Posted by DD Republished from Matter
Recommended Prior Reading for background on Charles Bowden and this story.
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2017/01/charles-bowdens-final-story-about-kiki_2.html
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2017/01/blood-on-corn-part-one.html
Recommended Prior Reading for background on Charles Bowden and this story.
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2017/01/charles-bowdens-final-story-about-kiki_2.html
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2017/01/blood-on-corn-part-one.html
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2017/01/blood-on-corn-part-2.html
Part Three
The investigation of a murdered DEA hero has taken agent Hector Berrellez deep into the murky world of drug traffickers, corrupt Mexican officials, and possibly the CIA (see: parts I and II). His final witnesses take him into the killing room — and threaten not just the case, but his life.
And he’s there at the house on Lope de Vega Street on February 7, 1985, the morning of Camarena’s capture. About 40 people have gathered including Caro Quintero and Félix Gallardo and their bodyguards. DFS personnel and state police also attend. At 12:30 p.m. a man shows up who is known to work at the American consulate and immediately the group focuses on the actual kidnapping of the DEA agent. The consulate figure tells Fonseca’s key henchman that everything is set according to the schedule “I gave you earlier.”
Part Three
The investigation of a murdered DEA hero has taken agent Hector Berrellez deep into the murky world of drug traffickers, corrupt Mexican officials, and possibly the CIA (see: parts I and II). His final witnesses take him into the killing room — and threaten not just the case, but his life.
By Charles Bowden and Molly MolloyIllustrations by Matt Rota
Chapter Eleven
THE TORTURE BEGINS
Raul is a soft-spoken man, his skin is smooth and unworried, a handsome face like something seen in cinema, not narco hit squads. He has moved on, and thanks to witness protection, he has embedded himself in America. He runs several small businesses and he has a new family. He has left the past behind, and he only talks now because agent Hector Berrellez has asked him to return to those days and tell what he saw and heard.
Raul comes
from the state police. He recalls the same meetings as Berrellez’s other
main informations — Godoy and Ramon—leading up to the kidnapping of
Camarena, with the same cast of capos, law enforcement, major
politicians, and the military. He remembers the day the Jehovah’s
Witnesses rang the doorbell. They are praying to God to save them when
the bullets tear into them.
“Now,” he allows, “it is a horrible thing but at the time it was what everyone was doing.”
He is at La Langosta restaurant when the two Americans enter and Caro Quintero orders them seized.
He hears Caro Quintero tell presidential hopeful Bartlett Diáz, “Remember us when you get up high.”
Twice
Raul sees a different American agent at Fonseca’s home, the guy who
comes for money and packs it in a garment bag. He says he’s there when
Max Gomez and Bartlett Díaz come by for the money packed in cardboard
boxes and Caro Quintero says, “Here’s your money, now let’s get to
work.”
And he’s there at the house on Lope de Vega Street on February 7, 1985, the morning of Camarena’s capture. About 40 people have gathered including Caro Quintero and Félix Gallardo and their bodyguards. DFS personnel and state police also attend. At 12:30 p.m. a man shows up who is known to work at the American consulate and immediately the group focuses on the actual kidnapping of the DEA agent. The consulate figure tells Fonseca’s key henchman that everything is set according to the schedule “I gave you earlier.”
A
caravan of four vehicles heads for the consulate. One car is dropped
off as an escape option if things go bad, the others take up
surveillance positions. Fonseca parks two blocks away.
Raul
is in the car with the consulate employee who had insisted that
Camarena would exit from the south door on Calle Libertad. It is
sometime after 2 p.m. The consulate employee suddenly signals “Mira ese es [Look, there he is].” Raul and two other men exit the car and approach Camarena.
The henchman flashes his DFS credentials and says, “The comandante wants to see you.”
Camarena
begins to reply, “When we are summoned and our services are needed it
is done through…” This response is cut short when the officer sticks a
gun into Camarena’s ribs and shoves him into the backseat of the car.
Raul pulls Camarena’s jacket over his head and the man from the
consulate drives the car back to the house on Lope de Vega Street. The
henchman makes a brief radio announcement to those involved in the
operation: “The doctor has seen the patient.”
When
Camarena arrives, Fonseca and Caro Quintero are sitting with a Mexican
army colonel on the patio. The henchman tells them, “You said it could
not be done, but here he is.”
Camarena
is blindfolded, but it must have been at this moment he realized he was
likely to die. He could tell he was not in a police station for a
meeting with a comandante.
Caro Quintero stands and says to Camarena, “Te dije hijo de la chingada que ibas a caer en mis manos [I told you, you son-of-a-bitch, that you were going to fall into my hands].”
Raul is puzzled. They sound as if they know each other.
Camarena says, “I’m of more use to you alive than dead.”
Caro’s half brother says, “Why did you betray me?”
Camarena is baffled. He says, “What are you talking about?”
“You got a lot of money.”
“I never got any money.”
Then Camarena says, “Let me talk to Caro, we understand each other.”
The half brother asks, “How do you know you were talking to Caro Quintero?”
“Who else would have me detained like this?”
Caro
Quintero puts his arm around the blindfolded Camarena and walks him
back to the room. The DFS comandante enters with a tape recorder.
All
this transpires at a time when DEA insists it has no photograph of
Rafael Caro Quintero and has no idea what he looks like. Later,
Operation Leyenda — the name given to the investigation of Camarena’s
death — will discover that $4 million had been paid to Camarena by Caro
Quintero. Except the money never got to Camarena. It was intercepted by
the Mexican federal agents who were supposed to deliver it. Camarena
never knew about a bribe or that he had become the target of Caro
Quintero’s wrath.
Raul is in and out of the torture room. He says he sees Max Gomez, aka Félix Rodriguez, in there asking questions. [ED NOTE: Rodriguez, who famously presided over the execution of Che Guevara
and later played a leading role in garnering support and training for
the Nicaraguan contras, denies any involvement with the interrogation,
torture, and execution of Kiki Camarena.]
The various interrogators — at least three — have different questions.
— What does DEA do in Guadalajara?
— Investigate narcotraficantes.
— Why did he not carry a gun?
— We don’t kill people here.
Ramon hears
questions about Mexican politicians and the secretary of defense. There
are also questions about Bartlett Díaz, who looks in on the
interrogation at least twice; the governor of Jalisco does likewise.
While
Camarena is being tortured, Alfredo Zavala Avelar, his pilot on the
Zacatecas raid that so angered the capos, is brought in. Raul sees men
jump from the bed and onto Kiki’s back. He hears the man’s ribs break.
He was brave, he never begged for mercy, Raul says. He just complained
about the pain.
Fonseca
leaves early on in the torture. When he returns Ramon and Raul both
tell him things have gotten out of hand, that the torture is too severe
and Camarena looks like a man who might die.
Fonseca angrily confronts Caro Quintero and says, “This was not the plan.”
At
one point Fonseca leaves with his entourage and goes back to his own
house where, in a rage over how things have turned out, he fires a burst
from his AK in his own entryway.
Eventually
a doctor named Humberto Álvarez Machaín arrives and looks in on
Camarena. He tells Caro Quintero that the man will die unless taken to a
hospital. Caro Quintero says he does not care, that the man
double-crossed him and would pay for it. But meanwhile the doctor is to
keep him alive so that more questions can be answered.
Out
in the living room the group is now assembled: Bartlett Díaz (cabinet
secretary of gobernación), General Arévalo Gardoqui (secretary of
defense), Miguel Aldana (the head of Interpol), Félix Rodriguez, Sergio
Espino Verdin (head of DFS). There’s also Juan Matta Ballesteros, a
Honduran trafficker and CIA link through his airline company called
SETCO, which is supplying the contra rebels in Nicaragua, and others.
Raul, hungry after a long day, ducks into the kitchen for some beef tongue with sauce.
Someone
wants to know if a decision has been reached on killing Camarena. Raul
hears them say, “As we found out through our own means, I wanted you to
hear the same words from his own mouth. That they were going to put a
stop to drug trafficking in the state of Jalisco.” Secretary Arévalo
Gardoqui looks worried and Raul overhears him say that the bodies of
Camarena and Zavala must be well hidden. Bartlett Díaz announces that
things are going well and in the right direction but he speaks such
sophisticated Spanish that most of the drug traffickers have a hard time
following him. Finally, Caro Quintero says, “Don’t worry, we are going
to kill all of them anyway. You [Bartlett Díaz] are going to make it all
the way to the top. We need you at the top.”
Chapter Twelve
MORE POWERFUL IN DEATH
About 10 o’clock
in the morning of February 9, Fonseca returns with his bodyguards to
the house on Lope de Vega Street. Camarena is dead. Caro Quintero and
Fonseca yell at each other. Both groups of bodyguards bring up their
guns. And then the moment passes. The organization in Guadalajara faces
an unexpected ruin. Enrique Camarena was right: He is far more useful
alive than dead. Camarena and Zavala, the pilot, are buried in a park on
the edge of the city. Zavala is still alive when they pile on the dirt.
Later, when the local prosecutors tell the drug people things are
getting too hot, the bodies are moved to another state so that they can
be found by the Americans who seem crazed over the matter.
In
the days after Camarena’s disappearance, DEA agents and bosses converge
on Guadalajara from all over the hemisphere. The U.S. Customs
commissioner orders every vehicle entering the U.S. from Mexico to be
stopped and searched, effectively shutting down the border and causing
diplomatic blowback from both Washington and Mexico City. A month passes
before the bodies of Camarena and his Mexican pilot emerge from shallow
graves on a ranch 70 miles away and across the state line in Michoacán.
In the
meantime, Caro Quintero flies from Guadalajara to Caborca, Sonora, then
wends his way to Costa Rica. On April 4 he is arrested in his mansion
there and returned to Mexico where he is sentenced to 40 years in
prison. Extradition requests from the U.S. are denied. Then, in August
2013, he is released on a technicality after serving only 28 years.
Mexican authorities claim they have no idea of his current whereabouts.
In the U.S., billboards appear alongside major highways advertising a $5
million reward for information leading to his apprehension.
He becomes a song:
I am Rafael Caro Quintero
I have new plans and new secrets
to live as a person of honor
Life is tough when you are charged this is true
the moments in prison too
I have new plans and new secrets
to live as a person of honor
Life is tough when you are charged this is true
the moments in prison too
Ernesto
Fonseca, another head of the Guadalajara drug business, at first lies
low on a farm outside of town, then flees to Puerto Vallarta where he
rents a house from the chief of police. He moves with a small army of
pistoleros including Jorge Godoy and Raul — Ramon has already deserted
because he realizes Fonseca is finished. Godoy is there to keep his boss
supplied with basuco-fortified
cigarettes and to ferry in tumblers of cognac. Fonseca had five tapes
of the torture with him but he keeps listening to one tape over and
over. On it a Cuban is questioning Camarena.
When
the raid finally comes on April 7, Fonseca tells his men to be calm,
that everything has been arranged. Raul hides behind a stove and escapes
wearing nothing but a pair of shorts and sleeps on the beach for a
couple of nights until the heat passes and he can get a friendly bus
driver to take him back to the city without paying the fare. While
hiding, he sees a bus go by with Fonseca and the others as prisoners.
Fonseca is sentenced to 40 years, but rumors have recently circled that
he too will be released.
Trafficker
Miguel Félix Gallardo stays free until 1989, possibly because of his
deep ties to DFS and through it to the CIA and possibly because his
cocaine connections remained vital for the ruling class in Mexico. He
also is eventually sentenced to 40 years.
Rubén
Zuno Arce has become a blemish on the family name. He is convicted in
the U.S. in 1992 and he gets two life sentences — he dies in prison in
2012.
Manuel
Bartlett Díaz went on to rig the 1988 presidential election that gave
Carlos Salinas the presidency, a post that Bartlett Díaz was slated for
until the Camarena case made him too hot. Because of an outstanding
warrant to appear before a Los Angeles grand jury, he has not been
willing to enter the U.S. for decades. He continues to serve in the
Mexican senate.
Most
of the less noted individuals associated with the Camarena murder are
killed or vanish into Mexico. One of the reasons for those involved to
come north and cooperate with Operation Leyenda was that they faced
certain death if they stayed in Mexico.
The case is closed. Except for a nagging matter. No one is exactly sure why Camarena was killed.
Chapter Thirteen
THE WHITE TOWER
Berrellez has just
taken over the Leyenda investigation when he hears of him. His
informants tell him about this tall white guy known as Torre Blanca (the
white tower), down there in Guadalajara. They say he is DFS but he’s
really CIA.
Berrellez
arranges a phone call and Torre Blanca explains it isn’t the way it
might look, that he was ordered to work with drug guys.
— Who ordered you?
He says he won’t talk about that on the phone.
Lawrence
Harrison comes up to the U.S. in September 1989. In his initial
debriefing, he explains that he holds a rank in DFS. He had handled all
the communications for the drug leaders in Guadalajara — Ernesto Fonseca
Carrillo, Rafael Caro Quintero, Miguel Félix Gallardo, and El
Cochiloco.
He
says he attended classes at the University of California at Berkeley
but was not officially enrolled and he also attended some classes in the
law school there. Then, in 1968, he is recruited by the CIA, trained,
and sent to Mexico. At first he teaches English at the university in
Guadalajara and makes friends with members of leftist student groups. He
offers to do some legal work for them. Then he notices that every time
he reports something about a student radical, that person seems to
disappear.
He
is eventually recruited by DFS, which sends him into the drug world of
Guadalajara where he guards shipments of marijuana and cocaine, and then
because of his electronics skills, he becomes the communications expert
for the capos. Eventually he moves into cartel boss Ernesto Fonseca’s
home so he can be on call 24 hours a day. In 1990 in Los Angeles,
Harrison testified in one of the trials of those involved in the murder
of Camarena. Asked about the official DFS badge carried by Ernesto
Fonseca and his men, he said, “I saw it first…in the last part of 1983.
They used it to sniff cocaine in their office.”
It
is a simple arrangement: He is a CIA operative embedded in DFS and
assigned by DFS to assist and guard major drug people in Guadalajara.
And everyone involved seems to know who he really is. He listens to
thousands of their communications. He attends their parties. Raul sees
Harrison around Fonseca’s house all the time and reports that the tall
American is fond of coke and basuco.
In his DEA debriefing in 1989, Harrison says, “By that time, I’d
figured it out that it was a very strict cooperation between the
government and the traffickers. By that time it would have been very
difficult to get out. I mean real difficult.” (In 2006, Harrison will
reach into his desk drawer, take out a photograph of two DFS officers
and show it to me. The men are with a motorcycle, one used in the murder
of a well-known Mexican columnist named Manuel Buendia, author of the book The CIA in Mexico. I ask if I can have the photograph. He smiles and puts it back in his desk drawer.)
Harrison
could see the future coming at Fonseca in the run-up to Camarena’s
murder. He says to Don Neto, “‘Why don’t you just get out of this
business? You have enough money, why don’t you just take it all and
leave?’ And he told me that there couldn’t be any trouble with the
Americans… There was some kind of secret understanding… They could do
anything that they wanted with the Americans and anything they wanted
with the Cubans. They were both trying to get them to cooperate with
them, in, in, some kind of refueling stops.”
Harrison
becomes the turning point for Hector Berrellez. He’d heard talk of the
CIA and drugs for years. When he was stationed in Mazatlán, he’d get
tips about airfields where large planes landed in the night. He’d report
this to DEA and be told to ignore the matter.
And
when he’d started in with Operation Leyenda he ran into more talk of
flights and airfields, report after report from informants that
CIA-leased aircraft were flying cocaine into places like the air-force
base in Homestead, Florida, and the Marana airfield north of Tucson,
long believed to be a CIA base. And that these planes were flying guns
south. So he had six suspect pilots testify to a grand jury. He got them
full immunity. They all said the same thing: that they’d flown loads of cocaine into the United States for the CIA.
Still, something inside of Hector Berrellez refuses to believe this.
He sends Harrison to Washington to be polygraphed by DEA. Over the course of three days, Harrison passes on every question.
Berrellez
writes a DEA-6 and in this report spells out the links Harrison makes
between the drug world, DFS, the Mexican government, and the CIA. He is
told never to do that again. His job, he is informed, is to investigate
the Camarena murder, not to investigate a sister agency. DEA realizes
the significance of these charges, he is told, and so any such
information must be kept out of the DEA-6s, which are discoverable by
the defense, and should only be written into secret internal DEA memos.
These memos will be given to a separate task force that will look into
the matter.
So
for the rest of the Leyenda investigation that is what Hector does: He
segregates all the information about the CIA to secret memos that go
into a separate channel where he believes a separate team is looking
into it.
Harrison,
for his part, tells him many things and yet leaves many questions
unanswered. He is a person who prides himself on his mind — Hector soon
thinks he is a genius. He knows almost everything except the details of
the Camarena case. Because in September of 1984, five months before
Camarena’s abduction and murder, Harrison takes nine rounds in an ambush
by 50 members of the state police in Jalisco, all this because Fonseca
suspects he’s been stealing. His only link with the case is that
Camarena visits him in the Guadalajara hospital in September 1984.
Harrison is guarded by state police. He refuses to tell Camarena
anything since such a move would be certain death.
Later, on a long car ride with two agents,
before moving his family to the U.S. permanently, he tells the DEA
three things. He says that the Guadalajara cartel was starved for
information, that they had no good intelligence on DEA. They could never
have figured out that Camarena was the one costing them money and
drugs. He said someone had to have told them. “I’ll tell you what, other
authorities were there during the Camarena interrogation. They had to
have said to them, look this is the guy that screwed you… This is the
one that wants to put you away.”
The
second thing he said was that Fonseca thought the plan was to
interrogate Camarena, not to kill him, and that the agent died because
Caro Quintero killed him despite the plan.
And
finally, he made the point that in all his time around DFS or the drug
capos he never knew them to tape anyone. He seriously doubted that they
could even run a tape recorder. Harrison was emphatic: They had to be
taping the interrogation for someone else. “I don’t think the CIA
would’ve gone directly, they would’ve sent the Mexicans. The CIA are not
so stupid, [that] they were gonna go in there themselves. They are
gonna send some of their own minions in there.”
Chapter Fourteen
“MY SON, THE CIA KILLED CAMARENA”
While Hector Berrellez
is running Operation Leyenda, DEA director Jack Lawn asks him if he
could deliver Dr. Humberto Álvarez Machaín from Guadalajara to the U.S.
so he can stand trial for his role in keeping Camarena alive during his
torture. The initial plan to pay Mexican agents to capture Álvarez
Machaín falls through, but soon after, in April 1990, the doctor is
tossed from an aircraft onto the tarmac at the El Paso, Texas, airport
where Berrellez is waiting to arrest him. Later, Álvarez Machaín is on
trial in Los Angeles, but the circumstances surrounding his abduction
cause serious diplomatic repercussions. In 1993, newly inaugurated
President Bill Clinton voices his distress over DEA’s role in the
kidnapping to the president of Mexico. Berrellez hears from friends in
Washington that the new U.S. administration is considering extraditing
him to Mexico. For Berrellez, this means certain death.
By this
time, Berrellez says, Operation Leyenda had filed a bale of memos
linking the CIA to drugs, to the Camarena case, and to the criminal
bosses in Guadalajara. He had given briefings to the brass in D.C.,
linking the political leaders of Mexico to the drug traffickers and to
the murder of Camarena.
When Berrellez first walked his superiors in DEA
through the allegations about Bartlett Díaz, they laughed at him. The
suits could not believe such a man would be at a house full of drug
thugs. And Berrellez now had three witnesses to meetings that planned
the kidnapping and the list of those at the meetings — a list that
included Bartlett Díaz, other high government officials, and Cubans
known to work for CIA. And he had the Mexican Directorate of Federal
Security (DFS) — a creation of the CIA — all over the crime.
Berrellez had done his job too well.
By 1993, he is being investigated by DEA for coaching witnesses
to commit perjury. Godoy later testifies that he had lied to Mexican
authorities while in custody there — downplaying his role and omitting
certain eyewitness accounts — for fear of retribution before he was
brought to safety in the U.S. as a protected witness. And Berrellez
faces extradition to Mexico for carrying out a kidnapping that was
requested by the head of DEA.
“I knew they were trying to destroy me.
“I drank every day, it was a stress reliever. I liked it.
“I
used to bring the tapes of the torture home and listen to them, listen
to him crying and begging for his life. I listened to them 20 or 30
times. Sometimes I couldn’t sleep. The way they would ask him questions
was very morbid. Very cold.
“They’d ask, ‘You want to go back to your family?’
“ ‘Yes. Yes.’
“ ‘You have to cooperate.’
“ ‘Please comandante, don’t hurt me anymore.’
“You hear screams.”
Fellow agents contact him with offers to help him escape.
His world is crashing down around him.
And
then his old friend Guillermo Gonzalez Calderoni comes back into his
life. Berrellez and Calderoni had gotten to know each other after the
firefight in the cornfield of Sinaloa that got Hector a medal from the
attorney general. By the time Berrellez took over Operation Leyenda,
Calderoni had become the personal hit man for the president of Mexico
and had murdered opposition leaders in the run-up to the 1988 election.
He knew where the bodies were because he’d put them there.
He was the conduit between the president of Mexico and the head of the
Gulf Cartel. That is, until the president decided Calderoni was keeping
too much of the drug money for himself. By the late 1980s, DEA analysts
estimated Calderoni’s private fortune at over a billion dollars.
He
eventually fled to the U.S., bringing $400 million with him. Mexico
tried to extradite him in 1994, but Berrellez appeared on his behalf at
court — to the displeasure of his superiors. Berrellez’s testimony
would help convince the federal judge to throw out the Mexican
government’s extradition request. During the hearing, Calderoni
expressed his gratitude to Berrellez by explaining what he knew about
the Camarena case. He said that the money seizures from Operation
Padrino, the DEA project to seize traffickers’ money, were one of the
motives for snatching Camarena. The money not only went into the pockets
of Caro Quintero, Fonseca, and other Guadalajara drug people. Much of
it was funneled into the purchase of weapons and other support for the
contra army in Nicaragua — a cause very dear to the Reagan
administration though outlawed by Congress. If this money stream was
permanently cut off, the U.S. proxy war in Nicaragua would suffer.
Calderoni warned Hector to back off the Camarena case, telling him in
Spanish, “My son, the CIA killed Camarena. Hector, listen, the CIA was
working with the drug guys to get money for the contras. Félix Rodriguez
[Max Gomez] was working with Juan Matta Ballesteros. Kiki was to be
picked up, but they went too far and they killed him.”
Chapter Fifteen
KILL THE MESSENGER
In 1998, I
looked up Hector Berrellez for a story on Gary Webb, the investigative
reporter who two years before had written a series called “Dark Alliance” on the CIA, cocaine, and the contras for the San Jose Mercury News. The stories had been denounced by mainstream media and ended Webb’s journalism career. As I wrote then in Esquire,
“Gary Webb’s ‘Dark Alliance’ broke an old story.” Webb had written the
truth, but he never recovered from the attacks on him, falling into a
deep depression and eventually committing suicide in December 2004.
[ED NOTE: Webb told Bowden in Esquire
in 1998 that if Berrellez had gone public in the fall of 1996, when his
stories were being erased by the media, he would have been like a
savior to him.
“Because he would have shown what I was reporting was not
an aberration,” Webb said then, “that this was part of a pattern of CIA
involvement with drugs. And he would have been believed.”]
Hector
first took me into the case in 1998, but would not go on the record.
The threat of being extradited to Mexico was still very real.
“I
didn’t want to talk more then because I was very afraid,” Hector says
now. There was still a warrant for his arrest in Mexico for his role in
the abduction of Dr. Álvarez Machaín.
Then,
in August 2013, Mexico released Rafael Caro Quintero from prison. “The
liberation of Caro Quintero gave me the window I needed to get this
story out,” he says.
In
Hector’s mind, there are limited scenarios that explain why Enrique
Camarena was kidnapped, tortured, and murdered. One is Operation
Padrino. It went global with wiretaps in Bolivia, Peru, Mexico,
Colombia, Spain, and the U.S. The money being seized was always credited
to informants code-named SOI (source of information) in the DEA
documents, and the capos always suspected a human source. But the real
secret of Operation Padrino’s success was that it had used the
surveillance powers of the National Security Agency (NSA) to find and
empty those bank accounts. But the drug people did not know this. Since
Camarena was the person who originally suggested Padrino, he would be
the logical person to ask about such a leak.
Yet
the tapes of the torture deal only with questions about DEA agents and
the big marijuana bust at Rancho Búfalo marijuana—there’s nothing about
money being drained from bank accounts around the world. And when DEA
finally gets the recordings of Camarena’s torture, none of them include
the voice of Félix Rodriguez/Max Gomez, though eyewitnesses say he was
there questioning Camarena.
Berrellez
focuses on the tapes. When Fonseca fled Guadalajara for Puerto Vallarta
after the murder, he holed up in a bedroom in the house near the beach.
Godoy was there to keep him supplied with basuco-fortified
cigarettes and tumblers of cognac. Fonseca had five tapes of the
torture with him, but according to Godoy, he kept listening to one tape
over and over. On it a Cuban voice was questioning Camarena. When the
house was raided, the tapes somehow passed through Mexican federal
custody to the CIA. But now there are only three tapes, and these
cassettes hold fragments of some other recordings. The CIA eventually
turn them over to DEA along with a transcript. But the transcript
matches none of the recordings and comes from some other tape.
As head
of Operation Leyenda, Berrellez requests two things: the tape that
matches the transcript and the missing tapes he knows Fonseca had in
Puerto Vallarta. Berrellez, lead investigator, is told he cannot have
this material for national security reasons.
For
Berrellez, at this stage in the investigation, such a refusal points in
one direction: to the CIA and their secret operations to supply the
Nicaraguan contras, which leads to the illegal activities of Lt. Colonel
Oliver North, managed directly from the Reagan White House, which leads
to lies.
Oliver North denies any involvement with drug people in his illegal project to support the contras. But his surviving notebooks have 15 entries on drug trafficking, entries that apparently survived his massive document-shredding binge in November 1986.
So
far, North’s version of events is taken as gospel. And neither Gary
Webb’s reporting nor the information uncovered by Operation Leyenda has
changed public opinion. Berrellez first presented the findings of
Operation Leyenda during a FOX News
broadcast in October 2013. The report was met by silence in the U.S.
but became front-page news in Mexico. Berrellez’s old boss, the former
head of DEA, Jack Lawn — the man who assigned him to solve the murder
and hunt down the killers no matter what — that man now says, “As a
youth I read Aesop’s Fables. This, this is another fable not worthy of
individuals who would serve in DEA.” [ED
NOTE: When reached by Matter, Lawn denies having direct contact with
Berrellez during Operation Leyenda and, despite reams of court documents
to the contrary, claims that Berrellez was never in charge of Leyenda.]
The
evidence uncovered by Operation Leyenda is held to have little merit
and is considered unthinkable. The U.S. attorneys prosecuting the case
try to keep testimony about CIA activities in Mexico out of the trial
record. However, during the 1990 trial of Rubén Zuno Arce and others
involved in Camarena’s murder, a defense attorney tries to question
Lawrence Harrison about connections between DFS and the CIA. These links
were spelled out in Harrison’s initial debriefing and reported in a DEA-6.
If drug capo Ernesto Fonseca thought that his work was sanctioned by
Mexican officials and by Americans and their Cuban allies working for
the CIA, then it cast doubt on the guilt of the defendants on trial for
the murder of the DEA agent. The judge eventually prohibited the jury from hearing that part of Harrison’s testimony.
The
U.S. and the CIA do not move drugs. The leaders of Mexico would not be
in the same room as the torturers of Enrique Camarena. It is far more
believable that U.S. would feel threatened by Nicaragua, secretly
finance a movement to overthrow its government, and get in an
arms-for-hostages swap with Iran, than it is conceivable that the CIA
would deal with Mexican drug leaders or be embedded in a Mexican
intelligence service that provided bodyguards to drug leaders and
escorted their loads through roadblocks.
In
the end Operation Leyenda comes down to three men — Godoy, Ramon, and
Raul: corrupt cops in Mexico who implicate the leading citizens of their
country.
You either believe the corrupt cops.
Or the leading citizens.
Chapter Sixteen
BOYS WITH GUNS
Interrogator:
And what did he do?
And what did he do?
Camarena:
Plant marijuana, now I remember his name, please, Lopez, Hay! Hay! Don’t hit me, please, now I remember.
Plant marijuana, now I remember his name, please, Lopez, Hay! Hay! Don’t hit me, please, now I remember.
“I was a gung ho motherfucker, I was willing to die in this drug war. I was very aggressive.
“I
saw our own government was corrupt and involved in the drug business.
How do you think I felt?
Our government bringing cocaine in here.
“It destroyed me, it made me totally disbelieve in our government.”
Hector
Berrellez pauses, the things come back to him in simple order but they
all drive him to the same place in his life, where he is now.
At times, he could hear his life shredding away as he chased his big case.
“I neglected my family, I missed birthdays, I was a terrible fucking father.
“And for what?
“My
fucking son kills himself. The last thing my son said before he pulled
the trigger in front of his kids was ‘Nobody loves me.’
“I
was never home and when I was home I was drunk. I was an adrenaline
junkie. I killed three or four people, who knows? In a shoot-out
everyone is firing.
“I wouldn’t do the Camarena case again. It destroyed my career. I really wanted to go after the CIA guys and I pissed them off.”
When
he is far gone into the case, when he has people from inside the
organization, people who snatched Kiki, people who tortured him, when he
has them talking and the CIA keeps coming into the story, then Hector
has a visitor.
The
man gives a name but Hector senses it is fake. He has flown from D.C.
to Los Angeles. What he says is simple: “Hector, Hector, Hector, why are
you jeopardizing the security of our country? The CIA does not work
under the constraints of the U.S. Constitution. Our enemies are not
restrained.”
Hector tells him that every criminal he has ever busted has said he broke the law because he had to.
The man from the CIA says, please understand our enemies don’t abide by the Constitution.
He asks Hector if he has any evidence of any CIA case officer being involved in drug trafficking.
Hector says no.
He
only runs into people who are paid by the CIA, not those who sit in
their offices in Langley. Informants, assets, cutouts. That is how the
system works and it works well for those who wish to deny that the
system exists.
Soon,
his phone is tapped. He hears rumors from headquarters that they are
discussing extraditing him to Mexico for the Álvarez-Machaín kidnapping.
Then DEA begins to investigate him.
“I’m
drinking. I was a horrible father and husband. I was investigating drug
guys while DEA is investigating me. They are trying to make me dirty,
to fuck me.
“They killed Camarena. What did I do?
“Nothing.
“I
put a bunch of drug dealers in jail. You never get to the main people. I
was one of the soldiers. We’re in shoot-outs, we never get promoted.
They’ve got starched white shirts, they get their hair dyed every month,
they sucked somebody off, they go up the ladder. Gunslingers never get
to be administrators.
“I was a little boy playing with guns.”
His mother did a reading for him once. She sees death near him.
Then an uncle dies and Hector thinks that is what his mother saw.
Then his son kills himself.
After that, Hector asks his mother to do no more readings for him.
He’s seen enough of the future.
Sometimes this nightmare comes. He is back in the cornfield outside of Guadalajara.
He hears the man who was tortured, murdered, and put down the well.
The man is screaming.
— Help me!
— Don’t kill me!
The man seems to suffer forever.
After his career is in ruins, Berrellez reads a story in the San Jose Mercury News on cocaine and the contras and the CIA by a man named Gary Webb. He can’t believe it is published.
Then Webb in turn is ruined by the story. First taken apart by the Los Angeles Times, New York Times, and the Washington Post. Then taken off the story by his paper and shipped to a dead bureau in Cupertino. Then he quits.
He calls up Hector Berrellez and wants to meet.
They finally meet at a steakhouse in Los Angeles in 1998.
Berrellez tells Webb, “I want you to know everything you wrote was true. I have a CIA operative who will tell you it was true.”
He introduces him to Lawrence Harrison.
The three of them talk for hours. They drink.
Berrellez hugs Gary Webb.
Webb cries.
Why would the dea protect these murders and let them live in the us
ReplyDeleteThey were used as material witnesses against the higher echelon cartel members.
DeleteThank you for posting this amazing article dd, it was much appreciated.
ReplyDeleteSomeone tell Mike Vigil that CIA Felix Rodriguez, was in the room when Kiki DEA was killed, Vigil claims CIA is inocent, at the time CIA was smuggling cocaine to Cali with Manuel Noriega
ReplyDeleteBezter idea: ask Vigil why Rodriguez was in that room!
Delete3:23 manuel noriega was persecuted, arrested, imprisoned by the HW administration, for doing his own deals, jeopardizing the iran-contra and shit, "after he was securely arrested, some building in pamama was.bombed to smithereens and burned to the ground and carefully investigated to make sure nothing remained there, like picshurs taken in secret, about small boys and girls and some big adults and the bees and the birds noriega was using to blackmail some BIIG US big wigs..."
Deletethis felix Rodriguez?https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C3%A9lix_Rodr%C3%ADguez_(soldier)
DeleteDD:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.expressnews.com/news/local/article/Valley-businessman-pleads-guilty-as-part-of-10834876.php
@4:10 Thanks for the link. Unfortunately BB does not have a budget for subscriptions to websites that require subscription to enter their site. Express News is one of those. I will look for the story on "free" site.
Deleteman this is one infukcinsane read, to be from a country thousands of miles away and to have followed the drug war for 3 years and reach this is starkly cold..even more tangled than the movie on bin ladens killing and that is still murky
ReplyDelete11:23 well, Kiki Camarena has been waiting for justice for 31 years, this is one more little effort, please buy the book and spread the word, it gives me hope to see that kiki camarena is not all alone in his grave with his "honors" that the givers could stick up their arses far as we can see, for justice, we want to see felix ismael rodriguez and his boss in court,
Delete--please, felix "max gomez" rodriguez, defend yourself, sue "estos estupidos" and bring your alibis with you...
you can sue them for millions of dollars, but sssh, quiet, talk to your lawyer first, he may keep your ass from the trap...
The truth is sickening
ReplyDeleteBrother, you said it!
Delete@4:00 Aaight, pick up your handkerchiefs, and do something, share the report...
Delete11:47 this is 11:26 . I wish the whole world knew . Not just this story but all the stories from all the sources and they all come together and say the same things . There to many stories out there not to have some truth in them that implicates the CIA into drug sealing as far back as Vietnam . Many indicators suggest Bush the senior was CIA back during the 50's . All this information is becoming apparent in a age that there are so many distractions that nobody notices . Back in the day when we had 5 channels on the TV we were doing air raid drills at school and people were putting in bomb shelters at home . 90 percent of the teen agers to 25 cant name the vice president of the usa .
DeleteThis is a very compelling read....the question begs an answer....what has changed in modern day Mexico? This is 2017 and the corruption is in our face..mayors and governors and presidents all on the take draining the coffers of the people and in bed with the narcos. Report it and the journalist ends up dead.
ReplyDeleteSounds like USA too. Where is all our social security $ going?
