Pubdate: Thu, 02 Dec 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Ricardo Sandoval FAMILIES WANT ANSWERS, BUT FEAR WORST IN JUAREZ CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico -- There is something about the discovery of apparent mass burials outside this Mexican desert city that both attracts and repulses people like Alfredo Medina. He harbors a quiet fear that the digging that continues to yield bones and personal effects at a shooting range and horse ranch just south of Juarez might resolve his father's 1997 disappearance. Yet he hopes authorities will find no trace of his 43-year-old father, a Juarez-based criminal lawyer who was taken from a hotel room by men dressed in the black uniforms of Mexican federal police. There are more than 200 families just like the Medinas who await news of what Mexican and U.S. investigators find at four burial sites around Juarez. Their relatives are among those -- including several Americans -- who've disappeared from the Juarez area over the past six years. Mexican officials say they suspect some of those missing people are buried at the Juarez sites, which by Wednesday evening had yielded the remains of six people as well as boots and clothes. The graves are being slowly mapped and dug up by Mexican federal investigators, FBI agents and U.S. government forensics specialists who have started examining the bones in a special lab established across the border in El Paso. The bodies were found next to or on top of each other, said Jose Trinidad Larrieta, an assistant attorney general who leads Mexico's team in the binational investigation. Criminologists said that's a sure sign that the sites represent an organized effort to get rid of a lot of people. ``That's a strong clue that this is related to narcotics traffickers,'' said Rafael Ruiz Harrel, a Mexico City criminologist who studies serial killings and drug gangs. ``That part of Mexico is well-known for the high number of extra-official assassinations carried out by police and the military to shut people up. And since the area is also known for the alliance between drug dealers and government agents, there is little doubt as to who put the bodies there.'' Hit squads suspected Ruiz Harrel said not all of the victims will be connected to drug dealers, because hit squads that often include police and Mexican soldiers work for anyone who can pay to ``make someone disappear.'' Published reports say Mexican officials and the FBI were led to the Juarez sites by a drug suspect who became an informant -- someone Ruiz Harrel said must have been involved in bringing people to the ranch sites. Trinidad Larrieta said Wednesday that Mexican officials would not speculate how many people might be buried at the Juarez ranches, but he said they were working with a list of ``at least 100'' missing-persons reports that could be related to drug trafficking. But the number could go higher, according to people tracking disappearances on both sides of the border. ``I hear it could go as high as 300,'' said Jaime Hervella, co-founder of the Association of Relatives and Friends of Missing Persons, a grass-roots group formed in 1997. ``You have to wonder who would do this. The cartel is making sure all of the competition is disappearing, as well as those working with law enforcement.'' Hervella said 196 people had vanished from the Juarez-El Paso area during the past several years, and 18 of them are thought to be U.S. citizens. ``I expected all the time that we would find (some of these) people in military jails. We thought this was some type of paramilitary operation and that we would find everyone alive. Now we're not so sure.'' Hervella expressed his torment about providing concrete information to the families of the missing while at the time being the bearer of bad news. ``I wish I could run away and hide from these older ladies, the ladies with the wrinkled faces, tired eyes, the suffering,'' he said. ``I don't know what to tell them.'' Young Alfredo Medina insists his father is not on that list, even though local crime analysts say it is tough to be a criminal lawyer in Juarez and not make enemies of either crime bosses or police. ``That's what they'll say to make excuses not to investigate these disappearances,'' Medina said. ``That way, they hope the public will just say it's bad people getting rid of each other so they won't care that no one investigates -- in a way I'm happy they've found something (at the ranches). It means our suffering won't be ignored.'' In Juarez, reaction was mixed Wednesday to the latest bad crime news drowning a city that's tried desperately to sell itself as a booming commercial city and a friendly gateway to free trade between Mexico and the United States. ``Not every missing person is related to the drug cartel. These are not all dead people,'' said one El Paso resident named Abe, whose cousin was once on Hervella's list -- kidnapped in 1994 and later freed after his family paid ransom. Abe, still fearful of the criminal elements that he says run wild in Juarez, declined to give his last name. ``I think with the corruption in the Mexican government, the cartels got so big that they can't be controlled now,'' said Abe, who suspects that his cousin, a pecan farmer, was kidnapped by criminals lured to the area by the Juarez cartel. ``I would urge every American citizen in El Paso not to visit Juarez. It hurts to say that.'' Mayor speaks up But, at a meeting with reporters, Juarez Mayor Gustavo Elizondo angrily defended his city as an innocent victim in a war between international elements. ``The people who produce the drugs are South American. The people who move it are Central Americans and some Mexicans. And the people who market drugs are Americans,'' Elizondo said. ``And there are no Juarez people in the Juarez cartel.'' Police Chief Javier Benavides also defended Juarez, telling the Mercury News that all the talk about local police being involved in the drug trade and with the bodies being dug up on ranches is ``convenient speculation.'' ``I was chief of the state judicial police as well and, yes, there are some people who acted badly, but many times it is criminals disguised as police who want to shift attention away from themselves,'' Benavides said. ``If there is proof that police are involved, like the Americans say, I want to see it. So far there is no proof.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart