Pubdate: Sat, 22 Nov 2008 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Authors: David Luhnow and Jose De Cordoba MEXICO DETAINS FORMER TOP DRUG COP MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's former anti-drug czar has been detained in a widening corruption scandal that suggests a large percentage of top agents assigned to fight the drug trade here have instead been cooperating with cocaine cartels. Noe Ramirez, who headed Mexico's elite anti-drug agency until August, accepted a bribe of $450,000 to leak information to a drug gang, Mexico's Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora alleged on Friday. Mr. Ramirez, who since August has been Mexico's acting envoy to the United Nations office for drug control in Vienna, was detained on Thursday and charged with participating in organized crime. It wasn't possible to reach him for comment. He is the highest-profile target of a widening corruption probe, called Operation Cleanup, that has implicated more than 35 high law-enforcement officials and raised serious doubts about Mexico's ability to wage the drug war. Mexico is the main transshipment point for Colombian cocaine headed to the U.S., and Mexican gangs supplement that with home-grown marijuana and amphetamines from Asia that they smuggle into the U.S. The scandal raises a question of whether Congress might put the brakes on U.S.-Mexico counternarcotics cooperation, including a $400 million initiative called Merida intended to supply Mexico with intelligence training and gear such as helicopters. John Walters, the director of the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy, praised the detention as evidence Mexico is willing to prosecute corruption at all levels. "This is a positive action that the world needs to support, and the U.S. government stands by them in their efforts," he said. The mounting corruption scandal is Mexico's worst in a decade. In 1998, anti-drug czar Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo was convicted of cooperating with a drug gang. The case, the basis of the Hollywood movie "Traffic," was a humiliation for Mexico and for Washington, which had praised Gen. Gutierrez and had worked closely with his agency in sharing secret information. After that, Mexico set out to create a new anti-drug agency immune to corruption, able to carry out acts like wiretaps and using lie-detector tests to weed out the corrupt. The detention of Mr. Ramirez suggested that even this specialized agency, a part of the attorney general's office, might have been corrupted at the top. Last month, Mexico detained two other top agency officials, including Francisco Rivero, head of drug intelligence. Detained in the past week was Ricardo Gutierrez, head of Interpol's Mexico office, who couldn't be reached for comment. President Felipe Calderon has been struggling against a rising tide of blood stemming from drug-cartel turf wars. More than 4,000 have been killed this year in the mayhem, which includes decapitations, torture and brazen daylight attacks on police. Mr. Calderon has sent 36,000 army troops about the country in an effort to keep the peace. In some ways, the rising corruption and violence are an unintended consequence of democratization. For decades, drug violence was kept in check by the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, which had furtive pacts with some gangs at the expense of others. After the PRI lost power in 2000, the end of those deals allowed for open, violent competition, analysts say. This may also have increased corruption as each cartel tried to buy off some officials for protection against rival gangs and law enforcement, said an adviser in the attorney general's office. Separate from the Operation Cleanup probe is another one that has implicated numerous former aides to Public Safety Secretary Genaro Garcia Luna, a Calderon cabinet minister. Officials in the attorney general's office said this week they are investigating Mario Velarde, the former top adviser to Mr. Garcia Luna. The A.G. said there is no investigation of Mr. Garcia Luna. Mr. Garcia Luna's office did not respond to requests for comment. Mr. Velarde could not be reached for comment. Court testimony from anti-drug officials and former cartel members detained in Operation Cleanup, reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, shows how modern drug corruption works here and how hard it will be to stop. In Mexico, court testimony is secret and not made public until cases are closed. Francisco Rivero, the detained former head of intelligence at the anti-drug agency, acknowledged taking money from drug traffickers. In his testimony, he identified them as representatives of the Beltran Leyva brothers, a bloodthirsty gang that broke away from the Sinaloa cartel earlier this year. Mr. Rivero's boss at the agency was Mr. Ramirez, the man detained on Thursday. Mr. Rivero recounted how he first met with a cartel representative in September 2007 at a cantina near