Pubdate: Mon, 13 Dec 1999 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 1999 The Miami Herald Contact: One Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132-1693 Fax: (305) 376-8950 Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: Ricardo Sandoval, Herald World Staff BODY COUNT IN MEXICO MAY BE LOWER `Mass Graves' Estimate Was 100 MEXICO CITY -- Families of missing people are reeling over recent statements by the FBI and Mexican authorities that dozens of bodies might not be buried at remote ranches near Ciudad Juarez. After two weeks of digging at two of four ranches some officials initially called possible mass grave sites that might hold as many as 100 bodies, remains of eight men have been unearthed and are being studied by FBI forensics specialists in El Paso, Texas. And with Mexican Attorney General Jorge Madrazo signaling that the digging may end in two weeks, officials are now saying they're not sure how many bodies they will discover. The total may be well below original estimates. Mexican and FBI sources at first suggested as many as 100 bodies might be found -- victims of a long war between drug gangs over illicit cocaine supply routes in Mexico said to be worth $10 billion a year. A media crush ensued, dozens of FBI specialists were granted special permits to work in Mexico, a special forensics lab was set up in El Paso. Buoyed by the official ruckus, families of the disappeared began hoping authorities could finally close ugly chapters in their lives. But it soon became clear that scores of bodies might not be buried at the ranches after all. ``The families are calling me, wondering what is going on, and I can't tell them a thing,'' said Jaime Hervelles, who directs an El Paso group that has tracked nearly 200 unsolved border-area disappearances and kidnappings since 1994. ``If the authorities would stay with it and dig up all the ranches said to belong to drug traffickers, and all the abandoned wells around Juarez, they might turn up 100 bodies. But that could take years.'' Agents from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, left on the sidelines by the FBI, privately doubt the existence of burial sites with high concentrations of drug-war victims. ``I wonder if people moved too quickly,'' said one Texas-based official. ``Everyone is jumping to conclusions, and there is really nothing yet to indicate drug-related burials at the scale they've advertised.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea