Pubdate: Tue, 08 Nov 2005 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2005 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.mercurynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Will Weissert, Associated Press GUATEMALA'S ANTI-DRUG HEAD TO RESIGN GUATEMALA CITY - He's Guatemala's top anti-narcotics investigator, and he's tired of fighting a losing battle. In an interview with The Associated Press, Adan Castillo said he plans to step down in December, after just six months on the job. "There are moments when you start to think you're swimming against the current," he said. "At those times, it's easy to think, 'If there aren't other institutions that can support me, if the government itself is weak in its responses, there's nothing left to do but leave it in God's hands.'" Castillo said his country's anti-drug agents are no match for smugglers. "They have speedboats with up to four motors, modern technology, the most modern communication systems and contacts all over the American Isthmus," he said. "It's easy for them." Smugglers use bribes to pay off "information sources that are absolutely excellent," he said. "So they realize how the state is working. They monitor the state and the authorities and then do analysis on how to handle the drugs." As many as 4,000 smugglers operate in Guatemala, Castillo said. They get cocaine shipments and move them to the Mexican border, where more powerful gangs take over. He said a key lieutenant of one of Mexico's most wanted drug lords, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, oversees operations along the Mexico- Guatemala border and that Guzman himself is believed to have spent time in this country. Castillo also said five major Colombian drug traffickers, whom he did not identify, were advising four formerly rival Guatemalan smuggling gangs on how to build a more powerful cartel. The groups have rallied together around reputed Guatemalan drug lord Otto Herrera, who escaped from a Mexican prison in May. "Before, the organizations were jealous and were killing each other's members," he said. "Now they are forming a single cartel in Guatemala to dominate all of Central America." Castillo said Herrera has been moving between Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico and hopes to lead a Guatemala-based super cartel that can stand up to Colombian and Mexican drug gangs. "This would give them tremendous power," he said of the proposed smuggling syndicate. "It would be very serious for us." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin