PRI Scolds Mexican Ex-Gov as US Prepares to Confiscate Property Paid by Cartel Funds

Borderland Beat: Read additional information in Buggs' February 2012 post;
Mexican Governor Got Millions in drug cash

Yarrington
By Mica Rosenberg
Mexico's opposition party, leading by double digits in presidential polls, on Wednesday said one of its former governors must face up to charges in the United States of accepting millions of dollars from drug cartels.

In an effort to contain what is likely to become a hot campaign issue, the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) said they are deciding if Tomas Yarrington, former governor of the state of Tamaulipas, should be thrown out of the party.

On Tuesday, U.S. prosecutors moved to seize millions of dollars' worth of real estate in Texas that Yarrington allegedly brought with drug money.

"Yarrington has to face justice in the country where he is being accused," the PRI said in a statement. "The PRI does not cover up impunity under any circumstances."

The PRI's candidate for president, Enrique Pena Nieto, has a commanding lead ahead of the July 1 vote but is fighting off attacks from rivals who say a win for the party that ruled for seven decades would be a return to Mexico's corrupt past.

Yarrington served as governor of Tamaulipas on the U.S.-Mexico border from 1999 to 2005. The accusations against him were brought in two civil suits but he has not been charged criminally.
The Photo Enrique Pena probably wishes didn't exist
PRI Buds: The disgraced former Governor with Mexico's likely next president
"(Yarrington) acquired millions of dollars in payments while holding elected office from large-scale drug organizations," one complaint filed in a U.S. district court in southern Texas said.

"He used his illicit income from his political years to become a major real estate investor through various money laundering mechanisms," the court documents said.

NO ARREST OR DETENTION

Yarrington was also the mayor of Matamoros, Tamaulipas, from 1992 to 1995, and sought nomination for the Mexican presidency in 2005.

One of the seized properties was a condo in the resort community of South Padre Island, at the southern tip of Texas, and the other was a larger site in San Antonio, prosecutors said.

Yarrington's lawyer has denied the properties belong to him, and called the charges "false allegations and false rumors."

Yarrington has not been arrested or detained, said Angela Dodge, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office. Mexican media reported that he was in Houston.

Tamaulipas, across the Rio Grande from Texas, is one of the country's most violent drug trafficking corridors.

Conservative President Felipe Calderon sent thousands of federal police and soldiers to take on the cartels after taking office in late-2006. However, drug murders have soared since then, reaching around 55,000 during the administration.

Calderon is prohibited by the constitution from running for re-election but his National Action Party (PAN) candidate Josefina Vazquez Mota is trailing by up to 20 points in the polls.

The PRI has gained much support by promising to restore security to the streets. Vazquez Mota has hit back, accusing the PRI of being complicit with drug gangs and said they may try to cut deals with cartels to lower murder rates.

"Yarrington is the face of the corrupt PRI that hasn't gone away," Vazquez Mota told local radio. "This is what we can't allow to happen again in our country."

The PAN, which broke the PRI's 71-year hold on power in 2000, is trying to shine a spotlight on a string of recent graft investigations against PRI officials.

The former treasurer of the state of Coahuila - who once worked for former PRI chairman Humberto Moreira - is also a target of a U.S. money laundering probe. (Reuters)
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Distancing himself from Yarrington:
The PRI's candidate for president, Enrique Pena Nieto, has a 20 pt lead in the polls for the July 1 vote but is fighting off attacks from rivals who say a win for the party that ruled for seven decades would be a return to Mexico's corrupt past.

"The party is not responsible for this," Pena Nieto said on Wednesday when asked about the Yarrington case. "The law should be upheld."
According to the DEA complaint in Texas: Pena-Arguelles' older brother Alfonso was found slain by a monument in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, last year. Next to his body was a banner accusing Antonio Pena-Arguelles of stealing $5 million from the Zetas. DEA informants said the money had been intended to buy the Zetas influence in the Tamaulipas government through Yarrington's connections.
In the complaint : On the morning of his brother's death, Antonio Pena-Arguelles received a cellphone text message from Trevino, the Zetas' No. 2, accusing him, Yarrington and the head of the Gulf cartel, Jorge Eduardo Costilla Sanchez, of orchestrating Torre's slaying.

Press release: Link Here Mexican Businessman Indicted for Alleged Money Laundering and Bank Fraud
All photos, links and bottom information added by Chivis

source: Borderland Beat: PRI Scolds Mexican Ex-Gov as US Prepares to Confiscate Property Paid by Cartel Funds