Financial weaknesses, egos, greed and a very human fear of poverty drive men to smuggle drugs into the U.S.
Borderland Beat
July 5, 2018
It happens every day, every hour, across Mexico, but especially in Tijuana, a transit point for millions of dollars worth of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, and fentanyl. Over drinks, over dinner, over a sipped beer or slammed shot, maybe the odd line of cocaine in an upscale bar, an arrangement is made. Over coffee, or lunch, in an office, or a ranch outside the city, the back of a casino, tired overworked waitresses, lingering cigarette smoke, the bleary drone of slot machines and jackpots, promotions and massive flat screens, an offer is presented.
The arrangement comes from a friend, comes from a friend of a girlfriend, a generous offer to sometimes desperate men, the desperation concealed by their job titles and upmarket houses, former glory days. These types are targeted by brokers, by sort of a feelers, men and women who lure them into their service, for sex, money, a chance for redemption in financial prosperity.
Take Esteban Loiaza, former professional baseball player, who made, spent, and apparently lost tens of millions of dollars, before ending up at age 46, thin, pale, and charged with trafficking 20 kilos of cocaine, from a stash house in his name, in Imperial Beach, minutes from the Tijuana border.
Loiaza is out of custody on a 180,000 bond, secured by a property owned by his former wife in Texas. It took months for Loiaza to make bail, showcasing his financial troubles. He was charged with federal drug charges in March, the state charges dismissed to make way for the federal indictment, charging him with one count of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute.
When he is finally sentenced, it is almost certain he will tell a familiar tale of desperate financial situations and an opportunity, that he now sincerely regrets taking. It may not sound much different from the former municipal Tijuana based judge, and lawyer, who was sentenced this week in federal court, to three years in custody.
Eduardo Sais Peinado was arrested in February, with 17 kilos of cocaine, at the San Ysidro point of entry. During his sentencing, through his attorney, he explained the series of events that led to his arrest and guilty plea. After 20 years as civil attorney in private practice, Peindao began working as a municipal judge, for $135 a week, he mostly oversaw matters such as parking tickets and traffic violations.
Around the same time he began seeing a woman, who had three children, one, 6 years old, had a disability, and he was financially helping to pay for her medical bills. His longtime partner in his law firm began to accuse him of being absent from the office, and negligent to the firm, as their business slowly slipped. Peinado for his part denied this.
Nevertheless, a large payment to the partners, of 128,000, was received, and Peindao's partner allegedly refused to pay him his half of the money. His financial situation worsened, as he burned through his savings and claimed he could not get a loan.
But, there was an opportunity that came one day at the Pueblo Amigo Caliente Casino in Tijuana. It wasn't a loan, but it was a chance. A man who he had never met, named Vale, but knew of his troubles approached him with an offer. Peindao claims two meetings later he agreed to traffic drugs across the border, concealed in his vehicle.
He made at least one preliminary trip, with nothing in the car, with another individual linked to Vale. Then he successfully crossed with drugs concealed, dropping the car in a parking lot in Chula Vista, where he left it with a man for an hour, who assumedly removed the product from the compartment. He then crossed the car back to Tijuana. He was paid 3,500.
A week later he was contacted again, and drove through the line on February 10th, 2018, driving a 2007 white jeep liberty, with kilos of cocaine lining the door panels. Customs officers, using a density scanning device, and a drug sniffing dog found the cocaine concealed in the door panels. He was charged with importation of a controlled substance.
The case brings to mind the Tijuana architect who was arrested in 2012, Eugenio Velasquez, who eventually was sentenced to a year in custody, for smuggling 5 kilos of cocaine. Velasquez, who through his lawyer, Jeremy Warren, told a story of deception and coercion, that resulted in his arrest and guilty plea.
Velasquez, was a successful, high end architect, who was contracted to do design work on a Tijuana ranch, in 2011. After a few weeks working on the ranch, he noticed he was being followed by men, and became concerned about his security. The client offered the use of his bodyguards, and Velasquez accepted. Months later, the client claimed Velasquez owed 40,000 for the use of his men.
Velasquez didn't have the money, or wouldn't pay, and he was offered a choice. He was a SENTRI card holder, and crossed rapidly, and frequently. The client claimed he would hurt or kill his family in Tijuana if he did not cross the 5 kilo shipment. Velasquez was arrested at the San Ysidro border, and charged federally.
Across the socioeconomic scale, people are recruited for this work. But, men like this piece details are especially useful, they are often well to do, and less likely to be stopped, or possess SENTRI cards and Readi Passes. They are vulnerable to the same threats of violence, but often it is the finances that lure them in.
There exists in Tijuana, and all over, a world of violence and killing, victims and killers, bodies with deep bruises under their eyes, ligature marks on their wrists, strangulation marks on their necks. This world is hinted at, alluded to, as men sit in bars and coffee shops, suits and sunglasses, shirt sleeves, coffee cups in saucers, the hectic flow of the morning work rush. Or the buzzy, frantic pulse of the casino, cigarette smoke and desperation in the air of every breath.
Esteban Loiaza and Sais Peinado were arrested the same weekend in Tijuana. There is nothing to suggest the two are linked, only in the sense that they are two of the same kind of targets that traffickers use. Exploiting financial weaknesses, egos, greed, a very human fear of poverty, these men always have work. They always have an offer. All you have to do is cross.
Sources: Zeta Tijuana and the San Diego Union Tribune
No comments:
Post a Comment