Borderland Beat posted by DD, republished from NYT
By GINGER THOMPSON
His two worlds collided spectacularly in 1997, when Mexico arrested the general,
Jesús Gutiérrez Rebollo, on charges of collaborating with drug
traffickers. As Washington tried to make sense of the charges, both
governments went looking for Mr. López. Mexico considered him a suspect
in the case; the D.E.A. saw him as a potential gold mine of information.
The reserved, unpretentious husband and father of three has been a
fugitive ever since, on the run from his native country and abandoned by
his adopted home. For more than a decade, he has carried information
about the inner workings of the drug war that both governments carefully
kept secret.
Mr. López served nearly two decades in the municipal police department
there, most of them as chief. Politically astute and streetwise, he
caught the attention of the D.E.A., which developed him as a
confidential source during the mid-1990s and valued him for the
reliability of his information.
In General Gutiérrez, who had the face and demeanor of a pit bull, the
United States saw the no-nonsense partner it had been seeking. The
administration invited him to Washington for briefings, and the United
States’ drug policy coordinator, Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey, praised him as a soldier “of absolute, unquestioned integrity.”
The Justice Department ordered the D.E.A. to explain how it could have
missed evidence that General Gutiérrez was dirty. The D.E.A. turned to
Mr. Villarruel, who began looking for Mr. López.
Later that year, Mr. Villarruel asked Mr. López to meet him at a Denny’s
in San Diego. Mr. López could tell something was amiss when Mr.
Villarruel arrived alone and had a hard time looking Mr. López in the
eye.
The CS, is a close confidant of Ex-INCD Gen. Jesus Gutierrez-Rebollo. The CS provided reliable information of corruption at the highest levels involving the Mexican Military and surrounding the circumstances of the arrest of Gen. Rebollo and the military connection to the Amadao Carrillio-Fuentes Organization. The CS provided information of the corruptive powers of the drug trafficking organizations in both the government and the social infrastructure of Mexico. Several of the CS’s close confidants were executed shortly after the arrest of Gen. Rebollo, including the CS’s attorney.
.
By GINGER THOMPSON
The forecast called for record snowstorms, and Luis Octavio López Vega had no heat in his small hide-out.
Thieves had run off with the propane tanks on the camper that Mr. López
had parked in the shadow of a towering grain elevator, near an abandoned
industrial park. Rust had worn through the floor of his pickup truck,
which he rarely dared to drive because he has neither a license nor
insurance. His colitis was flaring so badly he could barely sit up
straight, a consequence of the breakfast burrito and diet soda that had
become part of his daily diet. He had not worked in months and was down
to his last $250.
Going to a shelter might have opened him to questions about his identity
that he did not want to answer, and reaching out to his family might
have put them at odds with the law.
“I cannot go on like this, living day to day and going nowhere,” Mr.
López, 64, said one night last winter. “I feel like I’m running in
place. After so many years, it’s exhausting.”
Mr. López, a native of Mexico, said in Spanish that he has lived under
the radar in the western United States for more than a decade,
camouflaging himself among the waves of immigrants who came across the
border around the same time. Like so many of his compatriots, he works
an assortment of low-wage jobs available to people without a green card.
But while Mr. López blends into that resilient population with his
calloused hands and thrift-store wardrobe, his predicament goes far
beyond his immigration status.
Mr. López played a leading role in what is widely considered the biggest
drug-trafficking case in Mexican history. The episode — which inspired
the 2000 movie “Traffic” — pitted the Mexican military against the United States Drug Enforcement Administration.
Throughout the 1990s, Mr. López worked closely with them both. He
served as a senior adviser to the powerful general who was appointed
Mexico’s drug czar. And he was an informant for the D.E.A.
photo; Monica Almeica, NYT |
The United States found him first. The D.E.A. secretly helped Mr. López
and his family escape across the border in exchange for his cooperation
with its investigation.
Dozens of hours of testimony from Mr. López about links between the
military and drug cartels proved to be explosive, setting off a dizzying
chain reaction in which Mexico asked the United States for help
capturing Mr. López, Washington denied any knowledge of his whereabouts
and the D.E.A. abruptly severed its ties with him.
photo by Monica Almeica |
The United States continues to feign ignorance about his whereabouts
when pressed by Mexican officials, who still ask for assistance to find
him, a federal law enforcement official said.
The cover-up was initially led by the D.E.A., whose agents did not
believe the Mexican authorities had a legitimate case against their
informant. Other law enforcement agencies later went along, out of fear
that the D.E.A.’s relationship with Mr. López might disrupt cooperation
between the two countries on more pressing matters.
“We couldn’t tell Mexico that we were protecting the guy, because that
would have affected their cooperation with us on all kinds of other
programs,” said a former senior D.E.A. official who was involved in the
case but was not authorized to speak publicly about a confidential
informant. “So we cut him loose, and hoped he’d find a way to make it on
his own.”
These are the opaque dynamics that undermine the alliance between the
United States and Mexico in the war on drugs, a fight that often feels
more like shadow boxing. Though the governments are bound together by
geography, neither believes the other can be fully trusted. Mr. López’s
ordeal — pieced together from classified D.E.A. intelligence reports and
interviews with him, his family, friends, and more than a dozen current
and former federal law enforcement officials — demonstrates why the
mutual distrust is justified.
The absence of any facts to either condemn Mr. López or exonerate him of
corruption has wrought havoc on the former informant, and his
fugitive’s existence has been a ball and chain on his family, whom he
sees during sporadic rendezvous. They all exhibit symptoms of emotional
trauma, bouncing among flashes of rage, long periods of depression,
episodes of binge drinking and persistent paranoia.
During several long interviews, Mr. López repeatedly said he was not
guilty of any wrongdoing. He said he has refused to turn himself in to
the Mexican authorities because he believes he will be killed rather
than given a fair hearing. But years of living an anonymous,
circumscribed life have been nearly as suffocating as a jail cell.
He starts most mornings at McDonald’s, where breakfast costs less than
$2 for seniors and free Wi-Fi allows him to peruse Mexican newspapers on
his battered laptop for hours, his mind replaying the life choices that
landed him there.
“I risked my life in Mexico because I believed things could change. I
was wrong. Nothing has changed,” Mr. López said. “I helped the United
States because I believed that if all else failed, this government would
support me. But I was wrong again. And now, I’ve lost everything.”
The Military Steps In
These days, Mr. López wonders whether he is losing his mind as well.
Last September, he took his troubles to a psychiatrist at a health
clinic, telling her how his emotions were running erratically from hot
to cold and about his difficulty sleeping. An hour later, he left with a
diagnosis of bipolar disorder and a bottle of pills he decided not to
take.
Sipping Diet Coke in a sunlit hotel room, Mr. López explained that he
felt it was riskier to become dependent on medication that could be
confiscated if he fell into police custody. More important, he said, the
whole diagnosis was based on a lie — one of the many he tells to get by
each day. When the doctor asked him what might be causing his stress,
he told her that his family had turned against him.
“Imagine telling her what is really going on in my life,” Mr. López
said. “Where would I start? That I once helped capture El Güero Palma,
and now I’m being treated like a delinquent?”
Ballads were written in Mexico about the day in 1995
when the authorities took down Héctor Luis Palma Salazar, known as “El
Güero,” the fearsome kingpin of the Sinaloa cartel. Mr. Palma met his
fate on the outskirts of Guadalajara in suburban Zapopan, a nexus for
everybody who was anybody in the drug war.
Mr Lopez, far left. Photo; Monica Alameica |
Drug violence was raging. When things got too heated, Mr. López sought
backup from General Gutiérrez, a powerful ally whose territory spanned
five Mexican states. It was part of a secret arrangement, Mr. López
said, in which his officers shared information about the cartels with
the military and the general provided extra muscle to the Zapopan
police.
At home, Mr. López’s wife and three children lived surrounded by
bodyguards and snipers. With her husband often absent, Soledad López had
her hands full with the children. Their oldest child, David, got his
high school girlfriend pregnant. Luis Octavio failed eighth grade three
times. Cecilia, the youngest, did not understand the tumult around her,
and Mrs. López worked to protect her from it.
By the time Mr. Palma crossed his path, Mr. López had retired to start a
private security firm. Mr. Palma had been on his way to a wedding when
his private plane crashed in the mountains near Zapopan. Federal police
officers who were on the Sinaloa payroll swept him from the scene and
hid him in a house belonging to a supervisor.
Héctor Luis Palma Salazar, the fearsome kingpin of the Sinaloa cartel, after his arrest in 1995. Mr. López helped capture Mr. Palma, also known as "El Güero." |
When Mr. López’s security guards began receiving reports of suspicious
activity there, they alerted him and the military. No one realized they
had stumbled across one of the world’s most notorious drug traffickers
until Mr. López discovered a .45 Colt with the shape of a palm tree, or
“palma,” encrusted on its handle in diamonds, rubies and sapphires.
“It could only belong to one person,” Mr. López said.
The arrest was hailed on both sides of the border to justify the
unprecedented role the Mexican military was beginning to play under
President Ernesto Zedillo. The D.E.A. had long been pressuring Mexico to
deploy the military against the cartels instead of the federal police,
which often worked with traffickers instead of against them.
The agency was already secretly collaborating with General Gutiérrez.
Ralph Villarruel, a veteran D.E.A. agent who had been working with Mr.
López, said he pursued suspects the general believed were in hiding in
the United States and seized loads of cocaine moving across the border.
In return, he said, the general allowed him “unbelievable access” to
crime scenes, suspects and evidence.
After Mr. Palma’s arrest, Mr. López and General Gutiérrez let Mr.
Villarruel make copies of names and numbers in the drug trafficker’s
cellphone. An appreciative Mr. Villarruel said he arranged with his
bosses in Mexico City to award the general a special commendation.
“We were doing things we hadn’t ever been able to do, and I wanted to
acknowledge that,” Mr. Villarruel said, pulling out a photograph of the
closed-door occasion.
By December 1996, Mr. Zedillo elevated General Gutiérrez to run
counternarcotics efforts as the director of Mexico’s National Institute
to Combat Drugs. The move was a victory for the administration of
President Bill Clinton, which had put in effect the North American Free Trade Agreement
and orchestrated a $50 billion bailout of the Mexican economy. Cracking
down on drug traffickers hardly seemed too much to ask of the United
States’ neighbor.
General Gutiérrez was appointed Mexico's drug czar but was later arrested on charges of collaborating with drug traffickers. |
It seemed a head-spinning turn of events for a little-known military
leader who could count his suits on one hand and had never traveled
outside Mexico. When the general asked Mr. López to be his chief of
staff, though, he was apprehensive about moving to the capital. But the
general insisted.
“Going to work in Mexico City felt like falling into a snake pit,” Mr.
López said. “I had a bad feeling about the whole thing.”
‘There’s a Problem’
Less than three months later, Mr. López was in Guadalajara for the birth
of a grandchild when he suspected something had happened to his boss.
He had been calling General Gutiérrez for days without success. Finally,
he got the general’s driver on the phone.
“I don’t know where he is,” the driver said, according to Mr. López.
“You shouldn’t call here anymore. I can’t talk on this phone. Perhaps
they’re already listening. What the hell, you need to know. There’s a
problem.”
“It’s global,” the driver exhaled.
When Mr. López hung up and called the military base in Guadalajara, the
commander there summoned him to a “counternarcotics operation.”
“I didn’t know exactly what was going on,” Mr. López said, “but I knew that a trap was waiting for me at the base.”
He told his family to leave Zapopan and warned his aides to stay away
from the base. For several days, Mr. López kept out of sight, camping
out in abandoned barns and beneath bridges while the military seized his
house and searched his belongings.
On Feb. 19, 1997, the Mexican defense minister, Enrique Cervantes
Aguirre, held a dramatic televised news conference and accused General
Gutiérrez of using his authority to help protect Amado Carrillo Fuentes,
a drug baron nicknamed “The Lord of the Skies,” for his use of
converted jetliners to move multiton shipments of cocaine.
The defense minister said that when General Gutiérrez was confronted
with evidence of the association, he collapsed from what appeared to be a
heart attack.
With checkpoints going up around Guadalajara, it seemed impossible for
Mr. López to leave, and he was so well known he feared he could not hide
for long. Borrowing a page from the drug trafficker’s playbook, Mr.
López went to see a plastic surgeon to alter his appearance. Using a
false name, he handed the surgeon $2,000 in cash and got a face-lift.
In Washington, the Clinton administration summoned Mexican diplomats,
demanding to know why their government had not shared its suspicions
about General Gutiérrez before his trip to the United States. Congress
called on the White House to void Mexico’s standing as a reliable ally
in the drug war, a move that could lead to sanctions against a country
buying up American exports. The episode threatened security cooperation
between the two countries.
Mr. Villarruel while stationed in Guadalajara, Mexico, in the mid-1980s. |
Most of Mr. López’s staff members had disappeared, said Mr. Villarruel,
who learned that the military had rounded them up for questioning and
that some of them had been tortured or worse. “My sources were dropping
like flies,” said Mr. Villarruel, a veteran agent and native of East
Chicago, Ind., who has family roots in Guadalajara. “One day I’d be
talking to a guy, the next day he’d be dead.”
The D.E.A.’s message reached Mr. López in May 1997, just as he and his
family thought they had run out of options. The scars around his face
had healed and he had dropped 70 pounds, trading his “Vitamin T diet” —
tacos, tostadas and tamales — for salads and turkey sandwiches. He had
dyed his hair blond and shaved his beard. Still, he said he feared the
military would eventually catch up with him.
Meanwhile, his family was struggling with an even more pressing matter.
The grandchild born around the time of the general’s arrest was sick.
Her complexion was turning blue and her breathing was labored.
The family was so terrified of being discovered that it agonized for
days before taking the child to the hospital. Doctors diagnosed
pulmonary stenosis, which restricted the blood flowing to her lungs. She
was breathing easier after surgery, but her father, David, was not. “I
knew she was going to need a lot more care,” he said. “How could I take
care of her if I couldn’t even give her a home?”
Only 22, he was now the de facto head of a family on the run. For
safety’s sake, he was the only one who knew his father’s whereabouts, a
secret he hoped he could keep if the military found him.
“I remember telling my dad, ‘If the military detains me, give me three
days,’ ” he recalled. “The first day of torture would be the hardest.
The second day, they might realize I was not going to tell them where he
was and let me go. But if I didn’t appear the third day, I might never
appear again.”
Later that May, the D.E.A. opened an escape hatch, offering the family a
haven in the United States and arranging work permits and visas. Making
the trip were Mr. López’s wife, three children, daughter-in-law and two
grandchildren. The family members made their way to Utah, where they
had a friend.
Mr. López followed a couple weeks later. Wearing a navy blue suit and a
fedora he bought for the journey, he arrived in the United States with a
briefcase packed with his life’s savings, $100,000, and visions of
starting over.
On the Run
This January, Mr. López and his son Luis Octavio headed to Wendy’s for a
99-cent hamburger special. When his son handed over two dollars for
their order, a few cents short of the total, an embarrassed Mr. López
had to tell him that he could not cover the difference.
Money, or the lack of it, has been the hardest part of living in hiding,
Mr. López said. His savings ran out long ago, and most employers are
not interested in a 64-year-old man with no Social Security
card or documented work history. He has tried day jobs as a dishwasher
and a construction worker, but his back is not strong enough.
Fortunately, he said, he has an eye for junk. He inherited it from his
father, who ran a car battery repair shop. Mr. López has taken that
talent up a notch, scavenging for discarded auto parts, office equipment
and home appliances that he restores and resells. But it is always a
skate across thin ice, and Mr. López wakes up many days with no money
and nothing left to sell.
His dire circumstances reflect a precipitous fall from his arrival in
the United States as a prized informant. The inside account he gave to
Mr. Villarruel and other D.E.A. officials amounted to a bombshell,
according to former agents involved with the case and classified
intelligence reports obtained by The New York Times.
He claimed that the Mexican military was negotiating a deal to protect
the cartels in exchange for a cut of their profits. Mr. López
specifically accused several top officers of being involved, saying some
had asked the cartels for $2,000 per kilogram of cocaine that passed
through Mexican territory.
As a down payment, cartel operatives delivered satchels packed with tens
of millions of dollars to senior members of the military, according to
Mr. López. He also accused American-trained counternarcotics units of
allowing kingpins to escape during sting operations.
“It is highly likely that military officials probably wanted to continue
to profit from an ongoing relationship with the drug traffickers,”
concluded one intelligence report.
Mr. López said he told the D.E.A. that he did not believe General
Gutiérrez was among those conspiring with traffickers. But the
intelligence reports suggested that the general had ties to the Juárez
cartel, and that the relationship may have posed a threat to other
military officers who were being paid by rival drug-trafficking
organizations.
By 1998, some of that information began appearing in Congressional
briefings and newspaper reports, pitting the D.E.A. against the White
House. It was inopportune timing for the Clinton administration, which
was now applauding the general’s arrest as proof of the Mexican
military’s commitment to combating corruption.
The White House opposed any measures that would undermine the United
States’ second-largest trading partner. The D.E.A. accused Mexico of
failing to live up to its security commitments, and it advocated taking
action that could lead to economic sanctions. “There was definitely a
split between us and the White House over Mexico,” a former senior
D.E.A. official said.
Mexico, which was still trying to track down Mr. López, intensified its
search in 1999. The Foreign Ministry requested Washington’s assistance
to determine whether he lived in the United States, a senior American
federal law enforcement official said. United States marshals reported
back that he did.
Mr. Villarruel, now retired from the D.E.A., has kept in contact with Mr. López and is unhappy with the way his onetime informant was treated by the agency. photo; Monica Almeica , NYT |
“I told him I had orders from Washington that I couldn’t have anything
to do with him no more,” Mr. Villarruel recalled. “I could tell there
was some kind of pressure, but I couldn’t tell if it was from Congress,
or from Mexico, or where. All I knew was that if I had anything more to
do with him, I could get in trouble.”
The orders meant that “from that moment, the agency wasn’t going to
protect me or my family,” said Mr. López, who was shocked and confused.
When Mexico ousted the Institutional Revolutionary Party
in 2000, an era of multiparty democracy did not clean the slate. The
new government officially charged Mr. López, issuing an arrest warrant,
and promptly asked the United States to find him, former American
officials said.
Mexican officials discussed the matter with the American attorney
general and the secretary of state at the time, John Ashcroft and Colin
L. Powell, according to D.E.A. memos and e-mails. Federal marshals
received two to three calls a day from the Mexican authorities asking
how close they were to detaining Mr. López, one memo shows.
Mr. Villarruel implored the D.E.A. to ignore Mexico’s extradition
request. Mr. López is “one of a few individuals remaining who can
provide extremely damaging information on high-level, drug-related
corruption within the Mexican government,” Mr. Villarruel wrote to his
bosses. He warned that “if López Vega is returned to Mexican
authorities, it is highly likely that López Vega will be tortured and/or
killed.”
But D.E.A. officials refused to interfere with the arrest warrant.
Defying orders, Mr. Villarruel warned Mr. López to watch his back.
About five months later, Mr. López was meeting his sons at a relative’s
house in California when he noticed suspicious people hanging out in the
neighborhood. He immediately jumped in a car and sped away.
Seconds later, SWAT teams, canine units and helicopters from the federal
marshal’s office descended. Officers tried to catch up with Mr. López
but failed.
“I had a 20-second head start,” Mr. López said. “When you’re on the run, 20 seconds is a lot of time.”
*****************************************************************************
Excerpts From D.E.A. E-Mails Discussing the Case
JAN. 22, 2002, 11:32 A.M.
(Mexico
asked the United States to detain and extradite Luis Octavio López
Vega. A Drug Enforcement Administration agent explains the agency’s
relationship with Mr. López, referred to as CS, or confidential source)
DEA agent responds to superiors;.
DEA agent responds to superiors;.
The CS, is a close confidant of Ex-INCD Gen. Jesus Gutierrez-Rebollo. The CS provided reliable information of corruption at the highest levels involving the Mexican Military and surrounding the circumstances of the arrest of Gen. Rebollo and the military connection to the Amadao Carrillio-Fuentes Organization. The CS provided information of the corruptive powers of the drug trafficking organizations in both the government and the social infrastructure of Mexico. Several of the CS’s close confidants were executed shortly after the arrest of Gen. Rebollo, including the CS’s attorney.
JAN. 24, 2002, 11:54 A.M.
(Mexico,
referred to as GOM, or government of Mexico, presses the United States
for answers about Mr. López. The D.E.A. tries to determine how to
respond.)
We need to know what Mexico is requesting (material witness warrant or criminal extradition) and who in the GOM is asking for the arrest. Do they want to interview the CS or charge him with a crime? Who is looking to get the CS arrested? I don’t want to start asking without knowing the answers to these questions as it would be readily apparent that we are in touch with the CS . Please get back to me soonest.
We need to know what Mexico is requesting (material witness warrant or criminal extradition) and who in the GOM is asking for the arrest. Do they want to interview the CS or charge him with a crime? Who is looking to get the CS arrested? I don’t want to start asking without knowing the answers to these questions as it would be readily apparent that we are in touch with the CS . Please get back to me soonest.
JAN. 24, 2002, 12:32 P.M.
(The pressure from Mexico intensifies as it takes its request to the United States attorney general, referred to as AG).
I’m sending this to you, as Ralph has heard
that GOM has placed the highest priority on CS’ arrest, and GOM has
contacted the AG directly in this case. This of course will start the
downward spiral of phone calls, and we may be contacted.
No one seems to know what charges tile GOM has brought against CS....Ralph is concerned for CS’ safety, and doesn’t know how GOM found out CS was in US......
No one seems to know what charges tile GOM has brought against CS....Ralph is concerned for CS’ safety, and doesn’t know how GOM found out CS was in US......
JAN. 24, 2002, 4:03 P.M.
(The Office of International Affairs at the D.E.A., referred to as OIA, finds that the United States extradition treaty with Mexico requires Washington to surrender Mr. López despite concerns that he would be killed if returned. Agents raise the possibility of an “extralegal” solution. The D.E.A. notes that Mexico’s request has been sent to the United States attorney’s office, referred to as USAO, and the United States Marshals Service, referred to as USMS.)
Note: The extradition treaty does not
entitle the US to refuse the CS’ surrender to Mexico for the reason that
he might be killed upon his return, so if there’s to be a solution, it
would have to be outside the treaty, extralegal/diplomatic and
hopefully, OIA can come up with something.
The extradition request is already in the hands of the USAO in Utah and the USMS has the CS’ house under surveillance.
***************************************************************************
Adjusting to a New Life
Off screen, the real-life version headed in an unhappier direction. After Mr. López went into hiding, the American government revoked his family’s visas and work permits, forcing them into their own kind of stealth existence among Utah’s growing population of Mexican immigrants.
Mr. López’s wife Soledad, suddenly had to fend for herself, learn
English and get a job. Soledad , 57, lives with their children and grandchildren in Utah. They were granted political asylum in 2011.
Their daughter, Cecilia, began drinking and dropped out of college, hoping that if she rebelled enough her father would return.
The couple’s sons, David and Luis Octavio, managed the family’s affairs
and bore the brunt of the psychological trauma. “We’re all damaged,”
said Luis Octavio, 35. “We don’t talk much about the times when we wish
we could run away from our situation. But we’ve all felt that way.”
In the aftermath of the raid in California, the brothers fended off
questions from federal marshals who pointed guns in their faces and
threatened to deport them unless they revealed their father’s location.
The extradition request is already in the hands of the USAO in Utah and the USMS has the CS’ house under surveillance.
***************************************************************************
Adjusting to a New Life
As Mr. López and his family contended with their new lives in the United
States, a story with similar twists and turns began playing in movie
theaters across the country.
The film, “Traffic,”
was hailed as a landmark for dissecting the cross-border forces driving
the drug war. It featured the United States pinning its hopes on a
mercurial Mexican general, inspired by General Gutiérrez, who is later
caught working for the cartels.
The general was allied with a Mexican police officer, played by Benicio
Del Toro, who crosses the borderand gives information to the D.E.A. The
character was a composite of informants developed with the help of a
D.E.A. consultant and was not modeled on Mr. López, whose existence has
never been acknowledged by the American government. The film ends with
the officer returning to Mexico and using the money the agency paid him
to have lights installed at a baseball field in a poor neighborhood.
Off screen, the real-life version headed in an unhappier direction. After Mr. López went into hiding, the American government revoked his family’s visas and work permits, forcing them into their own kind of stealth existence among Utah’s growing population of Mexican immigrants.
Their daughter, Cecilia, began drinking and dropped out of college, hoping that if she rebelled enough her father would return.
David on left, Luis Octavio on right |
For the next few years, the elder son, David, followed his father into
hiding, rarely seeing his own wife and children. His movements
underground were like something out of a spy novel. By day, he worked
odd jobs. In the evenings, he ducked into gas stations, changed clothes
and hired taxis so he could see his father without being followed. He
created a code for their pager communications and rented places to hide.
“I promised him I would stand by his side until this whole thing was
over,” recalled David, 38. “I had no idea it would go on for so long.”
In Utah, Luis Octavio worked two jobs to help support his family.
Because he had married an American after arriving in Utah, he did not
have to worry about deportation. But he tried to find a legal way out of
the ordeal for the others.
In 2002, he met with the same federal marshals who were looking for his
father, hoping to make the case that the elder Mr. López had been
betrayed by the D.E.A. One marshal, Michael Wingert, told Luis Octavio
that he sympathized, but that the United States could not shield his
father from the Mexican charges, according to a recording of the meeting
made by Luis Octavio.
“We can only assume with a case like this that your dad’s got some
enemies in really powerful positions in Mexico, and they want him back,”
Mr. Wingert said.
Several years later, in 2007, the López family made their own power
play. They shared their story with aides to Senator Orrin G. Hatch, the
former chairman of the influential Judiciary Committee. The senator’s
staff members in Salt Lake City would not comment on their role, except
to say that they referred the matter to the Justice and Homeland
Security Departments, which helped the family obtain political asylum in
2011.
By then, David had returned home to Utah, where his wife gave birth to
their third child. With no consistent work history, he has not been able
to find a full-time job.
Luis Octavio got a bachelor’s degree and a recruitment job at a college.
But his family’s history continues to hold him back. Last year, when he
was profiled in a local newspaper as a model of how much Mexican
immigrants have contributed to Utah, he lied about why his family came
to this country. When approached about possibly taking a business trip
to Guadalajara recently, he was tempted to go, if only out of defiance.
“I feel a tremendous sense of impotence,” he said, “and the only tool I
have to cope with that feeling is to separate myself, and act like my
father’s situation doesn’t exist.”
The Pursuit Continues
Mr. López had settled into a booth at McDonald’s one recent morning when
his cellphone rang. A woman on the line said she had a recorded message
for him. The next voice he heard belonged to General Gutiérrez.
“They tried to finish me, but they didn’t succeed. I’m still here,” the
general said, his voice barely above a whisper, according to Mr. López.
General Gutiérrez, 88 and suffering from terminal prostate cancer, was
speaking from a bed in the same military hospital where he had collapsed
after his arrest 16 years earlier. He has not quite served half of his
40-year sentence, but he had been released from prison and his relatives
said his rank had been restored so that he could receive military
medical care.
In January, the Mexican government once again raised Mr. López’s case
with the American authorities, according to a Mexican official. The
Justice Department asked for confirmation that the charges against Mr.
López were still valid, and the Mexican government is expected to report
back within the coming weeks, the Mexican official said.
DD. This story was published by the NYT in 2013. I have searched and not found anything about what has happened to Mr. Lopez since then. If any readers have any info please send me an email. We will not publish anything that would put Mr. Lopez in danger.
“Until then,” he said, “the case is not closed, as far as we are concerned.”
The Justice Department and the D.E.A. said they could not comment on a
case that involved a confidential informant. But an American law
enforcement official who has fielded some of Mexico’s requests said
Washington was stalling for time, hoping the charges would be dropped.
The United States is no closer to understanding whether Mr. López is
guilty or the target of Mexican officials who wanted to silence him, the
American official said.
“If it was up to us, we’d make this case go away,” the official said.
“But if Mexico decides it still wants him, I’m not sure how the United
States is going to say no.”
Security cooperation between the United States and Mexico has been strained since December, when Enrique Peña Nieto began his term as president of Mexico.
His administration believes that his predecessor, Felipe Calderón,
allowed the United States to play too big a role in setting Mexico’s
security agenda and in staging law enforcement operations, officials in
both countries said.
Meanwhile, the violence that has left about 60,000 people dead over the
past five years rages on. And the military has been so demoralized by
accusations of corruption and human rights abuses that some of its
leaders openly wonder whether to pull out of the fight against drug
traffickers.
Mr. López religiously tracks these developments during his morning
coffee breaks at McDonald’s, looking for clues that might help him make
sense of his own situation. Mr. Villarruel, now retired from the D.E.A.,
is one of his few contacts from his former life. Mr. López said he sees
public attention as his only hope for a return to something resembling a
normal existence. “For better or worse, it’s time that I defend
myself,” Mr. López said.
When asked what he would do if he ran out of money, Mr. López shrugged
and said he would figure something out. He compares himself to
Prometheus, the Greek mythological figure whose punishment for stealing
fire and giving it to humans was to be tortured, surviving only to face
the same torment the next day.
“Every day is like the first day for me,” he said. “From the moment I
wake up until the moment I lay down, I am thinking, thinking, thinking
about what happened to me. I try to make sense of things that don’t make
sense. And it eats away at me. And it eats away at my family. Then the
next day, I wake up and start all over again.”
That is a very sad story but definitely needed to be told.
ReplyDeleteMr lopez write a book use all the real names....and let the mexican government cook..
ReplyDelete@12:30 AM: Second that! He really must write the tell all book. BB! Go for it! Volunteer to help him write the story!
DeleteSimply Amazing. Thank you BB
ReplyDelete-SouthPhx
General Gutierrez Rebollo's son has been protesting and trying to recover the good name of his father, shouting to the left and to the right that his father IS/WAS INNOCENT...
ReplyDelete--THE ONLY PROBLEM IS THAT HE ALSO SUPPORTS THE MILITARY ARRESTED FOR THE TLATLAYA MURDERS OF CIVILIANS BY THE MEXICAN MILITARY...
--as for Mr lopez, he really stuck it to zedillo's jundillo and his murdering sicariato, he will better fight the extradition to mexico or they will kill him, but why would the US protect so much the mexican governing narco-mierdocracia???
just think about who makes the most $$$$ off drugs? Yes the US
Deletemoney and politics
DeleteThats what he gets for being a rat
ReplyDeleteActually he was outing the rats. He was doing something that most people will not do to help end the violence and corruption. Not enough like him to go around and obviously after reading this story the DEA will loose the help of people that could help them. Lesson is to not trust the USA or Mexico by helping them. The people in Mexico are screwed according to this report. Unless you are in government, or one of the drug cartels that is protected by them.
Delete2:42 This "rat" threatens the mexican government, the US drops him, the saintly DEA falls down on its knees to protect "other deals" with the mexican governing narco-mierdocracia, and you take the side of the bigger RATS?
DeleteDD, is there a way that I can communicate with you, email address? Regarding an article.
ReplyDeleteSoliado. write me at dad4bb@yahoo.com
DeleteGood Work DD!
ReplyDeleteThis is the reason why so many people don't stand up to the Mexican government. So instead they resort to other methods to combat their problems. In the end it's all about survival. Survival by any means necessary. - El Soldado Perdido
ReplyDeleteMr Villarreal needs to know that "old soldiers do not die, they just fade away"...Mc Arthur
ReplyDeleteYou don't just retire and leave your men hanging, while you enjoy your healthy pension and retirement...
--zedillo's fundillo is now a "harvard" professor like "fecal"calderon, clinton owns
$500 000 000.00 million dollars in "donations" to his foundation, general enrique cervantes who took over weapons and drug trafficking from general Rebollo's hands in partnership with zedillo's jundillo in mexico, and their US partners are doing wonderfully...
--while DEA agent Villaruel steams in his frustration and Mr lopez picks scrap iron and cans and junk for his troubles and gets called a "rat"? Here on BB? Really?
Great article, lesson learn never help the government after your used they kick you to the curb. They do it to there own as well. Said, you have a better chance going to court and fighting it , than to live life Mr.Lopez . . .
ReplyDeleteYou sir have written REAL Journalism. Unlike the current media(bull shit hypocrisy) . Your story written and produced to the media could help mr Lopez cause. This is the problem with politics and war. Once your purpose is completed you are shoved aside ask any veteran.
ReplyDeleteI'm a veteran and I've never been shoved aside and forgotten. So I call bullshit on your comment. I've worked both as a soldier and as a civilian contractor for the Department of Defense. Never have I been denied any medical benefits or disability entitlements. And every month the $ comes in without a hitch. Please educate yourself before you open your pie hole out of ignorance. - El Soldado Perdido
DeleteMaybe YOU never threatened the mexican governing narco-mierdocracia or the amerikkkan powers that be, but barry seal got what he had coming, so did a few.other guys, and Guillermo Gonzalez calderon who got pablo acosta killed with
DeleteFBI, CIA, DEA, AND DFS HELP, also got murdered in mysterious circumstances, in the US...your case may be commendable, but not all are the same...
Should of known better than to trust the US Gov...US Gov been screwing people for years. All they do is speak with a forked tongue.
ReplyDeleteSo Mr. Lopez gets boned n demoralized for (being a informant) n the Flores twins get 14yrs n still get to live off there stashed money for (being informants)...they both turned in good info to the DEA, what seemed to be the difference?
ReplyDeleteNegotiation skills
DeleteThe DEA is the only US gov agency that can legally buy and sell drugs in the US, or ouside, anybody else doing that IS A CRIMINAL, INCLUDING THE CIA...
Delete--The flores twins are with DEA, bossed around by CIA agents, DEA is showing CIA who is the big pussy there...
The lucky ones retire with millions or million$ pensions.
ReplyDeleteLike the War on Drugs the rest are failures, dead or retire to a prison.
And the phoney War on Drugs continues on its failed path...of course, except fot those on million $ pensions or retire with millions!
My father once told me. Everyone chooses their own road. Taking a life doesn't make you a man. Being in the drug game doesn't make you a man. You become a man when you get caught. And keep your mouth shut.
ReplyDelete3:01 Daddy must have got a lot of dirt in his closet...
DeleteZedillo and his defense secretary general enrique cervantes we're the worst drug and weapons traffickers in their time, and they took down amado carrillo fuentes for benefit of the afo and Jorge hank rohn and the golfas and the beltranes...
--Now el jundillo de zedillo is a learned harvard professor of kissing ass...and fecal too.
Fuck yeah! You are the only one that chose that road for yourself, you knew the consequences. So keep your mouth SHUT n dont bitch about it!.
DeleteI couldn't finish this story.
ReplyDeleteToo long :-(
3:45 And there are 'nother 49 shades, plus 50, plus 50, plus 50...
Delete@3:45 I'll try to put the next one in a comic book format so you can finish it.
Delete3:45pm go back to Reading Rainbow then.
DeleteNo comics, just give 3:45 one finger salute...
DeleteNo one forcing you to come to BB,
DeleteI read it all. Interesting story too.
This is one crazy story. Feel sorry for him. Goes to show how governments use people one day, and turn there backs on them the next day. I'm sure he's not the only one its happened to.
ReplyDeleteInteresting story. The only part I find to be a bit unbelievable is that the US was concerned Mexico would not cooperate on more pressing issues, so they cut him loose. What does Mexico have that the US wants other than capos? It is apparent they aren't cooperating with that hardly. Also does this now put Mr. Lopez at more risk now that it is disclosed he is in the US?
ReplyDeletePemex, wind farms, tourism resorts, under age sex toys, gold and silver mines, land air and water, corrupt politicians, drug making facilities, stores for Walmart to take over, land from protected ecological systems to buy from dirty politicians... there is plenty in mexico that the US wants, or covets or desires, also mexican soldiers to use as cannon fodder, because american people are not so easily misled about crusades of mass destrocshun anymo'...
DeleteThe nerve of Mexico and that crappy treaty. They won't turn over a capo if he faces the death penalty, but want Mr. Lopez who definitely faces one. Up theirs. Reep what you sow. Good for you Mr. Lopez. I bet he will get protection. Great info DD!
ReplyDeleteThanks BB &DD. This was a great article. Keep them rolling. A true fan from the body of Christ TX
ReplyDeleteHe qualifies for Obamacare people. Relax.
ReplyDeleteHey old man I am older than u and I worked hard my life I am not rich. I am still work when they give me 7.25 a hour, I am happy, at least u were rich and famous at one time. No more crying
Delete@4:41. Understand sarcasm?
DeleteNot without a label, instructions and a warning
DeleteGreat story but you are still a big rata" de dos patas.I highly believe than any wrong you done in this life will catch up to you sooner or later. Tu medicina "how does it feel to wake up early in the morning and see the reflection of a coward in front of you.
ReplyDeleteMr lopez was not a criminal, how can he be a rat for doing his job?
Delete--The rats are the clintons, w bush, Obama, zedillo fox,.fecal and peña nieto, with their hands full of popó...
Besides, nobody owes any fucking criminal, drug trafficker, murderer, or whatever, his silence, even if they signed a treaty and notarized it...fuck'em, SNITCH !!! And if you get money for it, snitch even more!!!
What do you mean coward?Guy has BIG balls.He was EXPOSING CORRUPTION in the Mexican government.He was doing the RIGHT thing.Mexico can never be a 1st world country until this happens.
DeleteGreat story but totally ignores all the blood on his hands. You dont get that close by accident. Totally sanitized version of events, but well written, right?
ReplyDeleteCould you elaborate? What exactly has he done? I'm unfamilar with his alleged crimes in Mexico. I think the article said the Mexican govt won't supply details of alleged crimes?
DeleteNever a complaint when he was living large on Mordida!
ReplyDeleteThe mordida charges seem to have been fabricsted, even against general rebollos, but in any case, zedillo "el asesino invisible" (google) and cervantes aguirre, were worse than rebollos and lopez, took bigger mordidas, and fucked all of mexico in the ass...
Delete--and in their spare time murdered in Aguas Blancas, el Charco, Chenalhó and Acteal, but only dirty indian piojosos, with the help of emilio chuayffet chemor, angel aguirre and Ruben Figueroa alcocer...twenty years of impunity...
12:41 these politicians did not murder anyone, their generals and their grupo aeromovil los gafes, la polesia y el ejercito with their fort Bragg and their school of the assassins "training" to murder indians that their wives keep in line with a broom...and their wives, their parents and their children...real heroic...
DeleteIndios piojosos?? Pinche Vato racista
DeleteTough and rich in Mx. than come to US for protection
Delete