Source: Seattle Times (WA) Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Pubdate: 20 September, 1998 Author: Mark Stevenson, Associated Press WELL-TRAINED TEAM BEHIND MASSACRE But scene in Mexico of 18 bloody deaths has few clues EL SAUZAL, Mexico -- The killers arrived in three light trucks before dawn, dressed all in black and carrying automatic rifles. They worked quickly, professionally. And when they were done, 18 men, women and children from one extended family lay dead in bleeding mounds beside a patio wall at the ranch by the sea in northern Mexico. "The children said that it lasted an eternity -- an hour," said state Cmdr. Felipe Perez Cruz, quoting testimony of a 12-year-old boy and 15-year-old girl who survived the Thursday morning massacre linked to drugs. "It was probably 15 or 20 minutes." Statements by investigators and a tour of the blood-stained compound a day after the killings provide signs of a well-organized team carrying out orders to kill an alleged marijuana trafficker and his relatives for some unknown crime against rivals in the drug trade. After driving across a dusty plain, at least nine or 10 gunmen got out at the ranch this suburb of the Baja California resort of Ensenada. The killers broke into three teams, each assigned to one of the family's three houses. "They must have known the family," Perez Cruz said. First hit was the Tovar family household, headed by a sister of alleged trafficker Fermin Castro -- apparently the main target. The Tovar family was the only part of the Castro clan not believed to have been involved with drugs, investigators say. One team went through a downstairs window in the Tovar house, in the middle of the compound. Micaria Jaime Tovar, eight months pregnant with her second child, her 1-year-old son Cesar and four other family members were taken to the patio, probably at gunpoint. A second team entered the house of Francisco Flores Altamirano, Castro's brother-in-law and alleged lieutenant in marijuana smuggling. The last team went after Castro, who local media say was known as "The Iceman." While the first and second teams gathered half-dressed couples and pajama-clad children in a corner of the patio in the early morning chill, the third team raced up an exterior staircase and battered or shot in a third-story doorway in Castro's house. Castro was caught in his second-story bedroom, where he was beaten and possibly tortured. Two days later, Castro lay in a coma with gunshot wounds to the head, barely alive. It was unclear whether he was taken to the patio, where the victims were closely packed together against a cinderblock wall. His wife and 2-year-old son were among those killed there. Normally, the story would have stopped with the gunmen issuing a warning that would have been respected under a code of silence so strict that "you can't get a word out of these people," federal investigator Jose Luis Chavez says. Traffickers' relatives -- and especially children -- are rarely targeted in drug-related paybacks in Mexico. But something was different this time. Perez Cruz said the killers may have been in an "altered state" -- drugged or emotionally upset. Or the killers may have been following little-used rules about punishment for those who switch sides in drug gangs, local media say. Still closely huddled together, toddlers beside their mothers, they were ordered to get down on the cold concrete. Neighbors woke when bursts of automatic weapons fire shattered the early morning quiet at 4:15 a.m. "There weren't finished off one by one. They simply sprayed them all with bullets," Perez Cruz said. Eighty spent shells, an average of four bullets per victim, were later found. Mario Alberto Flores, 12, miraculously survived. Losing blood, he wandered about Castro's home until he was found by his cousin, Viviana Flores, 15, who was never discovered by the killers. The girl, six months pregnant, had hidden between a table and an armoire. There were no signs of struggle in the houses or on the patio. Apparently no weapons were kept at the compound. The crime scene offers no clues for the killers' motive. - --- Checked-by: Pat Dolan