Source: Washington Post (DC) Pubdate: Mon, Pubdate: 12 Oct 1998 Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Copyright: (c) 1998 The Washington Post Company Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: John Ward Anderson, Washington Post Foreign Service Note: Correspondents Anne Swardson in Paris and Douglas Farah in Washington contributed to this report. A MEXICAN'S MYSTERY MILLIONS Riches of Ex-President's Brother May Soon Be Explained MEXICO CITY--For Mexican investigators on a nearly four-year crusade to nail the ex-president's brother for alleged corruption, it was the break they'd been waiting for. On July 15, they arrested Juan Manuel Gomez Gutierrez, chief accountant for Raul Salinas de Gortari and such a trusted confidant that some of Salinas's secret Swiss bank accounts were held in Gomez's name. But then the Salinas saga took another bizarre twist of the sort that has become a hallmark. Somehow Gomez made bond less than 24 hours after his arrest, and somehow he lost the police tail assigned to follow him. The man that Mexican, Swiss and U.S. investigators had hoped could explain how Raul Salinas had accumulated hundreds of millions of dollars as a mid-level government employee during his brother Carlos's presidency slipped away and has not been seen since. The incident typifies the difficulties authorities faced trying to decipher the secret and often Byzantine financial transactions of Raul Salinas. Investigators describe a Herculean effort to gather enough credible evidence from an assortment of shady drug mafiosi to prove Salinas laundered millions of dollars in illicit drug proceeds. In spite of many setbacks, investigators may yet get an explanation of Raul's riches. Angry and humiliated by the Gomez debacle, over the following three months police executed 25 search warrants at 19 homes, offices and businesses linked to the accountant in Mexico City and the border city of Ciudad Juarez. According to the chief prosecutor in the case, Jose Luis Ramos Rivera, police hauled away a treasure trove of previously unknown financial data -- much contained on encrypted computer disks and hard drives. With the new findings, Ramos said in announcing the seizures on Oct. 2, Mexico has traced 289 bank accounts -- containing about $250 million -- and 123 homes, ranches, apartments and other properties to Raul Salinas, through investigations in Mexico, the United States, Switzerland, France, Britain, Germany, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium and nations of the Caribbean. Salinas denied that the new accounts and properties were his in a letter "to public opinion" that Mexican newspapers published a few days later. "Don't let yourselves be fooled," he wrote from his prison cell. "I don't have any more accounts, nor any more properties." Much of the money was first discovered several years ago in secret Swiss accounts after U.S. investigators told the Swiss they believed Raul Salinas had stashed illicit drug proceeds in their banks. That prompted a three-year money laundering investigation by Swiss Attorney General Carla del Ponte that is expected to climax later this month when the Swiss government officially seizes more than $132 million that Raul Salinas has on deposit there. Three officials familiar with the Swiss investigators' report on their findings said it concludes that Raul Salinas controlled practically all the drug shipments transshipped through Mexico during his brother's 1988-94 presidency. Details of the report were first published in the New York Times. The officials -- a European and two Americans, all of whom spoke on condition their names not be used -- said the Swiss report mentions the possibility that some of the money may have been funneled to Carlos Salinas's 1988 presidential campaign. The report does not implicate Carlos Salinas in any crimes, the sources said. But according to one of the officials, it asks, "Could the president of Mexico not have known what his brother was doing?" Noting that under Swiss laws, the government can keep the money if it is seized, Raul Salinas's attorneys charge that the Swiss concocted the case because they are eager to claim a huge financial windfall. They claim the Swiss have relied on the testimony of convicted criminals who have lied to get prison sentences reduced. One such witness is Luz Estela Salazar, an accountant for Colombia's Medellin cocaine cartel whose U.S. prison term was reduced from 25 years to seven in exchange for her testimony. She has told Swiss investigators that she attended meetings in Mexico City between Raul Salinas and Medellin cartel members during which Salinas allegedly agreed to protect cocaine shipments through Mexico for a fee of $300,000 per plane load. She also said one of the founding Medellin traffickers, Gonzalo Rodriguez Gacha, gave $200,000 to Carlos Salinas's