DeleteKike camarena,gary webb,manuel buendia,hector berrellez followed a dream and they achieved but and doing so, cost them their life and the sorrow of their families
ReplyDeletemike vigil thinks he knows everything cuz he was dea...guy is a clown. there is many of things he doesnt know and wasnt told. he should shut his mouth.
ReplyDeleteWhat I don't understand is why the US media found either Webb's or Berrelez's accounts hard to believe? It's not in any way a secret that the CIA were involved with sponsoring the Contras and were involved with deals with the drug baron Noreaga. Why such disbelief that they could have been involved?
ReplyDelete3:42 keeping the news to themselves make more money to a lot of american "journalists" in MSM and other media with "shared twisted priorities"
Deleteevery time i hear the facts of this brave man it turns my stomach.he should have taken the bullet but hed never been beat before,so had no idea.rip c nick
ReplyDeleteHe SHOULD have taken the bullet? You reckon?
DeleteWhen they tell you "el comandante quiere hablar contigo" these days you know you are going to be facked up, in the 80s it o ly meant "talk", Camarena did not know or did not believe the danger he was in, because he probably did not know about the CIA'S ROGUE AGENTS, AND EVEN THE VERY CIA PROBABLY DID NOT KNOW THE WHOLE THING ABOUT IT EITHER, AS THE OPERATION WAS PATCHED UP AND CAMOUFLAGED AS A NSA CONTRA-INSURGENCY OPERATION AGAINST THE SANDINISTAS...
Delete--but they at the CIA have never defended themselves but let their agency be used to silence and intimidate Héctor Berrellez, the DEA, Phil Jordan and Cele Castillo and all the witnesses, including to murder calderoni.
i cant say thank you enough to Borderland Beat for giving us these amazing stories to read! keep up the awesome work! also one side note however is this story was also somehwhat explained in the book "Narco Land" by anabel hernandez..not detail for detail the exact story but the book does explain the whole death of kiki and how the CIA most likely had a hand in it...
ReplyDeleteCorrect me if I'm wrong Rodriguez was also the Cubano involved in the capture of Guevara in Bolivia; also, I want to say since I am from NM this is a known fact: Mike Vigil was born and raised in Espanola, NM which has also been now as the Heroin Capitol of the US since the 80's and 90's, just food for thought folks.
ReplyDeleteL.A. DEA Agent Unraveled the CIA's Alleged Role in the Murder of Kiki Camarena
ReplyDeletehttp://www.laweekly.com/news/how-a-dogged-la-dea-agent-unraveled-the-cias-alleged-role-in-the-murder-of-kiki-camarena-5750278
"There is no question in my mind that people affiliated with, on the payroll of, and carrying the credentials of,the CIA were involved in drug trafficking while involved in support of the contras."—Senator John Kerry (1996)
How is this chode allowed to still be free let alone run for government?? Troll em'.
ReplyDeleteSen Manuel Bartlett –
@ManuelBartlett
Isn't it the same theory on the series Narcos where the CIA is trying to stop the DEA in Colombia?
ReplyDeleteAlso, the movie Bourne Supremacy. Isn't the same theory where the government acts with impunity and collateral damage is just business as usual even when beat cops are dying. I know it's Hollywood but the theory has to have some thruth?
Deletesicario is a great film about the same topic
Deletehttp://www.imdb.com/title/tt3397884/
So was clear and present danger
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0109444/
Both films about striking deals with the cartel.
next year is Tom Cruise's film about mena, Arkansas. "American made" about the life of BARRY SEAL. Even if the film flops, with TOM Cruise starring, it will be hard to ignore
Just from reading the 3 stories my conclusion is that Kiki was murdered for a bribe that he never received.Along with a bribe goes an agreement.Obviously he never knew what the agreement was and broke it unknowingly.I think it was someone else from DEA that doublecrossed Kiki and took the bribe on behalf of him.The bribe got 'busted' by the military.Whether Caro knew that or not nobody knows.I don't think the military would tell anyone but it did come out [supposedly].Wow tons of betrayals.So Kiki took the fall for another DEA agent that never even profited from the bribe but then again maybe he did by having the military 'confiscate it'.Maybe it was the CIA or maybe it wasn't but my take on the story it was a single rogue agent that set him up [Kiki]but then again maybe it wasn't and was an operation.Obviously the DEA had no intention of honouring whatever agreement Caro had but would take the money of course.A rogue agent could promise to abide by Caro's agreement but really wouldn't have any power to change the agenda.They said they didn't mean to kill him.That's bullshit.They fully intended to.They only said that to get a lesser sentence.Are there actually any survivor's that live and are released from the ranch?Not!You can shake a guy up without having to hold him for 2 days and transfer him to a ranch without sodomizing him,breaking his ribs and jaws and knife torture.They fully intended on torturing him for as long as possible then after killing him.Matbe they accidentally killed him after 2 days when they wanted it to be 4 days.
ReplyDeleteRodriguez owns businesses in deep south Florida.
ReplyDeleteSalinas is in London.
ReplyDeleteHow is it Webb shot himself twice in the head?
ReplyDeleteInteresting 11:1!Why was it considered a suicide then and not a murder?Is it remotely possible you could shoot yourself twice really quickly?
DeleteWhere does Mina fall into place here?
ReplyDelete