Mexico extradites alleged cartel member to U.S.

Eduardo Arellano Felix, aka 'the Doctor' one of the alleged leaders of the notorious Arellano Felix drug trafficking cartel, is presented during a press conference In Mexico City, on October 27, 2008. / LUIS ACOSTA/AFP/Getty Images
Updated 5:38 PM ET
(AP) SAN DIEGO - Mexico extradited Eduardo Arellano-Felix to the United States Friday, marking what one U.S. official said was the end of a 20-year investigation into the once-mighty drug cartel headed by his older brother.
Arellano Felix, 55, arrived in the United States and will make an initial court appearance Tuesday in San Diego on charges of narcotics trafficking, racketeering and money laundering, said Laura Duffy, the U.S. attorney in San Diego, who built her career on the case.
A 2003 federal indictment calls Eduardo Arellano Felix "the senior advisor" to his older brother, Benjamin, who headed the Tijuana, Mexico-based organization from its beginnings in the late 1980s until his arrest in 2002 in Mexico. In April, Benjamin Arellano Felix was sentenced to 25 years in prison in San Diego after being extradited last year.
Eduardo Arellano Felix was arrested in October 2008 in a Saturday night shootout with Mexican authorities at his Tijuana home that was witnessed by his 11-year-old daughter. Duffy said Mexico granted extradition in 2010, which was followed by two years of unsuccessful appeals by Arellano Felix.
The indictment says Eduardo was involved in all major cartel decisions, including moving drugs into the United States, distributing them on American soil and kidnapping and murdering rivals.
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration poured massive resources into pursuing the Arellano Felix clan as it moved tons of Mexican marijuana and Colombian cocaine across California's borders in the 1990s and well into the 2000s and killed untold scores of rivals.
"The extradition of Eduardo Arellano Felix today marks the end of a 20-year DEA investigation into this vicious drug cartel," said William Sherman, acting special agent in charge of the DEA in San Diego.
The cartel was severely weakened after Benjamin was arrested in 2002 and another brother, Ramon, was killed that year in a shootout with Mexican authorities. U.S. officials have described Benjamin as the mastermind and Ramon as the main enforcer.
Javier, another brother who inherited the helm after Benjamin's arrest, was captured by the U.S. Coast Guard on a fishing boat in international waters off the Mexican coast in 2006 and sentenced to life in prison in 2007 in San Diego.
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Now that he is out of the way all the drugs should be gone by about 2pm this afternoon.
The drug war does not work.
Register to vote to legalize in Colorado, Oregon and Washington.
A win will make the international drug laws null and void.
War is Over!
2012!
Did I mention, ending the prohibition of pot could result in millions of jobs and billions in tax revenue.
Anyone who thinks pot can only be used for smoking needs to have their heads examined. Or PICK UP A HISTORY BOOK.
I've personally met children from Europe who know and understand American History, better than most American adults. That is sad.
....Education and regulation are the answers. Our government through it's very outdated prohibition laws will result in continuing violence...via drug cartels and released violent offenders.
the American people need to DEMAND our overlords end this failed war on drugs.
How many more Mexicans need to die. How many more children in the U.S. need to be violently raped?... Prohibition supports criminals and crooked politicians. Period.