AP/ January 30, 2012, 11:36 PM

Drug cartel member confesses to 75 murders

A soldier stands guard among marijuana plants at an illegal plantation found during a military operation on Friday at the Culiacan mountains, northern Mexico, Monday, Jan. 30, 2012. The drought in northern Mexico is so bad that it has hurt even illicit drug growers and their normally well-tended crops of marijuana and opium poppies, Gen. Pedro Gurrola, commander of army forces in the state of Sinaloa, said Monday.

A soldier stands guard among marijuana plants at an illegal plantation found during a military operation on Friday at the Culiacan mountains, northern Mexico, Monday, Jan. 30, 2012. The drought in northern Mexico is so bad that it has hurt even illicit drug growers and their normally well-tended crops of marijuana and opium poppies, Gen. Pedro Gurrola, commander of army forces in the state of Sinaloa, said Monday. / AP Photo

MONTERREY, Mexico - Police in northern Mexico have captured an alleged member of the Zetas drug gang who confessed to killing at least 75 people, including many who were pulled off buses, authorities said Monday.

Enrique Elizondo Flores told investigators 36 of his victims were bus passengers traveling through the town of Cerralvo, near the border with Texas, said Nuevo Leon state security spokesman Jorge Domene.

Elizondo was detained Jan. 20 in the town of Salinas Victoria, but authorities delayed announcing his arrest so they could verify details of his confession, state Attorney General Adrian de la Garza said.

Domene said the 35-year-old suspect told investigators that he had been working in the area at least three years and that he was in charge of killing members of the rival Gulf drug cartel heading to the towns of Cerralvo and General Trevino.

Elizondo and other gunmen last January began pulling passengers off buses as they arrived at Cerralvo's bus station, Domene said. They are among at least 92 bus passengers the Zetas are accused of killing in three attacks in January and March 2011. Many the victims were originally from the central state of Guanajuato and had arrived in Cerralvo from the border city of Reynosa, Domene said.

Mexican ambassador in Venezuela kidnap drama
More gunwalker questions for Attorney General Holder
Border Patrol targets revolving door to Mexico

Elizondo was known "for torturing, maiming and then killing his victims," Domene said.

Last year, authorities in the neighboring state of Tamaulipas unearthed 193 bodies from clandestine graves in the town of San Fernando. Security forces said they were led to the site by members of the Zetas who confessed to kidnapping and killing bus passengers traveling through the area.

The motive for the bus abductions remains unclear. Prosecutors have suggested the gang may be forcefully recruiting people to work for it or trying to kill rivals they suspected were aboard the buses.

Northeastern Mexico has been engulfed by a turf battle between the Gulf Cartel and the Zetas since they split in 2010.

More than 47,000 people have been killed nationwide since President Felipe Calderon launched a crackdown against drug traffickers in December 2006.

Global Financial Integrity, a program of the Center for International Policy, a Washington-based think tank, said Monday that its analysis found that $872 billion in proceeds from crime, corruption and money-laundering had flowed out of Mexico in the four decades from 1970 to 2010.

In the border city of Ciudad Juarez, police officers killed three men and detained a fourth Monday after being attacked at a gas station, authorities said.

The officers were refueling their patrol cars at a gas station a few blocks from the Zaragoza border crossing into El Paso, Texas, when they were attacked, a police statement said. The officers returned fire, killing three assailants, and they also seized two assault rifles, two handguns and a hand grenade, it said.

Last week, messages signed by the New Juarez drug cartel and left in several parts of the city claimed Police Chief Julian Leyzaola is favoring a rival cartel. It said that one officer would be killed daily if their members continue to be arrested. Five police officers have been killed since.

Leyzaola was not immediately available to comment on Monday's attack.

In a public appearance over the weekend, Mayor Hector Murguia said the recent string of attacks on law enforcement officers was a response from criminals affected by Leyzaola's work.

"Go downtown, there are no more brothels where drugs used to be sold," he said, referring to a police crackdown in downtown Juarez as part of the city's efforts to combat crime.

As a safety measure, police officers are now required to leave precincts wearing street clothes and are allowed to take their guns home. The city also is considering plans to rent hotels to quarter all the police force.

In 2009, then Police Chief Roberto Orduna quit after several police officers were killed and their bodies dumped along with messages saying more officers would be killed unless he resigned.

Leyzaola is no stranger to threats. Shortly after he was hired in 2011, the body of a tortured man was left in a street with a message to Leyzaola that read, "This is your first gift."

In April 2009, when he was police chief in western border city of Tijuana, drug traffickers took over police radio frequencies to say that if he didn't quit, many police officers would die.

A few days after, seven officers were killed in separate but coordinated attacks. Drug traffickers took over the police radio frequencies again to say their threat had been carried out.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
10 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
smittyc says:
I wish the prisons would stop allowing the inmates to promote legalizing drugs on these sites. Drugs are against the law and drug traffikings results in other crimes, robbery and murder, in many cases those murdered are own law enforcement.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
malcolm-kyle says:
Some simple facts:

* A rather large majority of people will always feel the need to use drugs, such as heroin, opium, nicotine, amphetamines, alcohol, sugar, or caffeine.

* Just as it was impossible to prevent alcohol from being produced and used in the U.S. in the 1920s, so too, it is equally impossible to prevent any of the aforementioned drugs from being produced and widely used by those who desire to do so.

* Due to Prohibition (historically proven to be an utter failure at every level), the availability of most of these mood-altering drugs has become so universal and unfettered that in any city of the civilized world, any one of us would be able to procure practically any drug we wish within an hour.

* The massive majority of people who use drugs do so recreationally - getting high at the weekend then up for work on a Monday morning.

* A small minority of people will always experience drug use as problematic.

* Throughout history, the prohibition of any mind-altering substance has always exploded usage rates, overcrowded jails, fueled organized crime, created rampant corruption of law-enforcement - even whole governments, while inducing an incalculable amount of suffering and death.

* The involvement of the CIA in running Heroin from Vietnam, Southeast Asia and Afghanistan and Cocaine from Central America has been well documented by the 1989 Kerry Committee report, academic researchers Alfred McCoy and Peter Dale Scott, and the late journalist Gary Webb.

* It's not even possible to keep drugs out of prisons, but prohibitionists wish to waste hundreds of billions of our money in an utterly futile attempt to keep them off our streets.

* Prohibition kills more people and ruins more lives than the prohibited drugs have ever done.

* The United States jails a larger percentage of it's own citizens than any other country in the world, including those run by the worst totalitarian regimes, yet it has far higher use/addiction rates than most other countries.

* The urge to save humanity is almost always a false-face for the urge to rule it.
- H. L. Mencken (1880-1956) American editor, essayist and philologist.
reply
voiceofthepast replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
In 1906 there were 5% of drug users who were dysfunctional. The same number as today. You could get your heroin, coke, opium and that wonderful invention, the hypodermic needle, from your sears wish book. The only thing Prohibition does is kill innocent people,promote crime, and give us the longest American war; 106 years of it.Face it; we lost this one too. The only positive side to Prohibition is that it is the only current job growth industry for the inner city. You can't make a living working at Burger King. Just think of the billions of tax dollars that would be saved every year, and the billions of tax dollars in new revenue; not to mention the millions of new jobs produced. Legalize and regulate in the same manner as the current legal drugs; alcohol and tobacco; and tax at every level,fed, state,county, and city; like everything else we use from food to oil.Think of the jobs and potential reclamation of difficult arid land that is currently unusable. Build wind generators on the downward slopes of the Sierra Madras to generate energy and pump water. Systematically reclaim the desert with this hearty crop and then convert the now usable land into strawberry and other food crop production, while moving the Wacky weed crops further east. Sound like a plan? Nevada,Arizona, and New Mexico could be the fruit-basket of America. Think about it.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
nighttalk says:
Nobody seems to want to deal with the facts...close the borders...keep these people in their own country...why does our country have to be so nice?...catch an illegal...kick his/her ass back across the border...simple...then close the door again...their country...their problem...deal with it pedro...
reply
FormerUSMCSergeant replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Probably because no border can be "closed".

Look at the Berlin Wall - 16' high, 8' thick, solid concrete and guards with automatic weapons and STK orders.

Didn't stop 'em.......
expatriate2 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Then Mexico should arrest the 600,000 Americans living within its borders illegally, kick their ***** across the border and close the door again so that the druggies north of the border won't send the millions of dollars in drug sales into the hands of the cartels while the government is busy supplying them with arms. How do you like those facts?
linkicon reporticon emailicon
bradkt1 says:
Drug gang murderers should just be taken up in a helicopter and tossed out like they are garbage...

...because they are. The world is better off without them.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
askagain says:
It is amazing how brazen these murderers are. Mexico should enter into a deal with the United States where, when caught, these people would be sent thousands of miles away from Mexico and housed in specially built prisons in the United States in exchange for paying the costs of housing them. This would stimulate construction which would employ contractors, construction companies, construction workers, and provide jobs for jail guards, prison adminstrators, doctors, and indutries that are needed to feed and clothe these criminals.
reply
ricscore replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Are you insane? Next thing that would happen is that lawyers would be lining up to represent these animals to get them out of jail. Then these sum bags will be let loose into an already out of control illegal alien population drawing money from the already over taxed American citizens. Sounds like Obama talking.
thechooch1 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
ricscore you do realize that your President has deported more illegal aliens than the past administration?
Scroll Left Scroll Right