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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico 

Mexico Nabs Police Chief with Drug Cartel Suspect
email this pageprint this pageemail usAntonio Villegas - Associated Press
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April 01, 2010


The arrests come as the Zetas are under pressure from a bloody turf war with their former ally, the Gulf cartel.
Villahermosa, Mexico – The nephew of one of Mexico's most-wanted drug gang leaders was captured together with a police chief accused of protecting a notorious cartel in a key port city, authorities say.

Federal police detained Roberto Rivero Arana, who identified himself as the nephew of reputed Zetas gang leader Heriberto Lazcano, in the Gulf coast state of Tabasco after three months of intelligence work, the Attorney General's Office said in a statement issued late Tuesday.

He was detained along with Daniel Perez, the acting police chief of Ciudad del Carmen, an oil hub in neighboring Campeche state. The statement alleged Perez received 200,000 pesos ($16,000) a month for protecting the Zetas.

The arrests come as the Zetas are under pressure from a bloody turf war with their former ally, the Gulf cartel. Authorities blame that fight for contributing to a surge of violence in Mexico's northeastern border states north of Tabasco and Campeche.

Perez was acting chief pending a permanent appointment, Ciudad del Carmen Mayor Aracely Escalante said Wednesday.

"He's an agent who had been with the police force long before we took over the town government," Escalante said. "We had given him our trust."

The two men were found with 10 assault rifles, a grenade, ammunition, drugs, police uniforms and worker suits with the logo of Mexico's state oil company, Pemex, the Attorney General's Office said.

Last week, Tabasco Gov. Andres Granier warned that the arrests of several suspected Zetas over the past several months could stoke turf battles in his region. He asked the federal government to send troops.

Meanwhile, the Mexican government announced that federal police will take over the anti-crime campaign currently headed by the army in the violent border city of Ciudad Juarez.

The army deployment has come under criticism from those who say soldiers are not trained for police work, and complaints they conducted illegal searches and detentions. But perhaps more important is the fact that killings have continued apace, even with troops in the city across the border from El Paso, Texas.

An unspecified number of soldiers will remain in Juarez to help combat drug gang violence that killed more than 2,600 people last year, and 500 more so far this year in the city of 1.3 million.

Starting Thursday, "the Mexican army will start gradually transferring responsibility for public safety to civilian authorities, to federal authorities at the beginning and gradually to state and local" forces, the Interior Department said in a news release.

The statement said 1,000 federal officers will be added to the police deployment in the city, bringing the number of federal agents to 4,500.

More than 7,000 troops had arrived in Juarez by mid-2009.

The department said the change was part of a new strategy to focus on social programs as an answer to the continuing violence.

The U.S. consulate in the northern city of Monterrey, meanwhile, warned American citizens who may be traveling for Easter week about recent battles in the northern states of Nuevo Leon, Coahuila and Durango. The consulate said U.S. citizens traveling by road from Monterrey to Texas "should be especially vigilant."

On Tuesday, a shootout between soldiers and gunmen left two people dead on the highway connecting Monterrey and Reynosa, across the border from McAllen, Texas.

The Defense Department said that the two dead were gunmen and that troops confiscated assault rifles and more than 10 grenades at the scene.

Less than two hours before the shootout, Nuevo Leon Gov. Rodrigo Medina assured citizens that authorities had regained control over the state's highways.

"I've found the highways calm. We ask that if citizens have plans to go out and enjoy these vacations, they should do so," Medina said.

That same day, at least 12 people were killed in separate shootouts in the state of Tamaulipas, which borders Nuevo Leon. Among them were seven gunmen killed while exchanging gunfire with soldiers on the outskirts of Reynosa, state government officials said.

Elsewhere, four severed human heads were found early Wednesday in Apatzingan, a town in the western state of Michoacan. Residents found the heads, with eyes still blindfolded, lined up at the foot of a monument along with a threatening message, state prosecutors said.




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