the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City. He met a cartel man who was called "19," because he was missing part of a finger and had 19 digits left. At the meeting, 19 asked Mr. Rivero if he had ever been offered a briefcase of money, Mr. Rivero testified, adding that he laughed and said that was the kind of offer he'd been waiting for. After a meeting to haggle over price, 19 gave Mr. Rivero and several associates $150,000 in cash near a pizza parlor in northern Mexico City, Mr. Rivero testified. He said it was the first of several monthly payments in return for information about any law-enforcement operations against the gang. "I would give them details of the upcoming operations, and anything 19 wanted," Mr. Rivero testified. He was a useful contact, according to the testimony of a witness code-named "Jennifer," a former cartel member who's now a protected witness. In January, 2008, that witness said he was driving a Dodge Durango with no license plate when pulled over by federal police for speeding on the Mexico City/Toluca toll road. The police found two handguns and a machine gun with a silencer. Another federal police car arrived. The witness testified he called one of Mr. Rivero's aides, Jose Antonio Cueto, who today cannot be located. Within 20 minutes, he testified, several of Mr. Rivero's aides turned up, and the federal police, recognizing them as top members of the anti-drug agency, apologized profusely and let the witness go. The arrangement faced a big test in January when army troops swooped down on a farm in Sinaloa state and detained the Beltran Leyvas' youngest brother, Alfredo. The army didn't notify the anti-drug agency of the detention until afterward. Analysts say the army sometimes acts alone because it doesn't trust other agencies. Mexican officials say Mr. Rivero feared the cartel would kill him in retaliation, and tried to appease the gang by handing over copies of the younger brother's testimony and designing a plan for the cartel to rescue him. In his testimony, Mr. Rivero disputed the idea he hatched a rescue plan. What he did say was that after the raid on the farm, the cartel sent him word that he would be killed if he couldn't explain what had gone wrong. Soon after, several of Mr. Rivero's aides met near a Mexico City shopping mall with a top cartel figure, nicknamed "El Grande," or "The Big One." Mexican officials say El Grande is the head of the cartel's hit squad in Mexico City. According to Mr. Rivero and the testimony of several of his aides, the anti-drug officials explained they had no advance knowledge of the army operation and couldn't have stopped it. Days later, Mr. Rivero and his aides were given a lie-detector test at the drug agency about the operation, according to one witness, code-named Saul. A few days after that, Saul said, Mr. Rivero he got a message from the cartel that he wouldn't be killed because he had passed the test. According to the testimony, El Grande also told Mr. Rivero's agents their group wasn't the only group of officials the gang had bought off within the anti-drug agency. The accounts said El Grande said he had also bought off a group headed by Miguel Colorado, then technical director of the agency and an official in charge of assigning federal police agents to investigate gangs. According to the witness code-named Saul, El Grande "asked how it was possible to have bought off so many agents and gotten so little help," and El Grande "said that he was thinking of having both groups work together." The web of corruption even touched the U.S. Embassy. In September 2007, Mr. Cueto, the Rivero aide who is now a fugitive, introduced 19 to an old friend and former federal police agent who had just started working at the U.S. embassy and had access to sensitive information from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, according to several witnesses' testimony. The embassy employee, code-named Felipe, who is now a protected witness, testified they agreed he would give information in return for $30,000 a month. On June 16, the men met again at a parking lot near the U.S. Embassy, according to several witnesses. The witness who worked at the U.S. embassy, Felipe, said he told the other men he was having doubts about further cooperation. Soon after Felipe's testimony in early July, 19 was detained and became a witness, according to the court documents, including arrest warrants and police records. Days later, on July 31st, Mr. Rivero and some aides were detained outside the anti-drug agency. As the police action unfolded, cellphones began buzzing with text messages, according to a court transcript. The messages, say the documents, were warnings, believed to be from law-enforcement officials, that the men were about to be arrested and should flee. Mr. Colorado, the former drug-agency technical director, and several of his aides were put under investigation in early August and later detained. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake