Pubdate: Thu, 23 Dec 2010
Source: Wall Street Journal (US)
Copyright: 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.wsj.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487
Author: David Luhnow

TO ROOT OUT DIRTY POLICE, MEXICO SENDS IN A GENERAL

TORREON, Mexico-His grandfather was the cross-eyed cousin of Mexico's
legendary revolutionary Francisco "Pancho" Villa. Like his famous
ancestor, Carlos Villa is a hard-charging general who is charismatic,
foulmouthed and not afraid to use his gun.

And some say he is just what Mexico needs as it wrestles with the
corruption and violence spawned by the country's powerful gangs of
drug traffickers.

Retired Gen. Villa is the 61-year-old police chief in Torreon, an
industrial city in Mexico's violent northern badlands-a central
drug-running route currently being fought over by two of Mexico's
biggest cartels.

Since taking over as the city's top police officer in January, Mr.
Villa has battled not only the city's drug lords, but also his own
police force, which was on the payroll of a powerful cartel.

In March, nearly the entire force walked off the job to demand the
general's ouster. The mayor faced a choice: Fire nearly every officer
and leave the city at the mercy of drug gangs, or dump the general and
keep corrupt police on the street. He fired the officers.

"It was the best decision I ever made," says Mayor Eduardo Olmos.
"It's not that our cops weren't fighting the bad guys-they were the
bad guys."

Crime nearly tripled in Torreon during a summer that saw some of
Mexico's bloodiest drug-related crimes, including the massacre by
gunmen of 17 civilians at a party in August. But the mayor and his
soldier-turned-police chief are building a new force and seeing some
success against crime.

"He's the best police chief we've had," says Father Jose Rodriguez, a
73-year-old Torreon priest. "The Bible says you shall know them by
their works, and I know the general from his works."

Mr. Villa's effort to remake the Torreon force holds implications for
how Mexico tries to quell the drug-related violence that has claimed
more than 31,000 lives since President Felipe Calderon took power in
December 2006.

Until now, Mr. Calderon's strategy has focused on using federal forces
to fight the cartels, including the army and a new federal police. But
the strategy has been missing a key piece: local police. There are
only about 30,000 federal police and about 45,000 troops deployed on
cartels. There are some 240,000 municipal police-but they are widely
deemed corrupt and unreliable.

"Local cops are the tip of the spear," says a top DEA agent posted in
Mexico. "In the U.S., we'd struggle to do anything without our
partners in local law enforcement."

Until the mid-1990s, Mexico spent just 0.008% of annual economic
output on law enforcement, among the lowest rates in the world. The
average officer earns $500 a month, or about half the average
per-capita income in Mexico. Seven of 10 finished only primary school.
More than 400 municipalities have no local police at all.

In city after city, local police are a proxy army for cartels-acting
as lookouts, killing rivals, even helping fight federal forces.

Efforts to clean up local police have met bloody resistance from the
cartels. The new mayor of Santiago, an upscale colonial town near
Monterrey, was kidnapped, tortured and executed by members of his own
police this summer after he had pledged to clean up local police.

Mr. Calderon's government now realizes its offensive will stall
without revamping the local police. It recently proposed eliminating
all municipal forces and having 32 state forces, one for each state.
"The day we have 32 police forces that are well-paid, well-trained and
loyal, we will turn the page in our fight against organized crime,"
Mr. Calderon said recently.

Mexico's local police are often so corrupt that trying to clean them
up slowly may never work. The experience of Torreon shows a radical
approach: scrap and start over.

Torreon is a city of half a million that sits in a valley, with a
river that separates the states of Durango and Coahuila. In 2007, the
Zetas, one of Mexico's cartels, arrived to challenge the Sinaloa
Cartel. A turf war erupted.

The Zetas set up in Torreon by infiltrating the police. Last year, the
former Torreon police chief found a payroll with a list of officers in
the pay of the Zetas. What surprised investigators was how little it
cost to bribe the officers: beat police got an extra $10 a week;
commanders got $30 to $45.

One commander, Mario Ortiz Fernandez, resigned from the police after
five years in 2008 and joined the Zetas, according to police records.
Nicknamed "The Shadow," he rose to the top spot in the gang by late
last year, police say. Mr. Ortiz Fernandez's bar-called "Bar Ferrie,"
after his second surname-was shot up by Sinaloa gunmen on Jan. 31,
killing 10 civilians.

The Shadow was captured in May by federal forces. His job as the top
local Zeta was taken by another former Torreon officer, according to
police and intelligence officials.

In 2008, two federal policemen busted a Torreon officer in possession
of cocaine and marijuana. Hours later, more than three dozen municipal
police turned up at the federal police building with guns to try
rescuing their colleague. One Torreon officer was killed and 34 arrested.

Successive police chiefs tried to clean house. In June 2009, some 302
police-nearly half the force-were fired for corruption by former
police chief Karlo Castillo, a federal police commander, who took over
in 2008.

Mr. Castillo was attacked twice on the job in failed hits believed to
have been orchestrated by men under his command. He ended his term
Dec. 31.

The following day, Mr. Villa took over.

Born in neighboring Durango, the general is the penultimate son of a
man with 36 children. He has a master's degree in military
communications, wears SWAT boots and packs an Israeli-made Magnum .45
strapped to his thigh. Locals call him Rambo.

The general says his grandfather was named Jesus Arango, the first
cousin of Pancho Villa, whose real name was Jose Arango. There is no
bigger legend in Torreon than Pancho Villa, whose raid of the city was
a turning point in the Mexican revolution. Mr. Villa cultivates the
connection. He answers his phone, "General Villa, at your orders."

