Source: Houston Chronicle, Wednesday, July 9, 1997 LTEs: Family of drug lord Carrillo awaits return of corpse for funeral preparations By ANDREW DOWNIE Copyright 1997 Special to the Chronicle EL GUAMUCHILITO, Mexico The family of Mexico's most feared drug lord waited patiently inside the family ranch Tuesday as employees set out chairs and picked weeds in preparation for the funeral of cocaine billionaire Amado Carrillo Fuentes. Carrillo's wife and children he is believed to have six were inside the pale blue, onestory building waiting for word on when the funeral may take place, a federal official said. Trucks loaded with folding tables and metal stands arrived at the Carrillo family home on the edge of El Guamuchilito, a tiny farming community about 45 minutes from Culiacan. Other vehicles loaded with empty boxes and cleaning materials left the Finca Santa Aurora, the ranch named after Carrillo's mother, Aurora Fuentes. Fuentes and two of her daughters were still in Mexico City on Tuesday, waiting for her son's body to be released by the federal attorney general's office. The office has still not definitively ruled that the corpse is that of Carrillo, the reputed head of the Juarez drug trafficking cartel. Carrillo reportedly died Friday morning in Mexico City after eight hours of surgery aimed at removing fat deposits around his midriff and changing his features. His body was flown to Culiacan Saturday, but federal authorities ordered it returned to the capital for more tests. The Mexican government said Monday night it was carrying out DNA analysis that would allow it to conclusively confirm the corpse was that of Carrillo. Authorities showed the body, dressed in a suit and lying in an open casket, to photographers Monday night but did not say when it would be released or flown back to his home town. But while Mexican authorities have expressed doubt about whether the body is that of Carrillo, a senior official from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said in Mexico City that he was convinced the body was Carrillo's. "I'll bet my badge," said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity. "I'll say it's him." He added that the fingerprints on the corpse match those of Carrillo's. No one, however, was able to say when the corpse, still bruised from the surgery, might be handed over to the family. "We don't know when they we are going to get the body," said one man at the ranch. The man, who did not give his name, said the family was preparing to bury their son and wanted the house and its grounds to look its best. Carrillo is to be buried in a small chapel in the back of the ranch alongside his father, Vicente, and brother Cipriano. Already, dozens of wreaths line the walls of the building, many of them, reports said, sent from other major Mexican drug traffickers. Andrew Downie is a freelance journalist based in Mexico City.