Pubdate: Tue, 6 Apr 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Ricardo Sandoval MEXICAN EX-GOVERNOR A NO-SHOW MEXICO CITY -- Facing an intensifying investigation of his alleged ties to drug smugglers, the governor of the state of Quintana Roo on Mexico's Caribbean coast missed another date: his successor's inauguration Monday night. Skipping the inaugural was the latest in a string of missed appointments for Mario Villanueva, who Mexican crime experts say has probably fled the country. He had stood up prosecutors twice in recent days. It's believed that Villanueva is likely in either Belize -- the Central American country closest to Quintana Roo -- or Panama, where law enforcement officials say he has business interests and political connections. Villanueva's lawyer -- who said he doesn't know his client's whereabouts -- also said he wouldn't blame the now ex-governor if he decided to flee. ``His defense could be easier to mount in a foreign country than here in Mexico,'' Raul Cardenas said in a radio interview. Cardenas also represented Raul Salinas, convicted of murder and brother of former president Carlos Salinas de Gortari. Mexican legal experts familiar with the investigation predicted that 28 drug-related charges will be filed as early as today against Villanueva. During his six-year term, trafficking by the powerful crime group known as the Gulf Cartel exploded and now accounts for about 15 tons of U.S.-bound cocaine each month, according to drug agents. Even the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency has officially entered the picture, offering to help search for Villanueva. ``It would be a major lapse on the government's part to have lost him,'' said Raul Plascencia, an analyst with the Institute for Judicial Research in Mexico City. ``I'm hoping they know where he is and are just waiting for charges to be filed to bring him in.'' Before 20,000 noisy supporters and dignitaries in a baseball stadium in Chetumal, 150 miles south of Cancun, Joaquin Hendricks Diaz was sworn in as Quintana Roo's new governor Monday night. Hendricks Diaz's acceptance speech made no mention of Villanueva, who became the first exiting governor in recent Mexican history to miss his successor's swearing-in. Hendricks Diaz pledged a major fight against drug smuggling. ``Organized crime elements and narco-traffickers who would destabilize our state will be frustrated by our hard work,'' the new governor said. Crime experts say that the new governor has a virtually impossible task in a region that has become rife with drug-related corruption. ``The roots of this problem are deep -- too much for one man to fix,'' said Guillermo Velasco, president of Mexicans United Against Crime, a Mexico City foundation that has closely followed the Villanueva investigation. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart