On February 21, a federal jury in Brooklyn, New York found Mexico’s former secretary of public security, Genaro García Luna, guilty of conspiring with the Sinaloa Cartel.
Known as the “supercop” due to the outsize power he wielded during the administration of conservative president Felipe Calderón, García Luna was convicted on all counts: conspiracy to distribute cocaine internationally, conspiracy to distribute and possess cocaine, and conspiracy to import cocaine, together with participating in a continuing criminal enterprise and making false statements on his application to become a naturalized US citizen...
The verdict represents a brutal humiliation for two former presidents: Vicente Fox (2000–6), who named García Luna to be the director of the Federal Intelligence Agency (AFI), and Felipe Calderón (2006–2012), who elevated him to cabinet status as his secretary for public security, investing him with plenipotentiary powers over the nation’s policing.
In stark contrast to the former presidents’ attempts to depict their time in office as a heroic crusade against organized crime, witness accounts painted a portrait of a security apparatus in lockstep with it. According to Jesús “El Rey” Zambada, brother of the Sinaloa Cartel’s former leader Ismael, members of the Sinaloa Cartel would wear AFI uniforms “to make arrests and engage in fighting” while García Luna, as the head of the agency, was on the take for $1.5 million a month…
Both in the formulation of charges and the evidence presented, the prosecution case led by US attorney Peace appeared perfectly calibrated to achieve a conviction while divulging the least possible information to the public…
When the defense tried asking about Garcia Luna’s meetings with top-level officials in Washington, the prosecution moved to head them off. But one of the things that did slip out was the testimony of DEA agent Miguel Madrigal, who stated that the agency had been informed about García Luna’s connections with the Sinaloa Cartel back in 2010…
The fact that the intelligence community had a pretty good idea of who García Luna was did not stop its rank and file from “working with him” or even, as it turned out, going into business with him.
[Former US attorney general William Barr’s recent call for US intervention in México] avoids uncomfortable questioning about US complicity in the war on drugs, while deflecting attention on the Mexican side from Calderón (who was a US client) onto AMLO (who is not).