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Dragunov
10-27-2008, 11:32 AM
Mexico reveals cartel infiltrated attorney general's office, US embassy

E. EDUARDO CASTILLO
Published: 10.27.2008
MEXICO CITY - Mexican prosecutors said Monday that employees of the federal Attorney's General's Office worked for a drug cartel, passing sensitive information to traffickers in the worst known case of drug infiltration of law enforcement in a decade.
The Mexico City newspaper El Universal reported on Monday that one cartel informant said he had infiltrated the U.S. Embassy.
It said the informant told Mexican prosecutors that he had worked as a "criminal investigator" at the embassy and that he had passed along information on U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration operations in Mexico. The embassy had no immediate comment on the report.
The man reportedly worked for the Beltran-Leyva cartel, the same organization that allegedly employed at least five agents of Mexico's Attorney General's Office for Organized Crime.
Employees of that unit charged with fighting organized crime allegedly were paid by members of the Beltran-Leyva cartel to pass along information on federal investigations of their organization and other traffickers.
Two top employees of the organized crime unit and at least three federal police agents assigned to it may have been passing information on surveillance targets and potential raids for at least four years, the unit's head, Assistant Attorney General Marisela Morales, told a news conference.
One of the officials was an assistant intelligence director and the other served as a liaison in requesting searches and assigning officers to carry them out.
All but one of the officials has been arrested.
The agents and officials received payments of between $150,000 and $450,000 per month for the information, Morales said.
The case represents the most serious known infiltration of anti-crime agencies since the 1997 arrest of Gen. Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, the head of Mexico's anti-drug agency, who was later convicted of aiding drug lord Amado Carrillo Fuentes, who has since died.
The Beltran Leyva brothers are one of the groups that make up northern Mexico's Sinaloa cartel, the country's largest drug trafficking confederation.
Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora said that investigations were continuing to see whether any other informants had infiltrated prosecutors' offices.

http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/altss/printstory/border/100816

http://img338.imageshack.us/img338/7082/pgr0016b818bbs2.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

Hollis
10-27-2008, 11:38 AM
Always amazing at what money can buy.

XShipRider
10-27-2008, 02:51 PM
I do like this Mexican President, he's trying to fix some longstanding problems of his government. I am sure there is some resistance to do so, but it needed doing.

Maybe when he's done he can get citizenship, run for Congress and perform some House-cleaning (sic) here too.

Hispeed1
10-27-2008, 05:18 PM
Always amazing at what money can buy.

Money talks in Mexico, and many other places...

Dragunov
10-28-2008, 10:57 AM
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

Mexico acknowledges drug gang infiltration of police
At least 35 officials and agents from an elite unit have been fired or arrested following tips from an informant involving the so-called Beltran Leyva cartel.
By Tracy Wilkinson

October 28, 2008

Reporting from Mexico City — In a damning blow to its fight against drug traffickers, the Mexican government Monday acknowledged severe penetration of a top law enforcement agency by a vicious gang that may even have bought intelligence on U.S. operations from renegade employees.

At least 35 officials and agents from an elite unit within the federal attorney general's office have been fired or arrested in an investigation that began July 31 following tips from an informer.

The officials, including a senior intelligence director, are believed to have been leaking sensitive information to the very traffickers they were investigating for as long as four years, prosecutors said.

In exchange, prosecutors said, the corrupt government officials received monthly payments of $150,000 to $450,000 each from the so-called Beltran Leyva cartel, a drug gang based in the Pacific state of Sinaloa that is engaged in a bloody fight with rivals for domination of the region's lucrative trade.

The group has also been linked to crimes, including the May killing of Edgar Millan Gomez, acting chief of a federal police agency, who authorities believe was targeted in re- venge for the arrest of alleged traffickers including top cartel operative Alfredo Beltran Leyva.



Good reputation

The accused officials were members of the agency in charge of probing drug and weapons smuggling as well as kidnapping and terrorism, known by its initials in Spanish, SIEDO. Unlike many agencies within a notoriously corrupt police system, the SIEDO has a generally good reputation in U.S. government circles.

The case, which represents an unusually serious breach of Mexican security, was launched after an informer with the code name Felipe turned himself in at the Mexican Embassy in Washington. He revealed the names of senior SIEDO officials on the cartel's payroll and was quickly put into a U.S. witness protection program, sources in the attorney general's office said Monday.

"Felipe" told Mexican investigators that he had worked for Interpol and then for the U.S. Embassy in Mexico, where he relayed information to members of the Beltran Leyva gang, according to several Mexican media reports.

The embassy declined to comment. And in Washington, senior Drug Enforcement Administration officials said the investigation was ongoing, and that it was premature to confirm details.

Whether or not those reports are true, it is certainly possible that intelligence on activities by the DEA in Mexico could be gleaned from within SIEDO, and the alleged spies could have had access to it.

"They handed over secret information and details of operations against the Beltran Leyva criminal organization," Atty. Gen. Eduardo Medina Mora said during a news conference -- including details on raids of traffickers' hide-outs and the evidence seized.



Extent unclear

The full extent to which counter-narcotics operations may have been compromised is still not known.

"This investigation is not finished," Medina Mora said.

Although 35 people from SIEDO have been implicated, a spokesman for the attorney general's office said, five officials are likely to face the most serious charges, including illegal release of classified information.

They include Fernando Rivera Hernandez, a senior director of intelligence, and Miguel Colorado Gonzalez, SIEDO's general technical coordinator, both of whom have been in detention since August.

Colorado Gonzalez has also been named in a U.S. federal indictment filed Friday in the District of Columbia. He is accused of criminal association in the production and distribution of cocaine in the U.S. The U.S. is seeking his extradition.

The three others are federal agents, one of whom is a fugitive, prosecutors said. Medina Mora said SIEDO would be restructured and purged of its corrupt members through tighter screening and tougher punishment for lawbreakers. Reforming Mexico's underpaid and poorly trained police forces is a central component in President Felipe Calderon's two-year-long offensive against drug traffickers but one that has yet to show abundant progress.

SIEDO's predecessor agency within the attorney general's office was shut down in 2003 after half a dozen of its agents were arrested on suspicion they were helping drug traffickers.

Nearly 4,000 people have been killed in Mexico this year in drug-related violence as gangs fight Calderon's security forces and one another. The U.S. has pledged an additional $400 million to Mexico for help in training police and judicial agencies, but the money has not arrived.

Calderon wins praise from U.S. officials for attacking traffickers head on, but the mounting death toll and spread of violence to much of the country could eventually erode public support for the campaign.

Cases such as this also leave American law enforcement officers wary of sharing intelligence with Mexico.

Wilkinson is a Times staff writer.

wilkinson@latimes.com
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexbust28-2008oct28,0,3196498.story?track=rss


These ****ing traitors should be executed on the spot.

Jobu
10-28-2008, 11:12 AM
Where's Los Pepes when you need 'em?