News
Release
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 2, 2012
Contact: Special Agent Amy Roderick
Number: 858-616-4166
Leader
of Notorious Tijuana Cartel/Arellano-Felix
Drug Trafficking Organization Sentenced
for Racketeering, Money Laundering
--25 Year Sentence, $100 Million
Ordered Forfeited--
April
2 (San Diego, CA) – DEA
Administrator Michele M. Leonhart today
announced that Benjamin Arellano-Felix,
nearly 60, the former leader of the Tijuana
Cartel/Arellano-Felix Organization (AFO)
was sentenced today in U.S. District
Court in San Diego by the Honorable Larry
A. Burns to serve 25 years in federal
prison. Judge Burns also ordered Arellano-
Felix to forfeit $100 million in criminal
proceeds. The sentence followed Arellano-Felix’s
conviction for racketeering and money
laundering.
“The
Tijuana Cartel was one of the world’s
most brutal drug trafficking networks, but
has now met its demise with leader Benjamin
Arellano-Felix’s sentencing today,” said
DEA Administrator Michele M. Leonhart. “It
is a major victory for DEA and Mexico’s
Calderon Administration. Together, we will
continue our pressure on the Mexican cartels
whose leaders, members, and facilitators
will be prosecuted and face the justice they
fear.”
“Today’s
prison sentence virtually ensures that Arellano-Felix
will spend the remainder of his life in custody.
Following this sentence, he will be deported
to Mexico to finish a 22-year sentence. This
is a fitting end for a person who has caused
so much suffering and destruction,” commented
United States Attorney Duffy. Duffy heralded
the sentence as a landmark achievement in
the United States and Mexico’s joint
effort to dismantle drug cartels operating
on both sides of the border and stated that “Attorney
General Eric Holder and Mexican Attorney
General Marisela Morales are pleased with
today’s result and that this defendant
has finally been held accountable for his
crimes. Today’s sentence, together
with what remains of his sentence in Mexico,
will go a long way in ensuring that Arellano
Felix spends his remaining years in prison.”
Long-reputed
to be one of the most notorious multi-national
drug trafficking organizations to ever exist,
the AFO controlled the flow of cocaine, marijuana
and other drugs through the Mexican border
cities of Tijuana and Mexicali into the United
States. Its operations also extended into
southern Mexico and Colombia. Arellano-Felix
was taken into custody by Mexican authorities
on March 9, 2002. A final order of extradition
to the United States was granted in 2007
and after years of unsuccessful appeals,
Arellano-Felix arrived in the U.S. on April
29, 2011, to face charges in the Southern
District of California for narcotics trafficking,
money laundering and organized crime-related
offenses. On January 4, 2012, he entered
his guilty pleas before Judge Burns.
San
Diego FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge
Eric Birnbaum commented, “Today's sentencing
marks the end of Mr. Arellano-Felix's reign
as the leader of one of the most dangerous
drug and organized crime organizations our
agencies have ever investigated. While there
is still much work to do, it is particularly
noteworthy that this culmination would not
have been possible without the cumulative
efforts of law enforcement on both sides
of the border. We are pleased to stand united
against the violence brought forth by the
AFO and see this individual brought to justice.”
“The
money laundering investigation conducted
by IRS Special Agents contributed to the
dismantling of one of the most notorious
and violent drug cartels in Mexico,” commented
Leslie P. DeMarco, Special Agent in Charge
of IRS Criminal Investigation Los Angeles
Field Office. "Today’s sentencing
is further evidence of the successful partnership
that IRS Criminal Investigation has with
other law enforcement agencies by using our
financial expertise to unravel the money
laundering component of this multi-national
drug-trafficking organization.”
According
to court records and the defendant’s
admissions, Arellano-Felix was the leader
of the AFO from approximately 1986 to until
his arrest on March 9, 2002. During that
time, Arellano-Felix served as the ultimate
decision-maker for the AFO. Arellano-Felix
issued directives to other members of the
AFO, including his brothers, Ramon, Eduardo,
and Francisco Javier Arellano-Felix, as well
as his top lieutenants and drug-trafficking
partners.
Arellano-Felix
and other AFO members conspired to import
and distribute within the United States hundreds
of tons of cocaine and marijuana, for which
the AFO obtained hundreds of millions in
U.S. dollars in profits. At Arellano-Felix’s
direction, members of the AFO kidnaped, physically
restrained and murdered numerous persons
in furtherance of the AFO's illegal activities.
Also at Arellano-Felix’s direction,
members of the AFO bribed law enforcement
and military personnel, and murdered informants
and potential witnesses in order to obstruct
or impede the official investigation of their
activities. Arellano-Felix conspired with
other members of the AFO to launder proceeds
of the above drug trafficking activities
by directing other members to transport,
transmit, and transfer hundreds of millions
in U.S. dollars from the United States to
Mexico.
This
case was investigated by agents from the
Drug Enforcement Administration, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, and the Internal
Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation and
prosecuted in the Southern District of California
by Assistant United States Attorneys Joseph
Green, James Melendres, and Daniel Zipp.
The Criminal Division’s Office of International
Affairs provided significant assistance in
the extradition. The investigation was coordinated
by an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task
Force (OCDETF). The OCDETF program was created
to consolidate and coordinate all law enforcement
resources in this country's battle against
major drug trafficking rings, drug kingpins,
and money launderers.
### |