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Jose Antonio Acosta Hernandez, Alleged Drug Cartel Figure Known As 'El Diego,' Captured In Mexico

By ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON   07/31/11 05:36 PM ET   AP

MEXICO CITY -- A former police officer who allegedly admits ordering 1,500 killings during a campaign of terror as a drug gang chieftain along the U.S. border has been captured in northern Mexico, federal officials said Sunday.

Jose Antonio Acosta Hernandez also is a suspect in last year's slaying of a U.S. consulate employee near a border crossing in Ciudad Juarez.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon said through his Twitter account that Acosta's capture is "the biggest blow" to organized crime in Ciudad Juarez since he sent about 5,000 federal police to the city in April 2010 to try to curb violence in one of the world's most dangerous cities.

Acosta, 33, was caught Friday in the northern city of Chihuahua along with his bodyguard, said Ramon Pequeno, head of the federal police anti-drug unit. Without offering details on the capture, he said the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration helped by providing information. Acosta's arrest was not confirmed until Sunday, just before officials displayed him to journalists in Mexico City.

Wearing a long-sleeve dress shirt, the short man with a cleft chin and thick eyebrows limped as he was escorted by two masked federal police officers to stand before the cameras.

Pequeno said at the news conference that Acosta, nicknamed "El Diego," told federal police he ordered 1,500 killings. Investigators believe he was the mastermind of an attack last year that killed a U.S. consulate employee, her husband and the husband of another consulate worker in Ciudad Juarez, he said.

U.S. prosecutors also want to try him in that case. A federal indictment filed in the western district of Texas says Acosta and nine others conspired to kill the three.

Pequeno said he expects an extradition request from the U.S. government.

Mexican authorities have identified Acosta as head of La Linea, a gang of hit men and corrupt police officers who act as enforcers for the Juarez Cartel.

Acosta acknowledged he ordered the most notorious crimes such as the detonation of a July 2010 car bomb and a massacre that killed 15 people, mostly teenagers, at a birthday party, both in Ciudad Juarez, Pequeno said.

A former state police officer, Acosta built a criminal empire, not only leading a gang of contract killers for the Juarez Cartel but also extorting businesses and kidnapping for large ransoms, said Tony Payan, an expert on the drug war at the University of Texas-El Paso.

"This is an enforcer and the financial arm of the Juarez Cartel," said Payan, whose research comes from both newspaper accounts and people living in Ciudad Juarez.

Payan said Acosta's law enforcement past explains how the cartel could gather intelligence using informants within local police forces.

Payan also said Acosta's arrest could reduce the number of murders in Juarez, where more than 3,000 homicides were recorded last year.

"He was a very hands-on manager that was practically involved in the management and organization, personally brokering every single activity and every single murder," Payan said. "This may be the break that we have all been waiting for."

It may also weaken an already shattered Juarez Cartel, he said.

The cartel, allegedly led by Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, has been losing ground to the Sinaloa drug trafficking organization, headed by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman in a three-year battle over the border city's smuggling corridors. But Carrillo Fuentes and alleged top lieutenant Juan Pablo Ledezma remain at large.

