Pubdate: Sat, 27 Feb 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: Nicholas Casey Note: Leslie Eaton contributed to this article. TOP MEXICAN CARTEL CHIEF SENTENCED TO 25 YEARS The sentencing of infamous Mexican drug lord Osiel Cardenas Guillen this week in a Houston court underscores a longstanding struggle in the Mexican drug war: Cartels continue to prosper along the Mexico-U.S. border even under a law enforcement strategy where top leaders are captured and sent to the U.S. Mr. Cardenas, leader of Mexico's Gulf Cartel, was sentenced to 25 years in prison under a plea deal Wednesday, almost seven years after his initial capture in Mexico. The Gulf Cartel, one of Mexico's largest, has smuggled thousands of pounds of cocaine and marijuana into the U.S. mainly through South Texas, according to U.S. authorities. Mr. Cardenas pleaded guilty to five counts that included money laundering, drug distribution and the attempted murder of federal agents. He also agreed to forfeit $50 million in assets. His sentencing was held in secret Wednesday in Houston, where the federal judge based in Brownsville moved the hearing. That arrangement was made due to the possible "imminent danger" to everyone at the hearing, according to the courtroom transcript unsealed Thursday. "I feel that [in] this time that I have spent in jail, I have reflected and I've realized the...ill behavior that I was maintaining, and truthfully, I am remorseful," Mr. Cardenas said, according to the transcript. Few dispute that Mr. Cardenas's 2003 arrest marked a major victory for the Mexican government--and one of its earliest--in attacking drug cartels by capturing top leaders. He was extradited to the U.S. in 2007 along with 14 other suspected drug lords, a break with typical Mexican policy. But south of the U.S. border, Mr. Cardenas's empire continues to operate without him. Overall drug traffic from Mexico to U.S. has grown, experts say. Far from snuffing out operations, his sentencing will simply leave existing Mexican drug lords "trying to get a better bargaining position," says Alberto Islas, a Mexico City security consultant. A former mechanic in the northern state of Tamaulipas, Mr. Cardenas rose through the ranks of the Gulf Cartel through his ties to Juan Garcia Abrego, then the organization's leader. Mr. Garcia was later arrested and Mr. Cardenas took control of the organization. Mr. Cardenas became legendary when he scored a major coup against the government: The recruitment of about 30 members of the Airborne Special Forces Groups, an elite Mexican army squadron trained in the U.S. The defectors became known as Los Zetas, the highly feared enforcement wing of the Gulf Cartel known for its military-like assassinations that included the use of surface-to-air missiles and modern wiretapping equipment. Mr. Cardenas's arrest, far from stanching the drug problem at the border, may have helped to create yet another cartel in Mexico's drug wars. Since his arrest, Los Zetas have gradually split off into a group of their own, delving not just in drug trafficking but the movement of counterfeit merchandise and the kidnapping on the Central American migrants. Drug experts say that Mr. Cardenas has been cooperating with authorities since his arrest in 2007, making it unlikely that any new information will surface in the weeks following the sentencing. George W. Grayson, a professor at the College of William Mary who has written about the cartels says he suspects Mr. Cardenas "gave information more in regard to the structure and the modus operandi of the cartel," rather than "naming names." Leslie Eaton contributed to this article. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D