Yahoo – AFP,
Leticia Pineda, Oct 1, 2014
Mexico City (AFP) - Soldiers captured one of Mexico's most-wanted drug barons in a restaurant in a colonial town popular with American tourists and retirees.
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Hector
Beltran Leyva, leader of the Beltran Leyva's drug cartel, is led away
after a
press conference in Mexico City, on October 1, 2014 (AFP Photo)
|
Mexico City (AFP) - Soldiers captured one of Mexico's most-wanted drug barons in a restaurant in a colonial town popular with American tourists and retirees.
Hector
Beltran Leyva, known as "El H", was caught along with a suspected
henchman in a seafood restaurant in San Miguel de Allende, a historic town in
central Mexico, without a shot being fired, authorities said on Wednesday.
Tomas
Zeron, director of investigations at the attorney general's office, said
Beltran Leyva was passing himself off as a "well-off businessman dedicated
to real estate and art sales to justify his lifestyle."
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A view of
San Miguel de Allende, in the
Mexican state of Guanajuato, pictured on
July 7,
2008 (AFP Photo/Mauricio Marat)
|
San Miguel
de Allende is 300 kilometers north of Mexico City in the neighboring state of
Guanajuato. Founded in the 16th century, it is know for is cobblestone streets,
well-preserved colonial buildings and old churches that make it a picturesque
town that many artists and American retirees now call home.
The arrest
allows President Enrique Pena Nieto to cross off another big fish from Mexico's
most wanted list following the capture of Sinaloa cartel kingpin Joaquin
"El Chapo" Guzman in February and Zetas leader Miguel Angel Trevino
last year.
"This
action proves the effectiveness of the public policy of security and law
enforcement to get the peaceful Mexico that we desire," Pena Nieto wrote
on Twitter.
Beltran
Leyva, 49, inherited the thrown of his family's drug clan when his brother and
"boss of bosses," Arturo, was killed by marines in 2009 in a mansion
in Cuernavaca, a popular weekend getaway for Mexico City residents.
Two other
brothers, Alfredo and Carlos, are in jail.
$7
million man
Zeron
called Beltran Leyva one of Mexico's top drug traffickers, who specialized in
moving cocaine from South America and Central America to lucrative US and
European markets.
Mexico had
offered a $2.2 million reward for information leading to his arrest, on top of
a $5 million US bounty.
He faces
charges in Washington and New York courts.
The Beltran
Leyva clan was initially allied with Guzman's Sinaloa crime syndicate,
considered the biggest cartel in Mexico.
But the two
cartels went to war after Alfredo Beltran Leyva was detained in 2008 following
a betrayal by Guzman, officials have said.
It was
after the split that the Beltran Leyvas formed their own cartel.
More than
80,000 people have died in drug violence in Mexico since 2006, much of the
deaths due to turf wars between the country's numerous gangs.
The Beltran
Leyva cartel is believed to operate in a third of the country, mainly in the
central and southern regions.
The gang
has undergone internal power struggles and is known for its vast money
laundering operations and ability to corrupt officials.
Beltran
Leyva escaped capture once before in 2011, when he fled his home in Mexico
City, where he lived with his wife and three of his daughters.
This time,
he was arrested by soldiers at a controversial time for the army.
The
attorney general's office plans to charge three soldiers with murder for the
killing of 22 drug gang suspects who authorities originally said died in a
shootout with the military on June 30.


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