Source: Washington Post Author: Molly Moore and John Ward Anderson, Washington Post Foreign Service Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Pubdate: Saturday, 21 Mar 1998 PRESIDENT'S BROTHER DENIES MAKING CARTEL DEAL Powerful Drug Gang Offered to Fund Zedillo Project, Allegedly Tried to Buy Bank to Launder Cash MEXICO CITY, March 20—Alleged money launderers for Mexico's largest drug mafia offered to finance a hotel construction project two years ago for the brother of President Ernesto Zedillo, according to Rodolfo Zedillo. The president's younger brother, who is an architect and heads a Mexico City construction company, said in a letter released late last night that he never entered into business arrangements with the two men, who since have been named in a federal investigation that is revealing how deeply the Cuidad Juarez cartel penetrated Mexico's business sector. The attorney general's investigation has provided the first concrete evidence that a cartel had tried to buy a bank and that its reach had touched President Zedillo's family. The probe has found that the Juarez cartel, headed by Amado Carrillo Fuentes until his death last year, attempted to buy a stake in a struggling Mexico bank to launder proceeds from their drug-trafficking operations. Law enforcement officials have estimated that as much as $30 billion in drug proceeds are laundered annually through Mexican businesses, banks and money-exchange houses. Mexico only enacted strict money-laundering laws last year and has yet to prosecute a major money-laundering case. On Thursday, authorities arrested Juan Alberto Zepeda Novelo, a senior executive for one of Mexico's largest construction companies, on allegations that he funneled the drug money through his accounts on the cartel's behalf to make the bank-shares purchase appear legitimate. Zepeda's company, Bufete Industrial, has denied any wrongdoing. Documents published Thursday by Publico, a Guadalajara newspaper, revealed that the construction company executive's son, Juan Zepeda Mendez, and an associate, Jorge Bastida, approached Rodolfo Zedillo and offered to finance his hotel construction project in downtown Mexico City. Neither Zepeda nor Bastida, whose whereabouts are unknown, could be reached for comment. The newspaper published a copy of an agreement to build the hotel which had been signed by Bastida and Juan Carlos Fernandez Garcia, who had power of attorney to negotiate business deals on Rodolfo Zedillo's behalf. In a letter written in response to the newspaper's article, Rodolfo Zedillo said, "I want to make perfectly clear that neither I nor the company that I represent, ever carried out any type of financial operation with these people [Bastida or Zepeda]." Zedillo said that after being approached by the two men, he asked his lawyers to investigate their financial records. He said his attorneys recommended against the deal. A Zedillo administration official said Rodolfo Zedillo obtained other financing for the project. The Zedillo administration official said, "The president has told his relatives to watch what they do and to obey the law." Zedillo's predecessor, Carlos Salinas de Gortari, has become one of the most reviled figures in Mexico, based in large part on his brother Raul's use of his proximity to the president to make millions of dollars in business deals, many of which are now under investigation by U.S., Mexican and Swiss officials. Carlos Salinas is living in exile in Ireland and his brother is in prison in Mexico. Insofar as the Juarez cartel's efforts to purchase Banco Anahuac, a small Mexico City bank, prosecutors are investigating allegations that Zepeda and Bastida bought controlling shares of about $10 million in the bank in two transactions in 1995 and 1996. Three weeks after the traffickers bought the controlling interest, Mexican banking authorities refused to let the deal go through. "A portion of the capital of the Anahuac Financial Group was found to belong to Amado Carrillo Fuentes' organization," the attorney general's office said in a statement this week. It is unclear whether the banking commission knew of the drug-trafficking connection when they stopped the deal. © Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company