Pubdate: Sat, 22 Jun 2013 Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) Copyright: 2013 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Author: Les Zaitz Series: Under the curse of cartels - An Oregonian Special Report RISE AND FALL OF AN OREGON KINGPIN Lou Nalepa, an agent with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, reached for his ringing cellphone as he guided his car through Portland freeway traffic. On that Friday afternoon in February 2010, he expected to hear from a witness in an upcoming drug trial. Instead, he found on the line a fugitive he'd been chasing for six years. "This is Pocho," said the voice on the other end -- Porfirio Arevalo-Cuevas. The name means little to most Oregonians. But law enforcement officials know Arevalo-Cuevas as one of the most prolific drug traffickers in Oregon history, a violent thug with ties to Mexico's most notorious cartels. Pocho, calling from somewhere in Latin America, was angry that U.S. officials had disrupted his drug trade there. He resented that Nalepa's work had helped jail relatives, including his mother, according to federal documents and law enforcement officials. "Now," Pocho told Nalepa, his fury escalating, "I am going to start (messing) with you and your family." The DEA whisked Nalepa, his wife, son and stepson out of the state for two weeks. Officials also installed high-tech security equipment at Nalepa's home that weekend and stepped up street patrols. The threat illustrates the extraordinary brazenness of cartel-connected traffickers in the Northwest. Pocho in particular turned Salem into a national hub for meth, cocaine and heroin distribution before leading U.S. officials on a maddening international chase. Authorities traced his drugs as far away as Texas, Georgia and Illinois. "It's hard to think of any drug organization in Oregon that was larger or had farther reach," said Dwight Holton, Oregon's interim U.S. attorney in 2010-11. Pocho's story, constructed with documents rarely available to reporters plus interviews with officials and former traffickers, offers a window on the tactics used by him and the many like him. His operation was unusual for its size and sweep, officials said, but his reliance on relatives, ruthlessness and a seemingly endless supply of meth cooks, dealers and couriers was dismally common. "The only way they'll take me is dead" Pocho was born in the Mexican state of Michoacan and peddled pot for his dad as a kid. He quit school after eighth grade and later sneaked into the U.S. to join relatives. In spring 1997, at age 18, he and his girlfriend and two children moved into the Salem home of a cousin, according to federal court filings and law enforcement officials. The cousin tutored Pocho in heroin trafficking. That November, Pocho stepped off a plane from Oakland, Calif., at Portland International Airport with 300 grams of heroin hidden under his insoles. He attracted a police officer's attention by nervously pacing, then quickly confessed. He served 13 months in the federal prison in Sheridan before being sent back to Mexico in 2000. Pocho boomeranged right back to Salem and expanded into meth production, according to documents and officials. In September 2000, Salem police caught him with 7,400 pills of pseudoephedrine, a key meth ingredient, plus $1,240 and a .40-caliber Taurus handgun, according to Salem Police Department reports. This time, Pocho had no plans to confess. He coolly gave police a false identity and chewed off portions of his fingertips on the way to jail to keep his true name secret. He was released on bail the next day. "I'm like a fighting rooster," he bragged in a call intercepted by DEA agents in 2008. "The only way they'll take me is dead." Pocho moved to a home nine miles east of Scio, a small town northeast of Albany where residents gather each spring for a Lamb & Wool Fair and its pie-eating contest. Using connections to the La Familia cartel in Michoacan, Pocho opened some of the biggest meth labs Oregon has ever seen, federal court documents show. Investigators calculated that one superlab outside Brownsville, still the biggest ever found in Oregon, churned out 70 pounds of meth a week, worth $700,000 wholesale. Pocho's younger brother, Arturo, dropped out of Salem's McKay High School and joined the operation as a top aide. Other brothers made deliveries and sales. Sisters kept the books, paid the bills and shuttled to California for supplies. In 2002, a meth cook's mistake destroyed the group's lab outside Scio in a fireball. Pocho's crew scattered unscathed before firefighters and police arrived. Investigators linked the lab to Pocho only years later. Pocho and his family then settled in a two-story house just off of Salem's busy State Street. Pocho moved labs around the Willamette Valley, according to investigators. In Salem, Pocho carried himself with a bravado common among traffickers in Mexico but unusual here, former associates said. Still in his 20s then and short and stocky at 225 pounds, Pocho favored Tommy Hilfiger jeans and shirts. He often wore a heavy gold necklace, a Mexican centenario framed by jewels. He told friends it was worth $20,000. He also had a girlfriend in addition to his wife, and children with both. With his jet-black hair combed straight back and piercing eyes dominating a round face and thin mustache, Pocho regularly held court at El Flamingo, a nightclub on Salem's east side. "He would roll in with 10, 15, 20 people," said a former associate, an Oregon man who asked that his identity be shielded to protect his safety. "He'd bring out a wad of cash and first thing buy 10 bottles of the most expensive wine." Pocho would pay a Mexican band $10,000 to play for after-hours parties at the club, the man said. He also hired bands to write songs praising his drug-trafficking savvy, according to a federal wiretap affidavit. Some of the "narcocorridos" can still be found on YouTube. "His vice is to be a cook of good heroin and crystal. And if you want to meet him, you'll find him in Oregon," says one, titled "El Pocho." "He goes wherever he wants because he's not afraid of anyone." Vicious to the core Pocho lived up to the description. One associate described how in 2002 Pocho held a pistol to his head while two other men hit and kicked him in the face, according to a federal wiretap affidavit. "Are you afraid to die?" one of the men asked. The associate passed the test and went on to work for Pocho for years. Other insiders told DEA agents in 2008 that Pocho returned to Mexico in 2004 after ordering the Salem execution of a suspected thief. Agents searched but never found a body, according to Marion County Sheriff's Office records. Pocho put his brother, Arturo, in charge of day-to-day operations but otherwise maintained brutal control. He sent collectors to rough up a Fresno, Calif., dealer behind on a $96,000 debt. "Why did they come and get me, man?" the dealer asked Arturo in a phone call taped by investigators. "Because you don't pay him, that's why," Pocho's brother replied. "Dude, it is 96 pesos that are over there." In recordings from 2005, Pocho can be heard working the phones to track $162,000 left in a Lincoln Navigator seized by investigators after a bungled run to San Jose, Calif. Pocho asked Arturo: Was the money hidden? No, his brother replied, it was in a duffel bag on a seat. "That's why they have the cars with the hole," Pocho chided, referring to secret compartments in drug cars. "You guys get your story straight and act dumb," he ordered. State to state, nation to nation By then, investigators knew they were on to something big. That spring, the DEA raided the meth lab outside Brownsville and arrested Arturo, Pocho's girlfriend, three sisters and seven others. Pocho, keeping tabs from Mexico, sent an associate to recover 16 pounds of meth from a pickup police had overlooked, a wiretap affidavit shows. About this time, federal investigators think, Pocho formed an alliance with the Los Zetas cartel. Pocho shifted meth production to Mexico, in part to circumvent a U.S. clampdown on meth chemicals. He also recruited a new crew to rebuild his Salem operation, according to a federal affidavit, and reinforced his reputation for violence. Insiders told investigators that in 2006, Pocho retaliated against a pair of brothers he suspected of stealing $50,000. He ordered rounds fired into the Salem home of one brother, though no one was hit, according to a federal wiretap affidavit, and had the other brother's home in Gervais burned to the ground. Pocho paid his wife's two brothers $10,000 to kill the Salem cousin who first taught him the trade, mistakenly suspecting that the cousin had informed on him and caused his arrest back in 1997, according to federal investigators. The cousin traveled to Mexico in May 2006 and stayed in a house owned by Pocho. The brothers knocked on the door and cut him down with bullets when he answered, investigators said. In a bizarre twist, Pocho had the body shipped back to Salem for an elaborate graveside service at City View Cemetery, complete with a mariachi band. Falling to pieces Even as Pocho's relatives and associates trooped through federal court in 2005 and '06 -- Arturo was packed off to a federal prison in Eden, Texas, to serve 11 1/2 years -- Pocho was making plans. DEA agents got wind in 2007 that Pocho, working with the Sinaloa cartel, was plotting to smuggle 500- to 1,000-kilogram loads of cocaine from Colombia to Oregon. Pocho called an Oregon associate from Panama, according to a federal affidavit, saying he was about to leave for Guatemala "to start squaring up" -- bribing officials, investigators believed. Panamanian officials, working with the U.S., got to him first. They jailed him the next day on money-laundering charges. They seized his property, including the gold necklace. "I remember waiting for his photo out of Panama," said Nalepa, the DEA agent. "When I saw it, I felt like I sunk the winning putt at the Masters." In late 2007, after a second long investigation, federal prosecutors in Oregon indicted Pocho and 23 others. They jailed his mother for 10 days as a material witness, freeing her only after she agreed to provide a voice sample to compare with recorded phone calls. Early the next year, Panama's president approved Pocho's extradition. Pocho and his allies hatched plans to buy his freedom with bribes, according to calls intercepted by U.S. agents. The race was on. Nalepa, fellow DEA agent Shaun Alexander and Guy Gino, then a special agent with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, flew to Panama City, arriving Feb. 21, 2008. Two days later, the three men and a DEA agent stationed in Panama headed back toward the airport expecting Pocho to be handed off there for the flight back, Gino said recently. They stopped for groceries on the way so they'd have something for Pocho to eat. Then the local agent's phone rang. "They can't find him," he said. "What do you mean they can't find him?" Gino asked. They went to the airport and paced the tarmac for two hours before an embarrassed Panamanian official showed up to explain that Pocho and two prison officials were missing. Panamanian investigators later determined that Pocho had walked though the prison gates the day before after paying five prison officials $500,000 to give him the identity of an inmate set for transfer to another prison. Two years later, Pocho called Nalepa's government cellphone. "I could not believe I was talking to someone who had been so elusive for so many years," Nalepa said recently. He has since left the DEA to become a special agent in the U.S. Postal Service's Office of Inspector General. In a conversation that quickly grew heated, Pocho told Nalepa he had "eyes and ears everywhere" and knew Nalepa had traveled to Mexico and Central America to interview relatives. Nalepa, he said, had no idea how powerful he was. "By threatening an agent's family, that was crossing a line that drug traffickers have not been willing to cross in the United States," said Holton, the former U.S. attorney. "We talked about what to do. Are we going to tolerate that kind of violence coming into Oregon or are we going to put our foot down and say, 'This stops now'?" U.S. officials made catching Pocho a national priority, distributing "most wanted" fliers offering a $25,000 reward. They pressed Mexican authorities to do the same. Three months later, Mexican military commandos raided Pocho's ranch outside the town of Xalapa and arrested his uncle and three sisters. They also seized guns, 43 cellphones, a gold Versace watch and "five fine horses" boarded there by the state governor. Mexican police caught Pocho himself weeks after that in Puebla, about 75 miles southeast of Mexico City. He was charged with bribery and sent to a prison three hours east of Mexico City to await extradition. Now 34, Pocho remains in that prison, awaiting extradition to Oregon and U.S. justice. Officials in both countries, wary of upsetting a sensitive process, won't say what happens next. They were astonished to discover in early 2005 that 8 pounds of meth seized in Indiana had come from Pocho via the Fresno dealer, according to a federal wiretap affidavit. That meant Pocho's operation was so large that his drugs were reaching far from Oregon and, more important, feeding California's vast drug market. A DEA task force in Salem began tailing Pocho's associates, tapping phones and prodding for inside sources. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom