Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Pubdate: Sat, 19 Sep 1998 Author: DUDLEY ALTHAUS, Houston Chronicle Mexico City Bureau VICTIMS' DRUG TIES LIKELY BEHIND MEXICO MASSACRE ENSENADA, Mexico -- Still baffled by the brutality of the act, Mexican officials said Friday they are all but certain that 18 people were slaughtered near this seaside community because some of the victims were linked to the drug trade. "The motive appears to be problems between two or three groups involved in drug trafficking," said Baja California state Attorney General Marco Antonio de la Fuente. Police have detained 10 people for questioning in relation to the massacre, De la Fuente said at a news conference. Marijuana and weapons that may be linked to the crime have been seized in the town of Tecate along the U.S.-Mexico border, he said. Members of an extended family -- including a 1-year-old baby in diapers and seven children between the ages of 2 and 16 -- were dragged from their beds before dawn Thursday, herded against a low wall and shot with automatic weapons and pistols. "We can't begin to measure the brutality of the attack," de la Fuente said. Attacks on rivals' family members is rare in the Mexican drug underworld. Federal and state authorities said the apparent target of the attack was Fermin Castro, head of a small marijuana-smuggling gang based in Ensenada that allegedly had loose ties to powerful gangsters in Tijuana. Castro, 38, a cattle rancher and rodeo promoter nicknamed the "Indian Cowboy," survived the shooting but is in a coma with a gunshot wound to the head. Authorities said that Castro had apparently been tortured before he and the others were shot. Jose Luis Chavez, the top federal law enforcement official in Baja California, said a chair in Castro's house was stained with blood, as if someone had been interrogated there. There were indications that Castro had been beaten, Chavez said. Those killed include Castro's wife and their 2-year-old son; the sister of Castro's wife, her husband and their children; and Castro's sister, her husband, and their children. One of the five women who lost their lives was eight months pregnant. A 12-year-old nephew of Castro is hospitalized with bullet wounds. A 15-year-old niece apparently hid from the assailants and escaped unharmed. "It has been violent here, but never like this," said Gerardo, a neighbor of the victims who declined to give his last name. "I can't believe this. These were good people." Castro is well known in El Sauzal, a suburb of Ensenada about a 90-minute drive south of the U.S. border that is a confused jumble of fish canneries, U.S.-owned electronics factories and neat houses of wealthy retirees from California. Castro had put on a rodeo Tuesday not far from his home to help celebrate Mexico's independence holiday. Members of his extended family lived in a small walled compound of three houses tucked behind a ceramics factory. Soldiers guarded the compound Friday, refusing access to reporters and other visitors, as law enforcement investigators went through the houses and the yards. Old cars and trucks, some on cinder blocks, sat in the tall grass behind the houses. Castro's horses and cattle grazed in a small pen, munching on large piles of hay. Neighbors in small houses near the compound stayed indoors behind drawn curtains. A salty breeze blew off the fog-draped Pacific Ocean, a half-mile from the Castro compound. Officials said Friday that the Ensenada area, a favorite weekend and vacation destination for people from Southern California, has become increasingly caught up in the drug trade in recent years. "We had indications that the problems here in Ensenada were getting worse, that drug trafficking was getting worse," Chavez said at the news conference. "This is all because of the proximity to the border. This is a corridor." Murder usually is a state crime in Mexico. The Mexican federal police have become involved in the investigation into the Ensenada killings because of suspected links to drug smuggling, a federal crime. Chavez said authorities had been watching Castro's organization for some time but had failed to act on their suspicions. A recent article in Zeta, a weekly newspaper in Tijuana, listed Castro's group among about a half-dozen drug smuggling organizations that it said were flourishing in the Ensenada area. Chavez said Castro's small smuggling band unloaded marijuana-laden planes on clandestine airstrips near Ensenada and transported the drug to the border for sale in the United States. Many such small gangs operate in Baja California, paying fees to larger drug organizations for the right to smuggle, Chavez said. Castro's and other small bands in the Ensenada area paid protection money to an associate of the powerful Arellano Felix drug gang in Tijuana, Chavez said. But Chavez and other officials said there was no evidence that members of Castro's group directly worked for the Arellano Felix organization or were killed because of that gang's ongoing power struggle with other smugglers. Many experts consider the Arellano Felix organization, headed by four brothers from a well-to-do Tijuana family, as the most important criminal organization in Mexico. U.S. and Mexican authorities say the group smuggles tons of cocaine and other narcotics into the United States each year. The gangland killing of entire families happens rarely in Mexico. Still, there have been 250 murders so far this year in Baja California, most of them in Tijuana. Authorities have linked many of those to the drug trade. De la Fuente said Friday that although drug trafficking was likely behind the Ensenada killings, there is no evidence linking the 18 deaths to a wider gangland power struggle. Having federal police on the case may not assure some people in Baja California. Critics say that widespread corruption has kept many federal officials in the pockets of drug smugglers for years. Noting that witnesses describe the attackers as dressed in black -- the uniform of the federal anti-drug police -- several Mexican reporters pointedly asked Chavez on Friday about police involvement with area traffickers. The official said there was no evidence of any police involvement in Thursday's massacre and vowed that the case will be solved. He said, however, that the investigation may be hampered by human rights concerns. "We can't touch a hair on any detained person, because it would be violating their rights," Chavez said. "That's why this is so difficult. (But) I think we're doing OK. We're working very hard." Copyright 1998 Houston Chronicle Mexico City Bureau - --- Checked-by: Don Beck