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Los Angeles Times
September 16, 2002
Infamous Prison City Torn
Down
Tijuana: Prostitutes, drugs, shops - all were available at La Mesa. Mexico's
president vows more 'cleansing.'
Author: ANNE-MARIE O'CONNOR; TIMES STAFF
WRITER
Metro Desk
Edition: Home Edition
Section: California
Page: B-1
Index Terms:
MEXICO
PRISONS
DEMOLITION
POLITICAL CORRUPTION
PRISONERS
LIFESTYLESEstimated printed
pages: 5
Article Text:
It was never an
address for the faint of heart.
Yet when 1,500
well-armed federal police raided
Tijuana's
notorious La Mesa State Penitentiary two weeks ago, and bulldozed the
sprawling village prisoners built in its courtyard, the inmates'
children cried.
The infamous
penitentiary--a carnivalesque casbah that sprouted its own homes, shops,
prostitutes and drug-dealing gangs--was the only home many of the
children had ever known.
"It was a little
city within a city. There was no law except the law of money," said Raul
Gutierrez Anaya, a spokesman for the Baja California state attorney
general's office. "Whoever had money could have all the luxuries of
anyone outside--television, wines, women and drugs."
The National Human
Rights Commission in 1992 concluded that La Mesa presented "a tableau
that is unique in the world." Baja California Gov. Eugenio Elorduy
called the prison a "black legend."
The destruction of
the little universe within the penitentiary gates--a place where
prisoners paid $25,000 for townhomes with cell phones, tiled bathrooms
and Jacuzzis--began what Mexican President Vicente Fox said would be a
"complete cleansing" of La Mesa.
Fox, who
campaigned on promises to wipe out corruption, characterized the prison
raid as a triumph of a joint effort between the army and newly trained
federal police. He said the effort has achieved "extraordinary results
against organized crime and drug traffickers" in Tijuana.
The Baja attorney
general's office suggested that there is more housecleaning to come.
"They're going to have to punish those who allowed all this," Gutierrez
said.
But reform of
Mexico's criminal justice system has been a rocky road, strewn with
powerful special interests, cowed would-be reformers and stymied
investigations.
In the latest
twist to the bizarre saga at La Mesa, state officials announced a few
days ago that the prison's director, Carlos Lugo Felix, has vanished
since the Aug. 20 raid.
Gutierrez said
authorities asked Lugo Felix to appear to answer for "abandonment of
duties," but he has failed to turn up.
"We don't know
where he is," Gutierrez said. "The state attorney general's office is
looking for him."
In Lugo Felix's
absence, Tijuana state prosecutor Sergio Ortiz Lara has assumed the post
as prison director.
Lugo Felix wasn't
the first administrator to run into trouble at the prison.
The tenure of two
previous directors was cut short when they were killed, one of them
during a prison riot in 1978, and a second when he was gunned down by
assassins waiting at his house in 1995.
Another fled under
a cloud of suspicion that he was involved in the thriving narcotics
trade in the prison, where drugs were said to be so plentiful that they
sold for less than street prices.
In the absence of
a strong authority over the years, prisoners set many of the rules. They
built as many as 400 houses, some with microwaves, computers, DVD
players and air conditioning. There were maids, cooks and bodyguards.
There were stores, pizza parlors, tequila bars and video emporiums.
In the mid-1990s,
a prisoner, who had two French poodles and a Rottweiler, explained to a
visitor the going rate for bribes to smuggle in drugs and guns. One
murder in the prison was committed with an Uzi.
Such a luridly
illustrious fate would have seemed unthinkable when the austere edifice
was built in 1956, as a municipal jail for 600 prisoners. By the time of
the raid, it housed 6,700.
More than 2,200
prisoners were given a surprise transfer the day of the raid to other
prisons. After years of access to drugs, those who were shipped out had
to go cold turkey.
The raid also
touched off an earthquake among the prison staff.
Since the prison
director vanished, 53 of the 237 guards at La Mesa were suspended, as
authorities continue to investigate suspicions of corruption, Gutierrez
said. Half of the 53 have since resigned, officials said.
Also displaced
were prisoners' wives and children who had lived inside the prison. The
poorest lived in the open and were preyed upon by thugs. The luckiest
lived in the comfortable wood siding homes.
As these families
were shown the way out of "El Pueblito"--The Little Town--bulldozers
toppled the houses behind them, creating mountains of rubble in the
prison courtyard.
Some 40 children
had no parents except for prisoners, and they were led away by social
workers, tearfully clutching their toys.
Some of the
homeless families took shelter at the municipal auditorium; a few
accused the raiding police of stealing their possessions. The last 80
such refugees have moved out of the auditorium to the homes of relatives
or friends, Gutierrez said.
Difficult Separations
"They cried to be
separated from their fathers and husbands," he said. "Entire families
had been living there with the prisoners."
The tradition of
family cohabitation was perhaps the most wholesome aberration at La
Mesa.
Here, the
unorthodox had become such a tradition that, to some, the chorus of
official outrage over corruption there had a less-than-sincere ring.
"It's absurd,"
said Victor Clark, the bearded and bespectacled director of Tijuana's
private Binational Center
for Human Rights, who has visited
La Mesa regularly since 1989.
Clark, a respected
analyst of organized crime who has interviewed prison directors and
inmates extensively, estimates that the prison's black market
concessions, from prostitution to drugs and housing, generated $2
million a month in off-the-books earnings.
"We always said
the penitentiary was the under-the-table cash register of the state
government," Clark said. "People made a lot of money at La Mesa, and the
corruption went to very high levels."
"Not only did
[government officials] know, but they were beneficiaries of the millions
of dollars that penitentiary generated," he said.
Clark said each
new director was quickly intimidated by the organized criminals.
He said some
directors confided that they were sent briefcases of cash. If they
refused the money, they got telephone threats, underlined by deliveries
of elaborate funeral wreaths.
Such persuasive
tactics are known in Tijuana by a credo--"plata or plomo," Spanish for
"silver or lead"--whose most literal translation is: take the cash or
take a bullet.
"Whether they sent
them cash or funeral wreaths," Clark said, "all of them maintained the
status quo at the penitentiary."
Clark said the
captive audience of bored prisoners were a lucrative, ready-made
narcotics market. Some prisoners ran up such debts that thugs threatened
wives outside the prison that their children would be kidnapped if
families didn't pay up.
He said some
people visited the prison not to see inmates, but to buy jewelry and
other "merchandise."
"It was one of the
cheapest places in the city to buy jewels, all of them stolen," he said.
"You could find drugs on every corner."
"It was one of the
most wide open places in Tijuana."
Clark said
newcomers quickly adapted to the entrepreneurial ambience.
Prison Restaurant
When a boatload of
Chinese illegal immigrants was seized in Ensenada and its crew arrested
for smuggling, the incarcerated crew opened a fairly decent Chinese
restaurant inside the prison, he said.
It remains to be
seen whether the raid of La Mesa is truly the end of an era.
In one interview,
national public security chief Alejandro Gertz Manero linked the raid at
La Mesa to Mexico's drive to recover full control over federal
maximum-security prisons. He said that effort began in January 2001,
after renowned Mexican drug trafficker Joaquin Guzman bought his way out
of another regional prison -- riding in a laundry truck.
"They say things
have changed" at La Mesa, Clark
said, "but today prisoners are still selling cell phone calls for 50
cents a minute, and prostitutes are still going in. The price of heroin
and cocaine has supposedly doubled."
State attorney
general's office spokesman Felipe Guicho said investigators will get to
the bottom of the improprieties.
"The
investigations will show who was involved in the corruption at the
prison," Guicho said, "until we find all of those responsible."
* Times staff
researcher Robin Mayper and Times wire services contributed to this
story.
Caption:
PHOTO: An entrepreneurial inmate, shown in 1994, cooks a pail of soup
that he will sell for $1 per portion throughout the night.
PHOTOGRAPHER: DON BARTLETTI / Los Angeles Times
PHOTO: A strolling prison band, shown in 1994, serenades a couple in
their fortified house. Some inmates at La Mesa owned homes that included
cellular phones, tiled bathrooms and Jacuzzis.
PHOTOGRAPHER: DON BARTLETTI / Los Angeles Times
PHOTO: Relatives, from left, Yolanda Olivera, Juana Pedroza and Cristina
Ibarra wait outside La Mesa prison for word about their husbands or
children, who may have been relocated. Authorities transferred the most
dangerous inmates and destroyed a city prisoners had built.
PHOTOGRAPHER: Associated Press
PHOTO: Workers destroy a village within a state prison where inmates
moved freely, ran shops, sold drugs, owned homes, even lived with their
families. The demolition is part of an anti-corruption effort.
PHOTOGRAPHER: Associated Press
PHOTO: On a Sunday in 1994, the courtyard of La Mesa State Penitentiary
in Tijuana resembled an ordinary small Mexican community.
PHOTOGRAPHER: DON BARTLETTI / Los Angeles Times
Copyright 2002 Los
Angeles Times
Record Number: 000110297