Source: Houston Chronicle, Sunday, July 20, 1997, page 1 Contact: Postop drugs killed Carrillo, officials say Mexican kingpin may have been murdered By ANDREW DOWNIE Copyright 1997 Special to the Chronicle MEXICO CITY Amado Carrillo Fuentes, Mexico's most powerful drug lord, may have been murdered by the intravenous administration of postoperative drugs, the Mexican Federal Attorney General's Office said. The reputed billionaire head of the Ciudad Juarez drug cartel died July 11 in a Mexico City hospital, shortly after having spent eight hours receiving liposuction and plastic surgery that Mexican and U.S. antinarcotics officials said was aimed at changing his appearance to evade law enforcement officers. Carrillo died after receiving medication that caused his respiratory system to shut down, the office said, citing a battery of tests carried out on his organs by forensic scientists at the country's top military hospital. "As a result of the tests ... it is concluded that Amado Carrillo Fuentes died as a consequence of depression in the respiratory centers caused by the residual presence of anaesthetic agents (Fentanest and Diprivam) triggered by the depressant and nerving effects of Midasolam (Dormicum)," the office said in a statement. The report confirms news reports that said medical staff at the Santa Monica clinic had injected Carrillo with a medicine called Dormicum against the advice of doctors present. The reports led many to believe Carrillo, 42, was murdered. Carrillo's mother and others close to the family had said he died of a heart attack. The attorney general's office did not speculate on whether the administration of Dormicum and the other drugs was a deliberate attempt to kill the capo or whether it was a mistake by hospital staff. "The Federal Attorney General's Office continues with investigations to determine if the administration of this medicine (Dormicum) that caused the death of Amado Carrillo Fuentes was intentional or was due to imprudence, inexperience, or a lack of knowledge by the people in charge of his (recovery)," the office added. Carrillo's death has shocked and intrigued a country that during the last two years came to identify him as the most feared drug lord of the 1990s. The nephew of a former drug capo from Sinaloa, Carrillo rose through the ranks to become an almost legendary figure. At the height of his powers he made $200 million a week exporting cocaine and heroin from his homeland to the United States, anti narcotics officials estimated. In the mid1990s he won the alias Lord of the Skies because of his pioneering use of large jets to transport cocaine from Colombia to Mexico. The statement about his death was released Friday night, just hours after police arrested a man wanted in connection with the drugrelated killing of a newspaper journalist in the northern border town of San Luis Rio Colorado. State police detained Rodolfo Arroyo Palacios and accused him of shooting Benjamin Flores, the outspoken columnist and editor of the town's La Prensa paper. The state attorney general told newspapers that Tuesday's killing was ordered by the brother of a jailed drug trafficker of Carrillo's Juarez cartel. The trafficker was reportedly angry at stories written by Flores. Flores was one of the area's senior reporters and was best known for the stories and columns he wrote about the drug trafficking in and around the desert town. Andrew Downie is a freelance writer based in Mexico City.