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MEXICO CITY -- A former police officer who allegedly admits ordering 1,500 killings during a campaign of terror as a drug gang chieftain along the U.S. border has been captured in northern Mexico, fed...
MEXICO CITY -- A former police officer who allegedly admits ordering 1,500 killings during a campaign of terror as a drug gang chieftain along the U.S. border has been captured in northern Mexico, fed...
MEXICO CITY -- A former police officer who allegedly admits ordering 1,500 killings during a campaign of terror as a drug gang chieftain along the U.S. border has been captured in northern Mexico, fed...
MEXICO CITY -- A former police officer who allegedly admits ordering 1,500 killings during a campaign of terror as a drug gang chieftain along the U.S. border has been captured in northern Mexico, fed...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yaxchibonam
Learn a second language.
01:26 PM on 08/01/2011
"...federal officials said Sunday." It should not be the case that the press are the last to know that whatever they are fed by any kind of government source on the subject of narco-trafficking is specifically targeted to bolster Calderon's bloody war in Mexico. If the press feel no responsibility to search for a deeper truth, they should consider turning in their credentials. We the people know better than they do, apparently, what the real fact of the case are.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:24 PM on 08/01/2011
America's War on Drugs, Mexican Front continues to suck the life out of once great cities like Juarez and now Monterrey. End the prohibition, decriminalize and treat addiction as a disease and save money by focusing on anti-drug education and on treatment. Taxpayers win, Cartels lose, private prisons (and the politicians they own) lose. When the money goes out of the illicit drug trade, violence falls and levels of corruption fall. Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeyJaii
Free $$ For Everyone.
07:16 AM on 08/01/2011
Severe punishments for all criminals like these, don't let them easily go to jail and enjoy there sweet time. Work them to death.
05:59 AM on 08/01/2011
make an example of this man was naked under the hot asphalt road deposit will keep you, then by torture delirtip china, the people going to the execution of the course, whether the dirty Mexican drug traffickers and their accessory after the fact, and that welcomes everyone,
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
youarenotGod
02:09 AM on 08/01/2011
For those who care to learn some disturbing facts, simply google "documentary about CIA and cocaine trafficking." Also, watch a documentary entitled "The Injustice System in America." The War on Drugs is an abject failure. California has twice as many prisons as it had 20 years ago, and most are for-profit enterprises. California today spends more money incarcerating prisoners than it spends educating its children.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:40 AM on 08/01/2011
And thanks to Super Congress.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
12:20 AM on 08/01/2011
So what? The drug war is the problem. All that happens now, is number two moves up.
09:56 PM on 07/31/2011
What's worse, what's going on in Mexico, right next door, or what's going on in Iraq, a half a world away? Are we allocating our resources proportionately according to the respective threats to us?
09:34 PM on 07/31/2011
Capturing him and parading him in front of the media is one thing. That is called photo-Op and a poll booster for the Politician's. It is what happens to the monster now that will determine whether or not this is about Law, Order and Justice. Somehow, I doubt that this monster will receive his 'just desserts).
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
09:20 PM on 07/31/2011
The world will only take Mexico's war against the cartels seriously if they start extraditing the leaders to the US where they can face actual punishments. No one has any faith in the Mexican justice system to prosecute these monsters.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cliff53
12:29 AM on 08/01/2011
Mexico does not have the death penalty, so if we bring them to the US, true, they might receive justice here, but we would be supporting their sorry butts for years with 3 meals a day, a roof over their head, free medical, and goodness knows what else. The only alternative, would be if they are brought here and convicted, Mexico would have to pay the US to keep them in prison here, and we know that is not going to happen.
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chiodo08
...why do republicans HATE America?...
02:57 PM on 08/01/2011
really?...we can't even shut down that Gitmo t0rture chamber. Besides, do really need a 5th war?....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
03:01 PM on 08/01/2011
It wouldn't be a war, the cartel leaders will simply do time in a prison system that actually functions as a prison system.
12:35 AM on 08/21/2011
it is a war,,, you see the weapons they have?

they have everything the taliban have, more!

they shoot down planes ,, they ambush police and military convoys

they surrounded a squad of tennessee national guardsmen using military tactics ,,, and ran them off the border within the united states

its a war
09:19 PM on 07/31/2011
Que bueno!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oceanview136
The Truth and Nothing but the Truth
08:37 PM on 07/31/2011
Anyone that orders the killing of 1500 HUMAN BEINGS, is nothing short of a MONSTER !! I am glad that they caught this murderer.
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Idriss Nokour
knowledge is Power
07:59 PM on 07/31/2011
He ordered killing of 1500 peoples in Mexico but U.S wants to try him in America because he killed ONE consulate employee! WOW
08:38 PM on 07/31/2011
Well, The USA does have the death penalty.

And I would not trust he would remain long locked up in a Mexican prison.

I am sure he will be extradited with the best wishes of the mexican government.
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chiodo08
...why do republicans HATE America?...
02:58 PM on 08/01/2011
dude we went to war with a country because our president had "daddy issues"...there is NOTHING I believe in less than American resolve...
07:03 PM on 07/31/2011
America could legalize pot and put them out of business.

LOL that the play-act tough guy cops are hiding their faces.
06:43 PM on 07/31/2011
It would me much easier to make all the substances legal. We spend so much money for a cause that has no result and will not have a result. This money can be wisely spend on education