailbreaks, assassinations and kidnappings. Even those who cover crime in Matamoros can fall victim. In March, the editor of El Imparcial, one of the city's crime gazettes, was shot to death. Many believe it was a hit related to his detailed coverage of those benefiting from drug trafficking. The Dec. 27 jailbreak "wasn't the first, and it won't be the last in Matamoros," observed Sam Soto, head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration office in Brownsville. One veteran U.S. law official believes an operation of the magnitude mounted at Santa Adelaida smacks of involvement by the Matamoros-based Gulf cartel. Now headed by former Mexican federal police agent Osiel Cardenas, the cartel exerts control over criminal activities along a wide swath of Mexican states on the Gulf Coast. "I can tell you two things," said the U.S. official, who asked not to be identified. "One, you can't do anything without the blessing of Osiel Cardenas, and two, he's about the only one who would have that kind of armament, manpower and access to the uniforms." Why the inmates were removed also remains a mystery. No one knows whether the inmates were removed by friends or enemies. "In Mexico, anything is possible," said a local drug agent. The four escapees were Bellania Flores Montellanos, a 30-year-old woman awaiting a sentence for murdering a Mexican police commander; Enrique Gonzalez Rodriguez, serving a 10-year sentence for drug trafficking; Manuel Alguicides Garcia, sentenced to 15 years for bribing an official and carrying an illegal firearm; and Daniel Perez Rojas, serving a nine-year sentence for gun violations. Although the crime has not been solved, the jailbreak has had ramifications. The prison warden has been replaced and remains in Mexico City, where he is being questioned by the attorney general's organized crime division. More than 20 prison guards who were on duty at the time of the breakout have been detained during the investigation, Mendoza said. Mendoza said he does not believe the guards were involved. The jailbreak also has affected guards who were not at the prison that night. At least four Santa Adelaida prison guards have resigned, prison workers said. One jailer, Graciela Contreras, admitted she and other guards have been worried and afraid since the breakout. "I tell my friends there is danger wherever you go," she said. Santa Adelaida has 2,298 inmates, a population 30 percent over capacity because federal convicts are being sent there instead of other crowded federal prisons, Mendoza said. If recent history is any guide, the Santa Adelaida breakout might not be solved quickly, and even if it is, it might not stay that way. After all, authorities have never found the couple who were kidnapped in June from their Matamoros money exchange house, located a few blocks from state police headquarters. Police did swiftly track down a suspect and captured him after a gunbattle in city streets. He was taken to police headquarters, but later that day a group of nearly 30 heavily armed men -- wearing ski masks, black fatigues and bulletproof vests -- burst into the police station, sprayed the place with machine-gun fire, and freed the suspected kidnapper. The June breakout remains under investigation, and prison officials remain optimistic it will be solved. "I feel, if the investigation follows its course, the people (will be recaptured)," Mendoza said. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex