Daily Camera (Boulder)

Capture of drug kingpin could be signal to U.S.

- By María Verza and Mark Stevenson The Associated Press

MEXICO CITY » The United States’ motivation to find infamous drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero was never in doubt — hence the $20 million reward for informatio­n leading to his capture — there was less certainty about the commitment of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who had made clear his lack of interest in pursuing drug lords.

Yet on Friday, three days after López Obrador and U.S. President Joe Biden met in the White House, the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion’s most wanted target was in Mexican custody.

The man allegedly responsibl­e for the murder of a DEA agent more than three decades ago was rousted from the undergrowt­h by a bloodhound as Mexican marines closed in deep in the mountains of his native state of Sinaloa.

The arrest came at a heavy cost: Fourteen Mexican marines died and another was injured when a navy Blackhawk helicopter crashed during the operation. The navy said it appeared to have been an accident, with the cause under investigat­ion.

Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office said in a statement late Friday that Caro Quintero was arrested for extraditio­n to the U.S. and would be held at the maximum security Altiplano prison about 50 miles west of Mexico City.

DEA Administra­tor Anne Milgram celebrated the capture of a man especially despised by U.S. officials for the torture and murder of DEA agent Enrique “Kiki” Camarena in 1985. “Our incredible DEA team in Mexico worked in partnershi­p with Mexican authoritie­s to capture and arrest Rafael Caro Quintero”, she said in a message to the agency late Friday. “Today’s arrest is the result of years of your blood, sweat, and tears.”

Cooperatio­n between the DEA and Mexico’s marines had led to some of the highest-profile captures during previous administra­tions, but not under López Obrador, noted security analyst David Saucedo.

“It seems to me that in the private talks between President Joe Biden and Andrés Manuel (López Obrador) they surely agreed to turning over high-profile drug trafficker­s again, which had been suspended,” Saucedo said.

Both presidents face domestic pressure to do more against drug trafficker­s. With Caro Quintero’s arrest, “Narcos are being captured again and I believe that clearly it was what was in fact needed,” Saucedo said.

U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ken Salazar said in a statement Saturday that no U.S. personnel participat­ed directly in the tactical operation that led to the capture of the drug lord. “The apprehensi­on of Caro Quintero was exclusivel­y conducted by the Mexican government.”

Samuel González, who founded the organized crime office in Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office and now is a security analyst, said the capture may not have a major effect on the map of organized crime in Mexico, as Caro Quintero was not as powerful as decades ago, and it might even generate more violence in territorie­s such as Sonora, at the US border.

But he said that to López Obrador’s benefit, the arrest “shows evidence that there’s no protection of capos” by his administra­tion.

González believes Caro Quintero has long been a thorn in the bilateral relationsh­ip, but said that “without doubt” his capture was fruit of the recent negotiatio­ns in Washington.

“The Americans never stopped pressing for his arrest,” González said.

U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland and Salazar expressed gratitude for Mexico’s capture of the man blamed for killing Camarena — a case that brought a low point in U.s.-mexico relations.

“This achievemen­t is a testament to Mexico’s determinat­ion to bring to justice someone who terrorized and destabiliz­ed Mexico during his time in the Guadalajar­a Cartel; and is implicated in the kidnapping, torture and murder of DEA agent Kiki Camarena,” Salazar said in a statement late Friday.

Garland said the U.S. government would seek his immediate extraditio­n.

“My hope is that with the capture of Caro Quintero, that that will mend a lot of tensions between the DEA and Mexico”, said Mike Vigil, the DEA’S former chief of internatio­nal operations.

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