Los Angeles Times

FBI hunting fugitive Mexican drug lord

Rafael Caro Quintero joins the agency’s 10 most-wanted list, with a $20-million reward.

- By Patrick J. McDonnell

The agency has offered a $20-million reward for the arrest of Rafael Caro Quintero in the 1985 slaying of a U.S. DEA agent.

MEXICO CITY — One of Mexico’s legendary drug lords, a fugitive convicted in the notorious 1985 slaying of a U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion agent, is back in the narco business — at least that’s what U.S. prosecutor­s say.

This week, the FBI placed Rafael Caro Quintero, aging co-founder of the once-dominant, now defunct Guadalajar­a cartel, on its 10 most-wanted list. It also announced a reward for informatio­n leading to his arrest: $20 million.

Caro Quintero, believed to be at least 65 years old, has been a fugitive in Mexico since 2013.

That’s when a Mexican judge sprang him from prison on a technicali­ty after he had served 28 years of a 40year sentence for drug traffickin­g and for the murder of the DEA’s Enrique “Kiki” Camarena. The judge ruled that Caro Quintero should have been tried in a state court, not a federal court.

His release enraged U.S. officials. Mexican authoritie­s vowed to arrest him anew.

But the fabled mob boss, his exploits the subject of countless corridos, or ballads, immediatel­y went undergroun­d.

U.S. prosecutor­s say Caro Quintero continued his drug-traffickin­g activity while in prison in Mexico and after his release.

On Thursday, they unsealed a new indictment against the veteran trafficker, known as “The Prince” and el narco de los narcos in Mexico, alleging his leadership role in smuggling heroin, cocaine, marijuana, and methamphet­amines into the United States between 1980 and 2017.

“We take the Caro Quintero situation extremely personally,” said Rusty Payne, a DEA spokesman in Washington. “He is someone who we desperatel­y want to see face justice.”

According to the DEA, Caro Quintero has emerged as a co-leader of the Sinaloa cartel, which was once headed by Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, now jailed in New York.

Both men hail from the remote municipali­ty of Badiraguat­o in northweste­rn Sinaloa state, deep in Mexico’s “Golden Triangle” of illicit opium-poppy production. There, clan loyalties are tied to the multibilli­on-dollar smuggling industry.

The DEA would like to see Caro Quintero, like Guzman, extradited to the United States.

“We’re not going to stop looking for Caro Quintero until we find him and put him back behind bars where he belongs,” FBI Deputy Director David L. Bowdich said in a statement on Thursday.

Caro Quintero has given the Mexican press several interviews from hiding, depicting himself as an infirm retiree who did his time and is now hounded by U.S. and Mexican law enforcemen­t helicopter­s, drones and assault squads.

“I don’t belong to any cartel,” Caro Quintero told an interviewe­r from Mexico’s Aristegui Noticias news site, in an account published this month. “Whoever says [otherwise] is lying!”

He said that he had trafficked only in marijuana, and had long ago left that contraband trade behind. “Now that I’m out I don’t want to know anything about drugs. … I want to live in peace. … Everyone deserves a second chance.”

He suggested the allegation­s were based on informatio­n supplied by a cousin, Sajid Emilio Quintero Navidad (a.k.a. “The Cadet”), who pleaded guilty to drugtraffi­cking charges in January in U.S. District Court in San Diego.

“Sajid is lying!” Caro Quintero told the Mexican interviewe­r.

A spokeswoma­n for the U.S. Attorney’s office in San Diego declined to comment when asked whether Quintero Navidad was cooperatin­g with authoritie­s.

The article in Aristegui Noticias depicted Caro Quintero as an anguished “wild cat,” avoiding surveillan­ce drones, “never sleeping in the same place and always in the countrysid­e in a tent or sleeping bag.”

“During the day he wanders the mountain like a ghost, always looking at the sky,” it reported.

U.S. authoritie­s call Caro Quintero one of the “godfathers” of Mexican drug traffickin­g and say he was directly responsibl­e for Camarena’s kidnapping and murder. Camarena was bundled into a car on the streets of Guadalajar­a en route to lunch with his wife on Feb. 7, 1985.

His disappeara­nce sparked a massive manhunt and triggered a crisis in binational relations, as a livid Reagan administra­tion shut down most commerce through the U.S.-Mexico border.

The bodies of Camarena and his Mexican pilot, Alfredo Zavala, who was kidnapped separately, were found almost a month after the men were abducted. Their remains, dumped in the western state of Michoacan, showed signs of torture.

According to U.S. officials, Camarena was executed in retaliatio­n for a 1984 raid by Mexican authoritie­s on a vast marijuana plantation owned by Caro Quintero. The Guadalajar­a cartel blamed Camarena for the takedown, officials say.

The law enforcemen­t crackdown following his kidnapping also led to the disintegra­tion of the Guadalajar­a cartel, which originated in the 1970s and forged lucrative relationsh­ips with Pablo Escobar and other Colombian cocaine producers, and bribed Mexican cops and politician­s. The syndicate later fragmented into regional drug gangs in Sinaloa state, Tijuana, Ciudad Juarez and elsewhere.

While Caro Quintero is still a fugitive, two other Guadalajar­a cartel cofounders — Miguel (“The Godfather”) Angel Felix Gallardo and Ernesto (“Don Neto”) Fonseca Carrillo — are serving long prison sentences in Mexico.

patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com Twitter: @Pmcdonnell­LAT Cecilia Sanchez of The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Miguel Dimayuga Proceso ?? CARO QUINTERO, pictured at a 2016 interview, had been convicted in the death of a DEA official in Mexico in 1985. He was released from prison on a technicali­ty.
Miguel Dimayuga Proceso CARO QUINTERO, pictured at a 2016 interview, had been convicted in the death of a DEA official in Mexico in 1985. He was released from prison on a technicali­ty.

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