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America's Mexican Border Wars
Mexico president says future of democracy at stake


<<MEX_SOLDIERS_ACAPULCO_25Jun09.JPG>>

Reuters – Mexican soldiers patrol a street in the Mexican beach resort of Acapulco June 10, 2009. Eighteen people were killed in a shootout between drug gangs and soldiers on June 7 and the gun battle was a further blow to Mexico's tourism industry, already reeling from cancellations by foreigners scared away by the swine flu epidemic.

By MARK STEVENSON, Associated Press Writer Mark Stevenson, Associated Press Writer – Thu Jun 25, 12:01 am ET
MEXICO CITY – President Felipe Calderon said Wednesday the future of Mexican democracy is at stake in the government's fight against official corruption and organized crime, and he criticized politicians who he said want to return to the era when gangs were tolerated.

Calderon also called for making legislators more accountable to the public, including reducing the number of Congress members while allowing them to serve more than one term and face voters' judgment in re-election bids.

Speaking at a conference on security, the president gave a scathing appraisal on how far corruption has reached into Mexican government circles ahead of the July 5 midterm elections.

"What is at stake today is not just the result of an election, but rather the future of democracy, of representative institutions," he said. "For years ... crime was allowed to grow expand and penetrate. Perhaps people thought it was a manageable thing."

Calderon said the country, which has seen more than 10,800 deaths in organized crime violence since he took office in December 2006, "is at a historical crossroads."

"To turn one's head, to act as if you don't see the crime in front of you, as some politicians want to do, is no option for Mexico," he said.

He painted a grim picture of the security situation in some of the most violent parts of the country, noting that crime gangs and drug cartels are carrying out "an interminable recruitment of young people without hope, family, opportunities, future, beliefs or convictions.

"They turn up dead in some morgue and nobody claims their bodies, as happens with more than 30 percent of the bodies in the most violent cities, like Ciudad Juarez," across the border from El Paso, Texas.

In Ciudad Juarez, authorities said Wednesday that gunmen in a passing car killed an American teenager and his Mexican cousin as they stood at a corner. Officials didn't release any information about a possible motive, and no arrests were made.

The victims were identified by a relative as Raymundo Perez, 15, a student at El Dorado High School in Socorro, Texas, southeast of El Paso, and his cousin Alan Perez, 18, of Ciudad Juarez. Raymundo Perez lived in Socorro with his grandmother and aunt but spent vacation in Ciudad Juarez, where his parents live.

Earlier in the day, unidentified assailants in Ciudad Juarez tossed gasoline bombs into a billiard hall and a money exchange office. In 2008, more than 30 businesses were burned in the city, where threats of arson are often used by extortionists linked to drug gangs.

In the Pacific coast state of Guerrero, investigators on Wednesday found the bodies of two local police officers who had been shot to death, the state's public safety department said in a statement. It said the officers were kidnapped earlier Wednesday a block away from city hall in the town of La Union.

Calderon repeated calls he made earlier in his political career as a congressman for reducing the number of federal legislators, now 500 seats in the Congress and 128 in the Senate. He didn't offer any specific numbers, but argues that having fewer lawmakers would make it easier to hold them accountable for how well they work.

He also said letting legislators run for re-election would make them accountable to their constituents. In the current system, politicians from president to congressmen to town officials can serve in a specific post for only a single term, generally three or six years.

Hours after Calderon warned about corruption, federal agents and soldiers arrested at least 50 local and state police officers in the central state of Hidalgo, an area control by the Zetas, a gang of hit men tied to the Gulf cartel. ...". xxxxxx

AND our main focus is the middle east and the oil and Taiban, which by the way according to Intell reports is already inside Mexico working their plan to infiltrate across the US Mexico border and set up "sleeper cells" for assassinations conducted inside the United States. They have been crossing over for a few years now... back and forth with a plan. But the American people are not supose to know this... could cause panic... it has been said.
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We Americans had better get our heads out of our butts on this war and protect our borders. (And go for their oil, as little as it is..... seemed to work for us in the middle east.

Mexico is not failing we are failing Mexico and by our actions, policies, and double standards we aid the cartels in their operations and plans.

We have looked at this situation and found the real enemy is the USA and it appears as a nation we cannot function in this war because its not in our best interest to shut the cartels down... to much money involved to a select few working in the beltway of DC and their advisors....


Latin America Specialist xxxxxC (202)xxxxxx Map from the Article is attached.

Wall Street Journal MARCH 11, 2009 Congress Aims to Police Border Violence

By CAM SIMPSON and EVAN PEREZ WASHINGTON -- The number of federal agents trying to keep drugs and illegal immigrants out of the U.S. has more than doubled in five years. Congress now wants those sentinels to keep watch in both directions -- to stop the smuggling of U.S. guns and cash to Mexico. Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers on Tuesday urged officials from the Department of Homeland Security to halt the flow of weapons and drug profits that has fueled the violence by Mexico's drug gangs. At a hearing, some lawmakers expressed disappointment at the lack of a specific plan from Homeland Security officials to attack the problem, which has claimed thousands of lives. The ranking Republican on the House Appropriations Committee, California Rep. Jerry Lewis, compared the task to the challenge facing the U.S. in Iraq and Afghanistan. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has said tackling the issue is a top priority. But officials who lead the two biggest DHS agencies involved -- Customs and Border Protection, and Immigrations and Customs Enforcement -- said in interviews they don't have funding currently designated for so-called outbound enforcement. Rep. Hal Rogers, the top Republican on the Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee, which held Tuesday's hearing, said U.S. officials are "burying our heads in the sands of Cancún." One angry Democrat, Rep. Sam Farr of California, threatened to hold up the department's funding until there is a coordinated plan for going after the guns. The Mexican government is fighting a war with its drug cartels and their armed enforcers. The gangs are battling for access routes to the lucrative U.S. market and much of the violence straddles the border. The fighting is being waged with thousands of American-purchased or stolen weapons flowing south illegally each year, U.S. officials say. The State Department recently estimated U.S.-originated guns were used in 95% of Mexico's drug-related killings. The number of such murders more than doubled to almost 6,000 last year, up from about 2,700 in 2007. Meanwhile, U.S. authorities seized only 257 weapons heading south at border checkpoints in 2008 -- and a total of just 733 dating back to the start of 2005, according to data Homeland Security officials provided to The Wall Street Journal. The fighting is also fueled by the cash earned by Mexican gangs selling their illicit products in the U.S. The State Department estimated that as much as $22 billion in drug proceeds were sent from the U.S. to Mexico between 2003 and the end of last year, much of it through bulk-cash smuggling. Since July 2005, teams established by ICE to take on drug-cartel operations along the border have seized a total of $22.7 million in cash, a fraction of the estimated drug profits. The teams received $10 million in the budget for the year ended Sept. 30, 2008, but nothing since, officials said Tuesday. Ms. Napolitano has promised a total of $45 million more for border protection next year, but it's unclear how much of that would be directed toward stemming the flow of guns and money to Mexico. A separate hearing Tuesday focused on foreign assistance for Mexico's drug war under the so-called Merida Initiative. The plan, instituted under President George W. Bush, has directed $1.4 billion in aid to Mexico, mostly through training and equipment. Obama administration officials say they are committed to the deal. Justice Department officials recently touted a nationwide campaign targeting Mexico's Sinaloa cartel operations in the U.S., arresting more than 50 alleged members from California to Maryland on one day last month. Calling it "Operation Xcellerator," the department tallied more than 750 arrests in the U.S. and Mexico over the past 21 months and the seizure of more than $59 million in illicit proceeds. Law-enforcement officials acknowledge that the Mexican and U.S. governments have yet to gain the upper hand against these groups' U.S. operations, which reach coast to coast, from dealers in small towns in Maine to big-city coordinators in Southern California. Drug Enforcement Administration officials estimate the Xcellerator operation cost the Sinaloa cartel $1 billion, including drug seizures. That figure is an estimate of what the cartel would have earned from the disrupted drug sales. Write to Cam Simpson at cam.simpson@wsj.com and Evan Perez at evan.perez@wsj.com Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A3 Copyright 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit...".

AND the BEAT goes on.
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Wall Street Journal
MARCH 11, 2009

Congress Aims to Police Border Violence
By CAM SIMPSON and EVAN PEREZ

WASHINGTON -- The number of federal agents trying to keep drugs and illegal immigrants out of the U.S. has more than doubled in five years. Congress now wants those sentinels to keep watch in both directions -- to stop the smuggling of U.S. guns and cash to Mexico.

Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers on Tuesday urged officials from the Department of Homeland Security to halt the flow of weapons and drug profits that has fueled the violence by Mexico's drug gangs.

At a hearing, some lawmakers expressed disappointment at the lack of a specific plan from Homeland Security officials to attack the problem, which has claimed thousands of lives. The ranking Republican on the House Appropriations Committee, California Rep. Jerry Lewis, compared the task to the challenge facing the U.S. in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has said tackling the issue is a top priority. But officials who lead the two biggest DHS agencies involved -- Customs and Border Protection, and Immigrations and Customs Enforcement -- said in interviews they don't have funding currently designated for so-called outbound enforcement.

Rep. Hal Rogers, the top Republican on the Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee, which held Tuesday's hearing, said U.S. officials are "burying our heads in the sands of Cancún."

One angry Democrat, Rep. Sam Farr of California, threatened to hold up the department's funding until there is a coordinated plan for going after the guns.

The Mexican government is fighting a war with its drug cartels and their armed enforcers. The gangs are battling for access routes to the lucrative U.S. market and much of the violence straddles the border.

The fighting is being waged with thousands of American-purchased or stolen weapons flowing south illegally each year, U.S. officials say.

The State Department recently estimated U.S.-originated guns were used in 95% of Mexico's drug-related killings. The number of such murders more than doubled to almost 6,000 last year, up from about 2,700 in 2007.

Meanwhile, U.S. authorities seized only 257 weapons heading south at border checkpoints in 2008 -- and a total of just 733 dating back to the start of 2005, according to data Homeland Security officials provided to The Wall Street Journal.

The fighting is also fueled by the cash earned by Mexican gangs selling their illicit products in the U.S. The State Department estimated that as much as $22 billion in drug proceeds were sent from the U.S. to Mexico between 2003 and the end of last year, much of it through bulk-cash smuggling.

Since July 2005, teams established by ICE to take on drug-cartel operations along the border have seized a total of $22.7 million in cash, a fraction of the estimated drug profits.

The teams received $10 million in the budget for the year ended Sept. 30, 2008, but nothing since, officials said Tuesday. Ms. Napolitano has promised a total of $45 million more for border protection next year, but it's unclear how much of that would be directed toward stemming the flow of guns and money to Mexico.

A separate hearing Tuesday focused on foreign assistance for Mexico's drug war under the so-called Merida Initiative. The plan, instituted under President George W. Bush, has directed $1.4 billion in aid to Mexico, mostly through training and equipment. Obama administration officials say they are committed to the deal.

Justice Department officials recently touted a nationwide campaign targeting Mexico's Sinaloa cartel operations in the U.S., arresting more than 50 alleged members from California to Maryland on one day last month. Calling it "Operation Xcellerator," the department tallied more than 750 arrests in the U.S. and Mexico over the past 21 months and the seizure of more than $59 million in illicit proceeds.

Law-enforcement officials acknowledge that the Mexican and U.S. governments have yet to gain the upper hand against these groups' U.S. operations, which reach coast to coast, from dealers in small towns in Maine to big-city coordinators in Southern California.

Drug Enforcement Administration officials estimate the Xcellerator operation cost the Sinaloa cartel $1 billion, including drug seizures. That figure is an estimate of what the cartel would have earned from the disrupted drug sales....".

Nothing has been done to date except talk and BS on both sides of our political parties and officials. Over 15,000 people killed in Mexico in two years and we just talk a lot about something we know nothing about or really care about.

It will not be long before you will have the cartels running this country, much like they do now in Mexico.. or perhaps its to late... follow the money.
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From a journalist in hiding from deep inside Mexico. The Cartel just put out a 2 million US dollar award for the head of this reporter who has been on the front lines of this drug war for a number of years. He writes under various names in order to protect his life.

We need more dedicated people, like this reporter, in the fight of the drug war. It is said around Juarez that bets are being place that this reporter will not live to see the New Year.... last week the bets being placed closed at 20 to 1 predicting his murder before the years end.

received via JSOCTF7N 07-07-08 (not classified)

MEXICO: ECONOMICS AND THE ARMS TRADE

On June 26, the small Mexican town of Apaseo el Alto, in Guanajuato state, was the scene of a deadly firefight between members of Los Zetas and federal and local security forces. The engagement began when a joint patrol of Mexican soldiers and police officers responded to a report of heavily armed men at a suspected drug safe house. When the patrol arrived, a 20-minute firefight erupted between the security forces and gunmen in the house as well as several suspects in two vehicles who threw fragmentation grenades as they tried to escape.

When the shooting ended, 12 gunmen lay dead, 12 had been taken into custody and several soldiers and police officers had been wounded. At least half of the detained suspects admitted to being members of Los Zetas, a highly trained Mexican cartel group known for its use of military weapons and tactics.

When authorities examined the safe house they discovered a mass grave that contained the remains of an undetermined number of people (perhaps 14 or 15) who are believed to have been executed and then burned beyond recognition by Los Zetas. The house also contained a large cache of weapons, including assault rifles and fragmentation grenades. Such military ordnance is frequently used by Los Zetas and the enforcers who work for their rival cartels.

STRATFOR has been closely following the cartel violence in Mexico for several years now, and the events that transpired in Apaseo el Alto are by no means unique. It is not uncommon for the Mexican authorities to engage in large firefights with cartel groups, encounter mass graves or recover large caches of arms. However, the recovery of the weapons in Apaseo el Alto does provide an opportunity to once again focus on the dynamics of Mexico's arms trade.

White, Black and Shades of Gray

Before we get down into the weeds of Mexico's arms trade, let's do something a little different and first take a brief look at how arms trafficking works on a regional and global scale. Doing so will help illustrate how arms trafficking in Mexico fits into these broader patterns.

When analysts examine arms sales they look at three general categories: the white arms market, the gray arms market and the black arms market. The white arms market is the legal, aboveboard transfer of weapons in accordance with the national laws of the parties involved and international treaties or restrictions. The parties in a white arms deal will file the proper paperwork, including end-user certificates, noting what is being sold, who is selling it and to whom it is being sold. There is an understanding that the receiving party does not intend to transfer the weapons to a third party. So, for example, if the Mexican army wants to buy assault rifles from German arms maker Heckler & Koch, it places the order with the company and fills out all the required paperwork, including forms for obtaining permission for the sale from the German government.

Now, the white arms market can be deceived and manipulated, and when this happens, we get the gray market -- literally, white arms that are shifted into the hands of someone other than the purported recipient. One of the classic ways to do this is to either falsify an end-user certificate, or bribe an official in a third country to sign an end-user certificate but then allow a shipment of arms to pass through a country en route to a third location. This type of transaction is frequently used in cases where there are international arms embargoes against a particular country (like Liberia) or where it is illegal to sell arms to a militant group (such as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known by its Spanish acronym, FARC). One example of this would be Ukrainian small arms that, on paper, were supposed to go to Cote d'Ivoire but were really transferred in violation of U.N. arms embargoes to Liberia and Sierra Leone. Another example of this would be the government of Peru purchasing thousands of surplus East German assault rifles from Jordan on the white arms market, ostensibly for the Peruvian military, only to have those rifles slip into the gray arms world and be dropped at airstrips in the jungles of Colombia for use by the FARC.

At the far end of the spectrum is the black arms market where the guns are contraband from the get-go and all the business is conducted under the table. There are no end-user certificates and the weapons are smuggled covertly. Examples of this would be the smuggling of arms from the former Soviet Union (FSU) and Afghanistan into Europe through places like Kosovo and Slovenia, or the smuggling of arms into South America from Asia, the FSU and Middle East by Hezbollah and criminal gangs in the Tri-Border Region.

Nation-states will often use the gray and black arms markets in order to deniably support allies, undermine opponents or otherwise pursue their national interests. This was clearly revealed in the Iran-Contra scandal of the mid-1980s, but Iran-Contra only scratched the surface of the arms smuggling that occurred during the Cold War. Untold tons of military ordnance were delivered by the United States, the Soviet Union and Cuba to their respective allies in Latin America during the Cold War.

This quantity of materiel shipped into Latin America during the Cold War brings up another very important point pertaining to weapons. Unlike drugs, which are consumable goods, firearms are durable goods. This means that they can be useful for decades and are frequently shipped from conflict zone to conflict zone. East German MPiKMS and MPiKM assault rifles are still floating around the world's arms markets years after the German Democratic Republic ceased to exist. In fact, visiting an arms bazaar in a place like Yemen is like visiting an arms museum. One can encounter century-old, still-functional Lee-Enfield and Springfield rifles in a rack next to a modern U.S. M4 rifle or German HK93, and those next to brand-new Chinese Type 56 and 81 assault rifles.

There is often a correlation between arms and drug smuggling. In many instances, the same routes used to smuggle drugs are also used to smuggle arms. In some instances, like the smuggling routes from Central Asia to Europe, the flow of guns and drugs goes in the same direction, and they are both sold in Western Europe for cash. In the case of Latin American cocaine, the drugs tend to flow in one direction (toward the United States and Europe) while guns from U.S. and Russian organized-crime groups flow in the other direction, and often these guns are used as whole or partial payment for the drugs.

Illegal drugs are not the only thing traded for guns. During the Cold War, a robust arms-for-sugar trade transpired between the Cubans and Vietnamese. As a result, Marxist groups all over Latin America were furnished with U.S. materiel either captured or left behind when the Americans withdrew from Vietnam. LAW rockets traced to U.S. military stocks sent to Vietnam were used in several attacks by Latin American Marxist groups. These Vietnam War-vintage weapons still crop up with some frequency in Mexico, Colombia and other parts of the region. Cold War-era weapons furnished to the likes of the Contras, Sandinistas, Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front and Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity movement in the 1980s are also frequently encountered in the region.

After the civil wars ended in places like El Salvador and Guatemala, the governments and the international community attempted to institute arms buy-back programs, but those programs were not very successful and most of the guns turned in were very old -- the better arms were cached by groups or kept by individuals. Some of these guns have dribbled back into the black arms market, and Central and South America are still awash in Cold War weapons.

But Cold War shipments are not the only reason that Latin America is flooded with guns. In addition to the indigenous arms industries in countries like Brazil and Argentina, Venezuela has purchased hundreds of thousands of AK assault rifles in recent years to replace its aging FN-FAL rifles and has even purchased the equipment to open a factory to produce AK-103 rifles under license inside Venezuela. The Colombian government has accused the Venezuelans of arming the FARC, and evidence obtained by the Colombians during raids on FARC camps and provided to the public appears to support those assertions.

More than 90 Percent?

For several years now, Mexican officials have been making public statements that more than 90 percent of the arms used by criminals in Mexico come from the United States. That number was echoed last month in a report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) on U.S. efforts to combat arms trafficking to Mexico (see external link).

According to the report, some 30,000 firearms were seized from criminals by Mexican officials in 2008. Out of these 30,000 firearms, information pertaining to 7,200 of them, (24 percent) was submitted to the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) for tracing. Of these 7,200 guns, only about 4,000 could be traced by the ATF, and of these 4,000, some 3,480 (87 percent) were shown to have come from the United States.

This means that the 87 percent figure comes from the number of weapons submitted by the Mexican government to the ATF that could be successfully traced and not from the total number of weapons seized by the Mexicans or even from the total number of weapons submitted to the ATF for tracing. The 3,480 guns positively traced to the United States equals less than 12 percent of the total arms seized in 2008 and less than 48 percent of all those submitted by the Mexican government to the ATF for tracing.

In a response to the GAO report, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) wrote a letter to the GAO (published as an appendix to the report) calling the GAO's use of the 87 percent statistic "misleading." The DHS further noted, "Numerous problems with the data collection and sample population render this assertion as unreliable."

Trying to get a reliable idea about where the drug cartels are getting their weapons can be difficult because the statistics on firearms seized in Mexico are very confusing. For example, while the GAO report says that 30,000 guns were seized in 2008 alone, the Mexican Prosecutor General's office has reported that between Dec. 1, 2005, and Jan. 22, 2009, Mexican authorities seized 31,512 weapons from the cartels.

Furthermore, it is not prudent to rely exclusively on weapons submitted to the ATF for tracing as a representative sample of the overall Mexican arms market. This is because there are some classes of weapons, such as RPG-7s and South Korean hand grenades, which make very little sense for the Mexicans to pass to the ATF for tracing since they obviously are not from the United States. The ATF is limited in its ability to trace weapons that did not pass through the United States, though there are offices at the CIA and Defense Intelligence Agency that maintain extensive international arms-trafficking databases.

Mexican authorities are also unlikely to ask the ATF to trace weapons that can be tracked through the Mexican government's own databases such as the one maintained by the Mexican Defense Department's Arms and Ammunition Marketing Division (UCAM), which is the only outlet through which Mexican citizens can legally buy guns. If they can trace a gun through UCAM there is simply no need to submit it to ATF.

The United States has criticized Mexico for decades over its inability to stop the flow of narcotics into U.S. territory, and for the past several years Mexico has responded by blaming the guns coming from the United States for its inability to stop the drug trafficking. In this context, there is a lot of incentive for the Mexicans to politicize and play up the issue of guns coming from the United States, and north of the border there are U.S. gun-control advocates who have a vested interest in adding fuel to the fire and gun-rights advocates who have an interest in playing down the number.

Clearly, the issue of U.S. guns being sent south of the border is a serious one, but STRATFOR does not believe that there is sufficient evidence to support the claim that 90 percent (or more) of the cartels' weaponry comes from the United States. The data at present is inclusive -- the 90 percent figure appears to be a subsample of a sample, so that number cannot be applied with confidence to the entire country. Indeed, the percentage of U.S. arms appears to be far lower than 90 percent in specific classes of arms such as fully automatic assault rifles, machine guns, rifle grenades, fragmentation grenades and RPG-7s. Even items such as the handful of U.S.-manufactured LAW rockets encountered in Mexico have come from third countries and not directly from the United States.

However, while the 90 percent figure appears to be unsubstantiated by documentable evidence, this fact does not necessarily prove that the converse is true, even if it may be a logical conclusion. The bottom line is that, until there is a comprehensive, scientific study conducted on the arms seized by the Mexican authorities, much will be left to conjecture, and it will be very difficult to determine exactly how many of the cartels' weapons have come from the United States, and to map out precisely how the black, white and gray arms markets have interacted to bring weapons to Mexico and Mexican cartels.

More research needs to be done on both sides of the border in order to understand this important issue.

Four Trends

In spite of the historical ambiguity, there are four trends that are likely to shape the future flow of arms into Mexico. The first of these is militarization. Since 2006 there has been a steady trend toward the use of heavy military ordnance by the cartels. This process was begun in earnest when the Gulf Cartel first recruited Los Zetas, but in order to counter Los Zetas, all the other cartels have had to recruit and train hard-core enforcer units and outfit them with similar weaponry. Prior to 2007, attacks involving fragmentation hand grenades, 40 mm grenades and RPGs were somewhat rare and immediately attracted a lot of attention. Such incidents are now quite common, and it is not unusual to see firefights like the June 26 incident in Apaseo el Alto in which dozens of grenades are employed.

Another trend in recent years has been the steady movement of Mexican cartels south into Central and South America. As noted above, the region is awash in guns, and the growing presence of Mexican cartel members puts them in contact with people who have access to Cold War weapons, international arms merchants doing business with groups like the FARC and corrupt officials who can obtain weapons from military sources in the region. We have already seen seizures of weapons coming into Mexico from the south. One notable seizure occurred in March 2009, when Guatemalan authorities raided a training camp in northern Guatemala near the Mexican border that they claim belonged to Los Zetas. In the raid they recovered 563 40 mm grenades and 11 M60 machine guns that had been stolen from the Guatemalan military and sold to Los Zetas.

The third trend is the current firearm and ammunition market in the United States. Since the election of Barack Obama, arms sales have gone through the roof due to fears (so far unfounded) that the Obama administration and the Democratic Congress will attempt to restrict or ban certain weapons. Additionally, ammunition companies are busy filling military orders for the U.S. war effort in Iraq and Afghanistan. As anyone who has attempted to buy an assault rifle (or even a brick of .22 cartridges) will tell you, it is no longer cheap or easy to buy guns and ammunition. In fact, due to this surge in demand, it is downright difficult to locate many types of assault rifles and certain calibers of ammunition, though a lucky buyer might be able to find a basic stripped-down AR-15 for $850 to $1,100, or a semiautomatic AK-47 for $650 to $850. Of course, such a gun purchased in the United States and smuggled into Mexico will be sold to the cartels at a hefty premium above the purchase price.

By way of comparison, in places where weapons are abundant, such as Yemen, a surplus fully automatic assault rifle can be purchased for under $100 on the white arms market and for about the same price on the black arms market. This difference in price provides a powerful economic incentive to buy low elsewhere and sell high in Mexico, as does the inability to get certain classes of weapons such as RPGs and fragmentation grenades in the United States. Indeed, we have seen reports of international arms merchants from places like Israel and Belgium selling weapons to the cartels and bringing that ordnance into Mexico through routes other than over the U.S. border. Additionally, in South America, a number of arms smugglers, including Hezbollah and Russian organized-crime groups, have made a considerable amount of money supplying arms to groups in the region like the FARC.

The fourth trend is the increasing effort by the U.S. government to stanch the flow of weapons from the United States into Mexico. A recent increase in the number of ATF special agents and inspectors pursuing gun dealers who knowingly sell to the cartels or straw-purchase buyers who obtain guns from honest dealers is going to increase the chances of such individuals being caught. This stepped-up enforcement will have an impact as the risk of being caught illegally buying or smuggling guns begins to outweigh the profit that can be made by selling guns to the cartels. We believe that these two factors -- supply problems and enforcement -- will work together to help reduce the flow of U.S. guns to Mexico.

While there has been a long and well-documented history of arms smuggling across the U.S.-Mexican border, it is important to recognize that, while the United States is a significant source of certain classes of weapons, it is by no means the only source of illegal weapons in Mexico. As STRATFOR has previously noted, even if it were possible to hermetically seal the U.S.-Mexican border, the Mexican cartels would still be able to obtain weapons from non-U.S. sources (just as drugs would continue to flow into the United States). The law of supply and demand will ensure that the Mexican cartels will get their ordnance, but it is highly likely that an increasing percentage of that supply will begin to come from outside the United States via the gray and black arms markets....".

PS You will not find this type of reporting in the US mainstream media... Its a Taboo subject.., a very delicate political matter for both side that could effect the cashflow and bottom line in that business and those connected with same. This sensitive information must be kept from the American people for their protection and that of the cartels.... you figure the math and the reasons why.

Anyway... who really cares what goes on inside Mexico. Who on this side of the border really cares about human rights and the Mexican drug war. Its their problem. Right?
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All the money wasted on the phony war on drugs could possibley save the economies of both our countries. But the PTB just don't care. They have theirs and the hell with the rest of the world. It's actually very hard to read about this, so much of what is going on in the world today is worse than bad.
No wonder the focus last week was on all Michael all the time. People need an escape from mounting unpaid bills, fear of ...just about everything. When the shit really hits in California people will really wake up. But it will be too little, too late.
Dawn
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Dawn. It will not be long before we as a nation will be Forced to pay attention to what is really going on in this phony drug war and the billions thrown away to the cartel and its supporters in many countries.

It will not be long (in fact its already happened) when we in the USA might get blown apart by a gang working from within Mexico and one of its many cartels, when we are driving home from work...

It has been proven, we (Americans) really do not care what happens to others, in spite of what we claim. As long as it does not effect us directly, or our pocket book, its easy to look the other way and hide our heads in the sand.

We Americans are as phony as a four dollar bill... we talk a lot and BS more, We play silly political games with each other while our freedoms slowly burn.

Hell, I have the solution to all this: For those of you who have not put your heads in the sand I would advise you to get with the rest and put it there or keep it up you butts where its been for a number of years now....

I love my country and that is why I do what I do. And I'll fight and go to hell for Her.....

What did you do in the big war, Daddy? "Had my head in the Sand".... "Ma Ma said that was not where your head was, daddy.

Action Speaks loudly.., and lack of individual actions speak volumes as to what kind of people we really are deep inside.

If I die I do hope its on the front lines of this Mexican Drug War... and not in bed with a Mexican lady of the night.... wait I take that back.... I'll go for the Lady. To hell with the war...

I have to get with the program like all the rest. I am now looking for a pile of sand to hide my head... where it was a while ago stinks. I'm sure we all know that smell.


P.S. I will be on the Hill in DC to testify as to what I found out inside Mexico last Spring... with pictures' which some have been posted on this forum some months ago. However, I said I would go only if it was a public hearing... If not I'll take my chances with the Feds and their batter of legal advisors and "gatekeepers".

I think its a waste of time for all.... but its my duty to attend and honor that little invitation given to me by a Federal Agent last week...
Reply
Tosh - who do you think you're fighting For... and Against... in this "Mexican Drug War"?
"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."

Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon

"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
Reply
Washington DC..... Mexico..... Colombia. The Senate of the United States... Homeland Security... and the special interest who support and bribe elected officials on both sides of the border. Thats my fight.

There are a lot of good people fighting this war on drugs, but their hands are tied by special interest and those on the take in law enforcement and areas from the political arena of both countries. Its a money thing, always has been..., IMO

I fight for my freedom and for my country and do what I can and have a low tolerance for those who do not protect the freedoms handed us by those who gave their lives and spilled their blood on many battlefields in order to maintain our way of life.., to keep a free nation.
Reply
Within an area smaller than the size of the Los Angles basin of California, the following death toll from murders and assassinations within the Juarez area is staggering. Following is the body count for the year 09:

69 homicides for the month of July as of 7-9-9 (yesterday)
213 homicides for June
129 homicides for May
951 homicides for the year

These homicides include city of Juarez Mexico and surrounding area (approximate 20 mile radius outside city limits)

note: over 10,000 drug cartel, gang drug related murders in Mexico in less than two years. Mexico's border war with the cartels is failing and the United States is failing Mexico.


Does anyone know the pandemic swine flu death toll in the United States, or world wide for that matter?

Has anyone developed a vaccine for the cartel bullet or machete?
Reply
by DEA agent Celle Castillo

SELECTIVE*PROSECUTION*
&*
MY*
DEATH*SENTENCE*

“You’ve*never*lived*till*you’ve*almost*
died.*For*those*who*fight*for*it,*Life*
has*a*flavor,*the*protected*will*never*
know.”*

Jim Lamotte & Ricardo Davis
Green Berets in Vietnam

July 04, 2009

As I stand in the cross hairs of those who target Second Amendment
freedoms, I realize that firearms trafficking is not the only grievance my
government holds against me.

Having spent years as an “expert witness” for the defense, I still believed
in our judicial process. The function of justice is to serve truth. However, at the
end of the day, it had become obvious that my case had become “business as
usual,” and that our government was continuing to tear the fabric of our
Constitution. Our Constitution was written to protect American citizens from our
government.

Many people have asked me why I did not contest my case in a jury trial.
To begin with, I did not have the funds to take my case to trial. I hired my
attorney, Roberto Eddie de la Garza on April 14, 2008, for a plea agreement for
approximately $5,000. In addition, my 84-year-old mother asked me to accept a
2

plea agreement because she did not want to pass away while her only son was
incarcerated.

On January 30, 2009, my appeal attorney filed an Amended Motion for
Release Pending Appeal citing my Sixth Amendment right to effective
representation.

In January of 2009, the Honorable Judge Royal Furgeson ordered a
hearing on the motion for February 19, 2009.

On February 18, 2009, Assistant United States Attorney, State Bar
24062266, Mark Roomberg, filed a Government’s Response to Defendant’s
Amended Motion for Release Pending Sentence.

On February 19, 2009, the Honorable Judge Royal Furgeson did not rule
on my motion for release pending appeal; he intended to wait until he had heard
a brief from my attorney for a later date. However Judge Furgeson did extend my
self-surrender date to July 20, 2009, giving me the opportunity to assist my
attorney on the case. The reason given was that my former attorney, de la
Garza, had hijacked my file from October of 2008 to February of 2009.

On October 22, 2008, on my attorney’s advise, I pled out to two counts:

Superseding Information:

 Count One: Conspiracy to Traffic in firearms without a Firearms
License;
 Count Two: Trafficking in Firearms without a License.

I was sentenced to 37 months incarceration. The Honorable Judge Royal
Furgeson had at first ordered my self-surrender to take place on March 5, 2008.
3


On June 18, 2009, Public Defender, Judy Fulmer Madewell, my appeal
attorney, filed a Appeal Brief with the Honorable Judge Royal Furgeson in
reference to my appeal on the grounds of Ineffective Counsel, “conflict of
interest” and the district court’s error in applying a four-level increase to the
offense level.

On June 30, 2009, the judge ordered a Setting Status Conference for July
10, 2009, ten days before my self-surrender date of July 20, 2009.


History*of*the*Case*

On March 6, 2008, I was illegally arrested in San Antonio, Texas by
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, & Explosives Special Agent Allen Darilek
and ICE Special Agent Marcus Sexton. Their criminal complaint was filed on
March 05, 2008 and signed by United States Magistrate Judge, John W.
Primomo. The said complaint was authored by agent Darilek.

As I read the complaint, I could not believe the absurd and outlandish
allegations that he had sworn.

 COUNT ONE: (PERJURY): The act or an instance of a person
deliberately making false or misleading statements while
under oath. AGENT Darilek swore to this criminal complaint.

First and foremost, Darilek alleged that I had conspired with a convicted
felon, Dominick Colombrito, in purchasing weapons at a gun show. I attempted
to convince Darilek that Mr. Colombrito was not a convicted felon. Indeed, he
4

sold weapons with a Federal license. I questioned Darilek as to whether Mr.
Colombrito had been taken into custody. Agent Darilek assured me that he had
been arrested. Darilek displayed a phony mug shot of Mr. Colombrito. On April
03, 2008, I received a telephone call from Mr. Colombrito assuring me that he
was not a convicted felon and that he has never been arrested by a federal
agency. In my opinion, agent Darilek manufactured this evidence because this
was the only way he could arrest me. I was not a prohibited person, and neither
was the individual who had sold me the weapons. Agent Darilek knowingly and
intentionally violated my constitutional rights. The question is did the Assistant
United State Attorney Mark Roomberg approve the complaint before it was
sworn to? According to the Domestic Operations Guidelines: “The United
States Attorney shall be consulted…shall be furnished progress reports of the
investigation at regular intervals to ASSURE APPROPRIATE PARTICIPATION
BY PROSECUTING OFFICIALS.

 COUNT TWO: PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT is a
procedural defense; via which, a defendant may argue that
they should not be held criminally liable for actions which may
have broken the law, because the prosecution acted in an
“inappropriate” or “unfair” manner. Such arguments may
involve allegations that the prosecution withheld evidence or
knowingly permitted false testimony.

Roomberg failed to report to the court and the defense that agent Darilek
had manufactured evidence in his complaint. The law is very clear. If a federal
employee receives information that another federal employee committed a
crime and fails to report it, he himself has just committee a crime.

de la Garza also failed to bring this information to the court.

5

 COUNT THREE: CIVIL RIGHT VIOLATION (Fourth Amendment)
prohibiting unreasonable searches and seizures.

In the “end justifies the means,” BATFE agent Daniel Casey (McAllen
Field Office) conducted one of the most grievous atrocities any agent can
commit. On March 06, 2008, he illegally searched my residence by coercion.
He threatened the owner that if she did not give permission to search the house,
he was going to call the police, news media, and wait for my grandkids to get
home so they could witness the search. This allegation was made in front of the
other agents, which included ATF agent Robert Flores.

 COUNT FOUR: SELECTIVE PROSECUTION is a procedural
defense in which a defendant argues that they should not be held
criminally liable for breaking the law, as the criminal justice system
discriminated against them by choosing to prosecute. In a claim of
selective prosecution, a defendant essentially argues that it is
irrelevant whether they are guilty of violating a law, but that the fact
of being prosecuted is based upon forbidden reasons. Such a
claim might, for example, entail an argument that persons of
different age, race, religion, or gender, were engaged in the same
illegal actions for which the defendant is being tried and were not
prosecuted, and that the defendant is only being prosecuted
because of a bias. In the U.S., this defense is based upon the 14th
Amendment, which requires that “nor shall any state deny to any
person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

For several months the informant in this case, Jay LeMire, was not
arrested in my case until I threatened to expose it to the judge. The government
in an attempt to avoid this violation was forced to arrest LeMire. The injustice
becomes evident when you are made aware that LeMire received five years’
probation for the same violations I had been charged with.
6



 COUNT FIVE: PERJURY

Another allegation on Darilek’s complaint was that I had sold weapons
outside the United States.

This allegation was without merit or any evidence whatsoever. U.S.
Magistrate John W. Primomo did not buy into it and dismissed the charge. Yet,
Judge FURGESON took the allegation to weigh against me into the federal
guideline on my sentencing.

Brief for the Defense/Appellant In the United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit U.S. v. Celerino Castillo, III

Page 7: No. 08-51144

The Government admitted that it had no “proof that he was selling to
prohibited person.” “We suspect and we can’t prove that, yes, these guns
were going south of the border.”

On May 29, 2008, I met de la Garza at the Embassy Suites in McAllen,
Texas. de la Garza was in town for a meeting with head of the U.S. Attorney
Office in McAllen (Leonard). I questioned de la Garza what his business was
with the U.S. Attorney. Finally, de la Garza confessed that his son, Andrew de
la Garza, Criminal No. M-07-141-2 had been arrested on February 2007 in
South Texas by BATFE. He had been arrested for straw purchases and other
serious gun violations by the BATFE. I warned de la Garza that he needed to
address the court to see if there was a conflict of interest on his behalf. It was
later reveal that there were allegations that two BATFE agents Robert Flores
and Daniel Casey had been involved in both of our cases. See BATFE EF
7

3120.2 REPORT OF INVESTIGATION, prepared by SA Robert Flores, dated
03-06-08: on the consent search of my parent’s residence. Also see BATFE EF
3120.2 REPORT OF INVESTIGATION prepared by SA Daniel P. Casey dated
03-06-08 on the consent to search my residence. He assured me that there was
no conflict. This should have been my first red flag on what I suspected de la
Garza was up to. I also requested that he file a motion on Outrageous
Government Conduct in regard to the Criminal Complaint. Our lunch was cut
short; because he had the appointment at 1:30PM with the U.S. Attorney’s
Office. de la Garza admitted that both he and Leonard had gone to law school
together. He also stated that he had paid Jack Wolf $50,000.00 to make sure
that his son got off the criminal charge. As of this month de la Garza’s son is
down to one count of the 5 (five) counts he had originally been charged with.

 COUNT SIX: PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT

I requested from my attorney a copy of the Grand Jury transcripts
concerning the criminal indictment, in other words, what agent DERILEK and
AUSA MARK Roomberg had testified to. I suspect the Government had failed to
turn over the Grand Jury transcripts on discovery for obvious reasons. de la
Garza assured me that there were no grand jury transcripts. That should have
been the second “red flag” for me, but I trusted de la Garza because our families
went way back in history. As you will learn later, I was deeply mistaken. de la
Garza continued to promise that he would file the Motions.


In June 2008, I pled out to the two counts of a federal indictment. Guilty
pleas in the absence of trial prevented the judicial search engine from finding out
what actually had happened, thus impeding the pursuit of truth. In other words, I
pled out to two bogus charges.


8

For this hearing, the government gave a heads up to a young female
reporter, who walks the halls of justice for last minute hearings on a Friday
afternoon. I noticed Roomberg texting on his cell phone. Within one hour after
my plea, it was on the radio airways. By the time, I got home, (four hours later) it
was on the local television station. The following morning it was in the local
newspaper. I certainly would love to pull Roomberg’s cell phone calls/texts to
see whom he was calling while in the courtroom. I certainly hope that this
information will be revealed when an inquiry is initiated on to how my case was
mishandled by the government.

Could there also have been a telephone call or text to AUSA Toni Trevino
of the McAllen office? She is the prosecutor who is now being sued by a former
client (defendant) because she withheld evidence in his trial, plus other serious
allegations where transcripts were allegedly altered. The federal courts of
appeals are just sick to death of prosecutorial misconduct and not being able to
do anything about it in the Bush administration. This is a shot across the
prosecution’s bow. This AUSA allegedly had a meltdown in federal judge Ricardo
Hinojosa’s courtroom. The allegation is that she started to cry because she had
lost a case and started blabbering, “it’s not fair”. She is the same AUSA who
had a DEA agent, Amanda Davis, commit perjury before a grand jury. This is a
fact. AUSA Trevino also allegedly received information that someone had
changed the transcripts of a hearing, where she had been chastised by a federal
judge for breaking a plea agreement. She failed to report this allegation to the
proper authorities for criminal investigation. AUSA Trevino is married to Benito
Trevino, an alleged former Republican chairman for Starr County. This picture
should start to get clearer. Trevino once forewarned a defense attorney (Shelby
Wisefield) that I had “best be careful in what I did against the government,
because she was going to do everything in her power to get me arrested.” The
picture is not that blurry now.

9

For the past several months, I vigorously attempted to address my
concerns to the government through my attorney. I felt my attorney was reluctant
to carry out my instructions.

On September 2008, I received a telephone call from de la Garza , who
stated that the government was dismissing my criminal case because they had
failed to charge me with the proper charges. According to Roomberg, their
office had allegedly been the first to initiated Polk vs. U.S. back in the late
1990s. So if they are the experts on Polk vs. US, why the eight months delay?

See attached copies of Transcripts “Guilty Plea” dated October 01,
2008: Page 2: Line 3.

Roomberg:

We filed a motion to dismiss – he’d pled guilty but we filed a motion to
dismiss indictment on a case that was pointed out to me…
Let me take one step back. The reason we superseded was because our
office discovered the Polk case, because the plain language of the statute with
which the defendant was initially charged…

UNITED STATES V POLK

“Precludes an individual being charged with [a crime] where the
straw purchaser bought a firearm for an individual who was not a
prohibited person [such as a convicted felon]. The defendant
[Castillo] was not a prohibited person.” [U.S. Attorney Johnny
Sutton]

Also see copies of Transcripts “Sentencing hearing dated October 22,
2008: Page 7: line 14
10

Go figure, on their intelligence or boldness of outrageous government
misconduct. If our government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for
law; it has invited every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy.
The record will reflect that this district office of the criminal law continues that the
“end justifies the means”. This would bring terrible retributions and unrestricted
secrecy in unlimited corruption, as we can clearly see in this case.


According to a New York Times, story dated April 15, 2009, by James C.
McKinley Jr. “At gun shows in these states, (Texas) there is even less regulation.
Private sellers, unlike licensed dealers, are not obligated to record the buyer’s
name, much less report the sale to the A.T.F.”

Roomberg made the case that I had not documented any names of the
people I had sold guns to. I was given four-level increase for trafficking in
firearms. My base offense level was 12 and then was shot up to 21.

On October 1, 2008, my case was dismissed – but not without a catch.
The government was now charging me with Trafficking in Guns without a License
and Aiding and Abetting. I had to scan through the new plea agreement while in
the courtroom. I asked my attorney how was it possible for the government to
prove that I sold a gun. There was never any evidence introduced concerning
who I had sold the guns too. He assured me that the government could do
whatever it wanted to do. He insisted that if I took the plea, I would more than
likely receive probation. This was the real deal, “the government would
dismiss my case, and my attorney would convince me to plea out.” I
argued my point to my attorney that in half of the gun shows, weapons are
routinely sold without a license. I soon learned that this was not the first time that
this U.S. Attorney’s Office had initiated a plea agreement in the courtroom. The
case was the involvement of the Lampazianie family who continue to proclaim
their innocence – despite the fact that they each pleaded guilty to one count of
conspiracy as part of a group plea bargain. The family members contend that
11

the plea deal was slapped together in the courtroom just before the trial was set
to begin in 1999. They also stress that the plea deal was not in writing and was
presented to them as a last-chance offer before facing a trial they believed was
fixed.

 COUNT SEVEN: PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT “one of the
most reprehensible things a prosecutor can do is to attempt to put
into evidence before the court his own altered evidence.”

Prior to signing the agreement, Roomberg stated to my attorney that if I
pled out to this new agreement that I would NOT lose my benefits. Roomberg
assured my attorney that Jay LeMire was pleading to a similar charge, so that he
would not lose his Social Security benefits. My attorney failed to obtain a written
entry of my benefits into the plea agreement. de la Garza also reported this
allegation to Bill Conroy’s story dated February 01, 2009 title, ‘Iran/Contra
whistleblower Cele Castillo increasingly looks like a framed man.’ “De La
Garza also claims that in a discussion outside the courtroom that day, Oct. 1,
Roomberg told him that Castillo would keep his benefits if he pled out to the new
charges. And De La Garza says he relayed that information to Castillo.”


THE COURT:

…I – I will not in any way do anything to remove your benefits, but there –
there are instances where I understand in a sentencing a federal judge
can remove the benefits that people receive from either Social Security,
the Veteran’s Administration, or whatever. It’s not my plan to do that. Is
the Government planning to ask for that?

Roomberg:

No, Your Honor, In fact, in regards to the superseding information, the reason
these particular charges were chosen, we could have picked another charge
causing a false entry – causing a licensed firearm dealer to put a false entry into
their book which would be more of a falsity crime and which to my understanding
from talking to other attorneys would have a far greater impact than this would
because it is not a criminal falsity crime, either the conspiracy or the one
12

substantive count, it would not impact on that. I’m not an expert on that. We’re
not taking a position on it. We’re certainly not seeking that from the Court. But
that – That’s our position.


THE COURT:


“Well, that’s helpful, and I would not order it anyway. You’ve earned
those benefits and –“


My attorney once again assured me that there was no reason why the judge
would not place me on probation, because I had no previous criminal record plus
my health issues would be brought into consideration. He stated that in the worst
scenario, I would get one year, and that I would self surrender in March of 2009.

Between the 1st and the 22 of October 2008, I checked with the
appropriate departments to recheck the status of my benefits. I checked with the
Office of Personal Management (OPM) Government office and they advised me
that I would lose every aspect of my retirement annuity if I was to be incarcerated
for a felony charge. Never to get those benefits again. This would include my
family’s health and life insurance (half a million dollars) that I have had for the
past 28 years. I then proceeded to check with the Veterans Administration
Benefits, and I was assured that my benefits would be reduced upon my
incarceration in excess of over 60 days for a felony conviction. The amount not
payable may be apportioned to a spouse, dependent children or parents. I finally
contacted the Social Security Administration about my benefits and asked them if
I was incarcerated, would I lose my benefits? The individual further stated that
no government court order would change their policy. The question remains as
to how Roomberg was able to make these far-fetched statements about me not
losing my benefits.

If our courts lose their authority and their rulings are
no longer respected, there will be no one left to
13

resolve the divisive issues that can rip the social fabric
apart…The courts are a safety valve without which no
democratic society can survive.
Rose E. Bird,
Chief Justice, Supreme Court of California

On October 13, 2008, when I realized that de la Garza had failed to
address my concerns to Judge Furgeson, I decided to address them in a letter to
Judge Furgeson. On Oct. 22, 2008, Judge Furgeson confirmed that he had
received my letter of concern.

On October 22, 2008, I presented myself for my arguments on my
sentencing before Judge Royal Furgeson. We proceeded to address our five
arguments (objections) that had been implemented in the new Pre Sentence
Investigation Report during an unprecedented two hour sentencing. (See
attachment.) My attorney and I (mostly I) vigorously attempted to make my case
on the following objections.

The first was my objection to the number of weapons that the government
said were involved. The government could only submit proof of the last eight
weapons that I had purchased from LeMire. Only four of those weapons were
seized. Roomberg kept using the phrases to support the government’s position
as “we believe,” “we think,” & “we suppose.” The judge, without any
evidence, rejected our arguments.

The second objection pertained to the trafficking in arms. We made the
argument that I did not sell to a prohibited person or to any person who was
going to commit a crime with the guns, criteria for trafficking in arms. Once
again, the government kept saying, “we believe,” “we think,” and “we
suppose.” The motion was denied. I started to realize that the cards were
stacked against me. It was not going to make a difference what we argued; all
our arguments were going to be denied.
14


See transcripts on “Sentencing” dated Oct. 22, 2008

Page 11; Line12:

Roomberg:

“…normally I don’t discuss this in open court but since the
defendant raised it himself at sentencing…”

Do we have proof that he was selling them to prohibited
persons? NO!

Clarification : This is what I said in regards to the above
statements by Roomberg at my sentencing.

Sentencing Transcripts October 22, 2008


Page 22; Line 14:

Castillo

…The Government knows who it is You know, and he didn’t –
didn’t break the law, you know. He bought them from me just like –
just like another person. He has a Texas driver’s license, he’s from
the U.S. and He’s not a prohibited person.

NEVER did I mention that I spoke with the government. My
explanation was that the surveillance units had seen me meeting
with the individual and had identified him through his license plate.
15


Roomberg knew exactly whom the guns went to, because the agents had
followed me on surveillance when I delivered the shotguns in January of 2008.
Two agents, from two different agencies, have written reports [REPORT OF
INVESTIGATION] to that effect. There is no doubt that the individual who took
custody of the guns did in no way shape or form break the law by taking custody
of the guns. He was not a prohibited person, and the government knew this to
be a fact. The agents on surveillance did not witness any guns changing hands
between this individual and me. This can be confirmed in their surveillance
report. Once again the judge ruled against us.

Page 29; Line 10:

Roomberg:

this person who has dealt the majority – what he just said in court, the
majority of these guns he only knows by a nickname and a general area
where they live … The types of guns are the FN 5.7 and the P 90
which are the assault rifles.”

Roomberg intentionally, knowingly, and recklessly lied to the court.
Roomberg lied about the P90 rifle. This weapon is nowhere to be
found in my case. He just plain made up this allegation.

PAGE 35; LINE 13

THE COURT:

You know, this – this is a close call for me. And it – I have struggled with it and
struggled with it…

16

THE COURT:


…I’m just struggling with this. It seems to me that – if I can have more
information about the purchaser, but the problem is that information seems to be
pretty elusive.

 COUNT SEVEN : PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT

My attorney argued that under relevant conduct issue of trafficking
that I should not be held accountable for conduct that has no basis or
evidence to support the allegations the government was making that I was
involved in trafficking of weapons outside the U.S. Roomberg addressed
to the court that the government had no idea who the guns went to and
that they only had a nickname to go by. Again, the judge ruled against us.

On February 19, 2009, before the Honorable Judge Royal Furgeson,
Roomberg made a serious allegation against me. He alleged, without any proof
to the court, that since by the time of my sentencing, the BATFE had traced two
of the weapon in my case to Mexico. He identified them in his GOVERNMENT
RESPONSE TO DEFENDANT’s AMENDED MOTION FOR RELEASE
PENDING SENTENCE; DATED February 18, 2009. The weapons in question
were one FN-5.7x28 and a P-90 assault rifle. I warned my attorney that the P-90
assault rifle had no bearing in my case. This weapon was never mentioned in
my case, and that I strongly believed that Roomberg was once again lying to the
court. Roomberg never mentioned if these weapons were used in a crime, just
that they had been found. If Roomberg documented the P-90 from BATFE
records indicating that they had been seized in Mexico, he should had gotten the
serial number and the model number. He failed to properly identify these
weapons with serial numbers. It is a good indication that he was just
manufacturing evidence. He never produced any identification for the courts.
When I was first arrested by BATFE, their first statement was that they had found
17

one of the guns in Mexico. This is the M.O that BATFE uses to intimidate a
citizen.

PAGE 9 of said motion: Governments Response to Defendant’s Motion
on February 19, 2009

Roomberg:

Based on new developments in this case, the government believes
the defendant is a danger to the community as well. As discussed at
sentencing, the government speculated that the guns which Defendant, a
resident who lived close to the Mexican border, was purchasing in San
Antonio via the straw purchaser were being smuggled to Mexico for
nefarious purposes. Since sentencing, B ATFE has traced and located
two of the “mata policias,” “cop killer,” weapons to Mexico-a FN 5.7 pistol
and a FN PS-90 assault rifle…

 COUNT EIGHT: PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT

Page 19: line16:

Roomberg:

“That’s what these cop killing guns are meant for. They are not meant
for shooting bambis. Bambi doesn’t wear flak jackets. You don’t need
armor piercing bullets to go hunting.”

During my sentencing and at the latest hearing, Roomberg testified on
numerous times the wrong amount of weapons I was being charged with. The
official total was 35 weapons. He mentioned nine (9) times that there were 32
18

guns. He also falsified testimony on numerous occasions that that the FN 5.7x28
used armor piercing rounds, which it does not. And about Bambi doesn’t wear
flak jackets, it certainly would not matter because flak jackets are not bullet proof.
According to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, a flak jacket vest is a form of
protective clothing designed to provide protection from shrapnel and other
indirect low velocity projectiles. But how would Roomberg know, he never
served his country. I still own a Vietnam era flak jacket.
Page 20: line: 7

Madewell:

“I would like to point out that it had Government’s response they
mention two guns, one of which was an FN PS 90 assault rifle, but if you
will look in the plea agreement and the indictment, there’s no such weapon
mentioned. I would also like to point out that, although the prosecutor
called the guns at issue cop killers, that according to the ATF government
website, the FN 5.7, 5x7 times 28 – I don’t know to pronounce that part –
millimeter is imported into the United – approved for importation into the
United States as a sporting firearm. The ATF website also says the only
ammunition that is approved for import into the United States is not armor
piercing ammunition. That’s from the ATF’s own website.


On January 13, 2009, I received a telephone call from Mrs. Madewell who
advised me that she had for the past several months attempted to contact de la
Garza to no avail. She stated that she has not worked on my appeal because de
la Garza had not turned the file over to her or even spoken to him. She stated
however, that her secretary had contacted him on several occasions, and he had
promised to turn the file over to them. The appeal attorney claims that her office
has offered to send one of their investigators to pick up the file; but he has
19

declined. I asked her if he had to turn the file over to her, and she replied that
she thought that he did not have to. I then asked how she was going to file the
appeal. She stated that she could not file the appeal without knowing the proper
information. An appointment was made to meet with her the following week.

On March 03, 2009, two days, before my first self-surrender, I finally
received my attorney’s notes dated June 26, 2008. The notes will prove
without reasonable doubt that Roomberg lied to the court. The notes
indicate: the full name of the individual that purchased said weapons
from me. Second: The surveillance unit had identified his truck with paper
plates. (See surveillance reports by agents) And most significantly:
Roomberg made MapQuest from his computer in identifying the
individual.

 COUNT NINE: OBSTRUCTING JUSTICE
The act by which one or more persons attempt to prevent, or do
prevent, the execution of lawful process.

At the prosecutor’s table, ICE agent Marcus Saxton sat in on both my
plea hearing and my sentencing, and he never once corrected
Roomberg’s untruthfulness. Case agent Allen Darilek never showed up
for my last three court proceedings.

The third objection was to relevant conduct-leadership role. The gun deals
were between the “snitch,” Jay LeMire, and me. The government once again
said such things as “we believe,” “we think,” and “we suppose.” If the
government was adamant about not knowing who I was giving the guns to, how
could there be leadership involvement between LeMire and myself? We were
once again denied.

20

Finally, we objected to a downward departure due to health and family under
Sec. H of the sentencing guidelines & USC 3553. After suffering Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder in Vietnam and with the Drug Enforcement
Administration, the judge found no compassion for a worn out veteran of three
wars, who had placed his life on the line on several occasions to preserve his
country. Apparently, it was not good enough. Denied.

The Honorable Judge Royal Furgeson strongly denied that I was a
danger to the community and so did the Probation Department.

There is no proof the 32 guns he bought through a straw purchaser
ended up in cartel hands. “BUT PROSECUTOR SAYS THAT CAN BE
ASSUMED BECAUSE MANY OF THEM – 23 WERE HANDGUNS THAT
CAN FIRE ARMOR-PIERCING AMMO…”

I was sentenced to 37 months incarceration for my actions. The judge was
kind enough to allow me to self-surrender and ordered my surrender for March
05, 2009. The question is how did de la Garza know this back in October 2008
as to when I was going to self-surrender in March?

The Narco News Story wrote a story in regards to the wrong doing in my
case reference to The United States Attorney’s Office. Both de la Garza and I
were interviewed for said story. I assumed it was okay to do the interview since
Roomberg had been interviewed by the San Antonio Express News on their
story of gun running, dated December 14, 2008. The next three entries are from
the newspaper story.

 “We think the person sending the drugs and receiving the guns are
the same, “prosecutor Roomberg SAID.

21

 Prosecutors and BATFE said they hadn’t heard of Castillo before
his arrest in March.

Both prosecutors and BATFE agents had heard of me prior to my arrest.
The BATFE had initiated their case against me back in January 2008. Anyone
in law enforcement knows that when you initiate a case on an individual, you run
his name with all other law enforcement agencies. Because of my activism, and
history as an “expert witness” for the defense, they certainly knew of me. I am
known in government files, believe me. Let’s not forget the sting operation with a
television station I was involved with against BATFE at the Pharr gun show in
January, 2008 of that year. The BATFE was allegedly committing racial profiling
against U.S. citizens.

As for the prosecutors not knowing me, well how soon do they forget that I
testified against the government, as an “expert witness,” in the same courtroom
where I was sentenced? It was the Arturo Gutierrez case. This was where the
government was caught breaking the law. This was a sting operation by the FBI
against several San Antonio police officers. In that case, the case FBI agent,
Manny Ramirez, was fired and his supervisors were asked to resign because of
their misconduct.

Now, I am not a conspiracy theorist, but this cannot go unchecked. Let’s
see if we can use Roomberg’s allegations or (method of operation) that he used
to convict me without any proof. It was revealed that when de la Garza took on
my case, he was under investigation by the State Bar for stealing approximately
$30,000 from client/clients. For the complete story, visit the Texas State Bar web
site and read this month’s (January, 2008) magazine.

On October 15, 2008, de la Garza received a notice from the Texas State
Bar that he was to be suspended for one year, starting Nov. 01, 2008. On
October 22, 2008, de la Garza represented me at my sentencing, still deceiving
22

me concerning his investigation. During my sentencing, the judge had stated that
I have waived the right to appeal my sentencing. As for de la Garza, he had
misrepresented me from the very beginning.

On October 28, 2008, de la Garza emailed me and attached documents
for my appeal on my sentencing. A note on the email: “I am enclosing the
documents you have requested. Please print, sign where indicated and send to
the clerk of the court by FexEx or UPS so it gets there NO LATER THAN
FRIDAY. Appears you must personally sign the appeal, etc. The right hand
doesn’t know what the left hand is saying I guess. Questions-call me.
Remember you need to send the original NOTICE OF APPEAL and one copy
and the original Motion for Court appointed Attorney and Once Copy. Must sign
all in blue.” So, if I gave up the right to appeal my sentence, why is he
representing in filing for the appeal? In a phone call, he stated that Roomberg
had lied to the judge, and that he had the notes to prove he had lied.

In the middle of November of 2008, I spoke to my former attorney de la
Garza. He advised me that he had spoken to the attorney handling my appeal
case and that he had turned over the file to her.

On November 27, 2008, I received a letter from Public Defender appeal
attorney, Mrs. Judy Madewell advising me that she would be handling my appeal
on my sentencing. She also stated that if I needed any questions answered to
contact her.

Did Roomberg and de la Garza conspire in order to convict me? Did
Roomberg ignore the possibility of federal charges, if any, against de la Garza
on the State Bar’s findings? Numerous attempts by the Public Defender and me
were made to attempt to retrieve my files from de la Garza. He found no
concerns or worries that the government would take any action against him. They
are hoping that I will go to prison before this is exposed and then, while I am
23

inside, no one will listen, or I will have an accident. This may be, but all I can say
to these individuals is that I am going to become the nightmare that their mothers
warned them about.

So here we are at the end of this story. The question to some would be
why would the government come after me with bogus charges from the
beginning? During the 1980s, I became an Iran/Contra Whistleblower against
the Reagan/Bush administrations. I exposed our government as complicit in the
drug trade and ARMS SMUGGLING. There were several bi-partisan
investigations in both the House & Senate which confirmed my allegations
against the government. Several individuals involved in these atrocities were
convicted, but later pardoned. In addition, some of them continued to work for
the Bush administration. Why was I targeted by this outrageous government
conduct? I believe that U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton is very close to the Bush
family and I guess it was payback for all my allegations against the Bush family.

My fiasco has not been the only case the Sutton administration has
conducted. There is The House of Death, where he allowed an ICE informant to
get away with murdering several people in Mexico with the knowledge of their
handlers. There is also the prosecution of Border Patrol Agents Ramos and
Compean. Sutton allowed Osvaldo Davila to give false statements against the
agents. As Congressman Rohrabacher once said, “Davila is a rotten
habitual drug smuggler who should have been the target of Sutton’s
prosecution, instead of the agents.” Congressman Ted Poe also issued a
statement on the Ramos/Compean appeal following a hearing in the 5th Circuit
Court of Appeals in New Orleans, LA: “Today, before the 5th Circuit Court of
Appeals, the US Attorney’s Office admitted that their star witness in the case
against the agents, ‘told some lies’. The rest of us call that perjury. The fact that
the prosecution knowingly allowed their witness to offer false testimony raises
even more red lags about the overzealous prosecution of this case.”

24

Many years ago, I took an oath to protect the Constitution of the United
States and have gladly fought for it on several occasions. I’ve continued this
struggle. However, this time it’s against the criminals in my own government. It
certainly looks like I have lost this battle for my freedom, but I am desperately
trying to learn to live to fight another day. It also bothers the heck out of me how
to interpret this struggle. There is no greater conflict in me than that with regard
to how I feel about my government and how my government feels about me. All I
have ever asked from the courts was for a chance to prove myself. I asked for a
fair and impartial opportunity, nothing that you yourself would not demand.
Bottom line, I was invited to a poker game and was handed a fixed deck. I was
brought up to believe by my father that beneath it all, we as Americans are
decent people, with an abiding scene of integrity and fair play.

Back in 1996, I went before a Federal Grand Jury in Washington D.C, the
same Grand Jury that former First Lady Hillary Clinton testified before on “White
Water.” I testified concerning the allegations of the CIA’s implication in murder,
drug trafficking, and arms smuggling. I was granted whistle blower status.

In 1996, a great and honorable man, the Rev. Joseph Lowery invited Dick
Gregory, Joe Madison, and me to a press conference at the National Press Club
in Washington, D.C. We were protesting the corruption in our government,
specifically within the CIA and DEA. On that day, all three of them went to jail for
me and for the American people. On January 20, 2009, I saw the Rev. Joseph
Lowery give the benediction at President’s Barack Obama’s swearing in. Come
July 20, 2009, it will be my turn to carry the cross and become a political prisoner
of my government. But before I do, I will utilize one other tool that has always
worked on my spirit. I will conduct a pilgrimage to the federal court house in San
Antonio.

I certainly know that I am nowhere close to Senator Ted Stevens’
accomplishments, but I strongly believe the Prosecutorial Misconduct was more
25

severe in my case than in his. The judge in his case, Judge Emmet Sullivan, has
now held Justice Department lawyers in contempt for their Misconduct and most
surprisingly has dismissed the case against Sen. Stevens. His investigation
could lead to reprimands, disbarment, even criminal charges. I certainly hope
that in the Senator’s case, it will lead to more widespread reform – or at least
more effective oversight – of a practice that is more common than many would
like to admit for quite human reasons. The United States Attorney General has
gone where few before him dared to go. Mr. Erik Holder should be praised for
his actions on Sen. Steven’s case.

Roomberg commented in the last hearing “that it was time for me to go to
jail, for my wrong doing.” That may be so, come July 20. In point of fact, our
country can only move forward with confidence if it first cleans its own house.
Checks and balances are what ordinary people are requesting in our judicial
system. Whether Roomberg is punished for his action or not, we must never,
ever accept the defense that somebody was “just following orders”.

On April 10, 2009, my official complaint against the Government was hand
carried by two veteran’s organization, Americas Last Patrol and a member of
American G-I Forum, to the Office of Inspector General and the Civil Rights
division at the Department of Justice. I am requesting an inquiry of how my case
was handled by the prosecution. However, I am fearful that the old guard is still
present that will protect Roomberg. All I know is that I don’t want to spend the
rest of my life in prison, questioning whether I should have done this or that.

On February 27, 2009, I was awarded 100% disability from the Veterans
Administration. However, it was not for my Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
(50%), but for my coronary artery disease. The VA revealed that I have chronic
recurring congestive heart failure with a two vessel coronary artery bypass graft.
They also reported that I have chronic congestive heart failure. Most significant I
have (left) ventricular dysfunction with an ejection fraction of less than 30
26

percent. My incarceration will certainly be my death sentence. But, most likely,
Roomberg would say, “they have doctors in prison.” I proudly served my
country, so individuals like Roomberg are able to have that freedom.

Democracy is two wolves & a lamb (Castillo)
voting on what to have for lunch. Freedom is
an armed lamb contesting the vote.

A true American patriot must always be ready to defend his country
against his Government. I certainly earned those rights, even if it means going to
jail.

Respectfully,

Celerino “Cele” Castillo, 3rd
Former DEA Agent
United States Army
Infantryman Viet-Nam
Powderburns@prodigy.net
W.W.W. Powderburns. Info
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