News (Media Awareness Project) - Mexico: As Fox Takes Reins, Police Corruption Will Be A Focus |
Title: | Mexico: As Fox Takes Reins, Police Corruption Will Be A Focus |
Published On: | 2000-11-30 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 00:54:06 |
AS FOX TAKES REINS, POLICE CORRUPTION WILL BE A FOCUS
MATAMOROS, Mexico--Osiel Cardenas was a cop with dreams.
He was a lowly police communications specialist who wanted the fame and
fortune won by other law enforcement officials in this city bordering Texas.
So, say authorities, he followed their path: He became a drug trafficker.
Cardenas is now a top target of U.S. authorities, not only for drug charges
but for allegedly threatening two American agents at gunpoint in
Matamoros--then throwing a party to celebrate.
Cardenas is hardly unique in going from officer to outlaw. In fact, Mexico's
police forces have produced so many traffickers that they have become a sort
of Miss Porter's for the dope-and-murder set. The link "has become
institutionalized," says a former U.S. anti-drug official.
The police are a dramatic example of a major challenge facing
President-elect Vicente Fox as he takes office Friday: the creation of
strong democratic institutions.
During the seven decades of single-party rule now ending, many Mexican
institutions--ranging from the police to the courts, from comptrollers'
offices to environmental inspection departments--were underfunded,
underequipped and underhanded. And that, say analysts, is exactly how the
government wanted them.
"The institutions protected the political regime," said Ernesto Lopez
Portillo, an organized-crime expert at the National Institute of Penal
Studies. "That's why our institutions are so weak. . . . The authorities
bent the institutional structure in favor of their private interests."
But as the near-imperial Mexican presidency has weakened, so has its control
over institutions such as the police. That has fed an explosion of crime and
corruption that is bedeviling both U.S. and Mexican authorities.
Fox's challenge will be nothing less than creating a modern Mexican
government, complete with a civil service and internal controls. As he tries
to build a new system, however, he will be handicapped by institutions that
respond neither to him nor to the public.
"Fox will press a button and nothing will happen. He will pick up the phone
and say, 'Do this,' and nothing will happen--especially on the law
enforcement side," said Delal Baer, a Mexico expert at the Washington-based
Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Osiel Cardenas offers a glimpse into the institutional nightmare facing Fox.
Cardenas was a police officer in Matamoros as recently as 1996, according to
the Mexican attorney general's office, which has fragmentary information
about his career. The city was home to the powerful Gulf cartel of drug
smugglers, which had many police on its payroll. Both the current cartel
boss, allegedly Cardenas, and his predecessor came from the ranks of the
state police, according to the attorney general's office.
A Stunning Taste of Official Collusion Although Cardenas has left the
police, the police haven't left him. U.S. anti-drug agents got a stunning
taste of the official collusion in their confrontation with Cardenas on Nov.
9, 1999. Current and former U.S. officials, speaking on condition of
anonymity, give this account: An FBI agent and an agent of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration were driving through downtown Matamoros that
afternoon in a car with diplomatic license plates. With them was an
informant who pointed out Cardenas' house, guarded by local police.
Suddenly, state police blocked the road near the U.S. agents. Their car was
surrounded by Cardenas and heavily armed bodyguards--who appeared to include
police.
They demanded that the U.S. agents turn over the informant. When the
Americans refused, one gunman fingered his gold-plated Kalashnikov rifle.
"Kill them! Kill them!" he screamed, as the other gunmen prepared to fire.
Desperate, the Americans warned that the U.S. government would retaliate. In
the end, Cardenas simply ordered the agents and their informant out of
Matamoros. He celebrated the showdown with a raucous lunch at a local taco
restaurant.
"The fact he held the party the following day showed he knew he could live
and operate there with total impunity," said a former U.S. official.
The federal prosecutor who oversees the anti-drug fight in Matamoros,
Alfonso Navarrete, acknowledged that Cardenas is helped by local police
officers.
"One of the characteristics of organized crime is that it needs some type of
protection from a police force," he said. Still, he added, the federal
government is taking steps to combat such corruption, such as sending in
better-trained federal anti-drug officers.
Cardenas represents a different kind of corruption from the scandals that
periodically tarnish the Los Angeles Police Department. Cardenas is not just
a bad apple. Rather, he is a product of an institution long financed by
illegal activities--with the tacit permission of authorities.
Analysts note that Mexico has never had a democratic, professional police
force. Its first federal police corps, the Rurales, was made up of bandits
in the mid-1800s, said Lopez Portillo, the organized-crime expert. In
exchange for doing the dirty work of politicians, the police were permitted
to engage in crime themselves.
That trade-off continued through the 71-year rule of the Institutional
Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which lost the presidency in July. Authorities
used the police to do political espionage or repress demonstrators or
opposition politicians, analysts say. As a reward, the police enjoyed
impunity. For decades, little effort was made to train, pay or equip them
well.
"There was no political necessity to do it," said Lopez Portillo. "It wasn't
thought that the police had to be professional to carry out their function."
The end result: The Mexican police became brokers of criminal activity. As
U.S.-bound drug traffic exploded in Mexico during the past 20 years, police
became a vital part of it, in effect imposing a private tax on traffickers.
And the spoils were shared, from the beat cop to top state and even national
police officials.
One former U.S. anti-drug official points to the classic case: Mexican
police officers would routinely pay huge sums to be named commander in a
city bordering the vast U.S. drug market. Budgets were paltry; commanders
often had to pay expenses such as salaries out of their own pockets. But the
commanders would leave the job years later as multimillionaires, thanks to
drug bribes.
"It's like buying a McDonald's franchise. You pay for everything. It's just
an archaic colonial system," said the former official, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
U.S. and Mexican authorities have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on
screening, training and equipment in recent years to fight such systemic
corruption. But the police culture has changed little, U.S. authorities say.
President-elect Fox says reforming the police will be a priority. He plans
to remove all law enforcement functions from the Interior Ministry--the
political affairs arm of the president--in order to cut the unholy alliance
between police and political favors. Plans are being drawn up for an
FBI-style force to replace the federal anti-drug police. Fox also wants a
national system to produce better-trained local cops.
U.S. anti-drug officials worry that this could be yet another police reform
plan that goes nowhere.
Still, not everyone thinks the problem is intractable.
At an airy, plant-filled building in a residential Mexico City neighborhood,
Jose Luis Perez Canchola thinks he has broken the link between cops and
criminality.
"My concept is that the police in this country under the PRI governments
were formed to serve political and economic power. Now we're forming a
police in Mexico City to serve citizens and the community," said Perez
Canchola, director of the training academy for the capital's judicial
police, who handle major crimes.
Perez Canchola might seem an odd choice for such a job. He was a leading
human rights advocate in the state of Baja California for years and a harsh
critic of police abuse there.
But the soft-spoken, stoop-shouldered accountant is shaking up the
hard-boiled world of the police.
The city government, in the hands of the left-wing Democratic Revolution
Party, has doubled the pay for new judicial police to about $1,000 a
month--a middle-class salary by Mexican standards. That has attracted a
flood of applicants. And Perez Canchola is picking the best and the
brightest.
People such as Aaron Perez Castro. "The salaries are good, and it's a civil
service career," the clean-cut 29-year-old student told a visitor to his
classroom. "You can move ahead on the basis of talent, not friendships."
Looking More Like Boy Scouts Than Cops
His fellow students nodded. One by one, they stood and described their
university studies: Psychology. Law. Journalism. Industrial engineering. In
their starched white shirts, red ties and blue slacks, they looked more like
eager Boy Scouts than cops.
Perez Canchola has strict rules for entry: two years of college, an
extensive background check and absolutely no prior police experience. He
offers his bright young recruits benefits police have rarely enjoyed, such
as scholarships to train abroad.
Nearly half the city's 3,200 judicial police are now products of the new
system, Perez Canchola said. "You will begin to see a change that no one can
stop."
Judging from opinion polls, city residents have not yet noticed the change.
And crime has declined only marginally in recent years, after soaring in the
mid-1990s.
But Miguel Chao, a neighborhood activist who recently attended a
crime-prevention forum at the academy, said some local people are noting a
difference.
"Before, if we heard 'judicial police,' we were afraid," he said. "The image
of the judicial police is changing."
MATAMOROS, Mexico--Osiel Cardenas was a cop with dreams.
He was a lowly police communications specialist who wanted the fame and
fortune won by other law enforcement officials in this city bordering Texas.
So, say authorities, he followed their path: He became a drug trafficker.
Cardenas is now a top target of U.S. authorities, not only for drug charges
but for allegedly threatening two American agents at gunpoint in
Matamoros--then throwing a party to celebrate.
Cardenas is hardly unique in going from officer to outlaw. In fact, Mexico's
police forces have produced so many traffickers that they have become a sort
of Miss Porter's for the dope-and-murder set. The link "has become
institutionalized," says a former U.S. anti-drug official.
The police are a dramatic example of a major challenge facing
President-elect Vicente Fox as he takes office Friday: the creation of
strong democratic institutions.
During the seven decades of single-party rule now ending, many Mexican
institutions--ranging from the police to the courts, from comptrollers'
offices to environmental inspection departments--were underfunded,
underequipped and underhanded. And that, say analysts, is exactly how the
government wanted them.
"The institutions protected the political regime," said Ernesto Lopez
Portillo, an organized-crime expert at the National Institute of Penal
Studies. "That's why our institutions are so weak. . . . The authorities
bent the institutional structure in favor of their private interests."
But as the near-imperial Mexican presidency has weakened, so has its control
over institutions such as the police. That has fed an explosion of crime and
corruption that is bedeviling both U.S. and Mexican authorities.
Fox's challenge will be nothing less than creating a modern Mexican
government, complete with a civil service and internal controls. As he tries
to build a new system, however, he will be handicapped by institutions that
respond neither to him nor to the public.
"Fox will press a button and nothing will happen. He will pick up the phone
and say, 'Do this,' and nothing will happen--especially on the law
enforcement side," said Delal Baer, a Mexico expert at the Washington-based
Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Osiel Cardenas offers a glimpse into the institutional nightmare facing Fox.
Cardenas was a police officer in Matamoros as recently as 1996, according to
the Mexican attorney general's office, which has fragmentary information
about his career. The city was home to the powerful Gulf cartel of drug
smugglers, which had many police on its payroll. Both the current cartel
boss, allegedly Cardenas, and his predecessor came from the ranks of the
state police, according to the attorney general's office.
A Stunning Taste of Official Collusion Although Cardenas has left the
police, the police haven't left him. U.S. anti-drug agents got a stunning
taste of the official collusion in their confrontation with Cardenas on Nov.
9, 1999. Current and former U.S. officials, speaking on condition of
anonymity, give this account: An FBI agent and an agent of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration were driving through downtown Matamoros that
afternoon in a car with diplomatic license plates. With them was an
informant who pointed out Cardenas' house, guarded by local police.
Suddenly, state police blocked the road near the U.S. agents. Their car was
surrounded by Cardenas and heavily armed bodyguards--who appeared to include
police.
They demanded that the U.S. agents turn over the informant. When the
Americans refused, one gunman fingered his gold-plated Kalashnikov rifle.
"Kill them! Kill them!" he screamed, as the other gunmen prepared to fire.
Desperate, the Americans warned that the U.S. government would retaliate. In
the end, Cardenas simply ordered the agents and their informant out of
Matamoros. He celebrated the showdown with a raucous lunch at a local taco
restaurant.
"The fact he held the party the following day showed he knew he could live
and operate there with total impunity," said a former U.S. official.
The federal prosecutor who oversees the anti-drug fight in Matamoros,
Alfonso Navarrete, acknowledged that Cardenas is helped by local police
officers.
"One of the characteristics of organized crime is that it needs some type of
protection from a police force," he said. Still, he added, the federal
government is taking steps to combat such corruption, such as sending in
better-trained federal anti-drug officers.
Cardenas represents a different kind of corruption from the scandals that
periodically tarnish the Los Angeles Police Department. Cardenas is not just
a bad apple. Rather, he is a product of an institution long financed by
illegal activities--with the tacit permission of authorities.
Analysts note that Mexico has never had a democratic, professional police
force. Its first federal police corps, the Rurales, was made up of bandits
in the mid-1800s, said Lopez Portillo, the organized-crime expert. In
exchange for doing the dirty work of politicians, the police were permitted
to engage in crime themselves.
That trade-off continued through the 71-year rule of the Institutional
Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which lost the presidency in July. Authorities
used the police to do political espionage or repress demonstrators or
opposition politicians, analysts say. As a reward, the police enjoyed
impunity. For decades, little effort was made to train, pay or equip them
well.
"There was no political necessity to do it," said Lopez Portillo. "It wasn't
thought that the police had to be professional to carry out their function."
The end result: The Mexican police became brokers of criminal activity. As
U.S.-bound drug traffic exploded in Mexico during the past 20 years, police
became a vital part of it, in effect imposing a private tax on traffickers.
And the spoils were shared, from the beat cop to top state and even national
police officials.
One former U.S. anti-drug official points to the classic case: Mexican
police officers would routinely pay huge sums to be named commander in a
city bordering the vast U.S. drug market. Budgets were paltry; commanders
often had to pay expenses such as salaries out of their own pockets. But the
commanders would leave the job years later as multimillionaires, thanks to
drug bribes.
"It's like buying a McDonald's franchise. You pay for everything. It's just
an archaic colonial system," said the former official, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
U.S. and Mexican authorities have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on
screening, training and equipment in recent years to fight such systemic
corruption. But the police culture has changed little, U.S. authorities say.
President-elect Fox says reforming the police will be a priority. He plans
to remove all law enforcement functions from the Interior Ministry--the
political affairs arm of the president--in order to cut the unholy alliance
between police and political favors. Plans are being drawn up for an
FBI-style force to replace the federal anti-drug police. Fox also wants a
national system to produce better-trained local cops.
U.S. anti-drug officials worry that this could be yet another police reform
plan that goes nowhere.
Still, not everyone thinks the problem is intractable.
At an airy, plant-filled building in a residential Mexico City neighborhood,
Jose Luis Perez Canchola thinks he has broken the link between cops and
criminality.
"My concept is that the police in this country under the PRI governments
were formed to serve political and economic power. Now we're forming a
police in Mexico City to serve citizens and the community," said Perez
Canchola, director of the training academy for the capital's judicial
police, who handle major crimes.
Perez Canchola might seem an odd choice for such a job. He was a leading
human rights advocate in the state of Baja California for years and a harsh
critic of police abuse there.
But the soft-spoken, stoop-shouldered accountant is shaking up the
hard-boiled world of the police.
The city government, in the hands of the left-wing Democratic Revolution
Party, has doubled the pay for new judicial police to about $1,000 a
month--a middle-class salary by Mexican standards. That has attracted a
flood of applicants. And Perez Canchola is picking the best and the
brightest.
People such as Aaron Perez Castro. "The salaries are good, and it's a civil
service career," the clean-cut 29-year-old student told a visitor to his
classroom. "You can move ahead on the basis of talent, not friendships."
Looking More Like Boy Scouts Than Cops
His fellow students nodded. One by one, they stood and described their
university studies: Psychology. Law. Journalism. Industrial engineering. In
their starched white shirts, red ties and blue slacks, they looked more like
eager Boy Scouts than cops.
Perez Canchola has strict rules for entry: two years of college, an
extensive background check and absolutely no prior police experience. He
offers his bright young recruits benefits police have rarely enjoyed, such
as scholarships to train abroad.
Nearly half the city's 3,200 judicial police are now products of the new
system, Perez Canchola said. "You will begin to see a change that no one can
stop."
Judging from opinion polls, city residents have not yet noticed the change.
And crime has declined only marginally in recent years, after soaring in the
mid-1990s.
But Miguel Chao, a neighborhood activist who recently attended a
crime-prevention forum at the academy, said some local people are noting a
difference.
"Before, if we heard 'judicial police,' we were afraid," he said. "The image
of the judicial police is changing."
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