Pubdate: Sun, 12 Jan 2014 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2014 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Dane Schiller Page: B1 RETIRED DEA HEAD TALKS DAYS OF CHASING KINGPINS Javier Pena, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Houston Division, retired Saturday after a 30-year career. The Texas native recently spoke with Houston Chronicle reporter Dane Schiller. Here are edited excerpts from that conversation: Q: What do you make of legalizing pot in Colorado? A: We see the effects it has on people. I'm against legalization. Some states aren't, and that is a political fight. Will Texas ever? I hope not. Q: Does it make you angry? A: It is frustrating on the law enforcement side of the house. If you are a parent, do you want your kid to be smoking, especially this highly potent type of marijuana? Q: Any advice for stopping drug abuse? A: A lot of the solution is in the socialization process, talking to kids. We try to tell kids don't use this stuff, it is bad. Q: How is it that Houston is considered a hub for drug cartels? Do they have people based here? A: They are here as far as the workers, the cell heads, the transportation people, the money launderers. Q: Many wealthy people from Mexico have moved to this area. Does that include members of organized crime? A: One of the most alarming things I have seen, in the last five years, is the influx of Mexican traffickers who are buying up tons of assets here in this area - properties, houses, ranches, businesses, shopping malls - millions of dollars of trafficking funds being reinvested in the U.S. Q: Why don't you go after them? A: That is what we are trying to do. Q: But you know where they are, where they live and work. A: We have our intelligence, but proving it is another thing. It can take years. Q: As for Pablo Escobar, what is his legacy? A: He invented narcoterrorism. All his terrorism was about not getting extradited to the U.S. Q: How hard was it to watch him make a deal with the Colombian government so that he could surrender to his own private luxury prison, where he picked his own guards and the government could not enter? A: That was amazing because we had been chasing him for about six years and the killings, the atrocities, the killing of innocent civilians that he was responsible for - thousands of innocent people died. Q: What is the biggest lesson the DEA learned from Escobar? A: No matter how powerful they are, you have to go after them. No matter how big, powerful or how much money - you cannot back down. He declared war on Colombia and that we did see. Q: Do you stay in touch with any of the Colombians you worked with? A: Yes, a couple of guys. The (team) was made of the best Colombian cops, and their only mission was to get Escobar. I lived with them, stayed with them. We exchanged a lot of information. Some guys are dead. Some guys made it up to be generals. The major who was responsible for the death of Escobar is in prison right now. He later became the governor of a state in Colombia and got caught helping a paramilitary group fight (rebels.) Q: It seems that the latest generation of Latin American drug lords learned from Escobar's story that they should keep a low profile. A: With Escobar, it was the Wild Wild West - jewelry, bodyguards, whatever they wanted to do. Escobar in his heyday had 60 body guards at any time. The lavish parties. Big ranches. Money was not a problem so they would ... show it off. Q: You actually slept in one of Escobar's rooms after he had fled. What is something you learned about him as a person? A: He had a thing for bathrooms. They had to be immaculate, even in his ranches and jungle houses. Q: Escobar is history, but Americans still get all the drugs they could want. Has the amount of cocaine here changed? A: We are seeing less (cocaine) in the U.S. The prices have really gone up. In Houston it is in the mid 20s. Ten years ago here ... it was $13,000 to $15,000. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt