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APFN Message Board......
http://www.insidetheweb.com/messageboard/mbs.cgi?acct=mb1075995

Monday, 19-Feb-01 12:38:17

63.10.98.115 writes:
Please read the below article and select your personal favorite drug
"kingpin". Bush , Clinton or Fox ? Did you ever wonder why the so called
"drug war" could never be won? Their motto is: Things go better with
Coke!
A non-registered trade snort- mark.

joe 6pk Amer I CAN/ see coke lines

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http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=21729
President Fox guarding narco-hen house?

By Tom Flocco
© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com

There's an intriguing story left virtually unreported by the mainstream
U.S. media regarding a friendship between alleged Cancun drug-trafficker
and banker Roberto Hernandez Ramirez and Mexican President Vicente
Fox.

This is especially strange when you throw in President Bush's Feb. 16
meeting in Mexico with the nation's new leader.

Few people have cued into the Mexican president's connections to
Bush's own Dallas TV ad consultant, Robert Allyn. Along with
consulting work for Bush, according to a July 9, 2000, Dallas Morning
News report, Allyn worked secretly for three years on the election
campaign of Vicente Fox and would have most likely known about the
alleged connection between Fox and drug runners. The allegations were
made specifically by three Yucatan newspapers: Por Esto! (Dec. 16,
1996), El Universal (July 8, 2000) and La Jornada (July 9, 2000).

Forbes Magazine reported that Roberto Hernandez, who could not afford
an American Express card in 1980, today earns the largest annual
salary in Mexico -- reported as $29 million per year -- and is a billionaire
who runs Mexico's largest bank.

Por Esto!'s evidence linking Hernandez to narcotics was so solid that a
judge threw out Hernandez's libel suit against the newspaper and editor
Mario Menendez because, as the Feb. 23, 2000, Village Voice reported,
"all the accusations formed by [Menendez] were based on facts."
Hernandez did not return the Voice's calls for comment, but Menendez
added in an interview that Hernandez's "properties were found with
cocaine. All of this is confirmed by the [Mexican] Air Force, thus, there
is no possibility of libel."

Fox's campaign consultant, Robert Allyn, had been the creator of a
series of controversial ads during the Republican primaries for Bush's
Dallas billionaire friend, Sam Wyly, a heavy campaign contributor. The
TV spots defended Gov. Bush's environmental policies while questioning
the eco record of Arizona Sen. John McCain.

Presidential candidate Fox used the Bush-connected TV consultant --
reportedly paid no salary, only ad production costs -- over a three-year
period while he used fake names to avoid the media and ruling party
aides.  And Allyn made some 40 trips to Mexico, quietly consulting with
Fox at his Guanajuato ranch.

The Mexican president also visited Allyn whenever he was in Dallas.
However, the Dallas Morning News report did not reveal who
recommended Allyn to the Fox campaign, why Allyn was basically
working for no compensation, or whether -- more importantly -- someone
unidentified was paying him for his services to Fox.

Open borders, borderline behavior

Notwithstanding the drug issue, Fox has been controversial in the eyes
of some U.S. lawmakers because of his call for an open U.S.-Mexican
border, while declaring himself the leader of both Mexico's citizens and
the estimated 18 million Mexicans and Mexican-Americans living in the
United States. Bush himself has helped fuel this controversy. At a Feb.
7 White House press conference, Bush Press Secretary Ari Fleischer
told the national media that Bush "thinks we should have fair trade with
Mexico and that we should have borders that make that possible." No
explanation came detailing Bush's actual border policy.

Further complicating the drug issue, just two weeks ago, as the
Washington Post reported, four senators -- Chris Dodd, D-Ct., John
McCain, R-Ariz., Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., and Ernest Hollings, D-S.C. --
moved to cosponsor legislation to suspend the annual process under
which the United States is required to assess Mexico's performance in
combating narcotics trafficking.  Continued certification brings $1.4
billion in U.S. financial assistance in the drug war.

However, it seems that no one has questioned this legislation, when, at
the same time, the Mexican press is reporting that Fox consorts with a
narco-kingpin. Por Esto! refers to the controversial Roberto Hernandez
Ramirez as "El Narcotraficante," while editor Mario Menendez claims
that "U.S. authorities are managing the illegal drug trade in Mexico,"
according to a Feb. 23, 2000, report in the Village Voice.

No mention was made whether the senators discussed how their bill
addresses the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's continuing
concern over narcotrafficking and corruption in Mexico. Moreover,
Hernandez has hired Vernon Jordan's Washington law firm, Akin-Gump,
to sue Mario Menendez in New York City, to further heighten the
intrigue and, in effect, put the war against drugs literally on trial.

El Narcotraficante de Cancun

The Dec. 16, 1996, charge made by Menendez and his paper --
incidentally, the country's third highest circulation newspaper -- was that
Hernandez, Mexican national banker and No. 289 on the Forbes list of
wealthiest men on earth, operated a key entry point for hundreds of tons
of South American cocaine from his 22 miles of beachfront property
south of Cancun.

Reuters News Service reported on Aug. 8, 1998, that the Mexican
newspaper Reforma said "nearly a third of the illegal drugs that pass
through the Caribbean from South America to the United States enter
Mexico near the popular tourist resort of Cancun." Reforma added that
"ships -- some with a capacity of 300 tons -- unload their cargo on high-
speed boats that land in Cancun or very near the luxury resort."

Por Esto! reported stories of local fishermen describing what they called
a huge cocaine trafficking operation protected by Hernandez. The
fishermen also observed shark boats entering the estuaries by night and
unloading cocaine which was then, the allegation goes, loaded onto
small planes at the private airfield on Hernandez's beachfront ranch,
before heading north toward the Texas border.

The Por Esto! story included pictures of alleged narcotrafficker
Hernandez's airfield, planes, plus stacks of cocaine and assorted
shoreline garbage associated with drug-trafficking, such as glue
containers, cocaine packaging and other products with labels naming
Columbian drug-cartel cities of Medellin, Cali and Baranquilla. These
same products were also found on seized Columbian shark boats,
according to the Mexican newspaper, with cocaine on board.

In 1997, the government began aggressively patrolling the waters around
Cancun, Quintana Roo, Mexico's American tourist capital, in response
to the newspaper reports. Then-President Ernesto Zedillo, however,
ordered the armed forces not to enter Hernandez' beachfront estuary
properties. And Zedillo was described as a frequent visitor to
Hernandez's Punta Pajaros island ranch -- protected by armed guards
24 hours a day, according to El Universal.

A Mexican Supreme Court judge threw out a 1997 suit filed by
Hernandez against Por Esto!, its publisher, editor, reporter and
photographer in September 1999 -- saying "the Por Esto! reports were
based on facts." And drug-war authority Al Giordano reported on his
NarcoNews.com website that more than 100 Yucatan Peninsula town
councils, unions and church groups have passed resolutions
denouncing the cocaine trafficking and the attacks on Por Esto!

The other president

But Zedillo was not the only president to visit or vacation on the property
of the alleged "El Narcotraficante." President Clinton arrived in the
Yucatan on Feb. 14, 1999, just two days after escaping impeachment,
to hold an anti-drug meeting with Hernandez's friend, President Zedillo.
At the narco-summit, Mexico was certified by Clinton as a trusted drug-
war ally, and U.S. financial aid was released.

U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Jeffrey Davidow, a long-time diplomat who
gained valuable experience in Chile during the 1971-73 Gen. Pinochet-
President Salvador Allende era, organized President Clinton's itinerary.
The press corps covering the trip did not question why Davidow arranged
to place Clinton in such a controversial position while all of the Yucatan
was watching -- and reading the daily Por Esto! pieces.

The New York Times reported that the Clinton-Zedillo "anti-drug" meeting
was held at banker Roberto Hernandez Ramirez's island ranch near
Cancun, but never printed that Hernandez was the most well-known
alleged drug trafficker on the Yucatan Peninsula.

To make sure the American press corps knew about Hernandez's drug
ties, Por Esto! editor Menendez pulled out all the stops and ran a series
of three supplement pieces -- including 350 column inches of text
documented by 45 photographs and maps tracing the route of the
Columbian cocaine through Hernandez's properties -- beginning on Feb.
14, 1999, to coincide with Clinton's arrival in Cancun. Former Boston
Phoenix writer Al Giordano called the series a "journalistic tour de force -
- the culmination of a 26-month investigation. ..."

However, American journalists never mentioned the Hernandez story or
why President Clinton would agree to hold his anti-drug meeting at the
ranch of a publicly accused cocaine trafficker. Giordano searched
"Lexis-Nexis, the major dailies, wire services, etc;" however, he found
that the Hernandez cocaine story was "neither published, promoted,
criticized, nor rebutted."

Covering the drug summit for his then-employer, the Boston Phoenix,
Giordano said, "The White House press corps, along for the ride, was so
meticulously controlled by their handlers, kept in luxury hotel rooms and
restaurants that were guarded by U.S. Secret Service agents, offered
junkets to Mayan ruins and beaches in exchange for not spending their
time investigating or reporting."

Giordano quoted Por Esto! as charging that "the U.S. government has
wide and deep knowledge of Hernandez's drug-trafficking activities." No
reporter or member of Congress, however, has questioned either former
President Clinton or President George W. Bush about connections to
Fox, Hernandez, Robert Allyn, or what they know about small planes
flying north toward Texas and Florida from the Hernandez ranch after
Columbian boats off-load their cocaine cargos.

Drug war on trial

In March 2000, Por Esto!'s Menendez was invited to present his
evidence of official complicity in cocaine trafficking to the Columbia
University Law School in New York City. However, Roberto Hernandez,
through Banamex, has hired D.C. law giant Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer
and Feld -- the 7th largest firm in the U.S. -- to file civil action for libel
against both Por Esto! editor Menendez and NarcoNews.com's Al
Giordano.

The legal powerhouse is "waging a battle to discredit media reports that
[Banamex President], Roberto Hernandez Ramirez, is a drug trafficker
whose activities are allegedly protected by powerful politicians in both
Mexico and the United States," according to Metroland News Service.

Thomas McLish, a lawyer with Akin, Gump, said, "Roberto Hernandez
is a man of the highest moral character," according to the Village Voice.
And in November 2000, "Menendez retained Martin Garbus, the
legendary First Amendment lawyer," who said, "I represent a newspaper
and a journalist accused, and from what I understand, they have a good
defense of the libel claim." Moreover, Village Voice reporter Cynthia
Cotts says Garbus finds it "very significant" that Hernandez's libel
claims were thrown out in Mexico.

But Akin, Gump may have another type of problem in attempting to
convince a judge that their client Roberto Hernandez has no drug-
trafficking connections. The Washington Post, in a piece dealing with
drug kingpins buying congressional influence through Washington
lobbyists, reported that "another major D.C. law firm, Akin, Gump, et.
al., recently began lobbying on behalf of Glossco Freezone, an Aruba
business controlled by the Mansur family, some of whose members
have been indicted in the United States on charges of conspiracy to
launder drug trafficking proceeds, congressional sources said. ...
Barney J. Skladany Jr., the Akin, Gump partner representing Glossco,
did not return repeated telephone calls for comment."

>From Coca-Cola to coke?

On July 2, Vicente Fox won the Mexican presidential election and met
with U.S. Ambassador Jeffrey Davidow in Mexico City on July 7.
Giordano's Narco News Bulletin reported that "Fox then met with former
U.S. Ambassador James Jones, former employee of a company backed
by alleged drug trafficker Carlos Hank Gonzalez (Forbes List billionaire)
and recently hired by the Washington law firm of Mannatt and Phelps,
owned by the U.S. Narco-Ambassador to the Dominican Republic and
former U.S. Democratic Party chairman Charles Mannatt."

Mexican newspaper La Jornada reported that "President-elect Vicente
Fox returned to Mexico City to restart his activities after vacationing this
weekend at the residence of his friend Roberto Hernandez, president of
the banking group Banamex." Narco News added that "after meeting
with two U.S. operatives, Fox hops on a plane, then a helicopter, and
according to Mexican paper El Universal, heads for Punta Pajaros on
the Cocaine Peninsula as guest of Narco Banker Roberto Hernandez
Ramirez."

Questions remain this week as to whether President Bush will support
the aforementioned senators in attempting to suspend drug-war
performance assessment recertification each year for Mexico, thereby
freeing Vicente Fox to conduct the drug war in his own way.

And just recently, according to Metroland News Service, Mexican
newspapers have reported that "Roberto Hernandez Ramirez hosted a
private reception at his ranch this year that was attended by newly
elected Mexican President Vicente Fox, U.S. Ambassador to Mexico
Jeffrey Davidow and President Clinton."

Nationally syndicated Mexican columnist Isabel Arvide said in Letras de
Cambio, "Already they've rubbed it in our faces by at least saying who
hosted [President Vicente] Fox at his personal island to rest up from the
campaign. ... This is what millions of Mexicans voted for?" Then she
added, "The vote of refusal against the PRI (Institutional Revolutionary
Party) served so that Roberto Hernandez can continue enjoying his
personal island -- with or without 'snow' of all flavors and types. ... We
voted in favor of the drug traffickers' choice?"

And what about political ad consultant Robert Allyn? His introduction of
sage counsel into the Fox campaign, a more "visual" Mexican
candidate, focus groups, satellite paging and Mexican spin-doctors -- for
three years with no compensation -- all served notice that a busy
Washington press corps might have reason to question the campaign
aide about potential benefactors, possibly in both Mexico and the
United States, who really wanted to see the ex-Coca Cola executive
assume office. Or could Mr. Allyn have been working for three years out
of the goodness of his heart?

joe 6pk

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