Pubdate: Sun, 16 Apr 2006 Source: Newsday (NY) Copyright: 2006 Newsday Inc. Contact: http://www.newsday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/308 Author: Letta Taylor, Latin America Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Nuevo+Laredo LAND OF OUTLAWS Once a Tourist Spot, a Border City Has Become a Battlefield for Drug Cartels NUEVO LAREDO, Mexico - The three gunmen executed Ramiro Tellez Contreras before dawn as he got into his pickup truck to drive to his job as an ambulance dispatcher. Blood streaming down his shoulders and legs from four gunshot wounds, he stumbled to his front porch before he collapsed in front of his wife and three children. "He didn't even have time to say goodbye," said Tellez's wife, Silvia Andrade. "How could they kill a man who lived to help others?" The director of a 911-style emergency dispatch service, Tellez was killed in mid-March in what was widely believed to be retaliation for installing a new rescue and crime-monitoring system in this lawless border city. He was among 83 people who have died this year in Nuevo Laredo, nearly all in a brutal drug war that is spilling across the Rio Grande and into the United States. Once a popular destination for U.S. day-trippers seeking a taste of Old Mexico, Nuevo Laredo is turning into a land of Al Capone meets the Wild West as rival drug cartels battle with Kalashnikovs, bazookas and even grenades to control billion-dollar smuggling routes for cocaine and heroin through neighboring Laredo, Texas, the busiest border crossing in the Americas. "At times, Nuevo Laredo resembles a war zone," said a U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity. With the drug gangs offering local authorities "plomo o plata" (lead or silver), the official said, "the tragic truth is that people who wouldn't otherwise do so have no choice but to work with the cartels or be killed." The U.S. Consulate in Nuevo Laredo closed for a week last summer because of the lawlessness. The dueling Sinaloa and Gulf drug syndicates have virtually incapacitated the local government and infiltrated security forces, according to several Mexican and U.S. authorities. They are shooting police chiefs, government workers, other gang members - and, in rare instances, innocent bystanders - in places as public as hospital emergency rooms, outdoor barbecues and busy intersections. They have muzzled the media with attacks like the one in February at the respected daily El Manana, in which two gunmen stormed the newsroom and opened fire with semi-automatic weapons and a grenade, critically injuring a reporter. The paper, which lost its top editor to a suspected gangland slaying in 2004, has since announced a policy of "self-censorship" on drug stories and called for the legalization of soft drugs. And the cartels are increasingly making their presence felt on the U.S. side of the border as they execute or kidnap U.S. citizens and shoot at law enforcers. That spillover is heightening opposition to immigration reforms being considered by the U.S. Congress, though many U.S. officials and policy analysts say there appears to be almost no overlap between drug traffickers and undocumented Mexican workers. Officials' Optimism In an interview here, Nuevo Laredo Mayor Daniel Pena Trevino insisted his government hasn't lost control of the city - though he travels in an armored car and can't find a new city police chief. Mexican President Vicente Fox also remains upbeat. "Step by step, we are going to win this battle," Fox vowed recently, even as the vast majority of murders remain unsolved in this city of 350,000, and this year's carnage is likely to exceed the 182 deaths in 2005. Among other measures, Fox has vowed to extradite drug kingpins wanted in the United States, and U.S. and Mexican officials recently announced a joint task force aimed at increasing cooperation in tracking criminals operating on both sides of the border. But some policy analysts believe the measures will do little unless the United States dramatically rethinks its war on drugs. No matter the level of bilateral cooperation, drugs will continue entering the country "unless there is a real strong change in policy in the United States to lower demand," said John J. Bailey, an expert on Mexican drug trafficking at Georgetown University. Even if one cartel is squashed, he said, "another group will spring up to take the traffic." In Nuevo Laredo, the violence began when Sinaloa gang leader Joaquin Guzman, also known as El Chapo, tried to take over the turf of Osiel Cardenas, head of the rival Gulf cartel, who was arrested in 2003. But Cardenas is fighting back from behind bars, U.S. and Mexican officials say. By last summer, the battle had become so fierce that Fox's administration dispatched hundreds of elite Federal Preventative Police here to restore order. That didn't stop drug enforcers from executing the Nuevo Laredo police chief two months later, on his first day in office. The next city police chief - who has since quit - fired half his 700-member force to weed out rogue elements allegedly controlled by the Gulf cartel. But U.S. officials believe the force is still infected by the Zetas, a group of defectors from an elite, U.S.-trained Mexican military unit, who work with the Gulf cartel. Allegations have mounted that the Federal Preventative Police force here has been similarly corrupted by the Sinaloa cartel. Fox's administration last month replaced most of the federal police. But since the replacements arrived, 30 more people have been killed in suspected cartel attacks, including four new federal agents. Drug enforcers are even masquerading as security forces, so "you have absolutely no idea who the real police are and who the fake police are," one U.S. official said. Despite the carnage, Nuevo Laredo is hardly Baghdad. During a recent visit, the hot, dusty city hummed with workers and shoppers. But many stores were shuttered and the streets were eerily empty of children. "I don't want them to be in the wrong place at the wrong time," said Jose Lopez, 67, as his grandchildren played inside his gated yard. His eyes darted down the street to where a gunman boarded a transit bus two weeks ago and shot a man dead in front of 10 passengers. In the graceful, shady plaza across the pedestrian bridge from Laredo, four of five restaurants and more than a third of handicraft stores have closed as tourism from the United States has plummeted. Cartels Widen Scope But there is lots of movement from Nuevo Laredo to Laredo, where Mexican cartels are expanding their presence, according to U.S. law enforcement officials. In addition to buying homes and setting up stash houses, drug lords are recruiting Laredo ex-cons and other current or former south Texans. A key Sinaloa cartel enforcer is former Laredo resident "La Barbie," so nicknamed for his pale skin, light hair and blue eyes. La Barbie, whose real name is Edgar Valdez Villareal, is wanted on drug charges in Louisiana. "There are some significant violators here," said Tom Hinojosa, who heads the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's Laredo office. U.S. authorities earlier this year confiscated weapons including grenades and homemade bombs from a stash house in Laredo, he said. Traffickers driving vans laden with drugs also are firing at sheriffs' deputies and U.S. Border Patrol officials during chases along the Rio Grande. As sheriff's deputies chased a van filled with drugs into the Rio Grande in January, a group of men appeared on the Mexican banks of the river, pointed their AK-47s at the deputies and shouted in English, "You wanna play, --?" "They are armed and they are dangerous and their orders are, 'Don't give up your load without a fight,'" said Sheriff Rick Flores of Webb County, which includes Laredo. At least four people have been killed in suspected drug-related shootings this year in and around Laredo, a city of 250,000. And 40 U.S. citizens from the Laredo area are among 400 people who have disappeared in Nuevo Laredo in the past few years, many at the hands of drug traffickers. Americans in Danger Two dozen U.S. citizens are still missing, including Yvette Martinez, 27, a mother of two, and her friend Brenda Cisneros, 23, who were last seen leaving a stadium concert in Nuevo Laredo in September 2004. Martinez's stepfather, railroad conductor William Slemaker, has found eyewitnesses who say they saw city police and high-level drug enforcers take the women away. He's also found an escaped kidnap victim who claims he saw the women being held as cooks at a drug cartels' safe house. But neither the FBI nor Mexican authorities have made any arrests. "It burns me up," Slemaker said. "If this were George W. Bush's daughter, would they be dragging their feet like this?" On Wednesday, U.S. ambassador to Mexico Tony Garza declared that pressure on Mexican authorities "will not cease" until the missing Americans are found. But Norman Townsend, the FBI chief in Laredo, noted in a recent interview that once a U.S. citizen crosses the border, the United States has no jurisdiction. Townsend also said he was "frustrated" by Mexico's response. "If Mexican authorities think the case is drug-related, they back away," he said. Relatives and co-workers of Tellez, the slain emergency dispatch coordinator, expect no arrests either. An amicable, mustachioed man, Tellez broadcast weather reports at a local radio station and was studying law. He also had lectured on the dangers of drug addiction at local schools. By the time Tellez took the helm last year of Nuevo Laredo's C-4 rescue dispatching service, the city's equivalent to 911, drug dealers had broken into radio frequencies to warn security forces and rescue workers not to arrive too early at crime scenes. A typical missive, said one C-4 worker, was "Hold off or you'll be dead." Those warnings didn't stop Tellez from installing video cameras at crime spots as part of a replacement communications system last winter - and sharing footage with law enforcers. After an unknown man earlier this year toppled the C-4 radio tower in broad daylight by ramming it with a bulldozer he borrowed from a construction site, Tellez didn't stop, either. A black ribbon of mourning hangs on the door of Tellez's old office. Inside, workers still dispatch ambulances and police, but they've dispensed with the video cameras. "Since his death we felt we should no longer use them," said Tellez's friend Jose Luis Jacome, the new C-4 director. Asked if that was admitting defeat, Jacome merely sighed. [sidebar] Homicides per 100,000 people (2005) Mexico, national average (population of 106.4 million) 10.7 Mexico City (population of 8.8 million) 7.9 Nuevo Laredo (population of 350,000) 52 Source - Mexican National System of Public Security: City of Nuevo Laredo - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake