Bajaboy
Ultra Nomad
   
Posts: 4375
Registered: 10-9-2003
Location: Bahia Asuncion, BCS, Mexico
Member Is Offline
|
|
Mexico suspects ex-drug czar took huge bribes from traffickers
Like this is hard to believe....they are corrupt to the top.
Mexico suspects ex-drug czar took huge bribes from traffickers
* Story Highlights
* Noe Ramirez Mandujano arrested, suspected of taking $450,000 a month in bribes
* About 30 officials arrested in massive operation investigating collusion with cartels
* Report: 4,300 dead this year in war between authorities and narcotics traffickers
* Drug cartels pay some officials bribes of $150,000 to $450,000 a month
MEXICO CITY, Mexico (CNN) -- Mexican authorities have detained the country's former drug czar on suspicion that he may have accepted $450,000 a month
in bribes from drug traffickers, Mexico's attorney general said Friday.
Noe Ramirez Mandujano was in charge from 2006 until this August of the attorney general's office that specializes in combatting organized crime.
Ramirez is accused of meeting with members of a drug cartel while he was in office and agreeing to provide information on investigations in exchange
for the bribes, Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora Icaza said at a news conference Friday.
The arrest was part of an ongoing investigation called "Operation Limpieza," or "Operation Cleanup," the attorney general said. The operation targets
officials who may have passed information to drug cartels.
The arrest was announced Thursday night, four days after the house arrest of Ricardo Gutierrez Vargas, the director for International Police Affairs
at Mexico's Federal Investigative Agency and the head of Mexico's Interpol office.
Authorities say more than 30 officials have been arrested since July in connection with the anti-corruption operation.
Interpol, which is based in France, announced Wednesday it is sending a team of investigators to Mexico to investigate the possibility that its
communications systems and databases may have been compromised, a prospect raised by the arrest of Gutierrez, the top official working with the agency
in Mexico.
"A war of master proportions" between authorities and narcotics traffickers and traffickers among themselves has left more than 4,300 dead so far this
year, according to the Council on Hemispheric Affairs, an independent research and information organization. By comparison, the council said in a
report this week, there were 2,700 drug-related deaths in 2007.
"Homegrown drug cartels operating from both within and outside the country are engaging in a vicious turf war to seize control of major trafficking
corridors while engaging in almost open warfare against the mobilized forces of the state," the council said about what it calls "narco-fueled crime."
Mexican leaders have been trying to tamp down the violence by tightening controls on money-laundering and cracking down on corruption among local and
municipal police forces infiltrated by drug traffickers. It may not be enough.
"Due to pervasive corruption at the highest levels of the Mexican government, and the almost effortless infiltration of the porous security forces by
the cartel, an ultimate victory by the state is far from certain," the Hemispheric Council concludes.
Drug trafficking in Mexico is a $20 billion- to $50 billion-a-year industry, as much as the nation earns from tourism or remittances from Mexicans
living in the United States, said Robert Pastor, a former National Security adviser to President Jimmy Carter and now a professor of international
relations at American University in Washington. He has been studying Latin America for more than four decades.
"This is a huge industry with an extraordinary capacity to corrupt and intimidate the country. And they're doing both right now," said Pastor, also a
former director of the Carter Center's Latin American and Caribbean Program.
The drug cartels are paying some Mexican officials bribes of $150,000 to $450,000 a month, authorities have said. This in a country where the per
capita income is $12,500 a year and one of every seven Mexicans lives in poverty, according to the CIA World Factbook.
All AboutInterpol • Carter Center • Mexico • Illegal Drugs
Links referenced within this article
Interpol
http://topics.edition.cnn.com/topics/interpol
Mexico.
http://topics.edition.cnn.com/topics/mexico
Carter Center's
http://topics.edition.cnn.com/topics/carter_center
Interpol
http://topics.edition.cnn.com/topics/Interpol
Carter Center
http://topics.edition.cnn.com/topics/Carter_Center
Mexico
http://topics.edition.cnn.com/topics/Mexico
Illegal Drugs
http://topics.edition.cnn.com/topics/Illegal_Drugs
Find this article at:
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/americas/11/21/mexico.arre...
|
|
Iflyfish
Ultra Nomad
   
Posts: 3747
Registered: 10-17-2006
Member Is Offline
|
|
Thanks for the post.
Iflyfish
|
|
Bajahowodd
Elite Nomad
    
Posts: 9274
Registered: 12-15-2008
Location: Disneyland Adjacent and anywhere in Baja
Member Is Offline
|
|
With that kind of money to throw around, it's really going to take some stout people to put an end to the corruption. I certainly wish them well.
|
|
BajaNomad
Super Administrator
       
Posts: 5010
Registered: 8-1-2002
Location: San Diego, CA
Member Is Offline
Mood: INTP-A
|
|
http://forums.bajanomad.com/viewthread.php?tid=35459
http://forums.bajanomad.com/viewthread.php?tid=35770#pid3748...
When I was young, I admired clever people. Now that I am old, I admire kind people.
– Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel
We know we must go back if we live, and we don`t know why.
– John Steinbeck, Log from the Sea of Cortez
https://www.regionalinternet.com
Affordable Domain Name Registration/Management & cPanel Web Hosting - since 1999
|
|
|