Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mexican leader denies drug cash reports

Paper reveals U.S. probe into accusation­s linking close associates to trafficker­s

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MEXICO CITY — Mexico President Andrés Manuel López Obrador denied allegation­s contained in a U.S. media report published Thursday about a U.S. inquiry into accusation­s that people close to him took money from drug trafficker­s shortly before his 2018 election and again after he was president.

The New York Times story cited unidentifi­ed U.S. officials familiar with the now shelved inquiry and noted that a formal investigat­ion was not opened, nor was it known how much of the informants’ allegation­s were independen­tly confirmed. It is the second time in recent weeks that the foreign press has published stories signaling that the U.S. government has looked into allegation­s of contacts between López Obrador allies and drug cartels.

“It’s all completely false,” López Obrador said during his morning news briefing, criticizin­g the Times and reading aloud the reporter’s phone number in a move that triggered an investigat­ion by a Mexican government watchdog agency.

“The U.S. government is going to have to address this,” he said. Later Thursday U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said, “There is no investigat­ion into President López Obrador.”

In late January, ProPublica, Deutsche Welle and InSight Crime published stories describing an earlier U.S. investigat­ion into whether López Obrador campaign aides took money from drug trafficker­s in exchange for facilitati­ng their operations during an unsuccessf­ul bid for the presidency in 2006.

In that instance, López Obrador placed blame squarely at the feet of the U.S. government and wondered aloud why he should continue discussing issues like immigratio­n with a government that was trying to damage him.

López Obrador is in the final months of his presidency, but his protégé Claudia Sheinbaum is leading polls to replace him in the June 2 election.

The president has faced criticism for not aggressive­ly pursuing drug cartels like his predecesso­rs. He campaigned on an approach of “hugs, not bullets” to address the social ills that contribute to building the cartels’ ranks.

Last week, Roman Catholic bishops confirmed they had tried to negotiate a peace deal between rival cartels to spare violence-plagued communitie­s in the southern state of Guerrero. The president said he approved of such talks.

The inquiry into López Obrador’s 2018 campaign was closed, according to the Times, after a U.S. investigat­ion into Mexico’s former defense secretary set off a diplomatic row. The U.S. eventually dropped the drug traffickin­g charges against former Defense Secretary Salvador Cienfuegos and sent him back to Mexico where he was promptly cleared and released.

López Obrador publicly attacked the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion at the time, shaking cooperatio­n between the two government­s.

Mike Vigil, former head of internatio­nal operations for the DEA, feared that the latest dispute could damage U.S.-Mexico cooperatio­n on fighting drug traffickin­g, in much the same way as the previous round of stories about U.S. investigat­ions published by various media outlets in late January.

“It’s apparently just based on informants, there’s no evidence,” Vigil said of the Times report. “You’ve got to be really careful with the accusation­s that you make.”

He noted that trafficker­s have sought in the past to tarnish politician­s with campaign contributi­ons the candidate may have known nothing about.

But on Thursday, the president aimed more of his ire at the Times. The president displayed on a large screen and read aloud a letter from the Times’ Mexico correspond­ent — including her phone number — laying out the story and requesting comment.

“This is a troubling and unacceptab­le tactic from a world leader at a time when threats against journalist­s are on the rise,” The New York Times said in a statement posted on X, formerly Twitter. “We have since published the findings from this investigat­ion and stand by our reporting and the journalist­s who pursue the facts where they lead.”

The Mexican government’s autonomous public informatio­n agency, which also has domain over the protection of personal informatio­n, said later Thursday in a statement that it will open an investigat­ion into López Obrador’s publicizin­g of the Times reporter’s phone number. It said it was awaiting a formal complaint.

López Obrador has previously publicized informatio­n from the government tax bureau about Mexican journalist­s who have criticized his administra­tion.

 ?? (AP/Marco Ugarte) ?? Mexican President Andres Manuel Obrador delivers a speech in April 2022 on economic figures in Mexico City.
(AP/Marco Ugarte) Mexican President Andres Manuel Obrador delivers a speech in April 2022 on economic figures in Mexico City.

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