Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Contact: http://www.chicago.tribune.com/ Pubdate: Sat, 25 Sept 1998 Author: New York Times News Service ARRESTS OF 2 DRUG AGENTS IN MEXICO CRITICIZED TIJUANA, Mexico -- In a new case raising friction between American and Mexican law enforcement officials, two Mexican drug enforcement agents are in jail here on kidnapping charges that might have been trumped up by corrupt police working with traffickers. The two Mexican agents, part of an anti-drug unit that works closely with U.S. officials, were preparing to buy a ton of marijuana from Tijuana traffickers as part of a buy-and-bust operation when they were arrested by Baja California state police summoned by one of the traffickers. The traffickers, a father and son, have made protection payments to the state police who came to their rescue, according to testimony and Mexican and American government documents in court files. "The whole thing smells," said an American official familiar with the case. Several U.S. officials portrayed the arrest as the latest example of how pervasive corruption frustrates attempts to work with Mexican law enforcement. U.S. officials are perplexed because several Mexican Federal Police took part alongside the state police in arresting men who are, technically, their own colleagues. Mariano Herran Salvatti, who heads Mexico's Federal anti-narcotics agency, said in Mexico City on Thursday that he believes corrupt Baja state police were seeking vengeance against the two federal agents because, since their 15-member intelligence unit arrived in Tijuana in early September, it has made several large drug seizures. Baja state police, who have visited the two agents in jail, have asked them to name their undercover colleagues and commanders and to divulge the addresses of their undercover offices, Herran said. The state police also threatened to kill the federal agents, he said. The commander of the Baja California state police, Alvaro Castilla Gracia, insisted that the agents must stand trial, although he acknowledged that circumstances surrounding their arrest are more consistent with an undercover drug operation than a kidnapping. Since the agents' arrest on Sept. 11, he said, other kidnapping complaints have been filed against them. The two incidents for which the state authorities provided dates occurred before the federal agents say they arrived in Tijuana. The two agents, Eligio Garcia Reyes, 29, and Nicolas Carrillo Jimenez, 24, were recruited about a year ago into Mexico's elite anti-narcotics force, the Special Prosecutorial Agency for Drug Crimes, known by its Spanish acronym FEADS, as part of an effort to rejuvenate Mexico's discredited drug enforcement agencies with honest young agents. After passing lie detector tests and other examinations of their integrity, they were trained in investigative and intelligence procedures by Drug Enforcement Administration officers at an American training center in Leesburg, Va., according to Garcia and American officials. - --- Checked-by: Don Beck