Friday, May 02, 2008



Mystery surrounds Tijuana drug shootings
Newspapers are full of unattributed accounts of who was involved and who was killed. Mexican officials remain tight-lipped.

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http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-drugwar28apr28,1,2912650.story

From the Los Angeles Times
Mystery surrounds Tijuana drug shootings
Newspapers are full of unattributed accounts of who was involved and who was killed. Mexican officials remain tight-lipped.
By Héctor Tobar
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

April 28, 2008

MEXICO CITY — On Sunday, following one of the bloodiest days in Tijuana's history, authorities held no news conferences. The death toll in the gangland-style shootings early Saturday between rival drug traffickers increased to 15 from 13, after two men died of their injuries. But not even the names of the dead were released.

Instead, speculation, rumor and scattered news leaks filled the information vacuum after yet another battle in Mexico's drug wars.

And there were only tentative answers to the larger questions that worry many here: Is this violence between drug dealers a sign that the Mexican government is winning the wars? Or is it just another symptom of a country slipping deeper into an abyss of lawlessness?

Official silence is common in Mexico, where thousands have been killed in drug-related violence since President Felipe Calderon took office in December 2006. But many analysts believe that Calderon's decision to send thousands of army troops to Baja California, Veracruz, Michoacan and other states to crack down on the drug trade is reaping a type of dividend.

The government's efforts have disrupted agreements between trafficking organizations and corrupt officials, setting off turf wars among weakened organizations, analysts and government officials say.

"We wouldn't see so much bloodshed if the Mexican government were more complicit with these [criminal] organizations and just letting them have their way," said David Shirk, director of the Trans-Border Institute at the University of San Diego.

At the same time, the Tijuana shootout was just one of several seen in border communities in recent years. And unless officials decide to reveal more about who was involved and what happened, the true meaning of the bloodshed is likely to remain a mystery.

On Sunday morning Tijuana residents awoke to a rogue's gallery of criminal names in their newspapers.

"According to reliable sources," reported, the shootout was between rivals within the Arellano Felix gang.

Or maybe not. The national daily El Universal reported that the so-called Sinaloa cartel was to blame.

Several newspapers reported that among the dead was "Crutches," a.k.a. Luis Alfonso Velarde, a reputed local drug lord with a handful of YouTubevideo tributes to his name.

Another, even bigger "cartel" operative nicknamed "Mr. Three Letters" might be dead too, along with "La Perra," reported El Sol de Tijuana. And they may all have been ambushed by another cartel leader known as "El Cholo."

But no one was willing to confirm any of that on the record.

Official silence, many here argue, helps feed the culture of corruption. It is a widely recognized truth that drug traffickers operate in Baja California and elsewhere with the protection of some public officials.

On Tuesday, Gen. Sergio Aponte Polito, the commander of troops in the Baja region, took the extraordinary step of writing an open letter to a local newspaper that identified several law enforcement officials he alleged were linked to organized crime.

The letter's implicit argument was that officials who protect organized crime are likely to escape prosecution thanks to the culture of secrecy that surrounds law enforcement here.

"Isn't this corruption?" the general asked. "What a disgrace for the society of Baja California!"

Calderon's government has worked hard to clean up law enforcement. His top police official, Genaro Garcia Luna, has purged the Federal Investigative Agency of corrupt cops. Soldiers have temporarily disarmed police in Tijuana and other cities, and several reputed drug bosses have been extradited to the United States.

Yet the widespread violence shows few signs of abating. An estimated 2,500 people were killed in drug-related violence last year, officials say. So far this year, more than 850 people have been killed, according to tallies by news agencies.

The objective measures by which U.S. officials determine the strength of the drug trafficking business also offer a mixed bag.

The supply of cocaine declined in several U.S. cities during the first half of 2007, according to the U.S. National Drug Threat Assessment, a multi-agency report on the problem.

The drop in availability was probably a combined result of several large seizures of cocaine shipments en route to the United States, Mexico's anti-drug efforts, and warfare among rival Mexican traffickers, the report says.

By late 2007, supply "appeared to be returning to normal" in some U.S. markets, the report says. At the same time, the amount of cash smuggled in bulk from the United States to Mexico continued to increase, a sign that traffickers' revenues are still healthy.

"Mexican drug-trafficking organizations are the dominant distributors of wholesale quantities of cocaine in the United States, and no other group is positioned to challenge them in the near term," the assessment says.

Privately, top Mexican officials say that a decisive victory over the so-called drug cartels is impossible as long as demand for cocaine, methamphetamines and other drugs remains high in the United States.

The more realistic goal, one senior official said recently, is to keep the drug traffickers from dominating civic life in the regions where they are most powerful, including border cities such as Nuevo Laredo and Tijuana.

Although Calderon's efforts have reduced drug-related slayings in central Mexico, problems have "ballooned" along the border areas of Tijuana and Chihuahua state in part from narcotics traffickers moving their activities northward, Shirk said.

Shirk also said that the number of federal troops dispatched to Baja Norte and Chihuahua appeared to be lower, both per capita and in absolute terms, than those dispatched to Michoacan and other states where killings have diminished in recent months.

He said he was surprised to encounter only one checkpoint during a trip he took Friday to Tijuana, Ensenada and back via Tecate.

"Having troop inspection points plays a really important function of making the city less navigable," he said. "You can't just kill somebody and escape back to their lair."

hector.tobar@latimes.com

Times staff writers Reed Johnson in Mexico City and Richard Marosi in Tijuana contributed to this report.

If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives.

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1 Comments:

At 5:12 PM, Blogger San Judas Cuauhtemoc Cardenas said...

Lázaro Cárdenas Batel, RATA DE DOS PATAS
Saqueó Michoacán por más de tres mil millones de pesos
El ex gobernador de Michoacán, Lázaro Cárdenas Batel,
saquea las arcas de la entidad al otorgar contratos fantasmas
a la constructora Consorcio Industrial, empresa propiedad
de Félix Cantú Aguilar que defrauda al fisco, opera
ilegalmente y tiene suspensión de actividades.
Por cada contrato, Cárdenas Batel recibe una jugosa
comisión del 85 por ciento, a través de una ingeniosa
triangulación bancaria en la que la empresa se queda con
el 15 por ciento restante del dinero sin realizar ninguna
obra.
Lo saqueado hasta el momento por el ex mandatario
michoacano a la entidad que gobierna es de casi tres mil
millones de pesos, cifra que desvió de recursos destinados
a educación, seguridad y desarrollo social.
Parte del fraude y atraco a las arcas del gobierno de
Michoacán consiste en pagar millonarias sumas a la
constructora Consorcio Industrial por supuestas obras
que realiza y que en realidad son hechas por el gobierno
Federal, es decir la compañía de Cantú Aguilar las hace
suyas sin meter las manos.
De esta manera, Lázaro Cárdenas Batel, a quien le quedaban
escasos días como mandatario estatal, hace efectivo
aquello del “año de Hidalgo”, convierte al presupuesto
michoacano en su “caja chica” y se retira del cargo con
muchos miles de millones de pesos, resultado de los ilícitos negocios
con la mencionada constructora.
La empresa constructora, propiedad de Félix Cantú
Aguilar, tiene en sus fraudulentas operaciones como
“cerebro” a su contador público Raúl Rosas Morales,
quien a su vez es protegido por los funcionarios de la
Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público Juan Hernández
y Víctor Manuel Reyes, quienes “tapan” las evasiones fiscales.
Por estos dos funcionarios y Rosas Morales es que
Consorcio Industrial, que agrupa a 20 empresas, sigue
operando, no obstante tener problemas legales por evadir
al fisco y la suspensión de actividades presentada ante la SHCP.
Por su carácter al margen de la ley, la totalidad de los
contratos que consiguen los “venden” a otras compañías.
A pesar de su carácter ilegal, la empresa propiedad de
Cantú Aguilar sigue operando y prueba de ello son los
contratos que de manera ilícita le otorgó el gobernador de
Michoacán –unomásuno tiene pruebas en su poder—,
quien a cambio se benefició con varios millones de pesos Sin embargo,
Consorcio Internacional no paga el
Impuesto al Valor Agregado (IVA) y por consiguiente el
Impuesto a la Renta, lo que constituye un grave delito
en perjuicio de la Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito
Público y del gobierno Federal mismo.
En otra negociación ilegal, el gobierno del
Distrito Federal le otorgó a la empresa una serie de
contratos para obras, tras ganar un concurso,
según trascendió. Lo insólito de todo esto, al igual
que como ocurrió en Michoacán, es que Consorcio
Industrial no tiene maquinaria para realizar los
trabajos.
Lo mismo ocurrió con la paraestatal Petróleos
Mexicanos que le concedió contratos por 2 millones de
dólares y 21 millones de pesos.
TRIANGULAN Y “LAVAN” DINERO
Para que el gobernador de Michoacán, Lázaro
Cárdenas Batel y la empresa de Félix Cantú Aguilar
reciban las millonarias sumas saqueadas a las arcas
del gobierno michoacano, utilizan
una ingeniosa triangulación
en la que el dinero es “lavado”
o “blanqueado”.
La triangulación consiste en
que el dinero propiedad del
gobierno del estado que se paga al Consorcio industrial
por las supuestas obras, es depositado en
Interacciones que a su vez las devuelve a las cuentas
personales del mandatario, del propietario de la compañía
y al gobierno local.
Se sabe que incluso hay cuentas en el extranjero y
que algunas de ellas están firmadas por familiares,
como Gabriel Cárdenas Cornish, primo hermano del
mandatario.
AMISTAD CARDENAS-CANTU
La relación entre el ex gobernador de Michoacán,
Lázaro Cárdenas Batel y el propietario de Consorcio
Internacional, Félix Cantú Aguilar, data desde la juventud
de sus padres, Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas Solórzano y
Félix Cantú Ayala.
Al respecto, cabe destacar que Cantú Ayala tiene
cuentas pendientes con la justicia por burlar al fisco y
actualmente está prófugo, según se sabe.
Es precisamente por la amistad de sus padres que
Cárdenas Batel en complicidad con Cantú Aguilar
idean el desfalco al gobierno del estado de
Michoacán.
La empresa Consorcio Industrial S.A. de C.V. formaliza
con el estado de Michoacán sus contratos el 4 de
junio de 2004.
Sobre el aviso de suspensión de operaciones, esta
sucede el 19 de junio de 2006.
CARDENAS DEBE SER INVESTIGADO
Sobre el desfalco a las arcas del gobierno de
Michoacán, gente que conoce el asunto demanda que
se investigue a Lázaro Cárdenas Batel por el presunto
ilícito antes mencionado.
Señalan que el todavía gobernador hizo efectivo el
“Año de Hidalgo” al apoderarse de esta manera de
varios miles de millones de pesos que eran para educación,
seguridad y desarrollo social.
Piden que el gobernador, homosexual de Leonel Godoy inicie su
Gestión con una auditoria para que, de haber responsabilidades,
se haga justicia.

 

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