election campaign, according to Mexican newspaper accounts. Her husband, Jose Manuel "Alex" Ramos, a former Medellin cartel lieutenant serving a life sentence in the United States, also told investigators of the alleged Mexico City meetings, claiming Raul Salinas eventually collected $80 million in bribes. He alleged that shipments were protected by a network in Mexico's Interior Ministry and sometimes were transported by Mexican military vehicles, and that Colombians were given flight plans and radio frequencies to avoid detection by U.S. and Mexican anti-drug forces, according to Mexico's El Universal newspaper. Carlos Salinas, who lives in self-imposed exile in Ireland, has not been charged with any crime. He has denied any wrongdoing and has said that he knows of no wrongdoing by anyone in his family. Raul Salinas has said that the money he has on deposit in Switzerland was given to him by rich Mexicans for an investment fund he was in the process of setting up. He has repeatedly denied any connection to drug trafficking. Much of the Swiss information about Raul Salinas's alleged ties to drug trafficking appears to be identical to allegations about Salinas family drug ties that became public in recent U.S. court cases against Juan Garcia Abrego, once Mexico's biggest drug kingpin, and former Mexican deputy attorney general -- and Salinas's former brother-in-law -- Mario Ruiz Massieu. In October 1996, a jury in Houston found Garcia Abrego guilty of 22 counts of drug smuggling and money laundering and sentenced him to 11 life sentences. In 1997, a judge and jury in Houston confiscated $9 million from a Texas bank account of Ruiz Massieu, concluding the funds were illicit drug proceeds. He currently is under house arrest in Newark and is the subject of a drug trafficking investigation by a Houston grand jury. According to court documents, witness statements, law enforcement sources and numerous published accounts, Ruiz Massieu and Raul Salinas allegedly were paid millions by Garcia Abrego and other Mexican kingpins during the Salinas administration to protect their drug shipments to the United States - -- a charge both men deny. At the time of the Houston proceedings, however, prosecutors did not present all the evidence, conceding that much of it came from unsavory characters whose credibility likely would have been attacked. Other witnesses got cold feet about testifying when their names became public, officials said. The Swiss apparently interviewed many of those people. While many of the witnesses are less than exemplary, the burden of proof is lower because it is a civil asset seizure, not a criminal case. Salinas's attorneys have said they will go to Swiss court to challenge the seizure and reclaim the funds. At that point, Swiss prosecutors will have to present their case proving Salinas's drug ties. According to U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officials and published accounts, some of those witnesses and their allegations include: Magdalena Ruiz Pelayo, who said she was the longtime secretary for Raul Salinas Lozano, 81, father of Carlos and Raul Salinas. Ruiz Pelayo was convicted on cocaine conspiracy charges in Newark in 1992 and is still in prison. In a statement to the FBI in 1996, first published last year by the weekly Mexican newsmagazine Proceso, Ruiz Pelayo said she attended numerous meetings during which drug trafficking was discussed by kingpin Garcia Abrego, Ruiz Massieu, Raul Salinas and his father. The Salinases have denied the allegations. Marco Enrique Torres, a Mexican drug trafficker jailed in the United States, who told investigators that in 1994 an airplane loaded with $20 million in drug payoffs landed at a ranch owned by Raul Salinas in northern Mexico. Enrique Torres said he was paid $1.6 million to help arrange a truck convoy to transport the money to Banca Cremi in Mexico City. On another occasion, Enrique Torres told investigators, he was present when Raul Salinas and Ruiz Massieu helped arrange a $4 million payoff to secure the release of 1.2 tons of cocaine and a suspected trafficker that Mexican police had captured. Guillermo Palomari, the Chilean-born former treasurer of the Cali cartel, now in the U.S. witness protection program, who told Swiss investigators that Raul Salinas received more than $80 million in protection payoffs, sometimes totaling $5 million a month, and that Carlos Salinas also received some of the funds. Palomari told investigators that in early 1994, his cartel paid its Mexican partner, drug lord Amado Carrillo Fuentes, $30 million for transporting Colombian cocaine through Mexico. The cartel authorized Carrillo Fuentes to give a $3 million commission to Raul Salinas - -- nicknamed El Chupasangre, or the Bloodsucker -- and $1 million to Mexican senators, he alleged. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake