Pubdate: Wed, 02 Jun 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Page: 18A Author: Douglas Farah, Washington Post REPORT FINDS DRUG TRADE, MONEY LAUNDERING WASHINGTON - One of Mexico's wealthiest and most politically powerful families is so involved in drug trafficking and money laundering that the father and two sons "pose a significant criminal threat to the United States," according to a recent report by the U.S. government's main drug intelligence task force. While U.S. law enforcement officials have spent years investigating the family -- Carlos Hank-Gonzalez and his sons Carlos Hank-Rhon and Jorge Hank-Rhon -- the assessment by several agencies marks the first time that all three have been linked directly to the operations of major Mexican drug organizations. The Hank family, often described as Mexico's Rockefellers, is known for its multibillion-dollar transportation, construction and financial empire and its great influence within the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), which has ruled Mexico for seven decades. Hank-Gonzalez, the patriarch, was mayor of Mexico City, held two Cabinet positions in the government of Carlos Salinas de Gortari and used his position as minister of agriculture to mobilize electoral support for Salinas' successor, President Ernesto Zedillo. He was famous for saying that "a politician who is poor is a poor politician" when asked how he rose from poverty to become a billionaire while never holding a job that paid more than $80,000 a year. Spokesmen for the Hank family denied the report, and Mexican officials said the allegations were politically motivated and designed to embarrass the Zedillo government. A senior Clinton administration official acknowledged the authenticity of the report. It was written by the National Drug Intelligence Center, which coordinates investigations by different agencies. It accuses the family of using its businesses to move cocaine to the United States and launder millions of dollars in drug money. The family enjoys impunity in Mexico because of its high-level political connections, the report says. The report drew on information from the Drug Enforcement Administration, FBI, U.S. Customs Service, CIA, Interpol and others. The report says intelligence agencies had "intercepted conversations of the Hank family coordinating drug shipments" at TMM -- a giant Hank-owned shipping company -- and personally meeting with drug kingpins. The internal document was first described Monday in the Mexican newspaper El Financiero, and The Washington Post obtained a copy. "Several years of investigative information strongly support the conclusion that the Hank family has laundered money on a massive scale, assisted drug trafficking organizations in transporting drug shipments, and engaged in large-scale public corruption," the document says. "Grupo Hank poses a significant criminal threat to the United States," the report continues. "Its multibillion-dollar criminal and business empire, developed over several decades, reaches throughout Mexico and into the United States." Carlos Arguelles, a spokesman for Hank-Gonzalez, said the accusations were "completely false, and everyone in Mexico knows they are false ... I don't understand what is motivating these charges." The report links sons Carlos Hank-Rhon to the late Juarez cocaine cartel leader Amado Carrillo Fuentes, and Jorge Hank-Rhon to the Tijuana-based Arellano-Felix drug cartel. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea