Pubdate: Fri, 03 Sep 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 Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n559/a11.html PAIR CONVICTED OF DRUG TRAFFICKING IN MEXICO CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico-Two Americans detained last year by soldiers who said they found two marijuana-filled suitcases in their truck were found guilty of drug trafficking by a Mexican court. Shohn Huckabee, 23 years old, and Carlos Quijas, 36, were sentenced to five years in prison by a judge here Wednesday. The men said Thursday that they will appeal the verdict. "We aren't guilty," Mr. Huckabee said in an interview at a Ciudad Juarez jail Thursday. "The judge didn't take into account the evidence that was in our favor." Soldiers testified at the trial that they found two suitcases containing more than 100 pounds of marijuana in the men's pickup truck last December. Soldiers detained the men near the bridge that links Ciudad Juarez with El Paso, Texas. Mr. Huckabee and Mr. Quijas allege the soldiers planted the drugs in the truck they were driving. The pair also allege they were beaten, given electric shocks and threatened with death during an interrogation at a military base before they were handed over to civilian authorities. In a written statement in June in answer to questions by The Wall Street Journal, the Mexican military denied that soldiers had planted any evidence or tortured the men and said the two were taken to a military compound but questioned there only briefly. Three witnesses at the trial testified they had seen soldiers plant the marijuana-filled suitcases in the Americans' vehicle. One of those witnesses later was shot dead in front of his home. The two others appear to have fled Ciudad Juarez and could not be located to comment. The government human rights office of Chihuahua, the state where Ciudad Juarez is located, said it is investigating the Americans' torture allegations. An official there said the office is investigating more than 60 other incidents in which the military is believed to have planted evidence later used in a trial. U.S. officials have also become involved. The U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez says it sent an official in June to meet with the judge handling the case, in what consular officials said was a highly unusual move. "We will continue to monitor the developments in the case," a spokeswoman for the consulate said Thursday. Mexican diplomats stationed at the country's consulate in El Paso met with Mr. Huckabee and Mr. Quijas on Thursday morning and asked the men about their torture allegations. Mexican consular officials wouldn't normally be involved in the case of Americans accused of crimes in Mexico. The diplomats were ordered to visit by the Mexican ambassador to Washington, they said. Since 2006, the Mexican military has spearheaded Mexican President Felipe Calderon's war against the country's powerful drug cartels. In 2007, the U.S. agreed to provide Mexico with $1.3 billion to fight drug traffickers, including more than $420 million in funding for the Mexican military. U.S. lawmakers have threatened to withhold 15% of that money if there is evidence of human-rights violations or other problems. A decision is expected soon on whether Mexico is meeting its requirements. On Thursday, the parents of both men said they had begun the appeals process. "We registered an appeal," said Kevin Huckabee, Shohn Huckabee's father. But he said that after the trial court's guilty verdict, he wasn't optimistic. "I think it's already given what the verdict is going to be" in the appeals court, he said. In the Mexican judicial system, trials begin with a strong presumption of guilt against the accused. Some legal academics estimate that 8 out of 10 cases end in a guilty verdict. In 2008, Mexico approved changes aimed at strengthening defendants' positions in trials. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D