Military, law enforcement caught in FBI drug trafficking sting
in Arizona
By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN Associated Press Writer

(AP) - TUCSON, Arizona-Pretending to be cocaine traffickers,
undercover FBI agents in Arizona snared 16 current and former law
enforcement officers and U.S. soldiers who accepted more than
$222,000  in bribes to help move the drugs past checkpoints, the
government said Thursday, May 12, 2005.

Those charged include a former Immigration and Naturalization Service
inspector, a former Army sergeant, a former federal prison guard, seven
members of the Arizona Army National Guard, five members of the
Arizona Department of Corrections and a police officer, officials said.

All 16 agreed to plead guilty to being part of a bribery and corruption
conspiracy, said Noel Hillman, a Justice Department official.

Eleven defendants entered guilty pleas Thursday afternoon in U.S.
District Court, acknowledging that they used their positions as uniformed
public figures to assist in transporting cocaine for people they believed
to be drug traffickers.

Two other defendants were scheduled to enter their pleas Friday with
the remaining three on Monday, authorities said.

Those who pleaded guilty were freed on their own recognizance. Justice
Department prosecutor John W. Scott said all probably would start out
facing sentences of 34 to 36 months for a single conspiracy count, but
that the sentences could be less depending on the defendants'
cooperation. He said he would ask for an indefinite delay in sentencing.

The defendants in the nearly 3 1/2-year-long sting were not arrested
and agreed to cooperate with an investigation expected to bring more
arrests and involve people from additional agencies, said Hillman and
FBI Agent Jana D. Monroe, who is in charge of the bureau's operations
in Arizona.

Hillman said the defendants drove cocaine shipments past checkpoints
manned by the government while they wore official uniforms, carried
identification and used official vehicles.

"Many individuals charged were sworn personnel having the task of
protecting society and securing America's borders," Monroe said. "The
importance of these tasks cannot be overstated and we cannot tolerate,
nor can the American people afford, this type of corruption."

Hillman and Monroe said the FBI was tipped about an individual and set
up the fake trafficking organization in December 2001. Military and
police personnel then were lured with money to help distribute the
cocaine or allow it to pass through checkpoints they were guarding,
Hillman said.

Authorities engaged in an elaborate effort to determine that the
defendants were predisposed to taking bribes, he said.

One defendant, John M. Castillo, 30, was on duty as an INS inspector at
a border checkpoint in Nogales in April 2002 when he twice allowed a
truck he believed was carrying at least 88 pounds of cocaine to enter
the country without being inspected, Hillman said.

Castillo later sold INS documents to an undercover FBI agent that
fraudulently provided for entry of undocumented immigrants into the
United States, he said.

In another instance in 2002, several of those charged met an aircraft
flown by undercover FBI agents that was carrying 132 pounds of
cocaine at a remote desert airstrip, he added.

In full uniform, they supervised the loading of the cocaine into two
military Humvees assigned to the National Guard and another
government vehicle, then drove to a resort hotel in Phoenix - where
another undercover agent posing as a trafficker paid them in cash,
Hillman said.

The FBI used real cocaine seized in other operations, the officials said.
The 16 suspects transported more than 1,230 pounds of cocaine, the
officials said.

The cocaine, with a street value of nearly $18.5 million, never ultimately
left FBI possession, officials said.

Also Thursday, a U.S. Border Patrol agent in Texas and his brother
pleaded guilty to accepting about $1.5 million to allow drugs through a
checkpoint.

Agent Juan Alvarez, 35, and his brother Jose Guadalupe Alvarez, 38,
both of Laredo, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to bribe a public official and
conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana and cocaine.

The brothers admitted they accepted money to allow drug dealers to
move one or more loads of marijuana per month through the checkpoint
between June 2003 and April 2005. Each load included 1 ton to 2 tons
of marijuana. They also admitted to conspiring to move more than five
kilograms of cocaine.

Conspiracy, the more serious count, carries a maximum sentence of 15
years in federal prison. The men also were jointly ordered to pay the
government $1.5 million.
---

Associated Press Writer Mark Sherman in Washington contributed to
this report.
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