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| A crime scene in Monterrey, Mexico, last week. Drug-related violence has claimed the lives of more than 40,000 people since late 2006, Mexican officials say. (Josue Gonzalez/Reuters) |
WASHINGTON
— Undercover American narcotics agents have laundered or smuggled millions of
dollars in drug proceeds as part of Washington’s expanding role in Mexico’s
fight against drug cartels, according to current and former federal law
enforcement officials.
The agents,
primarily with the Drug Enforcement Administration, have handled shipments of
hundreds of thousands of dollars in illegal cash across borders, those
officials said, to identify how criminal organizations move their money, where
they keep their assets and, most important, who their leaders are.
They said
agents had deposited the drug proceeds in accounts designated by traffickers,
or in shell accounts set up by agents.
The
officials said that while the D.E.A. conducted such operations in other
countries, it began doing so in Mexico only in the past few years. The
high-risk activities raise delicate questions about the agency’s effectiveness
in bringing down drug kingpins, underscore diplomatic concerns about Mexican
sovereignty, and blur the line between surveillance and facilitating crime. As
it launders drug money, the agency often allows cartels to continue their
operations over months or even years before making seizures or arrests.
Agency
officials declined to publicly discuss details of their work, citing concerns
about compromising their investigations. But Michael S. Vigil, a former senior
agency official who is currently working for a private contracting company
called Mission Essential Personnel, said, “We tried to make sure there was
always close supervision of these operations so that we were accomplishing our
objectives, and agents weren’t laundering money for the sake of laundering
money.”
Another
former agency official, who asked not to be identified speaking publicly about
delicate operations, said, “My rule was that if we are going to launder money,
we better show results. Otherwise, the D.E.A. could wind up being the largest
money launderer in the business, and that money results in violence and
deaths.”
Those are
precisely the kinds of concerns members of Congress have raised about a
gun-smuggling operation known as Fast and Furious, in which agents of the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives allowed people suspected of
being low-level smugglers to buy and transport guns across the border in the
hope that they would lead to higher-level operatives working for Mexican
cartels. After the agency lost track of hundreds of weapons, some later turned
up in Mexico; two were found on the United States side of the border where an
American Border Patrol agent had been shot to death.
Former
D.E.A. officials rejected comparisons between letting guns and money walk away.
Money, they said, poses far less of a threat to public safety. And unlike guns,
it can lead more directly to the top ranks of criminal organizations.
“These are
not the people whose faces are known on the street,” said Robert Mazur, a
former D.E.A. agent and the author of a book about his years as an undercover
agent inside the Medellín cartel in Colombia. “They are super-insulated. And
the only way to get to them is to follow their money.”
Another
former drug agency official offered this explanation for the laundering
operations: “Building up the evidence to connect the cash to drugs, and connect
the first cash pickup to a cartel’s command and control, is a very time
consuming process. These people aren’t running a drugstore in downtown L.A.
that we can go and lock the doors and place a seizure sticker on the window.
These are sophisticated, international operations that practice very tight
security. And as far as the Mexican cartels go, they operate in a corrupt
country, from cities that the cops can’t even go into.”
The
laundering operations that the United States conducts elsewhere — about 50
so-called Attorney General Exempt Operations are under way around the world —
had been forbidden in Mexico after American customs agents conducted a
cross-border sting without notifying Mexican authorities in 1998, which was how
most American undercover work was conducted there up to that point.
But that
changed in recent years after President Felipe Calderón declared war against
the country’s drug cartels and enlisted the United States to play a leading
role in fighting them because of concerns that his security forces had little
experience and long histories of corruption.
Today, in
operations supervised by the Justice Department and orchestrated to get around
sovereignty restrictions, the United States is running numerous undercover
laundering investigations against Mexico’s most powerful cartels. One D.E.A.
official said it was not unusual for American agents to pick up two or three
loads of Mexican drug money each week. A second official said that as Mexican
cartels extended their operations from Latin America to Africa, Europe and the
Middle East, the reach of the operations had grown as well. When asked how much
money had been laundered as a part of the operations, the official would only
say, “A lot.”
“If you’re
going to get into the business of laundering money,” the official added, “then you
have to be able to launder money.”
Former
counternarcotics officials, who also would speak only on the condition of
anonymity about clandestine operations, offered a clearer glimpse of their
scale and how they worked. In some cases, the officials said, Mexican agents,
posing as smugglers and accompanied by American authorities, pick up
traffickers’ cash in Mexico. American agents transport the cash on government
flights to the United States, where it is deposited into traffickers’ accounts,
and then wired to companies that provide goods and services to the cartel.
In other
cases, D.E.A. agents, posing as launderers, pick up drug proceeds in the United
States, deposit them in banks in this country and then wire them to the
traffickers in Mexico.
The former
officials said that the drug agency tried to seize as much money as it
laundered — partly in the fees the operatives charged traffickers for their
services and another part in carefully choreographed arrests at pickup points
identified by their undercover operatives.
And the
former officials said that federal law enforcement agencies had to seek Justice
Department approval to launder amounts greater than $10 million in any single
operation. But they said that the cap was treated more as a guideline than a
rule, and that it had been waived on many occasions to attract the interest of
high-value targets.
“They tell
you they’re bringing you $250,000, and they bring you a million,” one former
agent said of the traffickers. “What’s the agent supposed to do then, tell them
no, he can’t do it? They’ll kill him.”
It is not
clear whether such operations are worth the risks. So far there are few signs
that following the money has disrupted the cartels’ operations, and little
evidence that Mexican drug traffickers are feeling any serious financial pain.
Last year, the D.E.A. seized about $1 billion in cash and drug assets, while
Mexico seized an estimated $26 million in money laundering investigations, a
tiny fraction of the estimated $18 billion to $39 billion in drug money that
flows between the countries each year.
Mexico has
tightened restrictions on large cash purchases and on bank deposits in dollars
in the past five years. But a proposed overhaul of the Mexican attorney
general’s office has stalled, its architects said, as have proposed laws that
would crack down on money laundered through big corporations and retail chains.
“Mexico
still thinks the best way to seize dirty money is to arrest a trafficker, then
turn him upside down to see how much change falls out of his pockets,” said
Sergio Ferragut, a professor at the Autonomous Technological Institute of
Mexico and the author of a book on money laundering, which he said was “still a
sensitive subject for Mexican authorities.”
Mr.
Calderón boasts that his government’s efforts — deploying the military across
the country — have fractured many of the country’s powerful cartels and led to
the arrests of about two dozen high-level and midlevel traffickers.
But there
has been no significant dip in the volume of drugs moving across the country.
Reports of human rights violations by police officers and soldiers have soared.
And drug-related violence has left more than 40,000 people dead since Mr.
Calderón took office in December 2006.
The death
toll is greater than in any period since Mexico’s revolution a century ago, and
the policy of close cooperation with Washington may not survive.
“We need to
concentrate all our efforts on combating violence and crime that affects
people, instead of concentrating on the drug issue,” said a former foreign
minister, Jorge G. Castañeda, at a conference hosted last month by the Cato
Institute in Washington. “It makes absolutely no sense for us to put up 50,000
body bags to stop drugs from entering the United States.”
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