Ex-attorney general says dea wants revenge for agent's death in 1985

Ex-attorney general says dea wants revenge for agent's death in 1985

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The arrest of former president Enrique Peña Nieto’s defense minister in the United States last week could be linked to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s desire for revenge for the


murder of one of its agents in Mexico, according to a former attorney general. Speaking Tuesday at a virtual conference on the drug trafficking case against former army chief Salvador


Cienfuegos, Ignacio Morales Lechuga, attorney general during the latter half of the 1988-94 government of former president Carlos Salinas, claimed that since the death of Enrique “Kiki”


Camarena in 1985, the DEA has wanted revenge against the Mexican armed forces, especially the army. His murder by the Guadalajara Cartel came after the army, acting on information from the


DEA, destroyed a 1,000-hectare marijuana plantation in Chihuahua known as Rancho Bufálo. Camarena, who was suspected of providing the information, was abducted in February 1985 before being


tortured and killed at a Guadalajara property owned by the plantation’s owner, Rafael Caro Quintero, a drug lord and one of the DEA’s most wanted fugitives. Morales said the DEA believed


that the Mexican army was protecting Rancho Bufálo before its destruction. The agency consequently decided to partner with the navy rather than the army in operations in Mexico, he said. The


former attorney general said the relationship between the DEA and the army has remained tense as a result. He also suggested that Cienfuegos, who was taken into custody at Los Angeles


airport last Thursday, might have been arrested because United States authorities found “signs” that he was complicit with drug traffickers rather than having overwhelming evidence against


him. Morales charged that United States Attorney General William Barr, who served in the same position in the early 1990s, has a tendency to launch investigations based on less than


conclusive “signs” of guilt. “When I was attorney general, I met with the United States Attorney General, William Barr, the boss of the FBI, William Sessions, and the administrator of the


DEA, Robert Bonner, and they asked me to extradite Manuel Bartlett, Enrique Álvarez del Castillo and Juan Arévalo, who they accused of being the intellectual authors of the murder of


Camarena,” he said. Bartlett, currently director of the Federal Electricity Commission, was federal interior minister at the time of Camarena’s death, Álvarez (now deceased) was the governor


of Jalisco and Arévalo (also deceased) was federal defense minister. Eyewitness accounts compiled by United States journalist Charles Bowden described Bartlett’s involvement in the decision


to kidnap, torture and murder Camarena in order to put an end to his operation against the Guadalajara Cartel, with whom the then interior minister was allegedly in cahoots. There have even


been claims that Bartlett and Arévalo, as well as other politicians and law enforcement officials, were present when Camarena was tortured and killed. However, when the U.S. officials asked


him to extradite the officials in connection with the DEA agent’s death, “they had no proof,” Morales said yesterday. Barr, who became President Donald Trump’s attorney general in February


2019, “is very given to putting together investigations with signs [of guilt], not with proof or evidence,” he said. Blackberry messages intercepted by U.S. authorities that incriminate


Cienfuegos, who is accused of colluding with the H-2 Cartel, are signs of guilt and not conclusive evidence, Morales charged. Such “signs” are often not supported, he added. The former


attorney general also noted that Humberto Álvarez Machain, a medical doctor who allegedly worked with the Guadalajara Cartel, was accused by U.S. prosecutors of involvement in the murder of


Camarena but a judge determined that the prosecutors were lying and exonerated him. “It was a paradigmatic case, I’m recounting it because everything – the character of the Attorney General


William Barr, the attorney general of New York [where Cienfuegos was indicted], who is an ambitious attorney general, the DEA with all its accumulated historical grievances – … [is part of]


the atmosphere that surrounds the trial of General Cienfuegos,” Morales said. He charged that Cienfuegos was an “exceptional” defense minister, who among other achievements recruited a lot


of women to the armed forces. Morales also said the Mexican government should lodge a complaint with its United States counterpart over its interception of Cienfuegos’ telephone


communications, which he said violated a 1992 bilateral agreement. “In the Cienfuegos case, it has been said and repeated that the DEA has been spying on Mexican telephones, it’s been spying


on everyone and the Mexican government cannot allow espionage in national territory because it’s an invasion of sovereignty.” Meanwhile, a judge in Los Angeles refused to grant bail to the


former defense minister at a hearing on Tuesday, ruling that Cienfuegos is a flight risk even though his lawyer said that he was willing to post a surety of US $750,000. _Source: El


Universal (sp) _