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Drug Cartels Put Hit Squads
in Laredo
AP
Monday Aug 27, 2007
The scrawny young man at the defense table was only 17, and
had only a peach-fuzz mustache in his mugshot. But authorities
say he was already a seasoned assassin in the U.S. for some of
Mexico's drug lords.
The trial last month of American citizen Rosalio ''Bart'' Reta,
combined with the case against a co-defendant and interviews with
law enforcement officials, has cast a spotlight on a new danger
along the border.
Mexican drug lords locked in a bloody fight for control of a
pipeline that runs from Mexico to Dallas and up through middle
America have brazenly stationed hit squads and reconnaissance
teams in Laredo.
In the past two years, rival cartels have killed at least seven
people in Laredo, including a victim stalked and killed near his
job site and a man gunned down in the parking lot of a popular
restaurant, U.S. authorities say. Nearly all the victims were
mixed up in the drug trade themselves.
(Article continues below)
''That river does not stop these people,'' said Webb County Sheriff's
Maj. Doyle Holdridge, who for the past 30 years has been working
drug cases along the Rio Grande, which separates Laredo from its
Mexican sister city, Nuevo Laredo. The cities have a combined
population of half a million.
Over the past few years, the Mexican Gulf Cartel and its rival
Sinaloa Cartel have carried out a terrifying bloodbath in Nuevo
Laredo, where the traffickers have a saying: ''Plata o plomo''
-- ''Silver or lead.'' So far, the worst of the violence has been
confined to Mexico.
''Our mission is to make sure it doesn't cross over,'' said Jesse
Guillen, a Laredo prosecutor who obtained guilty pleas from Reta
and another hitman for the Gulf Cartel earlier this year. ''Is
it under control? Let's see.''
Unlike many other drug-related killings, the Laredo slayings
often involve careful planning, explicit orders and surveillance
of law enforcement officers, Guillen said. And arrests aren't
easy: In most cases, the killers flee back across the border.
Also, the traditional taboos against involving family members
and other civilians have disappeared.
''These days, if they have a problem, they kill it,'' Holdridge
said. ''If they have to hose down a car full of five people, they'll
do it.''
Gone also is the grudging respect once accorded U.S. law enforcement.
Holdridge said he and his wife have occasionally been followed
by suspected cartel members as they drive around town. In fact,
Reta had the make, model and plates of a law officer's personal
car, Guillen said.
Reta, nicknamed for the cartoon character Bart Simpson, admitted
being part of a hit squad that was ordered in January 2006 to
kill a man who was dating a drug lord's girlfriend. The squad
of three Americans mistakenly killed the target's stepbrother,
27-year-old Noe Flores, instead, prosecutors say.
The hit squad's members -- all Americans -- lived in the U.S.,
awaiting orders from the drug lords. Investigators said they are
unsure whether other hit squads are living in this country.
Reta's co-defendant Gabriel Cardona, 20, pleaded guilty and was
sentenced to 80 years in prison. Although he probably would have
gotten a shorter sentence if he had been convicted at a trial,
''he was scared to death'' of his bosses, Guillen said.
Reta chose to go to trial, but as the testimony started to reveal
details of the cartel's organization and tactics, he pleaded guilty
and was sentenced to 40 years. A defense attorney and others involved
in the case received threats.
Reta, who was only 16 when Flores was killed, still faces charges
in the killing of another Laredo man, gunned down outside a restaurant,
also allegedly on the orders of the Gulf Cartel.
Reta told investigators that the Zetas, former Mexican soldiers
now working as Gulf Cartel enforcers, trained him in marksmanship
and grenade-throwing at a boot camp in Mexico, Guillen said. Reta's
right arm bears a tattoo of ''Santa Muerte,'' the pseudo patron
saint of drug traffickers whose image frequently shows up on candles
or statues with drug loads.
Reta told a U.S. investigator he participated in about 30 cartel-ordered
killings in Mexico, starting when he was 13, and sought extradition
to the United States for the Laredo murders after he was arrested
in connection with a grenade explosion that killed four people
at a nightclub in Monterrey, Mexico.
Reta, Cardona and other hitmen were paid $500 a week, according
to Laredo police. When a job was done, they could get a bonus
of $10,000 and two kilos of cocaine, police said in court documents.
For the Flores killing, Reta and Cardona got $500 each. (The intended
victim was eventually killed.)
The third alleged member of the hit squad made bail after his
arrest and fled to Mexico before trial. Warrants have also been
issued for the alleged middleman in the hit and the cartel's reputed
boss in Nuevo Laredo, but both men are believed to be in Mexico.
The cartels have studied U.S. law enforcement procedures and
know how to stymie officers.
Holdridge said the cartels sometimes send out ''suicide loads''
-- smaller piles of marijuana or cash that traffickers know will
get caught by local law enforcement. Such busts tie up officers
with paperwork for hours, giving traffickers time to drive a bigger
load through unnoticed, Holdridge said.
In recent months, the violence around Laredo and Nuevo Laredo
has quieted down, and no other hit squads have been discovered.
But ''it's like shark's teeth,'' Guillen said. ''You pull one
out and another one grows in.''
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INFOWARS:
BECAUSE THERE'S A WAR ON FOR YOUR MIND
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