News (Media Awareness Project) - Mexico: Drug Inquiry Finds Remains Of 6 People In Mexico |
Title: | Mexico: Drug Inquiry Finds Remains Of 6 People In Mexico |
Published On: | 1999-12-02 |
Source: | New York Times (NY) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 14:15:33 |
DRUG INQUIRY FINDS REMAINS OF 6 PEOPLE IN MEXICO
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico -- American forensic experts have unearthed the
remains of six people at a farm outside this border city, where they are
searching with Mexican investigators for clues to the fate of scores of
people who have disappeared, most of them after running afoul of drug
traffickers.
Journalists who watched the exhumations across the front wall of the farm
Wednesday saw agents gather material several times from a shallow pit,
place it in bags and carry it a few yards to a mobile forensics laboratory
that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has moved to the site. The farm is
on the southern outskirts of Juarez, 15 miles south of El Paso.
A spokesman for the attorney general of Mexico, Isidoro Guerson, said four
sets of human skeletal remains were discovered on the third day of the
joint operation. Partial remains of two other people were found on Tuesday.
The search apparently began after an F.B.I. informer, whose identity is
secret, told authorities that bodies were buried at the site.
Earlier in the day, the head of the Mexican organized-crime unit, Jose
Larrieta Carrasco, told reporters that some of the bodies had been found
with clothing and that others were in underwear.
Attorney General Jorge Madrazo said in a television interview in Mexico
City that along with the remains found on Tuesday, the investigators also
encountered "some clothing and a pair of boots, which are tied, with paper,
with glue."
Madrazo said authorities had collected files on 100 people who have
disappeared in and around Juarez in recent years. An association of
relatives of the missing people has collected files on nearly 200 vanished
people.
Most are Mexicans, though Madrazo said 22 were American citizens.
Although most of the missing vanished after the Mexican police had detained
them, no one has been charged in any of the cases. The authorities presume
the officers who carried out the detentions had been paid off by traffickers.
Juarez has long been a major center of drug trafficking, plagued by
frequent killings and unexplained disappearances. The authorities have
detained several members of a family that was living at the farm where the
bodies were unearthed. On Tuesday, the head of the family and another man
who appears on property records as the farm owner were flown by authorities
to Mexico City.
The joint operation, which has brought more American officials to perform
law-enforcement duties inside Mexican territory than any other in memory,
has aroused a prickly undercurrent of nationalism. Local television
reporters asked Madrazo whether he had ceded Mexican sovereignty to the
United States. His office issued a pointed statement that said the work of
F.B.I. agents in Mexico was based on the terms of the Judicial Mutual
Assistance Treaty and other bilateral anti-drug accords.
Interior Minister Diodoro Carrasco Altamirano vigorously contradicted
President Clinton, who suggested on Tuesday that drug-related violence in
northern Mexico was a result of recent progress in the drug war in
Colombia, where antinarcotics cooperation with Washington has been far less
troubled than in Mexico.
"We've had a lot of success in dismantling the Colombian cartels," Clinton
said. "And one of the adverse consequences is that many of their operations
moved to northern Mexico."
Carrasco bristled when asked what he thought "about those who are saying
that Mexico is becoming more like Colombia."
"I think that is a completely mistaken perception," he said. "I don't think
we're like Colombia at all. We're making an important effort in combatting
drugs, given the circumstances and realities of our country."
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico -- American forensic experts have unearthed the
remains of six people at a farm outside this border city, where they are
searching with Mexican investigators for clues to the fate of scores of
people who have disappeared, most of them after running afoul of drug
traffickers.
Journalists who watched the exhumations across the front wall of the farm
Wednesday saw agents gather material several times from a shallow pit,
place it in bags and carry it a few yards to a mobile forensics laboratory
that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has moved to the site. The farm is
on the southern outskirts of Juarez, 15 miles south of El Paso.
A spokesman for the attorney general of Mexico, Isidoro Guerson, said four
sets of human skeletal remains were discovered on the third day of the
joint operation. Partial remains of two other people were found on Tuesday.
The search apparently began after an F.B.I. informer, whose identity is
secret, told authorities that bodies were buried at the site.
Earlier in the day, the head of the Mexican organized-crime unit, Jose
Larrieta Carrasco, told reporters that some of the bodies had been found
with clothing and that others were in underwear.
Attorney General Jorge Madrazo said in a television interview in Mexico
City that along with the remains found on Tuesday, the investigators also
encountered "some clothing and a pair of boots, which are tied, with paper,
with glue."
Madrazo said authorities had collected files on 100 people who have
disappeared in and around Juarez in recent years. An association of
relatives of the missing people has collected files on nearly 200 vanished
people.
Most are Mexicans, though Madrazo said 22 were American citizens.
Although most of the missing vanished after the Mexican police had detained
them, no one has been charged in any of the cases. The authorities presume
the officers who carried out the detentions had been paid off by traffickers.
Juarez has long been a major center of drug trafficking, plagued by
frequent killings and unexplained disappearances. The authorities have
detained several members of a family that was living at the farm where the
bodies were unearthed. On Tuesday, the head of the family and another man
who appears on property records as the farm owner were flown by authorities
to Mexico City.
The joint operation, which has brought more American officials to perform
law-enforcement duties inside Mexican territory than any other in memory,
has aroused a prickly undercurrent of nationalism. Local television
reporters asked Madrazo whether he had ceded Mexican sovereignty to the
United States. His office issued a pointed statement that said the work of
F.B.I. agents in Mexico was based on the terms of the Judicial Mutual
Assistance Treaty and other bilateral anti-drug accords.
Interior Minister Diodoro Carrasco Altamirano vigorously contradicted
President Clinton, who suggested on Tuesday that drug-related violence in
northern Mexico was a result of recent progress in the drug war in
Colombia, where antinarcotics cooperation with Washington has been far less
troubled than in Mexico.
"We've had a lot of success in dismantling the Colombian cartels," Clinton
said. "And one of the adverse consequences is that many of their operations
moved to northern Mexico."
Carrasco bristled when asked what he thought "about those who are saying
that Mexico is becoming more like Colombia."
"I think that is a completely mistaken perception," he said. "I don't think
we're like Colombia at all. We're making an important effort in combatting
drugs, given the circumstances and realities of our country."
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