Source:   Dallas Morning News
Contact:    http://www.dallasnews.com
Pubdate:  7 Nov 1997
Website:  http://www.dallasnews.com
Author:   Tracey Eaton / The Dallas Morning News

DRUG LORD'S DEATH TAKES NEW TWIST

MEXICO CITY  A tale of crime and intrigue took a bizarre twist Thursday
when Mexican authorities said the late drug baron Amado Carrillo Fuentes
was murdered and didn't die by accident after surgery in July.

But instead of clearing up doubts about the death of one of the world's 
most powerful traffickers, the announcement only triggered more 
questions.

Mexican authorities' official story is that on Oct. 29 they began 
investigating three doctors suspected of having given Mr. Carrillo a 
fatal drug dose. On Monday, five days later, at least two of the three 
doctors' badly decomposed bodies were found stuffed in metal barrels 
along a highway leading to the resort city of Acapulco.

"How convenient," said a highlevel U.S. law enforcement official who 
requested anonymity. "If they thought it was murder, why did they wait 
so long to open the criminal investigation against the doctors?"

Indeed, many unanswered questions remain, the American official said. 
Among them:

Did Mexican authorities play a role in Mr. Carrillo's death? Did 
authorities begin investigating because they knew the doctors had been 
killed and they wanted to make it look like they were on the right 
trail? More important, who ordered Mr. Carrillo's killing?

"I don't know that we'll ever know what happened," the U.S. official 
said.

Whatever the truth, there's no telling if ordinary Mexicans will believe 
it. Most people these days are profoundly suspicious of statements 
coming from either the government or the ruling party. And few are 
convinced that Mr. Carrillo, dubbed the "Lord of the Heavens," is really 
dead.

"He's alive. They're only trying to make it seem like he's dead," said 
Soledad Hinojosa Cortez, a retired school transport employee in Mexico 
City. "I think there must have been some deal with highlevel 
authorities. There's too much money involved for the Lord of the Heavens 
to be dead."

A Drug Enforcement Administration official disputed that, saying rumors 
that Mr. Carrillo is alive have "as much credibility as the millions of 
sightings of the late Elvis Presley."

What's certain, U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officials say, is that 
Mr. Carrillo checked into a Mexico City clinic July 3 for a facelift 
and liposuction. The circumstances aren't entirely clear. As some U.S. 
antidrug agents see it, Mr. Carrillo was trying to change his
appearance to escape authorities. Others say it was vanity  he wanted 
to be better looking.

Whatever the case, he was found dead the next day. DEA agents blame 
complications  he was given too many sedatives considering the amount 
of anesthetics already in his system.

Mariano Herran Salvatti, the head of Mexico's antidrug agency, expanded 
on that version at a meeting with reporters Thursday in Mexico City.

He said Mr. Carrillo died in a recovery room after surgery. The cause: 
He had been given anesthetics and Dormicum sleeping pills, a mixture 
that "contradicted all medical science," Mr. Herran said.

"We have concluded that these doctors, acting with malice and the 
intention of taking his life, administered a combination of medicines 
that caused the trafficker's death," the Mexican drug czar said.

The mixture was especially potent, he added, because Mr. Carrillo had a 
damaged liver due to alcohol abuse, and his system was more vulnerable.

Mr. Herran, dripping with sweat and refusing to answer pointed 
questions, gave no clue as to why the doctors allegedly murdered Mr. 
Carrillo.

He identified two of the doctors accused in the case as Jaime Godoy and 
Carlos Avila. Highway maintenance workers found their bodies  
blindfolded, handcuffed and partially encased in concrete  inside 
52gallon drums. Their fingertips and even their toes had been 
mutilated, an apparent attempt to make them impossible to identify by 
fingerprint.

The third body is also thought to be that of a doctor, Ricardo Reyes 
Rincon, a Colombian who had reportedly been trained at a Guadalajara 
medical school. Confirmation of the body's identity, however, is pending 
DNA and dental record tests, Mr. Herran said.

Mr. Carrillo, 41, earned his nickname Lord of the Heavens by pioneering 
the use of aircraft in drug smuggling. U.S. law enforcement officials 
say his sprawling organization over the years moved hundreds of tons of 
cocaine across the U.S.Mexico border.

But few Mexicans paid attention when authorities said he was dead.

"People just don't believe anything from those who hold power," said
Daniel Lund, director of MORI de Mexico, an international polling firm. 
"It goes back to the authorities' long history of lying. People get real 
cynical. And eventually they believe just the opposite of what they're 
told."

Mexico has been dominated by the same political party for nearly seven 
decades. And the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, has 
done everything from stealing elections to murdering foes to stay in 
power over the years, members of the political opposition say.

Carlos Salinas de Gortari, the country's disgraced former president who 
left office in 1994, told his countrymen that Mexico was about to join 
that exclusive club of developed nations. But the economy nearly 
collapsed after he fled the country, and millions of Mexicans were 
plunged deeper into poverty.

And there have been countless other deceptions over the years, 
government critics say:

The authorities have routinely announced they're firing a batch of 
dishonest police officers only to replace them with even more corrupt 
officers.

The staterun oil company has proclaimed that gas prices will not go up, 
only to raise them less than 24 hours later.

Or, as it happened in one case, authorities say a psychic nicknamed "La 
Paca" led them to the body of a missing congressman only to admit later 
the corpse was planted.

"After a while, it just seems like a movie, like life interacting with 
art. You let your imagination run," Mr. Lund said.

Guadalupe Loaeza, a noted Mexican writer, said Mexicans' ability to 
believe has become "very elastic."

"We're living an age in which we don't believe anything we hear, but at 
the same time we believe everything," she said. "We don't believe our 
authorities because they don't give us they promise us."

The idea that Mr. Carrillo was still alive gained new momentum earlier 
this week when a Chilean newspaper called La Segunda reported that the 
trafficker was in DEA custody and helping "dismantle drug trafficking 
networks" throughout Latin America.

"Mexican officials were frantic," one U.S. law enforcement official 
said. They wanted a statement from the Americans backing up their report 
that the trafficker was dead. And this was just four months after 
Mexico's ambassador in the United States called DEA Administrator Thomas 
Constantine a "cretin" for confirming nearly a week ahead of the 
Mexicans that Mr. Carrillo was dead.

"Now it's, 'Please can you help us?' " the American official said.