Pubdate: Fri, 05 Sep 1997 Source: Houston Chronicle, page 22A, world news section (http://www.chron.com/cgibin/auth/story/content/chronicle/ world/97/09/05/mexicodrugs.20.html) Contact: Drug smugglers learned radar in U.S., paper says By ANDREW DOWNIE, Copyright 1997 Special to the Chronicle MEXICO CITY Eighteen Mexican pilots caught redhanded smuggling nearly 165 pounds of cocaine in a governmentowned plane were trained in the United States, a leading newspaper here said Thursday. The pilots were trained in the United States to read sophisticated radar used to track planes bringing drug shipments into Mexico from South and Central America, the Reforma newspaper said. The training was part of a program under which the U.S. government gave its Mexican counterpart $8 million to help in antidrug efforts, the newspaper added. A spokesman for the Mexican attorney general's office said the institution, under whose auspices the men worked, could not shed any light on the reports, and a U.S. Embassy spokeswoman did not return telephone calls Thursday. The 18 pilots were arrested Monday at the capital's airport getting off a plane from Chiapas state, the attorney general's office said in a statement released Tuesday. The men were returning from a tour of duty in the southern state when an anonymous caller tipped off officials about the presence of drugs on the aircraft, according to reports. Agents searched the plane, a GIGrumman, and found 164.5 pounds of cocaine on board, the onepage statement added. But while the statement named the agents and described the plane they were traveling in, it did not say the agents had been using a governmentowned aircraft. Only on Wednesday did a senior justice official acknowledge that the plane belonged to the attorney general's office. A spokesperson for the office said the information was not omitted deliberately. "We thought it was understood," said the spokesperson, who asked not to be identified. The arrest of the pilots comes just days after Attorney General Jorgé Madrazo Cuellar declared there was "not one iota of corruption" at the highest levels of his office. Earlier this year, Mexico's drug czar was arrested after it was discovered he was taking money, cars, property and other goodies from the country's most powerful drug cartel. This year alone, 161 agents and detectives with the attorney general's office have been charged with crimes, most of them bribery or drugrelated. Another 39 are under investigation. Andrew Downie is a freelance journalist based in Mexico City.