Source: Houston Chronicle (Texas) Contact: Wed, 30 Jul 1997, Page 13A (http://www.chron.com/cgibin/auth/story/content/chronicle/world/ 97/07/30/3srodrugsmexico.20.html) Woman lawyer linked to drug world is shot dead in Mexico Reuters News Service GUADALAJARA, Mexico A 44yearold woman recently identified as a key link between allegedly corrupt Mexican army officials and drug traffickers was murdered Tuesday, officials said. Irma Lizeth Ibarra Navaja, a lawyer, was gunned down by a hit man riding a motorcycle at a street corner in the western city of Guadalajara, authorities said. She later died in a hospital. Witnesses said Ibarra arrived at the intersection in a gray pickup when "a subject traveling on a motorcycle shot a firearm," Sergio Villa, a spokesman for the Jalisco State Attorney General's Office, told Reuters. "Six 9mm shells were found at the scene," he said. On Sunday, the Mexican news magazine Proceso published what it said were secret army documents into the investigation of active and retired officers allegedly on the take from drug traffickers. Ibarra was a "contact between groups of drug traffickers and commanders of the 15th Military Zone," Proceso said, citing the army documents. That military zone was once commanded by Gen. Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, who was arrested and charged in February with being on the payroll of Mexico's mostwanted drug kingpin. The Proceso report named generals and other top officers who in the last six years were allegedly given cars and other expensive gifts from drug lords in exchange for protection. The army then admitted that 34 mostly retired officers have been arrested this year "for their presumed responsibility in drug trafficking or for collaborating in it." Earlier Tuesday, Mexican police detained for questioning the lawyer who is defending the jailed general. The lawyer, Tomas Arturo Gonzalez, was called to appear before authorities on accusations that he attempted to bribe witnesses, the Mexican Attorney General's Office said. Gonzalez is one of four men defending Gutierrez Rebollo, the former head of the National Institute for Combating Drugs. Gonzalez was picked up at the maximumsecurity prison where Gutierrez Rebollo is held as the lawyer was on his way to attend a court hearing. Stunned family members of Gutierrez Rebollo immediately protested the move.