In the 1970s, he participated in Operation Condor to destroy marijuana
and opium plantations. There he met Guillermo Galvan, now defense minister.

In early 2009, Mr. Villa turned 60, retirement age for a brigadier
general. Four months later, he was lying on the beach in Mazatlan when
his phone rang.

"Get down here, you lazy goat. Galvan wants to see you." It was a
fellow general calling on behalf of the defense minister. Days later,
Mr. Villa met Mr. Galvan, who convinced him to try his hand as a
police chief in Coahuila, a state that borders Texas.

Coahuila has basically given up on having civilian police chiefs. It
has 16 generals in charge of police forces.

Mr. Villa started his new career as police chief in the town of
Parras. Soon, he discovered seven of his officers were involved in a
kidnapping ring. He had them jailed. Within three months, 56 of the
original 80 police had been fired. "I couldn't believe it. They were
practically all corrupt," he says. "But those corrupt cops were
amateurs. The real pros were here, in Torreon."

Mr. Villa took over as Torreon's top officer on the same day as the
incoming mayor, Mr. Olmos. Within days, the general got a taste of
what his new force was like. One policeman, driving drunk, hit a
father and his little girl as they crossed the street, killing both.
Days later, another drunken policeman ran over and killed a woman-and
fled the scene.

The general ordered that officers take a breath test before and after
their shifts.

A month after he took over, police videos taped seven Torreon police
cars escorting Zeta gunmen. The general fired the officers. By early
March, some 108 officers out of a force of 700 had been fired.

The general started to impose strict discipline. Anyone late to work
was sent home without pay. Cellphones were banned, because police were
using them to alert the Zetas of army patrols. The general told
residents to report crimes to his own cellphone because the city's
emergency number was being used by crooked police to retaliate against
Good Samaritans.

Tensions rose. One officer openly talked about killing the general,
witnesses say. On March 13, the majority of police on the force walked
off the job to demand better working conditions and Mr. Villa's
resignation.

As the officers staged a sit-in outside City Hall, luxury cars with
tinted windows pulled up to deliver steaks and whisky, witnesses say.
Local reporters were ordered by the Zetas to give favorable coverage
to the strike, say several reporters.

A delegation of police met the mayor at his office. "It was like a bad
Tarantino movie," says the mayor. "These were the scariest looking
guys you've ever seen, and they were our city police."

In five hours of negotiations, the mayor agreed to all of their
demands except for firing the general. Finally, one senior officer
told the mayor the police didn't really care about concessions. They
wanted the general gone. "Just agree to change his bodyguards and
we'll take care of the rest," the policeman said, according to the
mayor.

The mayor refused. "They wanted me to agree to have him killed," he
says, shaking his head at the memory. That night, he signed the order
to fire 600 officers, nearly the entire force.

The next morning, the state governor called Mr. Olmos and
congratulated him. He has also sent him a present: an armored Suburban
and eight bodyguards.

The chief lives under siege. Two of his bodyguards disappeared in the
months after the strike; another was seized from his home, tortured
and executed. His head was placed in front of the police station.

Thanks to the army, the general now has a contingent of 60 former or
active-duty soldiers. None are from Torreon. They live in the police
headquarters, venturing into the city only on patrol. The general
lives in a single room next to his office, with a mattress, an
exercise machine and a pet boxer named Chata.

For most of the soldiers, this has been their first time in a police
force. "I couldn't believe the lack of discipline," said Lt. Francisco
Naranjo.

After the strike, Mr. Villa was left with about 80 police from a force
of 700, mostly older officers near retirement. He and his troops went
on patrol several times a day and night, often taking on traffickers.
"I've seen more action now than in my entire career in the army," he
says.

The police chief and mayor also set about recruiting new police.
Results were mixed. One applicant had just gotten out of jail for murder.

A psychologist was hired to evaluate recruits. "Most applicants were
completely unfit. They had all kinds of psychological issues,
including narcissism and delusions of grandeur," says Bismark Soriano,
a 26-year-old psychologist.

But then a different type of person started coming through. Hortencia
Ovalle, a 36-year-old housewife, heard a radio report about the
general and signed up. "I wanted to be a part of something bigger for
my city," she says.

A challenge will be keeping new recruits honest. Across Mexico,
cartels spend an estimated $100 million a year bribing police,
according to the federal government.

One new tactic: buy a home for all beat officers. If a police officer
stays 15 years on the force with no issues of corruption, they get the
home free. "It's a way to get the wives of the cops to make sure their
husbands stay on the straight and narrow," says the mayor. The city
raised salaries for police from an average of $570 a month to about
$800-which puts Torreon in the top five best-paid police forces in the
country. Police are also getting scholarships for their children at
private schools.

After the March strike, the city offered to give back jobs to any
officer who wanted to return-to help police who were pressured to go
on strike. But to win re-entry, police had to undergo a lie-detector
exam, psychological profile and physical-fitness tests. Some 300 of
the 600 fired police reapplied. Only one-41-year-old Raquel
Estrada-passed all the tests. "Meet our only honest cop," Mr. Villa
said, chuckling on a recent day, introducing Ms. Estrada.

Around town, Gen. Villa is viewed with a mix of admiration and
trepidation. A new neighborhood watch program is starting to produce
results. Crime is starting to fall after the summer peak-but is still
well above last year's levels. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D