Pubdate: Wed, 17 Mar 2004
Source: San Antonio Express-News (TX)
.72936fb3.html
Copyright: 2004 San Antonio Express-News
Contact:  http://www.mysanantonio.com/expressnews/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/384
Author: Guillermo Contreras

MEXICO NARCOTICS WHISTLEBLOWER JAILED IN DRUG-MONEY PLOT

Eight years ago, a former high-ranking Mexican anti-narcotics agent charged
his government's top crime-fighting organization was so corrupt that fellow
officers served as bodyguards for huge drug shipments across the U.S.
border.

The allegations sent shockwaves through U.S. lawmakers, who at the time were
debating whether to send Mexico millions of dollars to fight cocaine and
marijuana smuggling.

A frustrated Ricardo Cordero Ontiveros said bribery was so embedded that he
left his post as head of a special drug intelligence unit in Tijuana.

Arrested a day after he agreed to testify before the U.S. Congress about the
corruption, Cordero was charged by Mexican authorities with blackmail, but
he eventually was acquitted.

"(Cordero) was an important whistleblower," said Eduardo Valle, a special
assistant to two former Mexican attorneys general and a political columnist
in one of Mexico's largest newspapers, El Universal. "He said some important
things, but then they jailed him, he won his freedom and then he
disappeared."

Today, the wealthy businessman has resurfaced, snared in a criminal web
similar to the one he described years ago.

This time, the same U.S. anti-drug agency that some sources say helped fund
Cordero's Mexican counter-drug unit is accusing him of profiting from
illicit narcotics.

Cordero, 43, is in a San Antonio jail, facing charges he helped launder at
least $12 million for a cocaine-trafficking organization in New York and New
Jersey by ordering that bulk amounts of money be shipped to Mexico via Texas
and Arizona.

The U.S. government claims it not only has accounts from informants about
Cordero's alleged activity, but also from an undercover Drug Enforcement
Administration agent who said he witnessed Cordero offer to move drug money.

A federal grand jury in San Antonio indicted Cordero on four charges,
including conspiracy to launder money and aiding and abetting.

His brother and another man also have been cited in the charges.

Cordero has denied the allegations. He has been denied bond.

His brother, Jose Javier Cordero Ontiveros, 44, hasn't been arrested and is
believed to be in Mexico.

The third defendant, Francisco Javier Romero, 37, of Glendale, Ariz., is
serving a 31-year prison sentence in Arizona for an unrelated vehicular
manslaughter case, but is in federal custody in Texas awaiting trial on the
money laundering case.

"What we all have to figure out is what's the bottom line here," Ricardo
Cordero's attorney, Cynthia Orr, said. "Do we have some folks who are angry
with Mr. (Cordero) claiming that he did illegal things to take him out
because of his unpopular position in the past, or does he have a problem?
It's our position that he's not guilty of these charges."

Noted Valle, the former Mexican official, "if the case is rooted on
informants, then it's a weak case.

"However, if there's evidence of money moving through banks, or large
amounts of money (seized), then that's another story."

Corruption charges

In the mid-1990s, Cordero gained international fame by accusing his own
government's police forces of corruption, saying the attorney general's
office "is controlled by the drug dealers."

A businessman from San Luis Potosi in central Mexico with no police
experience, Cordero was hired to work in the Mexican Attorney General's
National Institute to Combat Drugs from May to November 1995.

Cordero's last four months on the job were as head of a special 17-member
intelligence unit in Tijuana that, according to the Washington Post, was
partially bankrolled by the DEA.

The unit was established to investigate one of Mexico's main drug gangs, the
Arellano Felix organization in Tijuana.

But instead of working with a force of good cops, Cordero told reporters in
a news conference that his crew spent most of the time watching television
and drinking beer.

Yet Cordero said that problem was minute compared with the rampant collusion
he witnessed between drug traffickers, police and government officials.

He recounted stakeouts for drug deliveries that he wanted to bust, only to
find Mexican federal and local police serving as bodyguards.

When he reported his complaints to superiors, he was told to leave the
traffickers and cops alone.

Finally, Cordero said, he resigned and went public, labeling Mexico's
anti-drug effort "a joke."

He was arrested, accused of the same illicit activity he denounced - a move
that made Cordero something of a cause celebre among politicians. Some U.S.
lawmakers considered his arrest retaliation because his allegations were
significant, preceding the arrests of other law enforcers, including
Mexico's own drug czar a year later.

"It gives the impression that instead of investigating his allegations, that
the messenger, in fact, has been punished," U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley,
R-Iowa, the head of the Senate's Anti-Narcotics Caucus, said on the Senate
floor Aug. 2, 1996. "If this is the case, then it raises further doubts
about the ability of Mexico to take serious steps to end corruption and to
deal with the problems posed by drug trafficking."

Officials said at the time that they were investigating Cordero before he
began giving interviews and alleged he had started speaking out because he
knew he was under investigation.

Cordero spent 15 months in jail following a conviction for corruption.

He was released after the conviction was dismissed on appeal.

Growing questions

Since Cordero left the spotlight, he has seen a growing amount of police
scrutiny here.

Court records that have been unsealed since Cordero's arrest show federal
agents have taken aim at his business dealings in the United States.

He owns a company called Tampico Fiber and two marble mines in Mexico, worth
a total of $3.5 to $4.5 million.

Cordero also said he owned an import store, Pueblo Bonito Furniture behind
North Star Mall in San Antonio, but the business closed within the past
month.

He also reported an income of $35,000 to $40,000 a month.

But his biggest asset, according to federal court documents and officials,
was drug profits coming from New York and New Jersey that would be driven to
Mexico, sometimes after stops in San Antonio.

According to the court file, local police and federal investigators found or
seized nearly $4.5 million that moved across the Eastern United States in
less than a year.

In early 2003, the affidavit states, an undercover DEA agent posing as a
drug trafficker met Cordero through an informant.

In the meetings in San Antonio, the affidavit said, Cordero offered to
transport bulk drug money for the agent from the United States to Mexico.

While the courts will have to judge if Cordero moved from drug fighter to
drug war profiteer, observers say such moves were not unusual a decade ago.

Cordero's path appears to be similar to other crime fighters, such as Gen.
Jose de Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, Mexico's former drug czar.

Eight months after Cordero went public with his allegations, Rebollo was
arrested on charges that he aided the Juarez drug cartel led by Amado
Carrillo Fuentes.

"Drug warriors can also be corrupt, as most dramatically evident when
Mexico's drug czar general was going after one trafficking group and
colluding with another," said professor Peter Andreas, who heads the Watson
Institute for International Studies at Brown University. "There is also a
pattern of unemployed former Mexican police 'retiring' into the business of
organized crime."
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