Alleged Mexican drug trafficker nabbed in U.S.
Man linked to Mexico's largest seizure of drug cash arrested in Maryland
![]() | Chinese-Mexican businessman Zhenli Ye Gon is wanted in Mexico on drug trafficking and weapons charges. |
Richard Drew / AP file |
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MEXICO CITY - Mexico said Monday that U.S. authorities have arrested alleged methamphetamine trafficker Zhenli Ye Gon, whose mansion was the scene of what U.S. officials say was the world’s largest seizure of drug cash.
Mexico’s Attorney General’s office said Ye Gon was detained in the Washington suburb of Rockville, Md. He is wanted in Mexico on organized crime, drug trafficking and weapons charges. Mexican officials have requested his arrest for extradition.
In March, Mexican agents found more than $207 million in dollar, peso and euro bills in a mansion owned by Ye Gon in one of the capital’s most exclusive neighborhoods.
Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora said the money was connected to one of the hemisphere’s largest networks for trafficking pseudoephedrine, the main ingredient in methamphetamines. He said the ring had been operating since 2004, illegally importing the substance and selling it to a drug cartel that mixed it into the crystal form and imported into the United States.
Ye Gon said the chemicals imported by his company, Unimed Pharm Chem de Mexico SA, were legitimate and intended for use in prescription drugs to be made at a factory he was building in Toluca, just west of the Mexican capital.
Claimed he was threatened
Ye Gon also claimed that $150 million of the money belonged Mexico’s ruling party, and that he was forced to store it for party officials in his mansion under threat of death during the 2006 presidential race, which Felipe Calderon narrowly won.
Calderon has called the accusations “pure fiction.”
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AP file Money seized at Zhenli Ye Gon's home |
Ye Gon’s U.S. lawyer, Martin F. McMahon, had said he would ask that Ye Gon be given asylum in the United States and called for congressional hearings and a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration investigation into his client’s claims.
U.S. anti-drug officials have praised Calderon’s crackdown on Mexican traffickers since taking office. DEA chief Karen Tandy also praised Mexican agents following the March money seizure.
“This is like law enforcement hitting the ultimate jackpot. But luck had nothing to do with this windfall,” Tandy said, calling it “the largest single drug-cash seizure the world has ever seen.”
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