Pubdate: Wed, 01 Dec 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Page: 29A Author: Michael Riley, Special to the Chronicle JUAREZ DRUG CARTEL KNOWN FOR RESILIENCE Organization Endures Turf War, Sting Operations, Death Of Leader MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's infamous Juarez drug cartel has taught U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officials a stinging lesson: The gang will not go away any time soon. The cartel, which was the dominant drug-smuggling organization in Mexico for most of the 1990s, has survived everything that police on both sides of the border could throw at it. The organization, made up of at least three independent cells, has adjusted amoebalike to the unexpected death of its boss in 1997, to a vicious turf war that followed, and then to aggressive sting operations aimed at midlevel leaders by both the United States and Mexico. U.S. drug-enforcement officials estimate that the cartel, based in Ciudad Juarez across the international border from El Paso, remains responsible for half the cocaine that enters the United States from Mexico. "The point is that the same amount of drugs are getting into the U.S.," said Jorge Chabat, an expert on Mexico's drug trade who works at CIDE, a Mexico City think tank. "There is no sign that impunity of the cartel to act is any less," he said. "There is no sign that the Juarez cartel is any weaker." The disappearance of more than 100 people off the streets of Juarez over the past few years attest to the gang's power, not its weakness, analysts say. On Tuesday, FBI forensic experts joined ski-masked Mexican police and troops in searching two desert ranches near Juarez where the bodies of more than 100 Mexican and U.S. citizens were suspected to have been buried. After the death of the gang's boss, Amado Carrillo Fuentes, during a risky plastic surgery operation in July 1997, anti-drug agents in both the United States and Mexico expected that the cartel would begin to wither. What followed, though, was a blood bath in which more than 70 people were killed in gangland assassinations in Juarez alone. Cartel soldiers were shot to death while dining in fine restaurants, driving their expensive cars or even strolling in middle-class neighborhoods that are found throughout the fast-growing industrial city of about 1 million people. The killings turned the city known for its assembly factories into one of the bloodiest districts in Mexico. Over the last few years, more than 150 people have disappeared in circumstances that may be drug-related, according to an organization for family members set up in El Paso. Many of the victims likely were low-level members who became threats to the cartel's security. "It looks like many of the disappearances took place because the victims were no longer useful to the cartel or too dangerous to be allowed to live," said Sigrid Arzt, an expert on organized crime in Mexico City. A couple of the Americans who disappeared were specialists in telecommunications who, Arzt suspects, may have been selling equipment to the cartel. But in the end, the organization has not been weakened substantially. U.S. law enforcement agents believe that Carrillo's brother, Vicente, has gained overall control of the cartel and that the organization continues to function despite becoming the main target of Mexico's anti-drug forces. One reason, according to experts, is that Carrillo left behind a highly disciplined organization that changed the way of Mexico's drug syndicates look and operate. Rarely seen in public and a man who eschewed the flashy lifestyle of the country's other kingpins, Carrillo shaped the cartel into cells that operate with separate structures in different regions. The cartel's members also appeared to be highly trained along the model of a paramilitary group, according to officials in the country's special anti-drug unit quoted in the Mexican news magazine Proceso. Gang members are known to receive intense training in security and the handling of small arms. That forced Mexican drug enforcement agencies to divide their forces to tackle each cell. The most high profile of those investigations has been in the Caribbean coastal state of Quintana Roo, where a former governor named Mariano Villanueva has been charged with protecting the cartel's operations -- even to the point of allowing traffickers to use government hangers to transfer shipments of cocaine. Villanueva disappeared only days before he was scheduled to leave office, and his whereabouts are unknown. Analysts outside government say the intense investigation into the cartel's operation illustrates both the pressures of ambitious Mexican prosecutors on the gang and the extent to which the gang has infiltrated local governments and the federal and state police forces. The names on the more 100 arrests warrants include those of federal prosecutors and police who worked in the state. "The cartel has control over federal police forces at the level of regional commanders," said Arzt. "Often (drug kingpins) meet the commanders while they are serving as head of prisons, develop relationships, and continue those when the commanders are promoted." While this week's operation may be a positive sign of U.S. agencies' increased access to drug investigations in Mexico, experts here say it may also prove to be a double-edged sword. Mexico still faces the torment of undergoing annual certification in the U.S. Congress of its actions in the fight against drugs. Decertification would almost certainly result in a loss of U.S. support for Mexico's political and economic systems. "If it is confirmed that there are some American bodies there, perhaps even the bodies of (Drug Enforcement) agents or whatever, then that will affect U.S.-Mexican relations in a very significant way," said Chabat, of the CIDE think tank. "It would provoke a very strong reaction from the American public," he said. "The Clinton administration will come under a lot of pressure from the public to review its drug policy toward Mexico." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea