Suspected female drug lord enthralls Mexico
Police arrest Avila Beltran, who allegedly used seduction in rise to power
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MEXICO CITY - Blessed with charm and good looks, Sandra Avila Beltran is enthralling Mexico. Not as a beauty queen, but as an alleged drug lord, and the story of her arrest and possible extradition to the U.S. is being followed more closely than a telenovela.
Police say the raven-haired 46-year-old spent more than a decade working her way to the top echelons of Mexico’s male-dominated drug trade, uniting Colombian and Mexican gangs and seducing several notorious kingpins.
Dubbed the “Queen of the Pacific,” she even has her own song — a “narcocorrido” folk ballad about drug traffickers by Los Tucanes de Tijuana that pays homage to her as “a top lady who is a key part of the business.”
Since her arrest last week, the song has been playing often on Mexican radio, and television stations are repeatedly broadcasting a video showing her coyly telling police that she is just a housewife and businesswoman. The clip had been seen 40,000 times on YouTube as of Thursday.
Romance allegedly united cocaine groups
Avila Beltran lived largely unnoticed in the northern cities of Guadalajara and Hermosillo until 2001. That’s when police found more than nine tons of cocaine on a ship in the Pacific port of Manzanillo and tracked the shipment to her and her 39-year-old lover, Juan Diego Espinoza Ramirez — known as “the Tiger” and also wanted by U.S. authorities.
It was her romance with Espinoza Ramirez that brought together two powerful cocaine organizations, Mexico’s Sinaloa gang and Colombia’s Norte del Valle cartel, prosecutors say.
Officials say Avila Beltran was head of “public relations” for the Sinaloa cartel, an unprecedented role for a woman, and as such helped move cocaine from Colombia.
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AP Sandra Avila Beltran, also known as the "Queen of the Pacific," smiles for a police mug shot Sept. 28 in Mexico City. |
Another uncle, Juan Jose Quintero Payan, was extradited to the U.S. last January on drug-trafficking charges, Assistant Federal Public Safety Secretary Patricio Patino said.
The only other woman believed to be part of a cartel’s leadership is Avila Beltran’s distant relative Enedina Arellano Felix, who experts say took over the Tijuana-based Arellano Felix cartel after one of her brothers was killed in a police shootout and her other brother was arrested.
Love affairs reportedly catapulted her into elite
Mexican media have said Avila Beltran had love affairs with other drug lords, as well, which helped catapult her into the elite of drug trafficking. Among the purported lovers were Ismael Zambada, a leader of the Sinaloa cartel, and alleged methamphetamine kingpin Ignacio Coronel.
She managed to stay behind the scenes until 2001. A few months after the cocaine seizure, her teenage son was kidnapped in Guadalajara and she contacted authorities for help. The size of the ransom demanded, which police said was $5 million, raised more suspicion among authorities.
Avila Beltran ended up saying she would handle the kidnapping negotiations herself. Patino said she paid $3 million for her son’s safe return. She says it was less.
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