MEXICO CITY (AP) —
Prosecutors in western Mexico arrested the mayor of a city that once
served as a stronghold of the Knights Templar drug cartel on charges
that he helped the gang extort money from city council members.
The meeting was held in January 2012, when the cartel was at the height of its power, according to prosecutors.
The
"self-defense" vigilante movement that sprang up last year to fight the
cartel had long claimed the Knights Templar controlled, or extorted
money from, municipal governments in the western, largely agricultural
state.
Some town governments
were forced to hand over 10 percent of the money they got from the
federal government to the cartel, local residents say. Some officials
were also forced to grant public works projects to cartel-controlled
construction companies.
The
arrest of the Apatzingan mayor was the latest case that appears to
illustrate the near complete control the pseudo-religious Knights
Templar exerted over Michoacan until the vigilantes began fighting them
in February 2013.
The arrest
comes 10 days after the detention of Jesus Reyna, Michoacan's former
interior secretary — the state's second highest-ranking official — under
a form of house arrest. Federal Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam
said there was evidence that Reyna met with the leaders of the Knights
Templar. Reyna has not been formally charged and in the past has denied
links to the cartel.
Officials
have confirmed that the cartel had demanded protection payments from
almost every type of farm, orchard and business in the state. The cartel
also manipulated distribution and production of produce like limes and
avocados, apparently to raise prices and increase their cut.
And
in some industries, like mining, the Knights Templar set up their own
commercial operations, even exporting iron ore to China.
There
had been longstanding reports of cartel involvement in Michoacan
politics, but previous efforts to prosecute alleged offenders have ended
in embarrassing failures.
In
2009, federal prosecutors arrested 12 mayors and 23 other Michoacan
officials for supposedly aiding the La Familia drug cartel, the
predecessor of the Knights Templar. Two years later, all 35 officials
had been acquitted.
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