Pubdate: Sun, 05 Dec 1999
Source: San Luis Obispo County Tribune (CA)
Copyright: 1999 The Tribune
Contact:  P.O. Box 112, San Luis Obispo, CA 93406-0112
Fax: 805.781.7905
Website: http://www.thetribunenews.com/
Author: Pauline Arrillaga, Associated Press

DISCOVERY OF MEXICAN GRAVES UNLIKELY TO SLOW FLOW OF DRUGS TO U.S.

EL PASO, Texas - A man is busted smuggling 137 pounds of marijuana in the
fuel tank of his pickup. The same day, across the Mexican border in Ciudad
Juarez, authorities begin digging up graves believed to hold the enemies of
a ruthless drug gang.

A day later, another man is caught at the border with 232 pounds of pot
under the floorboard of his van. At the grave site, body bags are being
loaded onto a truck, destined for the United States.

As the grisly search for the bodies unfolded last week on Mexican ranches
outside Juarez, the smuggling of narcotics across the border into the
United States continued uninterrupted.

Regardless of how many corpses eventually are unearthed, and what is
learned of their deaths, experts warned that the drug trade isn't likely to
feel an impact. They say that won't come without a renewed commitment to
bring down the men calling the shots - and a decrease in Americans'
insatiable appetite for drugs.

"The final test of this will be not that you just find the bodies and not
that you find some low-level gunman, but that the leaders of these
organizations and the corrupt officials that work with them are arrested,
brought to justice and punished severely," said Thomas Constantine, retired
head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

"That will be the test of whether or not this will be successful," he
added. "And that will not be easy."

The joint U.S.-Mexico search at four sites around Juarez began after a
former Mexican federal police officer told the FBI that 100 or more bodies
may be buried there.

Mexican Attorney General Jorge Madrazo immediately pointed the finger at
the notorious Juarez drug cartel, one of Mexico's largest and most violent
gangs.

He noted that more than 100 people, including 22 Americans, had disappeared
in Juarez over the past few years, presumably at the hand of the cartel,
now headed by Viente Carrillo Fuentes.

Carrillo Fuentes, who assumed control of the gang after the 1997 death of
his brother, Amado, is among dozens of top drug traffickers facing U.S.
indictments that could lock them up for life.

But such prosecutions have been hindered by the failure of honest Mexican
officials - and, more significantly, the unwillingness of corrupt officials
- - to round up and extradite the wanted men.

"We know who they are. We know what crimes they have committed. The problem
is that nobody can find them in Mexico," Constantine said. "As long as they
exist in a sanctuary, we will be unable to bring these people to justice."

Others note that even in the rare instance a cartel leader is caught, the
successful prosecution of one man alone is not enough to cripple
organizations that have a string of successors.

Take the case of Juan Garcia Abrego, who after more than a decade of free
rein over the Gulf cartel in Matamoros, across the border from Brownsville,
Texas, was captured by Mexican police in 1996 and flown to Texas.

Garcia Abrego was later convicted and given 11 life sentences.

His gang barely skipped a beat.

"There was a temporary disruption because of the power struggle, but the
amount of narcotics coming across the border has increased," said Phil
Jordan, former head of the DEA's El Paso Intelligence Center, which tracks
Mexican drug gangs.

The same thing occurred after the death of Amado Carrillo Fuentes, who
molded the Juarez cartel into a thriving business that earned tens of
millions of dollars smuggling drugs through El Paso to Dallas, New York and
Chicago.

When Carrillo Fuentes died following plastic surgery meant to hide his
identity, a bloody power struggle ensued between Vicente Carrillo Fuentes
and a faction of the cartel aligned with the Tijuana-based Arellano Felix
gang.

While smuggling activity dipped slightly during the turf war, the
organization quickly regrouped and has since even branched out into other
cities along the Texas border, Jordan said.
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