Pubdate: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Ricardo Sandoval MEXICAN GOVERNOR AVOIDS PROSECUTORS He Faces Charges Of Helping Drug Traffickers MEXICO CITY -- Mario Villanueva, governor of Mexico's Quintana Roo state, once again stood up federal prosecutors seeking to question him about his alleged ties to drug traffickers. Mexican prosecutors are said to have at least two dozen drug-related charges readied against Villanueva. To obtain an arrest warrant, they must convince a judge the evidence is strong enough. Villanueva spoke with prosecutors late last week in Chetumal, capital of the tourist-rich state that includes Cancun. He was supposed to be in Mexico City on Tuesday for another round of questioning at the hands of prosecutors from the federal attorney general's office. But by Tuesday evening, prosecutors emerged to say they had tired of waiting for Villanueva, and did not know where he was. He also failed to show up for an appointment with prosecutors in Mexico City last week. In Chetumal, officials said they were unaware of the governor's whereabouts. They said he also had not shown up as scheduled in Cancun on Tuesday night for a scheduled speech by that city's mayor. Mexican officials would not speculate on what they might do next. Radio Monitor in Mexico City reported that Villanueva had skipped the meeting with prosecutors to huddle with officials from Mexico's Interior Ministry. Interior officials could not be reached for comment Tuesday. Sources familiar with the Villanueva investigation said Tuesday that the governor was due to be charged with drug violations before April 5, his last day in office. The sources say prosecutors are racing to wrap up the case, which would probably be filed formally in Chetumal so they could make him the first Mexican governor to face drug charges while in office. For days the embattled governor has angrily accused the Mexican federal government of political persecution because of his support for the presidential candidacy of Manuel Bartlett, leader of an old-guard faction within the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). Bartlett is vying for the PRI's presidential nomination against rivals said to be close to President Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de Leon. Prosecutors depict Villanueva's defense as a smoke screen aimed at distracting the public from what they have termed ``serious'' charges, such as receiving gifts from drug dealers, making his official aircraft hangar available to smugglers and doing business with friends of what law enforcement officials call the gulf cartel. The cartel, which is described as Mexico's largest and best organized, is widely considered the leading shipper of cocaine into the United States, moving about 15 tons a month. It is reportedly behind a recent effort to make the coast around Cancun a haven for traffickers moving cocaine north from Colombia. Some law enforcement officials now describe Quintana Roo as a narco-state, with drug money corrupting almost every level of government. Quintana Roo's emergence as an avenue for smugglers is the reason law enforcement officials in Washington think the drug war is going badly in Mexico, according to U.S. congressional sources. Regardless of how strong the evidence against Villanueva may be, a U.S. congressional aide worries that efforts to prosecute him could bog down in the attempt to obtain an arrest warrant. The aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that even Mexican prosecutors fear the case might get lost in the country's notoriously corrupt legal system. Still, arresting Villanueva, just days after Mexican bankers entered guilty pleas in a U.S. district court in Los Angeles in connection with a drug-money laundering sting, would resonate well with U.S. lawmakers still mulling President Clinton's decision to certify Mexico as performing well in the war on drugs. Congress has yet to sign off on Clinton's 1999 certification of Mexico's efforts, although lawmakers opposed to his decision admit they lack the votes to overturn it. ``The objective with the Villanueva case is to show the Mexican public that we're not afraid to go after sitting governors or any high-level official,'' said Guillermo Velasco, president of Mexicans United Against Crime, a foundation started by business leaders to track the government's work against organized crime. - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry