U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officials say Javier Arellano-Felix headed a ruthless drug cartel. |
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WASHINGTON (CNN) -- One of the world's most wanted drug lords was
captured Wednesday aboard a recreational fishing boat off Mexico's Baja
peninsula, federal law enforcement officials said.
The Drug Enforcement Administration's Michael Braun described the man captured, Javier
Arellano-Felix, as "one of the most ruthless thugs that was involved in drug trafficking around
the world."
Law enforcement officials say Arellano-Felix led a violent Tijuana-based cartel that brought
multi-ton shipments of marijuana and cocaine into the United States and trained body guards
and assassins to protect turf and eliminate rivals.
"We feel like we've taken the head off the snake," said Braun, the DEA's chief of operations.
"This is not your average arrest ... It's what our job is all about. It's what we live for."
The Arellano-Felix organization was responsible for a recently discovered, elaborately
constructed tunnel under the Mexico-California border, law enforcement officials said.
And, Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty said, the cartel was sophisticated enough to
negotiate directly with Colombian drug lords and paramilitary groups for multi-ton shipments of
cocaine.
The DEA lists rewards of $5 million each for the capture of Arellano-Felix and his brother,
Eduardo, who federal officials said plays a lesser leadership role in the cartel.
Gone fishing
Coast Guard Commandant Thad Allen said the DEA alerted him Monday morning that
intelligence showed Arellano-Felix was aboard the chartered 43-foot recreational fishing
vessel Dock Holiday, 15 miles off the coast near La Paz, Mexico.
Arellano-Felix was traveling under an alias, but eventually confirmed his identity, officials said.
Eight other adults and three juveniles also were detained.
Officials said two of the men in custody are believed to be Arturo Villareal-Heredia and Marco
Fernandez, both described by the DEA as "assassins" for the Arellano-Felix organization.
Authorities said the two will initially be held as material witnesses, but later will be charged with
conspiracy to distribute narcotics and other counts.
Arellano-Felix is in the custody of the U.S. Coast Guard on board the cutter Monsoon. He will
be brought ashore in San Diego, where he has been indicted and will be arraigned.
His brother and several other indicted cartel members remain at large.
2003 indictment
According to the DEA's Web site, members of the Arellano-Felix organization were named in a
July 2003 indictment alleging federal racketeering offenses, conspiracy to import marijuana and
cocaine and launder money.
The indictment also listed 20 murders in the U.S. and Mexico as part of the conspiracy,
McNulty said.
The Arellano-Felix organization, often referred to as the Tijuana Cartel, was considered one of
the most powerful and violent drug trafficking organizations in Mexico, according to the DEA.
At the beginning of 2002, the cartel was dealt two blows, the DEA said: Ramon Arellano-Felix,
the cartel's enforcer and assassin, died in a street fight with drug trafficking competitors and
Mexican police. A month later, Benjamin Arellano-Felix, who the DEA says played the role of the
cartel's CEO, was arrested by the Mexican Military.
The loss of two cartel leaders was "the beginning of the end" for the organization, the DEA's
Braun said. With Javier Arellano-Felix's capture, he added, "We've got this brutal organization
in a choke hold."