Source: Seattle Times (WA) Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Pubdate: Tuesday, 28 July, 1998 Author: John Ward Anderson, The Washington Post GIRLS' KIDNAPPING A SIGN OF POLICE CORRUPTION IN MEXICO MEXICO CITY - Last week, three teenage girls in this crime-ridden capital accepted a ride in a police van carrying several uniformed officers, purportedly after asking them for directions. But instead of providing them with a friendly lift, the officers allegedly kidnapped the girls - ages 13, 15 and 18 - and took them to a stable used for police horses, where they held them for four days, repeatedly raping the two youngest. The girls escaped Thursday; so far, 16 police officers have been arrested in the case. The incident has prompted outraged denunciations by citizens, human-rights activists, politicians and women's groups, who see it as gruesome proof of an accepted article of faith: In Mexico, the biggest, most dangerous and feared gangs of criminals often are police officers themselves. Police corruption not new After such an "inconceivable" crime, "asking the citizens to have confidence (in the police) would seem a distasteful joke or a macabre prank," said Luis de la Barreda, chairman of the city's human-rights commission. The incident also emphasizes the role of police corruption in driving an unprecedented three-year crime wave sweeping Mexico. In fact, most Mexicans avoid contact with police, considering them uniformed outlaws. "If you look at the recent crime history, there is no significant case in which on-duty or former cops were not involved," said Rafael Ruiz Harrell, a leading criminologist here. "They have been doing it forever; it is all they know as a way of life." A citizens' advisory committee on public security created by Mexico City Mayor Cuauhtemoc Cardenas recently recommended 89 separate investigations into police corruption - including complicity with organized-crime groups, extortion rackets and stolen-car, kidnapping and prostitution rings; bribery; drug trafficking; and credit card and check fraud. City officials could not say yesterday if they are pursuing any of the recommendations, but a spokeswoman for Mexico City police said the agency fires an average of 70 officers a month for corruption. "We are witnessing the result of a lack of attention to the public security problem for the last 40 years," said Lucio Mendoza Rios, a member of the independent Mexican Institute of Organized Crime Studies and one of the authors of the report. "The borderline between cops and criminals is now unclear." Many veteran police officials began their careers in the 1970s in special units formed to combat leftist guerrilla groups, Mendoza said. "They were trained in all kinds of `dirty-war' techniques, including torture, disappearances, kidnapping," he said. "Many continued to use the same illegal techniques in (civilian) police departments," particularly in anti-drug squads, he said. "That's why some federal cops later became some of the most prominent drug lords." The abduction of the girls Mexico City officials said that the three kidnapped girls were hospitalized and given counseling before being returned to their families. Nine police officers were arrested within a day of the girls' escape, and seven more were arrested Sunday. There were conflicting details yesterday about the circumstances of the alleged July 18 abductions. Authorities said initially that the girls were kidnapped after they flagged down the police van to ask for directions. But La Jornada newspaper, citing sealed court records, reported that it was the policemen who had asked the girls for directions. When the girls refused to accompany the officers to show them the way, the newspaper reported, the girls were forced into the van. It was unclear how many men may have participated in the alleged rapes, but some of those arrested apparently were cited for knowing what was going on and doing nothing to stop it. One of those in custody is a police radio operator; the rest are members of a horseback patrol unit, officials said. They are being held pending completion of an investigation by the city attorney. Police structure built on bribes In recent months, there have been numerous other sensational cases of police corruption here. The head of the anti-kidnapping squad in the state of Morelos, just south of Mexico City, was charged with kidnapping and murder; the former head of Mexico's federal police was jailed on charges of protecting the country's biggest drug dealers in exchange for millions of dollars in bribes; 34 members and officials of Mexico City's most elite police unit are under investigation in the execution-style slayings of seven young men late last year; and two weeks ago, one of the city's top police officials was fired after it was discovered he had previously been imprisoned for kidnapping. The prestigious weekly magazine Nexos recently published a blistering attack on Mexico's criminal justice system that painted police forces as little more than criminal enterprises. The article, written by a sociology student who posed as a police cadet and patrolman for a year to write his thesis about police corruption, depicted an entire police infrastructure and hierarchy built on bribes. Police corruption is so ingrained and systemic here that most analysts are stumped about how to fix it. Some criminologists say that firing corrupt police officers does not work because judges usually reinstate them. That happened earlier this year when Mexican courts ordered the attorney general to reinstate more than half of the 826 federal agents he fired last December, most for failing drug tests. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski