Mexico’s Top Cops Arrested As Drug Dealers – Military Plans Found To Attack Law Enforcement Agencies In U.S.

January 24th, 2009 (14) Posted By .

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MEXICO CITY – President Felipe Calderon’s war on drug trafficking has led to his own doorstep, with the arrest of a dozen high-ranking officials with alleged ties to Mexico’s most powerful drug gang, the Sinaloa Cartel.

Gerardo Garay, the acting federal police chief, is accused of protecting Sinaloa and their former allies the Beltran Leyva brothers and stealing money from a mansion during an October drug raid. Former drug czar Noe Ramirez, who was supposed to serve as point man in Calderon’s anti-drug fight, is accused of taking $450,000 from Sinaloa.

Over the last five months, officials from the Mexican Attorney General’s office, the federal police and even Mexico’s representatives to Interpol have been detained on suspicion of acting as spies for Sinaloa or Beltran Leyva gang. An officer who served in Calderon’s presidential guard was detained in December on suspicion of spying for Beltran Leyva.

Calderon has long acknowledged corruption as an obstacle to his offensive, which involved sending more than 20,000 soldiers to battle drug trafficking throughout the country. The U.S. aid plan includes technology aimed at improving the way Mexico vets and supervises police.

Agents who conduct raids have long suspected Mexican government ties to Sinaloa, and rival drug gangs have advertised the alleged connection in banners hung from freeways. While raids against the rival Gulf cartel have netted suspects, those against Sinaloa almost always came up empty—or worse, said Agent Oscar Granados Salero of the Federal Investigative Agency, Mexico’s equivalent of the FBI.

“Whenever we were trying to serve arrest warrants, they were already waiting for us, and a lot of colleagues lost their lives that way,” Salero said.

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Most of such tips are coming from a Mexican federal agent who infiltrated the U.S. embassy for the Beltran Leyva drug cartel. No such infiltrators have been found for the Gulf cartel, which controls most drug shipments in eastern Mexico and Central America. Sinaloa controls Pacific and western routes.

The U.S. government estimates that the cartels smuggle $15 billion to $20 billion in U.S. currency across the border into Mexico each year. Almost all of it is done through vehicular and foot traffic.

The president vows to create a “new generation of police,” consolidating agencies under Public Safety Secretary Genaro Garcia Luna, who heads all federal law enforcement.

That’s what worries Granados Salero and other agents. So many of Garcia Luna’s associates are under suspicion of Sinaloa ties that many wonder how he could not have known.

Calderon has publicly backed Garcia Luna, calling him “a man of great capacity.”

“Obviously, if there was any doubt about his honesty, or any evidence that would call into question his honesty, he would certainly no longer be the secretary of public safety,” the president said recently.

The U.S. praises Calderon for rooting out corruption at the top. But critics say the arrests reveal nothing more than a timeworn government tactic of protecting one cartel and cracking down on others.

The DEA’s Courtney agrees that before the Sinaloa there has been a greater crackdown on the Gulf Cartel in both the U.S. and Mexico, with more than 600 members of the gang arrested in September. But he declined to answer questions about Mexico favoring Sinaloa.

Some see the alleged Sinaloa ties with Garcia Luna’s lieutenants as an old tactic used widely under the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which ruled Mexico for 71 years with a tight fist. Officials in the past preferred to deal with one strong cartel rather than many warring gangs—what Calderon faces now. More than 5,300 people died in drug-related slayings in 2008.

“I fear that Secretary Garcia Luna … is working on the idea that once one cartel consolidates itself as the winner, that is, Sinaloa, the violence is going to drop,” said organized crime expert Edgardo Buscaglia, who tracks federal police arrests and has studied law enforcement agencies’ written reports.

Garcia Luna has denied being involved in corruption. He has acknowledged that authorities in the past chose the path of managing cartels. But in an interview with the newspaper El Sol, he said that approach only strengthens the gangs in the long run.

Others say the high number of Sinaloa infiltrators is a reflection of the two cartels’ very different styles.

The Gulf cartel is led by Mexican Army-trained hit men so violent that they have plans to attack even U.S. law enforcement agencies in American border states.

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“They don’t necessarily try to build networks of corruption. They prefer networks of intimidation,” said Monte Alejandro Rubido, who leads Mexico’s multi-agency National Security System.

Sinaloa, on the other hand, appears to use bribery and infiltration at least as much as its gunmen. Cartel leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman bribed his way out of a Mexican prison in 2001, provoking suspicions the government was on his side.

Many Mexicans worry about giving so much money and power to a still corrupt force. Of more than 56,000 local and state police officers evaluated between January and October last year, fewer than half met the recommended qualifications, Calderon reported to Congress in early December. No similar numbers are available for federal police.

Agents like Granados Salero wonder who is in charge of police integrity.

“We agents find out about a lot of things,” he said, “but who can we turn to?”

Operation Clean House comes just as the U.S. is giving Mexico its first installment of $400 million in equipment and technology to fight drugs. Most will go to a beefed-up federal police agency run by the same people whose top aides have been arrested as alleged Sinaloa spies.

“If there is anything worse than a corrupt and ill-equipped cop, it is a corrupt and well-equipped cop,” said criminal justice expert Jorge Chabat, who studies the drug trade.

