Pubdate: Wed, 7 Apr 1999 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Seattle Times Company Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Author: The Associated Press FUGITIVE FORMER GOVERNOR OF MEXICAN STATE CHARGED WITH DRUG TRAFFICKING MEXICO CITY - A fugitive former state governor in Mexico has been charged with drug trafficking and organized crime, prosecutors said. Yesterday's announcement came a day after Mario Villanueva left office and nine days after he dropped out of sight. Prosecutors denied they delayed the criminal case to avoid charging and impeaching a sitting governor, something that has never been done in Mexico. But Villanueva said in a letter published yesterday by Mexican newspapers that the case was politically motivated. "Harassed by an investigation aimed at incriminating me at any cost with the trafficking and use of drugs . . . I have abandoned my turf to avoid being jailed," Villanueva wrote. His lawyer, Juan Collado, confirmed Villanueva had written the letter, the daily Reforma newspaper said. The former governor did not reveal his whereabouts. The warrant and charges against Villanueva and five alleged accomplices cap a long-running scandal in the Caribbean coast state of Quintana Roo, which U.S. and Mexican officials say has become a relay point for Colombian cocaine entering the United States. Villanueva claimed the accusations he worked with drug traffickers were "absurd and ridiculous," saying that as governor he had no opportunity to protect drug traffickers from federal authorities. He said the charges were politically motivated because he opposed efforts by national leaders of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party to control Quintana Roo's state government. The attorney general's office had no comment yesterday. Prosecutors have asked Interpol and "other police agencies" to help in the search for Villanueva, indicating they believe he may have fled the country. U.S. authorities, including the Drug Enforcement Administration, have joined Mexican police in the search. Media reports have suggested Villanueva may have fled to Panama, where he has business contacts. Villanueva's successor, Joaquin Hendricks Diaz, said yesterday that the attorney general's office had every right to investigate the former governor and that the new state administration would cooperate by providing information about the case, the government news agency Notimex reported. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake