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Saturday, June 20, 2015

Borderland Beat

Borderland Beat

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10 gunned down at Monterrey, N.L. beer distribution center

Posted: 20 Jun 2015 02:14 AM PDT

Lucio R. Borderland Beat material from Reforma, Tiempo and Cronica


Ten people were killed Friday after an armed commando opened fire in broad daylight at a beer distribution center on the outskirts of Monterrey, a major city in northeast Mexico.

Gunmen aboard two trucks arrived around 2 P.M. at the brewery, located 200 meters from Garcia City Hall  and about 25 kilometers from Monterrey, an industrial epicenter in the state of Nuevo Leon and Mexico's third  largest city.

"The investigation to this point says it is an attack between organized crime groups in which the victims were specifically targeted.  We are not saying positively that they were involved in illegal acts but by the way the attack occurred it points in that direction." explained the prosecutor of Nuevo Leon, Javier Flores.

According to preliminary investigations, all the victims worked in brewery trade and several people who witnessed the attack were unharmed.


Arriving at the scene, authorities found in a warehouse, seven kilos of marijuana and seven naked or half-naked bodies, added Flores.

Three others were injured were sent to a nearby emergency hospital, where they died soon after.

One of those executed was identified as Viviano Sepulveda Rodriguez, who had 30 years working as an accountant for the company

The site is a center for warehousing and distribution of beer.

Zeta territory

In the municipality of Garcia (about 145,000 inhabitants) resides Jaime Rodríguez "El Bronco," who made ​​history in the midterm elections last June 7 when he was elected governor of Nuevo Leon, the first independent candidate to win a office this substantial  in Mexico.

In his statement he said on  Friday "my sadness and my anger increases, from  not having the power to act quickly," Rodriguez wrote on his Facebook page.

"El Bronco",  the 57 year old politician known for his rancho style, claims to have survived two assassination attempts during his tenure as mayor of Garcia (2009-2012), during which he challenged the Los Zetas cartel.

A source at the State Investigation Agency who requested anonymity said the brewery, where authorities found weapons  and magazines of various calibres, acted as an operations center for  Los Zetas.



Gates, Elite Police that combat narcos in Coahuila, lower the crime rate

Posted: 19 Jun 2015 12:01 PM PDT

Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Milenio article

 [Subject Matter: Gates (Groupo de Armas y Tacticales Especiales
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required]

 "Here there are no narco's of the last letter (Los Zetas), here we call them by their name and we combat them for what they are: killers and leaches: Military will change State Security"




Reporter: Acosta M
Saltillo, Coahuila: In Coahuila some come to the Grupo de Armas y Tacticas Especiales (GATE), created in 2009 by the State Government to combat organized crime, like a blessing, they are attributed a decrease in the crime rate, and have quelled related activities of Los Zetas and Cartel del Golfo, who have for years had a violent dispute over territory.

In 2013 in Coahuila occupied sixth place in the national league of the most violent states in the country, according to the statistics for 6 types of crimes for every 100,000 inhabitants, (homicides, kidnapping, extortion, rapes, robberies with violence), by 2014 it had improved and they were 11th in the list.

According to levels recorded by the Secretariat of the National Systems of Public Security, in 2010 Coahuila had 16th place in the national league for homicides, but one year after, with the increase in activities of organized criminals, things started to worsen, occupying 9th place in 2011, 8th in 2012 and also 8th in 2013. For the past year, things have got better, 12th place this year, and the first three months until March it shows 13th place.





For the crime of extortion something similar occurred, 20th place in 2010 and better with 24th in 2011, and this year 2015 we are in 28th.

When it comes to kidnapping, there have been fluctuations, Coahuila was third nationally in 2010, improving to 24th in 2011, and this year it is 11th.

In crimes of federal order, we see something similar, the majority are going down, after Coahuila being near the top of the list. According to the levels of the Secretariat, in 2012 Coahuila occupied 15th place out of 32 in the country in crimes linked to drug trafficking, (production, transport, traffic, commercial, supply, possession and others) we are in 16th place, and in 15th for crimes against the Federal Law of Firearms and Explosives, but stay in 7th place for violating the Federal Law against Criminal Organizations.

For 2013, it was better, 16th place for crimes against health, and 17th in narco trafficking. Also better in violation of Federal Law of Firearms and Explosives in 18th, even though it has worsened in violation of Federal Law of Criminal Organizations, in 4th place nationally.

In 2012, 74.6% of the inhabitants of Coahuila ( 10th place nationally) perceived their state to be insecure, according to the National Survey of Victimization and Perception about Public Security that every year publishes the INEGI. In 2013 things worsened: 82% of the citizens (7th place nationally), while in the past year the feeling of insecurity was at 78% and 8th place nationally.

At town level, things are better, in 2014 it was down to 62%, 9th place nationally.

The blessed and the narco C4

In the streets, where there are businessmen, students, taxi drivers, hotel staff, citizens walking, most of them recognise that they live in relative tranquility. The ambiance in the streets is very different to before, when gun battles were an everyday occurrence and people travelled in state of paranoia.

They had reason to be scared, already the criminal controlled the state in many ways: for example a high functionary of State Government revealed to Milenio that the plaza boss of one of the cartels in Piedras Negras had his own C4 ( closed circuit TV system). His own control centre, with feeds from 50 cameras elevated to a point where they can see all of the city on lamp posts and other high standing buildings and poles.

The Capo had access to the cameras via an application of his smart phone and a tablet. He didn't only rely on the work of his halcones, he had this system so his Lieutenants knew, in real time, the exact deployment of Municipal, and State Police and Federal and Army, with which in seconds he could prepare an ambush of not only Security Forces but against members of adversarial cartels.

This is the reason the citizens lived in fear.

Before, you left home when you had too and looked where the battle was, to know which different route to take, to one side or the other, or if it was better to stay at home. It was a case of dodging the bullets, remembers a chauffeur, who remembered that his children never left home other than to go to school.

When one sees the GATES, already I feel more calm because they carry arms. They are a blessing, said a woman business owner who approved of the general idea of these police, black uniforms, with square faces, armed with rifles and armoured vehicles, they confront whichever group of Sicarios they encounter, which inhibits the presence of the criminals.



In the Government of Coahuila, they have little doubt that GATES have been a good decision. The Commissioner for State Security, Captain Hugo Eduardo Gutierrez Rodriguez, who was in the State Mayor Presidential with Ernesto Zedillo and Vincente Fox, who doesn't hesitate to expound the elite Police unit, nine have died in combat and five have been reported as disappeared), they have received training from Army Special Forces, and training from Spanish and Israeli forces, they are paid 30k pesos monthly, they are provided with housing. Also they have a psychologist dedicated to them and their families to council for the constant stress they live in.

Here, they are taught to give no quarter to organized crime, a GATE has the capacity, the volume of fire, training specifically for the Military, by personnel from Special Forces for Special Operations and interdiction operations, urban combat, personal defence, and stress shooting situations.

This group was formed in 2009 from 60 elements. In actuality we have 215 elements competent and trained, and 200 more that belong to the Metropolitan Operations Reactions Group (GROM), that administratively depend on the Municipals and operationally they drive GATES at the State Commission for Security.

The Captain supposes:

"You ask a child :"What do you want to be?". and before the child answers, badly, with a big apology that he committed a crime, they say they want to be Sicario's. Now you go to the schools and ask a child what he wants to be and he says: Soldier or GATE".

To sacrifice your freedom in the area of Security: all that work in drugs, have the hands of killers".

"What role did GATES have in reducing the crime rate?"

What's more important, is that I feel that GATE would be the nerve centre, a neurological point to combat the narco traffickers and organized criminals, that have free reign. They start by selling all types of drugs, after they start extortion's (cobra de piso), they control the sale of alcohol, they control the black market, they control money laundering, slot machines, and kidnapping. Its no only a question of reaction, but through proposed legislation. The Law of the land, to not permit licenses for table dancing, for the black market. So they cant present semi-nude or nude in spectacles or in bar events. They cannot install casinos.

Sacrifice certain freedoms in areas, to cut the financial flow to these people?

Exactly,  but it will not violate or cut the freedoms of the citizens. This we have been permitted to use in some towns to reduce by 90% the deaths that are catalogued for violent collisions in road traffic accidents, related to ingestion of alcoholic beverages. After two in the morning, already, one cannot sell, nor have an establishment open that sells alcoholic beverages.

Here they speak a lot about the Zetas leaders. Is this territory free of this cartel?

With certainty one can say right now that we don't have any grand capos of this criminal group. We are combating the cartel that is, the group concerned, we are trying to eliminate to the minimum to its minimum expression this scourge of society. For us all here that sell drugs in the streets have the hands of killers, who decimate humanity.

Do you combat everyone?

What are you trying to say? Here we call them by their names, here we have no fear. To know that Coahuila is a place where order prevails, where the law prevails, and where the State Force prevails.

What do you mean you call them by their names, to ask, alluding that usually nobody wants to mention them.

Inferring the group of Los Zetas, of the group Cartel del Golfo, or inferring La Familia Michoacana, because there are some that say: the last letter. Here we call them by their names, and what they are: criminals, killers, leaches of society.

The houses that are confiscated (from criminals) are destroyed? I'm asking about the tens of houses of capos that have been destroyed after confiscation.

A raid in which we make confiscations and detentions stay abandoned, and become populated with homeless, or wrong doers that use them to take drugs or steal, and its a symbolic, an apology for the lavishness in which they felt untouchable. They search for legal mechanisms to proceed with destruction of the same.

Welcome to Hell


This is what they call the place where GATES are trained: Hell. This represents the extreme training that they receive. Practising shooting with rifles, training in the desert sun, explosions in underground caverns, tunnels filled with water. GATES are people of few words, they are addicted to adrenaline and danger.

They talk about Ranger, 25 years of age, two years in GATES. By trade he is a mechanical engineer. He climbs in a armoured vehicle today his is the top gunner. His face covered by a balaclava like all his companions, so they are not identified by organized criminals who will move against them and their families.



What motivated you to come here?

Well I saw in the streets the black uniforms, the pride they have you can see it. They come to the streets full of criminals and want to help to clean this. This is what motivates me most. To see that GATES are making the changes.

What did you say to your family, were they scared?

Yes, they said to me it would be very risky and dangerous, but I don't want to look at other work, an other vocation, but inside I want to be GATE and change things, no other vocation calls me.

Is it stressful?

Since the start I believe God guides and cares for me, I leave with him and return with him, and I like the adrenaline rush.

Is the six months training difficult?

No, whatever I have to do to qualify for GATES, its very difficult training that nobody want to finish

Our weapons are a trusted part of us, and like the military we will never give them up or lose them.

Your weapon is like your woman, always be faithful, never leave it alone, never abandon it. Its that it is going to save your life, you and your gun are together.

They live for confrontations, risky situations...

Yes if we come up on them, a brief confrontation with criminals, in which you can hear the wizzing of passing bullets. Here you are going to learn to control your impulses. To know how to manage the risk.

When bullets whizz by what do you feel?

A cold chill, more than anything because you feel that one centimetre either way and it could have been you. To control yourself is the best help.

How do you keep cool during battle?

To think, to feel the pulsations, to calm yourself, to think of tranquil things and to have vision. To have the field of vision for where you are working and to have control.

---------

She is 29 years old, with six months service in GATES, she is one of the few women that form part of this elite body. She wants to be the Commander of the Group, as one of her colleagues has already done. They call her "Roja", the mother of three children, she says she is treated equally to the men.



The women are treated the same as the men, we have the same training, the same tiredness, everything. We are equals. There is no distinction, and no allowances. The truth is the training is very hard, we sleep very little, and all day is forces training, physical training.

Your family say you are crazy to come here?

The truth, yes, to start with it took them by surprise and they didn't accept it. But now after a little insistence, they have given me their support. My brothers support me a lot. They told me they would come and look after my children whilst I was training.

You are not scared?

Yes I get scared, it worries me, I have two very young children and sometimes I feel anguish for them, but I like that. The stress. I put my faith in god and I have the support of my family, when god decides it, I know my children will be ok.

The gun battles

The truth is they stir up strong emotions, and I like the adrenaline.....

--------------

The commissioned, the Military in the streets carrying a Glock pistol and two rifles, a Galil and a Beretta, and in their office are photos of Bill Gates or Tom Hanks, are proud of their own. But there are people that have denounced their excesses, some of which have been documented by the State Commission for Human Rights. There is a video, where an apparent execution by GATES in front of Soldiers, that is another story.

Part 2 GATES accumulate allegations of Police Abuse (the other side of the coin) coming soon

Original article in Spanish at Milenio

Life Sentence Slashed: Francisco Javier Arellano Félix becomes a "cooperating witness"

Posted: 19 Jun 2015 03:46 PM PDT

Lucio R. Borderland Beat posted by SiskiyouKid republished from UTSD,  and DEA Website

Francisco Javier Arellano Félix' aka "El Tigrillo" delivered "extensive post-sentencing cooperation," providing information, on cartel figures and the public officials alike,  who worked with them on both sides of the border, the information will be used in arrests and  in prosecutions.  He is now obligated to testify in those prosecutions.

The UTSD article is defining Arellano Felix as "Cooperating Witness". A "Cooperating witnesses," or "CWs," differ from Confidential Informants  in that CWs agree to testify in legal proceedings and  have written agreements with the Department of Justice (DOJ) (usually with an Assistant U.S. Attorney) that spell out their obligations specifically and their expectations of future judicial or prosecutive consideration. 

His reduction in sentencing means he could be released in 11.5 years, depending on time served, good time reduction and when the clock began ticking.  (Lucio)

UTSD Article:

The life in prison sentence for former drug cartel leader Francisco Javier Arellano Félix has been reduced to 23 1/2 years because he's provided crucial information to the government that has led to prosecutions in the U.S. and Mexico, according to federal court records.

Arellano pleaded guilty in 2007 to racketeering and money laundering charges and was sentenced to life in prison without parole, after the U.S. Department of Justice elected not to seek the death penalty against him.

But court records say that almost since his dramatic arrest in 2007, when he was plucked off a boat in international waters by the U.S. Coast Guard and taken to San Diego to face trial, Arellano has been cooperating with federal authorities.

In a court order filed Monday, U.S. District Court Judge Larry A. Burns wrote that federal prosecutors in San Diego had described his cooperation as "extensive."


Arellano, now 45, met with federal law enforcement agents 25 times over a five-year period, the judge wrote, transported from the prisons where he is housed on 23-hour lockdown to locations across the country.

The meetings sometimes lasted for several days. At one, Arellano's lawyer said, an agent told Arellano the information he was giving was like "a dream come true."

Precisely what he told investigators isn't publicly known. Documents that detail the extent of his cooperation filed both by prosecutors with the U.S. Attorneys Office in San Diego and Arellano's lawyer are under seal in federal court in San Diego.


But in his order last week, Burns said prosecutors had outlined Arellano's "extensive post-sentencing cooperation," providing information on both cartel figures and the public officials who worked with them on both sides of the border.

He wrote that prosecutors contended in the secret documents that Arellano "provided substantial and significant information that helped the government identify and charge other large scale drug traffickers and corrupt public officials in this country and Mexico."

In the debriefings, Arellano also provided information on what the judge said was the "structure and methods" of how drug cartels operate in Mexico and along the southwest border. And he agreed to testify against drug traffickers and others arrested based on the information from Arellano, including what Burns described as "critical documentary evidence."

The revelations confirm what many in the legal community had suspected: that Arellano had agreed to work with federal authorities to stave off a potential death sentence, and earn a lighter term.

"I'm sure he had very current information on multiple people in the drug world when he was plucked from the high seas," said Jan Ronis, a San Diego criminal defense lawyer who once represented Benjamin Arellano Felix, the oldest brother, whose arrest in Mexico in 2002 led to Javier Arellano's rise to the top. "I'm sure he was a treasure trove of valuable information for the government."

In a statement, U.S. Attorney Laura Duffy echoed Burns's comment that Arellano had provided substantial assistance to authorities. "The court made a careful determination that the reduction was appropriate and we agree," said Duffy, who prosecuted the case against Arellano before becoming head of the office.

Mark Adams, Arellano's lawyer, declined to comment.

The court file shows that Burns reduced Arellano's sentence to 282 months, or to 23 1/2 years, last November on a motion filed by prosecutors, that argued Arellanos' assistance should earn him a discounted sentence.

That ruling ended a lengthy, secretive process that began in 2008, a year after Arellano was sentenced to life without parole, court records show.

At that time, prosecutors filed a motion asking for the reduced sentence, but asked Burns to hold off granting it. Burns agreed, and the motion remained sealed for the next six years, while the federal government extracted as much information from Arellano as they could.

Last November, federal prosecutors finally asked Burns to grant the request and lower Arellano's sentence. Adams then filed a new defense motion, also under seal, arguing for a further cut of 47 months to Arellanos' sentence.

The reason he cited: the government should have asked for a steeper sentencing cut given the value of the information Arellano provided. Adams also argued that high-security conditions Arellano lives under in prison limit his contact with his family and what he can do while in prison.

Burns' ruling was in response to that second effort to get a lower sentence, and recapped the history of his cooperation. The judge said he was unpersuaded a further reduction was needed, writing Arellano's "culpability for the many wicked consequences of his crimes far outweighs any concern that the court may have for the hardships of prison life."
In February, 2015 after 9 years, Tigrillo's  seized property was awarded to the government, including a luxury
ocean front compound "Rancho Leonero" in Baja California Sur.  The compound was used as a
safe house/party central, and was difficult to access by land.  It boasted a landing air strip and three separate estates
Nathan Jones, a professor at Sam Houston State University in Texas who studies drug traffickers and has written about the Arellanos, said Javier likely provided investigators with a guide to the internal workings of his family cartel at a crucial time. He could have provided investigators with insight into the bloody 2008-2010 period, when a bloody struggle for power and control of the cartel and the lucrative Tijuana smuggling corridor erupted in Tijuana, leaving scores dead.

"I think he probably was able to give them a lot of information they otherwise couldn't have had," he said. "He might have knowledge of things like stash houses, or specific players who were key to the operations."

He also played a role in the resolution of the case against his older brother, Benjamin Arellano Felix. Once the head of the cartel, Benjamin was arrested in Mexico in 2002 – a move that led to Javier assuming the leadership.

Benjamin was eventually extradited to San Diego in 2011, pleaded guilty a year later to racketeering and money laundering charges and is serving a 25-year-sentence.

His plea came after Benjamin and Javier, who had agreed to testify against his brother in a trial, met in an extraordinary meeting under heavy security in a building at the Miramar Marine Corps Air Station. Benjamin had been skeptical his brother would turn on him, sources told The San Diego Union-Tribune in a report published in 2013. But just weeks after the meeting, Benjamin Arellano pleaded guilty.

Below is the federal attorney presser after the capture of Arellano Felix.  Note that AFO is CAF
August 16, 2006

Deputy attorney general McNulty: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I'm very pleased to be joined on stage by Admiral Thad Allen, the Commandant of the Coast Guard and Michael Braun, the Assistant Administrator for Operations of the Drug Enforcement Administration.

 We are here today to announce the apprehension of one of the world's major drug traffickers. The Arellano Felix organization is the largest and most violent drug trafficking organization operating in the Tijuana/Baja California/Mexico area.

 Eleven individuals, representing the top hierarchy of the Arellano Felix organization, including Francesco Javier Arellano Felix were named in an indictment unsealed on July 8, 2003, in the Southern District of California. The indictment charges these individuals with racketeering offenses, conspiracy to import and distribute cocaine and marijuana, and a conspiracy to commit money laundering. The indictment carries penalties of up to life in prison. And in addition, it includes forfeiture of almost $300 million. The indictment also alleges that the leadership of the Arellano Felix organization, I'll refer to it as AFO, negotiated directly with Colombian cocaine trafficking organizations, including the FARC, for the purchase of multi-ton shipments of cocaine and received those shipments by sea and air in Mexico, and then arranged for smuggling of the cocaine into the United States.

 The indictment specifies the role of Francisco Javier Arellano Felix in the enterprise as one who participated in the most major decisions of the AFO and specifies that he was in charge of the organizations Tijuana and Mexicali operations after the arrest in Mexico of a co-defendant back in May of 2000.

 The indictment also alleges that the Arellano Felix organization recruited, trained and armed groups of bodyguards and assassins responsible for protecting the leaders of the organization, and for conducting assassinations of rival drug traffickers, suspected cooperators and Mexican law enforcement and military personnel; along with members of the news media. The charges specifically allege 20 murders in the United States and Mexico that were carried out by the Arellano Felix organization.

 Now, in addition to that indictment, which as I said was unsealed July 8, 2003, information developed during a 14-month fugitive investigation revealing that AFO leader Francisco Javier Arellano Felix and others were expected to use the fishing vessel Doc Holliday, a U.S. documented vessel. And so, on August 14th, just two days ago, DEA received information that this vessel, Doc Holliday, was approximately 15 nautical miles off the shore of La Paz, Mexico. And acting on this lead the DEA requested that the United States Coast Guard interdict the vessel. Following the interdiction of the vessel in international waters a boarding took place by the US Coast Guard personnel and eight adults and three juveniles were discovered on board and detained.

 One of the individuals aboard the vessel, who was traveling under an alias, later identified himself as the same Francisco Javier Arellano Felix that I have described in this indictment. He is a CPOT meaning he is a person who has been designated on a Consolidated Priority Organizational Target List.

 All of the individuals are being transported by the Coast Guard to San Diego. Francisco Javier Arellano Felix will be arraigned in the very near future on the indictment. This case is the result of extraordinary coordination and cooperation between the governments of Mexico and the United States. I especially want to thank Mexican Attorney General Daniel Cabeza de Vaca for his leadership and partnership in these efforts. It takes teamwork like this in order to accomplish such a significant arrest.

 I also want to give special recognition to the United States Attorney's Office in the Southern District of California for the charges that were pending that led to the arrest of the fugitive and to the men and women of the Drug Enforcement Administration and the US Coast Guard for its courageous and devoted work.

 I now would like to introduce Mike Braun from the Drug Enforcement Administration. Michael.

 MR. BRAUN: Good afternoon. The DEA arrests a lot of high-level drug traffickers, that's nothing new, but to say that Javier -- excuse me -- Francisco Javier Arellano Felix is just another drug trafficker is an understatement. This guy happens to be, as the Deputy Attorney General mentioned, one of the 45 most notorious, most wanted, drug traffickers in the world. So, this is not your average arrest and Javier is not your average drug trafficker.

 For over a decade the AFO family has dominated the Mexican drug trade and flooded our nation with literally tons and hundreds of tons of a variety of drugs; cocaine, marijuana, methamphetamine and heroin to name just a few. That dynasty, built on drugs and ruthless violence, began to topple in 2002 with the death of one of the Arellano Felix brothers and the arrest of another; and was further weakened with the 2003 indictment of the major remaining organization leaders by the US Attorney's Office in San Diego.

 The DEA and our Mexican counterparts have pursued those leaders relentlessly ever since. And it's important that you know that Javier was one of the most ruthless thugs that was involved in drug trafficking around the world. The organization that he led was under investigation in Mexico. There are pending charges in Mexico, and as we've said, there are pending charges in San Diego that he and other members will be charged with or will be brought forward on those charges.

 It's also important to understand, though, that we considered him such a threat to our country that the United States State Department issued a $5 million bounty for his capture a few years ago. He was the last strong hold in the declining AFO family cartel when we arrested his brother Benjamin back in 2002. We called it the beginning of the end of the AFO. Today we've got this brutal organization in a choke-hold and we are not letting up. Our Mexican authorities -- our Mexican counterparts that we work with very closely with and the DEA is absolutely full-court press at this point. We're piling on, if you will, and moving this initiative and this ongoing investigation even more forward.

 We at the DEA are in the job to protect our country, to take drugs off the street, to protect our kids, and to make our streets safe. Today this announcement, this huge success for law enforcement, basically is what our job is all about. It's what we live for.

 Finally, I have to mention this, and hopefully I don't embarrass the Commandant by saying this, but we would not be here today if it were not for the outstanding support rendered by our US Coast Guard. And it is in testament to this dynamic, very flexible, maritime force -- the flexibility that is needed as our nation continues to wage war in our war against drugs and in our war against terrorism. Thank you very much.

McNulty: Thank you, Mike. And you said it very well in terms of the kind of appreciation we have for the Coast Guard. And we think of the Coast Guard constantly out there rescuing individuals on the seas and yet those of us in law enforcement know them as a major partner in our effort to go after organized drug trafficking organizations. And I want to thank, also the Admiral, and introduce him now.

 Admiral Allen: It's a pleasure to be here today and be part of this historic event. We have long been partners with the Department of Justice and the Drug Enforcement Administration on other long war, the war on drugs.

 On Monday morning, August 14th, the Coast Guard was requested by DEA to take part in an interagency operation off the coast of Baja, California. At approximately 9:00 in the morning on Monday the Coast Guard cutter Monsoon was positioned off shore. Based on prior law enforcement work and intelligence intercepted a 43-foot recreational boat and conducted a boarding with the crew of the Monsoon, which is crewed by 28 Coast Guard personnel; it was augmented by two personnel from our Maritime Safety and Security team based in Los Angeles.

 As a result of the boarding we encountered 11 individuals, three minors and eight adults. Based on the identity verification associated with those individuals, and the fact that there were warrants out they were placed under arrest by the Coast Guard. They are currently on board the Coast Guard cutter Monsoon en route San Diego under the escort of another Coast Guard cutter.

 I would just like to reaffirm what was said previously. This is an extraordinary example of interagency cooperation and coordination. Drug interdiction remains a vital core mission of the United States Coast Guard and the Department of Homeland Security. But I think, moreover, it demonstrates the flexibility and agility of the Department of Homeland Security to simultaneously deal with an event of this magnitude while dealing with the heightened threat period that we're going through right now.

 We're proud to be partners with the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Department of Justice, as we have been for the entire 35 years I've been in the Coast Guard. It is an honor to be here today.

 Thank you.

McNulty:Thank you, Commandant.

 Q: Can you tell us anything about the tip that came in about the Doc Holliday or how you found out that the Doc Holliday was where it was and whether anybody will be getting that $5 million reward?

 McNulty: There aren't a lot of details we are prepared to share about this because of the sensitivity of the law enforcement effort. Although I will give Mike a chance to take a crack at your question. But generally speaking, we're going to limit the information we're providing to the fact that the arrest has occurred and that we received a tip on it.

 I'm not sure about the award, I'll see if Mike has a response on that -- or anything else, Mike.

 Mr. Braun: I can't answer your question with respect to the award -- reward. I don't have that answer at this point. We'll certainly find out in the future. I can tell you that this successful intervention on the part of the Coast Guard was part of a very long, very complex, undercover operation that was backstopped by highly technical means and support.

 Q:  So, is it possible no one will get any part of that reward?

 Mr. Braun:That's possible.

 Q:  Was there any other member of the drug cartel of the Arellano Felix apprehended among those 11 adults?

 McNulty: Well, we're currently not specifying other individuals in the group but all individuals have been detained at this point. And more information will be forthcoming as to other potential charges.

 Q: What is going to happen to the minors that were apprehended? And also, how this operation is going to impact or diminish the Arellano Felix Organization within the United States?

McNulty:First, with regard to the minors, that too will be determined here in the very near future. No decision as of right now has been made on that. With regard to the organization, I think Mike said it well when he talked about the fact that this is huge blow to the organization -- the head of the snake, if you will, and that that represents obviously a significant impact on such a powerful drug trafficking organization. It is, however, a large organization and much more remains to be done. But we think that this, combined with an number of the other efforts that have preceded it, will have a noticeable impact; not just on Mexico, but also in the Untied States in terms of the ability to bring drugs into the country and the violence that has occurred on this side of the border in the San Diego area in particular.

 Q: …And Mr. Arellano is going to remain here in the US under custody, maybe to respond for the charges against him?
McNulty: He is being brought into the United States to be arraigned on the indictment that I described as unsealed in 2003; those are the charges that are pending against him at this time.

 Q: Were any of the others ones who were arrested named in the indictment?

McNultyy:No.

Q:Is there -- this is related to the last question -- there is at least one other brother, Eduardo, I think, that's wanted on equal $5 million reward. And it makes me wonder if you can talk about the extent to which this organization can continue to operate as it has without Javier Arellano Felix? Is it a crippling blow? How do you describe it?

Mr. Braun: Well, let me just lay out the family structure. Ramon is dead. Benjamin is in La Palma Prison in Mexico and has been there for quite some time after he was successfully arrested -- investigated and arrested by Mexican authorities. Eduardo is out and about in Mexico, but our most recent intelligence does not identify him as one who is capable of leading the organization at this point in time.

 So, as Deputy Attorney General McNulty said, we feel like we've taken the head off the snake here. That's not to say that there may not be one or more members within the organization that are capable of stepping up and taking over and running operations; that's yet to be seen. But we can tell you that we are -- we and our Mexican authorities and other federal law enforcement agencies in our country that we work very closely with -- again, at this point we are full-court press at this point to do as much damage as we possibly can against this organization. They are extremely vulnerable right now. So, again, we're piling on.

 Q: Mr. Braun, still on the same issue, is the United States pursuing the extradition of Benjamin into the US? I understand that his legal problems are reaching some kind of an end in Mexico.

 Mr. Braun: I believe that we are. We'll have to get back with you, though.

 Q:  Can I pull open the thing that was right here in terms of the organization of the Araino Felix -- there is also the rumor in Mexico that the Mayo Zambada organization is taking the leadership of the Arellano Felix cartel -- probably the DEA knows more than me on this issue -- but so you say Eduardo is -- doesn't have the leadership but people in Mexico say it's Mayo Zambada who is now in front of the Arellano Felix -- can you tell me a little bit more about this relationship between these two drug cartels? And another question, you mentioned it was a very close cooperation with Mexico on this incident. What is the reason the Mexican authorities didn't arrest this guy? You don't trust the authorities? I understand this guy was 15 miles from the coast of La Paz.

 Mr. Braun: Let me answer your last question first. We trust the Mexican authorities. We work very closely with Mexican authorities every single day of the week, not only on this investigation but on an number of joint investigations. So, we do trust them. And I can tell you that they contributed significantly to this investigation at every step of the way. I'm not at liberty to talk about the details at this point. They'll come out certainly at some time in the future.

 And you're going to have to refresh my memory on the first part of your question.

 Q: What is the relation between Mayo Zambada and the --

Mr. Braun: Okay, yes. Look the Tijuana corridor, as you know, there has been a turf battle going on for quite some time between the AFO and the Federation. There are a number of syndicates that comprise the Federation. Do I believe personally, based on past experience, do my Mexican counterparts believe based on their past experience that someone is going to fill in the gap in this corridor at some point in the future? Absolutely, without question, someone will, some organization will.

 Q: Given the fact that the indictment lays out the fact that this defendant is part of a conspiracy that's responsible for 20 murders is the Department in a position where they could seek the death penalty if this goes to trial?

Mc Nulty:  I don't have any further information on that point right now.

 Q:  Regarding the Doc Holliday, is the boat registered under any of the aliases of Javier Araiano?

Admiral Allen: Issues associated with the ownership and the registration of the boat are being developed as the investigation goes forward. We have no information we can release at this time.

 Q:  General, please, can you help us -- give us some information about the plane that was sent to Logan with a woman who was detained -- will she face any federal charges?

McNulty:All I can tell you about that situation right now is that we are closely monitoring it, but facts are still coming in. I'm not in a position to give you any definitive answers to questions about what will happen on that.

 Q:  Mr. Braun, can you tell us just about the operation of the AFO in Peru? According to some reports in Mexico they were working directly with cocaine producers in Peru, do you have any reports about that?

 Mr. Braun: We've talked about this before. I can tell you -- well, you know, all of the cocaine that's on the global market originates, for the most part, in three countries in South America, Colombia, Peru, Bolivia -- are there connections with Peru? Absolutely. Because the AFO is moving a great deal of cocaine for Colombian organizations across the southwest border -- are there links? Yes. But I'm not prepared to go into detail at this point.

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