Pubdate: Sun, 05 Dec 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: James Pinkerton BACKHOE, WRECKER CHURN RANCH DIRT, FIND NOTHING CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico -- FBI agents and their Mexican hosts Saturday used a backhoe and large wrecker to search a walled compound containing a clandestine cemetery operated by a Mexican drug cartel, but evidently did not add to the six human skeletons unearthed last week. Shortly before 5 p.m., several dozen FBI agents in a convoy that included a backhoe and portable generators, pulled out of the front gate of a large walled compound 10 miles south of Juarez known as Rancho La Campana. They were escorted by teams of heavily armed Mexican federal agents -- wearing black fatigues and ski masks -- who led them back to the international border. "They kept looking and digging, but they didn't find anything," said a Mexican government official, who asked not to be identified. "They were using dogs, but their machines (hand-held detectors) aren't finding anything." During most of Saturday, FBI agents used a backhoe to dig along the back wall of the compound after dogs alerted them to an area beneath several abandoned vehicles, the official said, adding: "There are a lot of animals buried there, and a lot of (animal) bones." Last Monday, FBI agents in El Paso confirmed they had been asked by the Mexican attorney general's office to lend technical and forensic assistance in searching four properties controlled by drug traffickers, in an effort to determine if more than 100 people who had disappeared in Juarez are buried there. On Friday, Mexican Attorney General Jorge Madrazo said a group of his agency's federal police force who were stationed in Juarez from 1994 to 1996 are being investigated in the disappearances. Mexican newspapers have identified some of those police as being on the payroll of Amado Carrillo Fuentes, the drug baron who, before his death, controlled the Juarez cartel. The six skeletons found in a common grave at Ranch La Campana last week had their hands and feet bound with wire, their mouths taped shut with duct tape and their eyes blindfolded with bandages, the Mexican official said. FBI officials in El Paso said the search would continue through this week. G. Alan Robison Executive Director Drug Policy Forum of Texas Houston, Texas 713-784-3196; FAX 713-784-0283 - --- MAP posted-by: allan wilkinson