Pubdate: Mon, 06 Sep 2010 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2010 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Dane Schiller THE MOST WANTED WARLORDS IN THE HEMISPHERE Their names change, but all meet the same end: dead, in jail or on the run One by one, Mexico's notorious warlords have come and gone - household names and nightmares with a modern-day twist. Instead of Al Capone or John Gotti, they are drug cartel kingpins with private armies and nicknames like Shorty, Blondie, Friend Killer and most recently, Texas-born La Barbie. Part terrorist. Part rock star. Part legend. But eventually they all meet the same fate, ending up dead, in prison or on the run for life. They share notoriety south of the border as well as across it - having pushed illegal drugs through Texas and other states, some ending up in shackles on extradition flights headed to Houston or beyond. "I have watched this for 20 years. There are no old, retired drug traffickers," said Drug Enforcement Administration agent Steve Robertson, of the Houston Division. "Violence is the nature of their business." Now, nearly two decades since the Mexicans took over from Colombian Pablo Escobar - the world's first true drug kingpin - a review of Mexico's top gangsters over the years traces their rise, reign and nearly inescapable fall. Many have been sent to the U.S., landing in federal courtrooms from Texas to California to either stand trial on drug trafficking charges or take a deal: Snitch on cartel comrades - and forfeit some of the riches earned through drugs and blood - in exchange for leniency. Borderland butchery About a dozen major Mexican drug traffickers are in American prisons and many more of their underlings are imprisoned on both sides of the border. Hundreds are vying to work their way up the ranks to take their places. But times are changing. The celebrity status may be wearing out as an estimated 28,000 people have died in Mexico's drug war since 2006. Gangsters have taken butchery to a new level by hacking off heads and body parts, killing rivals by the dozens at a time, and breaking the oldest code of organized crime: Killing family members and civilians. The most infamous of warlords on the run is Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, whose nickname translates as "Shorty." He has defied all odds by breaking out of a Mexican prison nearly a decade ago and taking his Sinaloa Cartel to the top of Mexico's organized crime world. Guzman is the most wanted man in Mexico and rubbed salt in President Felipe Calderon's wounds in 2009 by landing on Forbes magazine's list of billionaires. He is wanted in the U.S. on drug trafficking and conspiracy charges, and there's a reward of up to $5 million for his capture. Keeping it in the family Amado Carrillo Fuentes, known as the "Lord of the Skies," took the most unique path to his demise. He died from complications of plastic surgery intended to make him less recognizable. The doctors who did the deed were killed and their bodies stuffed in drums. His brother now runs the business, but the Juarez cartel, based in Ciudad Juarez across the border from El Paso, has shifted away from the smuggling of planes that gave Lord of the Skies his name and moved on to the cartels' new normal of barbaric crimes. Amado Carrillo's contemporary, Juan Garcia Abrego, known as "El Senor" among other names, was the first Mexican drug boss to make the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list. He refused a plea bargain and was found guilty in a Houston court on an array of conspiracy, drug trafficking and money laundering charges. He is serving multiple life sentences in the federal Supermax prison in Colorado. His Gulf Cartel, which is based out of Monterrey near South Texas, gave birth to perhaps the most merciless thugs of them all, the Zetas. An assassination hit squad that grew into a full-fledged cartel, the Zetas introduced beheadings and other such savageries to Mexico's drug war and are blamed for the slaughter of 72 immigrants last month on a ranch. Just to name a few. Price on their heads "You can go on and on and on. Taking out the head (cartel leader) is not enough," Steve McCraw, head of the Texas Department of Public Safety, said of destroying a cartel. "You have to take out an entire organization, and you'll need to take out the ability of the entire organization to profit." In fact, not one cartel has been eradicated. Francisco Javier Arellano Felix, who comes from a band of brothers who led the Tijuana Cartel, was arrested in 2007 by the Coast Guard on a boat south of the Mexican coastal resort of Cabo San Lucas. The playboy of the family, he rose to power when few were left to take the helm. He is imprisoned in California. Miguel Trevino Morales, known as "Comandante 40," is a Zetas boss believed to be responsible for much of the mayhem on the South Texas-Mexico border in recent years. He is a fugitive from charges in the U.S. and has a $5 million price on his head. The same reward looms over other top-tier traffickers, including former soldier Heriberto Lazcano and Antonio Ezequiel Cardenas Guillen, whose brother was the Gulf Cartel's chief leader. Osiel Cardenas Guillen, considered the most diabolical of drug bosses, once put a gold-plated AK-47 to the heads of two U.S. federal agents working an operation in Mexico. He was arrested by the Mexican military in a shootout. After doing time in a Mexican prison, from which he continued to run his cartel, he was extradited to Houston. He offers his fellow gangsters perhaps the best example for self-preservation. By cooperating with the U.S. government, and offering information secreted in sealed court documents, he took a deal to do time in prison and go free 14 years from now. "You become a target, just like the gangsters from 1920s Prohibition in the United States," said Larry Karson, a retired Customs Service agent who is now a criminal justice lecturer at the University of Houston-Downtown. Karson said the government went after Al Capone because he was getting too big to be tolerated: "I believe the president of the United States himself said, 'Get Capone,' because he became bigger in the public eye than many people thought was appropriate for a gangster." Mexico's war continues The Capone of cartels was Colombia's Escobar, known for his overwhelming wealth and power. He also spent millions on taking care of the poor, who in turn took care of him. At one point Escobar surrendered and agreed to imprisonment in his own customized, luxurious prison, before deciding later to escape. He died in a rooftop shootout in Medellin. Officers posed for photos standing over his body. And so it goes in Mexico, where President Calderon has continued his all-out war on the cartels and noted in his annual state of the union address that three major traffickers have been captured or killed in the last year. Edgar Valdez Villarreal, who was born in Laredo and is nicknamed "La Barbie" for his light hair and eyes, was arrested in Mexico last week. He did not look fearful of his fate and even smirked when paraded in front of reporters while flanked by masked federal agents. His Houston lawyer, Kent Schaffer, said he'd been working for his client for months to explore options should he be captured. He wouldn't discuss negotiations. Beto Cardenas, a Houston lawyer from Laredo who went to school with La Barbie, said it steams him that anyone would look up to the mobsters who ride herd over the borderland bloodshed. "Celebrity status for criminals is based on a path of destruction and greed," Cardenas said. "No comparison of heroic, folklore or legendary status is justified. Heroes save lives, they do not take them; legends earn respect with honest, hard work completed each day for the betterment of all." Or, put another way by the DEA's Robertson, "These are not Robin Hoods. They are hard-core, violent criminals - animals who should be put in a cage." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt