Pubdate: Tue, 30 Jan 2001
Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA)
Copyright: 2001 Union-Tribune Publishing Co.
Contact:  PO Box 120191, San Diego, CA, 92112-0191
Fax: (619) 293-1440
Website: http://www.uniontrib.com/
Forum: http://www.uniontrib.com/cgi-bin/WebX
Author: Anna Cearley, Staff Writer

MEXICALI DUPLICATES ANTI-DRUG TEAM CONCEPT

TIJUANA -- A team of state and federal agents charged with capturing 
lower-level drug dealers has shown such promising results in Tijuana that 
the concept is being duplicated in Mexicali.

Tijuana's "Agencia Mixta" is credited with the capture of 83 drug dealers 
over the past eight months. The 16-agent team was formed after last year's 
shooting of police chief Alfredo de la Torre Marquez, when the various law 
enforcement agencies pledged to work more closely with each other.

This week, government officials introduced a new team of 12 agents in Mexicali.

"We pledge to make this agency function with honesty and openness," Baja 
California Governor Alejandro Gonzalez Alcocer said in a news release.

The teams aren't responsible for tracking down the big fish of the drug 
trafficking world, such as the Arellano Felix brothers, who are said to 
control most of the major drug routes from Baja California into the United 
States.

"They (teams) will combat drug dealing among those who sell smaller 
quantities of drugs, such as those who sell near schools or in houses," 
said Raul Gutierrez, a spokesman with the attorney general's office in Tijuana.

People found with larger quantities of drugs, such as more than a half-kilo 
of marijuana, will be turned over to the federal attorney general's office, 
Gutierrez said. That office specializes in higher-profile drug-related 
investigations.

The work done by Agencia Mixta is significant, said state attorney general 
spokesman Enrique Tellaeche, because it allows federal and state police to 
exchange information and to strike a blow against the most common kind of 
drug violence.

"The small-time drug dealers are the ones who are the cause of much of the 
general crime," Tellaeche said. "They cause the robberies, the drug 
addiction among our young people, and the violence in general."

The force is not to be confused with another multiagency task force, the 
Base de Operaciones Mixtas, which comprises local, state and federal police 
and the military. That group, formed in March, looks for drugs, guns and 
stolen cars at random checkpoints.

Agencia Mixta focuses on long-term investigations leading to the capture 
and prosecution of suspected drug dealers.

The Tijuana team has conducted 306 investigations leading to the capture of 
the 83 people, according to the state attorney general's office in Tijuana. 
The team also has confiscated 11 guns, six cars, 71 kilos of marijuana, 523 
grams of cocaine, 726 grams of heroin and 881 grams of crystal.
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