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Eduardo
Arellano Felix, leader of a drug trafficking cartel, at a press
conference in
Mexico City on October 27, 2008 (AFP/File, Luis Acosta)
|
LOS ANGELES
— A US judge sentenced the former number two leader of the Tijuana drug cartel,
Eduardo Arellano Felix, to 15 years in prison Monday after he pleaded guilty to
money laundering.
US District
Judge Larry Burns said Arellano's crimes had "terrible effects ... And for
that, you should be ashamed."
Arellano
Felix entered a guilty plea as part of a deal with prosecutors under which he
also agreed to pay $50 million.
Known as
"the Doctor," the 56-year-old Arellano Felix is a brother of the
founder of the Tijuana cartel, based across the border from San Diego.
He was
arrested after a firefight with Mexican authorities in October 2008 and
extradited to the United States a year ago.
He had
initially pleaded "not guilty," but changed his plea in May.
His
brothers Eduardo, Francisco Javier and Benjamin Arellano Felix are all serving
prison terms in the United States.
Burns
backed a request by defense attorneys that Arrellano Felix be imprisoned in
Florida with his brother Benjamin, the leader of the cartel during its heydey
in the 1990s.
The group
once dominated the smuggling of cocaine, marijuana and other drugs between
Mexico and California, and was the inspiration for the Steven Soderbergh movie
"Traffic."
Weakened by
arrests, the cartel is now thought to be run by the brothers' sister Enedina
and her son Fernando, known as "The Engineer."
Violence
linked to drug trafficking and organized crime has left more than 70,000 dead
in Mexico over the past six years.

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