Pubdate: Sat, 27 Dec 2008 Source: San Antonio Express-News (TX) Copyright: 2008 San Antonio Express-News Contact: http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/384 Author: Dudley Althaus Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/gulf+cartel (Gulf Cartel) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/mexico (Mexico) HIGH-PROFILE EXTRADITION DIDN'T HOBBLE DRUG CARTEL MEXICO CITY - Even as accused mob boss Osiel Cardenas awaits a federal trial in Houston next year, the criminal army he allegedly commanded with deadly resolve rampages across this country. Cardenas, 41, has been imprisoned for six years - four in Mexico and two in the United States. He faces federal charges of leading a drug syndicate, trafficking cocaine and marijuana, laundering money and threatening the lives of U.S. agents. Though weakened by a crackdown, Cardenas' Gulf Cartel and the gang of assassins it spawned, the Zetas, remain powerful and widely feared. Their gunmen have spread violence deep into the Mexican heartland. Mexican officials blame the organization for many of this year's estimated 5,600 gangland murders. Now, as President Felipe Calderon's war on Mexico's gangs enters its third year, the Gulf Cartel's resilience underscores the challenges of that war. While Calderon has approved more than 150 extraditions of alleged drug bosses and gunmen, the cartel and other crime organizations have continued to threaten Mexico's stability and smuggle narcotics northward, officials admit. And, they admit, the extraditions have stoked the bloodshed rather than snuffed it. The Gulf Cartel arguably has been the Calderon government's principal target. Aside from Cardenas' extradition to Houston in January 2007, several other cartel leaders and hundreds of lesser hoods have been arrested. Tons of drugs have been seized and tens of millions of dollars have been confiscated. Recent blows include the November capture of the Zetas' third-ranking commander and the seizure the same month of some 400 smuggled weapons on the Texas border. Those events followed the September dismantling of a major Gulf Cartel drug distribution network in the United States and Europe. But, though bowed, the cartel hardly seems broken. "If anything, the extradition of Cardenas has led to an even more virulent form of the Gulf Cartel," said Bruce Bagley, an expert on Latin American narcotics gangs at the University of Miami. Blame the Zetas Mexican authorities blame the Zetas for the Sept. 15 grenade attack that killed nine people in a crowd celebrating Independence Day in the capital of central Michoacan state. On the outskirts of Mexico City and in states along the Pacific Coast, gunbattles involving the Zetas have killed scores - including dozens of police officers. That continued strength has mocked the hopes of some who argued that Cardenas' extradition would shatter his cartel. Gang warfare seems to have exploded in Mexico in 2008. In Tijuana, more than 400 have been killed since late September in a struggle between the former underbosses of the Arellano Felix crime family. In Ciudad Juarez, the feuding has killed more than 1,500 people since January, when gunmen from Sinaloa state moved in to eliminate the city's weakened criminal bosses. Still more blood has flowed in Sinaloa itself after former allies turned on one another. "There is a benefit in cutting down large organizations into little cartels, because they don't threaten the state," said Bagley, who has studied the impact of Colombia's extradition of its own gang chieftains in the 1990s. But, he said, "you leave a vacuum at the top, and you unleash more violence." "You don't get any diminishing of drug trafficking. That's the fallacy of it. Extradition does not solve anyone's problem." Cardenas rose to the top of his organization after the 1996 arrest of Gulf Cartel founder Juan Garcia Abrego, who was sent to the U.S. and convicted of narcotics-related charges. Garcia Abrego, once a lord of the border, is serving multiple life sentences in a U.S. federal prison. U.S. Agents Threatened Cardenas, a onetime mechanic and federal police informant, allegedly murdered his way up the ladder, investigators say. He's reputed to have earned the nickname "Friend Killer" by knocking off a former colleagues. He recruited deserting army commandos - the founders of the Zetas - as his bodyguards and hit men. By 1999, Cardenas was the undisputed head of the Gulf Cartel, which officials say was smuggling as much as 70 tons of cocaine a year into Texas. His downfall began the same year, after Cardenas and more than a dozen gunmen accosted and threatened to kill two U.S. federal agents in Matamoros. Alarmed by the gang's bravado, U.S. agencies launched a joint investigation into the cartel, which resulted in federal indictments of Cardenas and several lieutenants in 2002. After his 2003 arrest in Matamoros, Cardenas was convicted of drug trafficking charges by a Mexican court, but never sentenced. His U.S. trial has been delayed and is scheduled to begin in September. He faces multiple life sentences. While jailed in Mexico, Cardenas continued to direct his organization, Mexican officials say, in a war with rivals that included the 2004-'05 battles that killed more than 500 people in Nuevo Laredo. Mexican police, U.S. officials and some analysts say the Zetas now operate as a separate smuggling organization independent of Cardenas' gang. But the recent peace in the cartel's area of influence along Mexico's Gulf Coast suggests a working relationship has been hammered out with Cardenas' successors. An intelligence report from Mexico's public security minister identifies Zeta leader Heriberto Lazcano as the de facto head of the Gulf Cartel. U.S. and Mexican investigators believe Cardenas' brother, Ezequiel, remains one of the gang's leaders. Justice Department officials indicted Lazcano and Ezequiel Cardenas in the aftermath of the September raids against Gulf Cartel distribution networks in Texas, Georgia and elsewhere. The raids netted 175 arrests, but not Lazcano and Ezequiel Cardenas. If the two are arrested in Mexico, U.S. officials presumably would want them extradited. That threat could provoke more violence in the short term, one expert said, but also could persuade the cartel's leaders to look for ways to call it quits and stay in Mexico. "Fear of extradition is definitely a factor in how people conduct themselves," said Thomas Schweich, until this year a ranking State Department official involved in anti-narcotics efforts. A gangland boss "sees the situation of his predecessor and doesn't want it to happen to him," he said. "If you are going to attack a major criminal organization, there is always an uptick in violence. "That's exactly what's going on in Mexico right now." - --- MAP posted-by: Doug