U.S. drug enforcement agents say they have no qualms about sending support to Mexico.

“We’ve been working with the Mexican government for decades at the DEA,” said Garrison Courtney, spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Administration. “Obviously, we ensure that the individuals we work with are vetted.”

(AP)

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  • Rob (CDTFLINT)

    Are you serious? They’d actually plan to attack us? Come on. This sounds like Muslims to me….only they would be that willing to commit suicide.

  • Mike Mose

    Clearly, Obama will want to extend amnesty to cover all of Mexico’s citizen and maybe take Mexico as a partner state.

    We should send the military down to our border and clean it up.

    I bet the illegals will have amnesty this year.

  • Tanzfleck

    I can’t believe that they didn’t name Los Zetas as working for the mexican government.

  • Professor Bill

    For the amount of money that California spends on schooling, food, medical care and law enforcement for illegal aliens in just one year we could build a fence from the Pacific ocean to the Gulf of Mexico. All the money confiscated from drug dealers should go into a fund to build the fence.

  • XD-40

    :shock: The last thing we should do is arm and train their forces– which is why I believe the Obamanation will do so, in order to create more domestic chaos in the US; this makes it easier for him to assume emergency powers. The Mexican Cartel is also working in his favor. Make no mistake, he has a plan to destabilize the US government. That is why he was put into office.

  • American Woman (bitter clinger to my guns and religion)

    :arrow: XD40

    you are so right! And he is doing it now with the economy. Why else do you think he says everyday ” we are in the worse economic times of our lifetime” to scare people.[obviously forgetting about carter] and the “stimulas” is an “emergency” but in fine print wont be spent for 18 months. money is for stregthening the dimocRATS.
    Amnesty will most definatly happen this year if not in his first 6 months. :twisted:
    capital #202-224-3121

  • Hardball1911(Revolutionary Constitutionalist)

    Rob, sorry to tell you this, their plans to attack US law enforcement weren’t suicide plans. They would have been using military equipment, military training, and military tactics against law enforcement training, equipment and tactics. US Law officers would have been mowed down one after another until they could muster the force to deal with it, which would have taken several states acting in unison.

    Do you think that these people are that stupid? For fuck’s sake, man, they are hiring Mexican soldiers straight out of the Mexican Army and paying them four times what the military was paying them. They have to scruples or morals as do our soldiers, or they would never be hired away from the organized military. We have had many armed incursions onto US soil from Mexican Military HMMV’s armed with .50 cals. What do you wanna bet these were probes to finalize their plans?

    Only our civilian leadership can be that stupid…

  • XD-40

    :arrow: American Woman– Amnesty is probably a good bet. I am one who believes despite many good things he did, Bush is a Globalist. Obot will continue with those plans, but to a higher and more rapid degree until the only way to “save” the Economy will be the so-called North American Union. Mexican troops can then come into the US and shoot us, since, unlike our own troops, they will have no compunction against wiping out Gringos. Our troops will be sent to Mexico to wipe out their Nationalists/Constitutionalists. The Canucks pretty much already had their balls cut off, but the ones who will fight will be up in the woods.

  • Dan (The Infidel)

    A sneak attack by Mexican cartel would be devestating at the outset…much the same as Pancho Villa’s raids were on US soil in 1916 (Columbus, NM).

    But that’s what it will take for the US civilian leadership to wake up to the fact that Mexico is a broken country, dominated by drug cartels, who are being advised by Hizullshitta. And who…IMHO will strike the US at some point…unless we are prepared to deal with them…and wer’re not.

    Note to US Law Enforcement: Empty carbines on the border is a fucking no-go.

  • Lftbhndagn (God, Family & Country)

    :arrow: The U.S. government estimates that the cartels smuggle $15 billion to $20 billion in U.S. currency across the border into Mexico each year. Almost all of it is done through vehicular and foot traffic.

    —————————————

    Yup – easy to do when you have no checkpoint going into Mexico and just drive right in…

  • http://cjloop56yahoo.com CHUCK

    :gun: Let’s hit the border! :gun:

  • http://www.gwuh.com Marc Stockwell-Moniz (Infidel since birth thanks in part to my crusader ancestors, especially Egas Moniz, Knight Templer who defeated the Moors.)

    :arrow: Mexico’s Top Cops Arrested As Drug Dealers –

    Dah? Like no shit Serlock. What; this is freaking news?
    Mexico declared war on the U.S. a long time ago.
    Our do nothing federal govenment condones and promotes the fact that we will loose a certain amount of people each year to the drug life-style and that is ok. Sombody in this nation is making just as much money as the degenerates in Mexico do and that is why nothing will ever get done. I bet if just one of us from this site were president for even a freaking day, the drug war would be solved. I know I would clear it up an a nanno-second.
    Mexico is no friend to the U.S.
    The war on drugs is a joke. It is perhaps the biggest war that we have never won.

  • unkaglen

    Double down in Afg. and leave the fucking border WIDE OPEN.
    Makes sense to me!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :cry: :cry: :cry:

  • Carlo Tresca

    Corruption is rampant on both sides of the border. The cartels pay better than either the US or Mexican govt can.