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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | June 2009 

In Laredo, Drug War Ills Slip Into Shadows
email this pageprint this pageemail usMarc Lacey - New York Times
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June 13, 2009



A relative calm has enveloped Nuevo Laredo, once ground zero in Mexico’s drug violence. (Kirsten Luce/New York Times)
Nuevo Laredo, Mexico — The reminders of Nuevo Laredo’s violent days still mar its streets — bullet holes and the impacts of grenades where drug traffickers once flaunted their power, boarded-up buildings of merchants who fled the lawlessness, and until they were leveled by the government a few weeks ago, garish roadside shrines to Santa Muerte, the saint of death.

What makes Nuevo Laredo so remarkable now, however, is the relative calm that envelops this border town, a small dose of good news in a country awash with bloodshed.

Tamaulipas State, where Nuevo Laredo is located, used to be ground zero in the country’s drug war, with convoys of criminals riding through the streets as if they owned them and one of the highest murder rates in the country. That distinction has since shifted farther west along the United States-Mexico border to Ciudad Juárez and Tijuana, where soldiers patrol the streets by the thousands. But Nuevo Laredo’s transformation from war zone to regular town is not necessarily what it seems. Organized crime has gone underground in Nuevo Laredo, still feared, still thriving, but no longer in charge.

That uneasy peace may well be the best outcome Mexico can extract from its consuming drug war, so Nuevo Laredo could be a glimpse of the country’s future. Government officials acknowledge that their realistic goal is not to eliminate the outlaws, but to weaken them to the point where something resembling everyday life can resume.

The government, which is in the midst of a vicious, countrywide battle with the cartels, played a role in the newfound tranquillity by pouring soldiers into Nuevo Laredo, under President Felipe Calderón and his predecessor, Vicente Fox. They took up positions around the city and took over the police force, which was regarded as a corrupt adjunct of the cartels.

But the army did not actually defeat the traffickers here by rounding them up and putting them out of business. Rather, law enforcement officials on both sides of the border say, a brutal, long-running turf war between rival cartels came to an end when one side, the Gulf Cartel, came out on top. The added presence of government troops made it harder for the rival Sinaloa Cartel to continue its quest to take over Gulf territory. But many of the most-wanted criminals responsible for the violence got away and continued their business trafficking drugs, in the shadows.

What has changed and what has not in this once-besieged border city are best seen through the eyes of some of those who survived the darkest times.

A POLICE OFFICER

Wavering Allegiances

“I’ll never go back,” said Homero Villarreal, a former Mexican federal police officer who used to investigate the cartels.

Mr. Villarreal spoke from an Italian restaurant across the border in Laredo, Tex., with his wife, Dora, at his side. They fled from Nuevo Laredo in 2005 after two of their sons, who were in their 20s, were abducted by gunmen and not heard from again. Mr. Villarreal is not sure exactly why his sons were singled out, although he acknowledges that he, like many officers, accepted money from the cartels on occasion to look the other way. He makes a firm distinction between the money he took not to act and the payments that other officers took — and continue to take — to commit illegal acts themselves.

Mr. Villarreal has not been back since he fled because, he says, the traffickers who once ran the city still lurk below the surface. Drugs continue to flow north, and money and guns return, as recent seizures of huge shipments make clear. In recent weeks, the haul at the bridges connecting Laredo and Nuevo Laredo, for example, has included nearly three tons of marijuana and cocaine heading north, and two caches of weapons and ammunition, as well as $1 million in cash going south.

Mr. Villarreal has joined a group called Laredo’s Missing to try to find out what happened to his sons. Disappearances were commonplace in those days, and the police sometimes acted in cahoots with the criminals, Mr. Villarreal said. “The cartels would call the police and say they were looking for someone,” he said. “The police would find the person and turn him over to the cartels, who would take him away.”

Those police officers who did not play along were killed. It was in June 2005, after a police chief was killed hours after being sworn in, that the federal government of Mr. Fox launched Operation Safe Mexico and sent hundreds of soldiers and federal police officers into Nuevo Laredo. On their way to the city from the airport, the federal forces were fired upon by none other than the municipal police, which had all but turned into a protection force for the drug cartels. Dozens of officers were arrested after that morning shootout, which left one federal police officer wounded and offered a stark example of Nuevo Laredo’s lawlessness.

A scrubbing of the police began, with all 700 officers removed from their posts and investigated. What brought the explosion of violence to an end, however, was not just revived law enforcement but the fact that a long intercartel war over the lucrative transit route through Nuevo Laredo had run its course.

Some law enforcement officials say that the Gulf Cartel, backed up by a feared paramilitary group, the Zetas, defeated its rivals from the Sinaloa Cartel outright and sent them packing. Others say the cessation of hostilities was the result of a pact in which the Sinaloa Cartel, unable to dislodge its rivals, agreed to pay what amounts to a transit tax for drugs that passed through Tamaulipas. Emerging from the conflict stronger than ever were the Zetas, which now operate semi-independently from the Gulf Cartel.

The soldiers stationed in an armored vehicle at one of the bridges connecting Laredo and Nuevo Laredo are only a temporary solution, government officials say, until the police are able to handle the outlaws on their own. That time has not yet come.

“It’s quiet, but that doesn’t mean they’re not around,” Mr. Villarreal said of the drug lords. “Believe me, they’re there.”

A JOURNALIST

Muted Media

Long ago, journalists here stopped covering the drug violence in their backyard. They still do not. They avoid mentioning the Zetas and would not even consider writing about one of the group’s top men, Miguel Ángel Treviño, whom law enforcement officials hold responsible for much of the bloodshed here.

When the Drug Enforcement Administration in April named Mr. Treviño and his younger brother as 2 of the 11 most wanted Mexican fugitives, the local press took a pass.

“We’re self-censored,” said one Nuevo Laredo newspaper editor, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid angering the outlaws. “We’re in the mouth of the wolf. We hope one day to again have the freedom to publish what we want.”

Some papers did publish photographs recently of banners that the traffickers hung from overpasses criticizing Mr. Calderón’s government for detaining the relatives of some drug traffickers. “Families are sacred and should be respected,” the traffickers said, a gibe that the papers reported straight.

Army transgressions receive extensive coverage. In May, the military prosecutor’s office arrested 12 soldiers and said it would court-martial them on charges that they murdered three local residents and then buried them in a hidden grave.

The editor says that the drug barons do not contact newspapers as much as they used to offering suggestions, which were really not optional, on which articles should be printed and which should not. But they continue to lurk in the background, issuing occasional threats to keep the news media in line.

They mean business. In 2006, the newspaper El Mañana was invaded by attackers, who opened fire on the newsroom and hurled a grenade in as well. One journalist, struck in the back by shrapnel, was paralyzed. The battle scars are still visible in that newsroom. Journalists continue to be singled out, but in recent years they have been killed in other parts of the country.

“I’m concerned the problems could come back, but I’m not afraid anymore,” the editor said. “We’ve all been through too much. Everyone. Society, little by little, is recovering its voice. They are talking about what happened.”

A CHILDREN’S ADVOCATE

Outlaw’s Philanthropy

On Children’s Day in 2004, tractor-trailers full of food and gifts pulled up outside the orphanage that Guadalupe Carmona de González runs on the outskirts of the city. There were bags of rice, toys galore and cakes in the shape of cartoon characters. The children were giddy and so was Ms. Carmona, who founded Casa Hogar Elim in the mid-1980s with her own money.

Even after she learned that the donations were sent by one of the area’s most notorious drug dons, Ms. Carmona remained thankful. “The gifts weren’t for me,” she said in a recent interview. “It was for children who had nothing.”

The gift giver was Osiel Cárdenas, who was in a Mexican prison at the time, accused of being the leader of the Gulf Cartel, which ran drug operations in Nuevo Laredo and points east. It was his jailing, authorities say, that emboldened a leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, Joaquín Guzmán Loera, who is known universally by the nickname El Chapo, or Shorty, to launch his bold and bloody takeover attempt in Nuevo Laredo.

Mr. Guzmán failed. Mr. Cárdenas was eventually extradited to the United States, where he awaits trial on drug trafficking charges. Filling the void were the Zetas, ruthless ex-soldiers who cared much less about their public image than Mr. Cárdenas did and who sent no gifts to Ms. Carmona’s orphanage, which now houses about 100 children.

Her chief patron now is the government, a normal state of affairs. Ms. Carmona credits Nuevo Laredo’s mayor, Ramón Garza Barrios, with bringing air-conditioning to her orphanage, helping to build a library and outfitting the children with school uniforms.

Gone are the days when her calls for the city to pave the road in front of her orphanage would go unheeded, and Mr. Cárdenas would step in to hire a crew to do the job.

Mr. Garza was also one of the officials behind the destruction of the shrines to the saint of death, worshiped by traffickers, which had been set up on the highways leading into Nuevo Laredo. He banned the sale of images of the saint on public property. One of Mr. Garza’s spokesmen said the mayor was so intent on eliminating Nuevo Laredo’s image as a drug haven that he would not comment for any newspaper article on the subject.

Ms. Carmona, a religious woman, said she welcomed the government support. As for her former patron, she said she never knew Mr. Cárdenas personally but appreciated his humanitarian gestures and prayed for him during his travails. She agreed that drugs break up families and result in even more orphans. But she was somewhat philosophical about those who were engaged in the business, saying they were not evil people but were lured into the easy money by dire poverty.

“We’ve all committed sins,” she said.

A SHOPKEEPER

Enduring Reputation

Nuevo Laredo’s violence may have calmed, but the border city’s reputation has not changed as quickly. Nuevo Laredo is still frequently mentioned in the same breath as Tijuana and Ciudad Juárez, the more recent hotspots.

That frustrates business owners like Jack Suneson, who sells Mexican artifacts, or rather tries to sell them, from a stylish boutique in Nuevo Laredo. Customers are so few that he recently bought land in San Antonio and is on the verge of closing his Mexican store, which his mother first opened in 1954.

“I can’t begin to tell you how bad business is,” he said inside his sprawling store, which was full of merchandise but not buyers.

The other day, he took a walk around his store, pointing out the events that took place on his block alone during the dark days. There were the dead bodies — “There was one there,” he said, pointing down the block. “And another there. You never knew when you’d come across another victim.” There were the boarded-up buildings. Some were once well-known restaurants that catered to the Americans who used to stream across the border for a taste of Mexico. Others were casinos that were similarly filled with foreigners but closed their doors when cartels began demanding more and more in protection money.

Mr. Suneson said the cartels have always steered clear of his store. But the collection of taxes by the criminals continues. In but one example, the pirated movies that are sold across the city bear stamps from the particular organized crime group that produced them. Many movies carry a photograph of a gold Hummer, referring, authorities say, to “El Hummer,” one of the top leaders of the Zetas in the area until he was arrested in 2008.

“There’s a psychosis,” Mr. Suneson said of the fear that Americans still have about crossing the border into Nuevo Laredo these days. “I won’t deny we had a bad period. I won’t say we weren’t in the middle of a drug war. We were. But we shouldn’t be the poster child of violence in Mexico. We had our bad period, and now it’s crept along somewhere else.”



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