Obama names 54 suspected Mexican drug traffickers to kingpin list; US can seize, freeze assets
By Martha Mendoza, APWednesday, March 24, 2010
Obama adds 54 alleged traffickers to kingpin list
MEXICO CITY — President Barack Obama’s administration named 54 alleged Mexican drug cartel lieutenants and enforcers as drug kingpins Wednesday under a law that allows the U.S. government to freeze their bank accounts and penalize their business associates.
The action, carried out as part of the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act, involves members of the Gulf Cartel and a gang of former Gulf cartel hit men known as the Zetas, Adam J. Szubin, director of the Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control, said Wednesday in Washington.
Dozens of cartel-related businesses and individuals have already been named, allowing authorities over the past decade to seize $13 million and freeze $3 million in drug-related assets.
The administration’s announcement came the day after top U.S. Cabinet officials led by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton visited Mexico to underscore their shared responsibility for the drug-related violence that has killed 17,900 people since President Felipe Calderon took office in December 2006.
In Ciudad Juarez, the country’s most violent city, just across the border from El Paso, Texas, at least seven people were killed in three shooting attacks.
Two sisters, ages 17 and 19, were slain by gunmen who barged into their home Wednesday afternoon, said state police spokesman Arturo Sandoval.
Moments later, gunmen killed the manager of a factory as he drove toward a military checkpoint, Sandoval said.
The killings followed the murders of four young men who were remodeling a storefront they had rented to a funeral agency when assailants sprayed them with gunfire. The victims included two brothers, a cousin and a friend.
Sandoval said the mother of one of the victims said the youths, aged 17 to 23, had previously received threats from a criminal gang demanding they pay protection money if they wanted to operate the storefront. According to her, the victims refused to pay.
Mexico’s drug gangs often branch out into kidnapping and extortion.
In other violence:
—Police in Tijuana, across the border from San Diego, California, were searching for the killers of a man whose charred and mutilated body was found near the border fence and a second man who was shot to death on a downtown street.
—Also in Tijuana, 150 federal workers poured into the streets following a bomb scare. No bomb was found, and workers returned to their offices within a few hours.
—Officials in the northern border city of Mexicali, fired the city’s police chief, blaming him in part for the alleged failure of police officers to detain a possibly drunk local legislative leader after allegedly finding drugs in his car.
Meanwhile, authorities were investigating the case of a drug suspect who was arrested over the weekend and then turned up dead Monday, his body showing signs of torture. The incident happened in Santa Catarina, a suburb of the northern city of Monterrey.
The police officers who detained the suspect are being investigated, Alejandro Garza y Garza, attorney general of Nuevo Leon state told Milenio television.
Santa Catarina security chief Rene Castillo said he had no knowledge of the case.
“I don’t know anything, I don’t know anything, I don’t know anything. That’s my position,” Castillo told The Associated Press.
Associated Press Writer Olga R. Rodriguez in Mexico City contributed to this report.
Tags: Barack Obama, Central America, Drug-related Crime, Latin America And Caribbean, Mexico, Mexico City, Municipal Governments, North America, Organized Crime, United States, Violent Crime