Wednesday, June 3, 2009

47 police officers questioned in disappearance of Mexican customs official

Nearly 50 police officers were questioned in the disappearance of a top Mexican customs official in the port city of Veracruz, authorities said Wednesday.

The probe targeted traffic police in Veracruz, where customs administrator Francisco Serrano disappeared Monday night from the scene of an apparent traffic collision. Forty-seven police officers were heldfor questioning by federal authorities.Salvador Mikel Rivera, attorney general for the state of Veracruz, said authorities decided to question all officers on duty that night after viewing security camera footage of a crash involving Serrano's vehicle. The footage showed several police cars arriving. Serrano has not been seen since.

Veracruz is the nation's main cargo port on the Gulf of Mexico and watched by customs officials for smuggling of illegal drugs and other contraband.

The action came as federal authorities this week detained 58 police officers in the northern state of Nuevo Leon for suspected ties with drug traffickers. Among those taken into custody were the public safety chiefs in two towns.
for questioning by federal authoritiesPolice corruption remains a major obstacle for Mexican President Felipe Calderon's 30-month-old crackdown on drug cartels and other organized-crime groups.

Though the administration has sought to clean up and reorganize the roughly 25,000-strong federal police, graft is entrenched in cities and small towns, where officers sometimes moonlight as gunmen for drug-smuggling groups.

Calderon has responded by sending the Mexican military to patrol drug-trafficking hot spots. In a growing number of places, retired Mexican army generals and colonels have been put in charge of police.

More than 10,000 people have died in drug-related violence since Calderon launched the nationwide anti-crime offensive in December 2006. Traffickers have fought government forces and feuded with one another over prized smuggling routes

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