The drug cartel enforcer told an unsettling story: A woman who worked in the Mexican border’s biggest US consulate had helped a rival gang obtain US visas. And for that, the enforcer said, he ordered her killed.
Nonsense, said a US official, who said on Friday the motive for the slaying remains unknown.
The employee, Lesley Enriquez, and two other people connected to the US consulate in the city of Ciudad Juarez were killed on March 13 in attacks that raised concerns that Americans were being caught up in drug-related border violence.
Jesus Ernesto Chavez, whose arrest was announced on Friday, confessed to ordering the killings, said Ramon Pequeno, the head of anti-narcotics for the Mexican federal police. Pequeno said Chavez leads a band of hit men for a street gang tied to the Juarez cartel.
Enriquez and her husband were killed in Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas, as they drove toward a border crossing.
Chavez is also accused in a nearly simultaneous attack that killed the husband of a Mexican employee of the consulate.
Pequeno said Chavez told police that Enriquez was targeted because she helped provide visas to a rival gang.
A US federal official familiar with the investigation said on Friday that after the killings, US officials investigated possible corruption involving Enriquez and found none. The official was not authorized to speak about the case and spoke on condition of anonymity.
The official said the motive behind the killing remains unclear.
Officials with the US embassy in Mexico City declined to comment.
At the US Justice Department in Washington, spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler said law enforcement “continues to work closely with our Mexican counterparts to bring to justice individuals involved in these murders.”
US embassy officials previously said that Enriquez was never in a position to provide visas and worked in a section that provides basic services to US citizens in Mexico.
Mexican police provided no further details from Chavez’s confession on how Enriquez might have helped provide visas to a drug gang.
Enriquez was four months pregnant when she and her husband, Arthur Redelfs, were killed by gunmen who opened fire on their vehicle after the couple left a children’s birthday party. Their seven-month-old daughter was found wailing in the back seat.
Jorge Alberto Salcido, the husband of a Mexican employee of the consulate, was also killed by gunmen after leaving the same event in a separate vehicle.
Chavez told police that gunmen opened fire on Salcido because the two cars were the same color and the hit men did not know which one Enriquez was in, Pequeno said.
Investigators have also looked at whether Redelfs may have been targeted because of his work at an El Paso County jail that holds several members of the Barrio Azteca, the gang believed to be responsible for the attacks. Pequeno said Chavez belongs to Barrio Azteca, which works for the Juarez cartel on both sides of the border.
In March, US federal, state and local law enforcement officers swept through El Paso, picking up suspected members of the gang in an effort to find new leads in the killings. A suspect detained in Mexico shortly after the shooting confessed to acting as a lookout as the Azteca gang supposedly hunted down Redelfs, but he was never charged and was released without explanation.
Officials also have speculated that both attacks could have been a case of mistaken identity.
More than 23,000 people have been killed in Mexico’s drug-related violence since Mexican President Felipe Calderon launched an all-out offensive against drug gangs in 2006.
Much of the violence stems from rival drug and migrant-smuggling gangs vying for power, including a firefight on Thursday that left 21 people dead and at least six others wounded about 20km from the Arizona border.
On Friday, the Mexican army warned that drug cartels are using vehicles painted in military colors or with military emblems “to make it look as if they belonged to Mexican army.” A defense department statement mentioned four instances in four different states where such vehicles had been detected.
Chavez, 41, served five years in a Louisiana prison on drug distribution charges, according to Mexico’s central intelligence database. He was detained in Mexico in 2008 by the Mexican army on drug trafficking allegations and released, only to be promoted within the Azteca gang, federal police said.
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