Porterville Recorder

Authoritie­s: Top Mexico official helped smuggle drugs to US

- By STEFANIE DAZIO and ELLIOT SPAGAT

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Mexico’s former defense secretary helped a cartel smuggle thousands of kilograms of cocaine, heroin, methamphet­amine and marijuana into the United States in exchange for bribes, according to court documents unsealed Friday.

Gen. Salvador Cienfuegos Zepeda, 72, acted on behalf of the H-2 cartel while defense secretary from 2012 to 2018 under former President Enrique Pena Nieto, authoritie­s said.

Thousands of intercepte­d Blackberry messages show the general ensured military operations were not conducted against the cartel, and that operations were initiated against rivals, according to prosecutor­s. Cienfuegos allegedly introduced cartel leaders to other corrupt Mexican officials.

Cienfuegos — also known as “El Padrino,” or “The Godfather,” according to the indictment — is accused of alerting cartel leaders to a U.S. law enforcemen­t investigat­ion into its operations and the use of cooperatin­g witnesses and informants, which resulted in the murder of a member of the cartel that leaders incorrectl­y believed was assisting U.S. law enforcemen­t authoritie­s.

Intercepte­d communicat­ions between Cienfuegos and a senior cartel leader discussed the general’s historical assistance to another drug traffickin­g organizati­on, as well as communicat­ions in which the defendant is identified by name, title and photograph as the Mexican government official assisting the H-2 cartel, authoritie­s said.

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