What's new

DEA Caught with The Cheese

Jalisco Kid

Active member
Official helped enemies

By Sebastian Rotella

Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON -As a high-ranking U.S. antidrug official, Richard Padilla Cramer held frontline posts in the war on Mexico's murderous cartels. He led an office of two-dozen agents in Arizona and was the attache for Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Guadalajara.

While in Mexico, however, Cramer also served as a secret ally of drug lords, according to federal investigators.

He allegedly advised traffickers on law enforcement tactics and pulled secret files to help them identify turncoats. He charged $2,000 for a Drug Enforcement Administration document that was e-mailed to a suspect in Miami in August, authorities say.

"Cramer was responsible for advising the (drug traffickers) how U.S. law enforcement works with warrants and record checks as well as how DEA conducts investigations to include flipping subjects,'" or recruiting informants, according to a criminal complaint filed by a DEA agent.

DEA agents arrested Cramer, 56, at his home in Arizona on Sept. 4.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney in Miami said Wednesday that she could not comment, but said cases that begin with complaints usually go before a grand jury.

Cramer's duties as the ICE attache in Guadalajara included serving as a liaison with Mexican police, assisting investigations and gathering intelligence.

But the investigation revealed that Cramer also worked for "a very high-level drug lord," according to federal officials. The 26-year government veteran became a full-time adviser to traffickers after retiring from ICE in January 2007, according to the complaint.

A trafficker "convinced Cramer to retire ... and began working directly for (him) in drug trafficking and money laundering," according to the complaint.

Cramer sold secret documents that he obtained from active U.S. agents, an aspect of the case still under investigation. The charges underscore the corruptive power of the cartels, which have bought off Mexican politicians, police chiefs and military commanders. Drug lords have reached across the international line with increasing ease, corrupting U.S. border inspectors and agents to help smuggle cocaine north. In 2006, the FBI chief in El Paso, Texas, was convicted of charges related to concealing his friendship with an alleged drug kingpin.

Cramer stands out because his rank and foreign post made his work especially sensitive, officials said. Stunned colleagues described him as a well-regarded investigator who spoke fluent Spanish and operated skillfully in the array of U.S. and Mexican agencies at the border when he ran the ICE office in the action-packed border zone of Nogales, Ariz., his hometown.

"It came as a complete shock," said Santa Cruz County Sheriff Tony Estrada in a telephone interview. "I have been in law enforcement at the border 42 years and I have seen some strange things, but I have never ceased to be surprised. You have to be watchful and mindful. The cartels have touched local, state and federal agencies."
 

TickleMyBalls

just don't molest my colas..
Veteran
Life imitating art imitating life. isn't this pretty much the plot of the last 2 seasons of weeds?
 
I

itsjustaride

anather case of rationalizing there fake idiology so they can get paychecks.
 
Well perhaps it limited violence on Americans and stabilized the American drug network. Just wish they supported, way up here! Something about improving society, not a gang life~
 

guest396

Member
i am sure they won't use these facts to free the probably hundreds of people that this guy musta f$cked over in the last 26 years! if i was one i'd have my lawyer on it.


OHGEE
 

fatigues

Active member
Veteran
An official helped the cartels? Well, that would be corruption and bribery. Sure. If he were an "official" at the time that he did it.

But that isn't what this article says. It's not a corruption or bribery charge when you are retired. The whole "they bribed him to retire" sounds a little desperate and implausible. If he was on the take, wouldn't they want him to still be active? Pay him not to retire?

Is it illegal as a retired DEA agent to merely act as a consultant to advise others as to the operating procedures of your former employer, without more?

Not too sure of that. RICO / conspiracy is about as good as they got, but there has to be a lot more to this story than is reported above, to make that stick.
 

Grendelkhan

Member
He's likely working for some high end black bag group within the government. Don't forget whom the world banks lend money too, drug cartels because they can pay back the high interest on these loans. I'll bet that this is will just go away at some point never to be heard of again.
 

love?

Member
Yeah the title is a bit misleading (what is this, International Cannatabloid?). Only one person instead of larger DEA involvement and nothing at all relating to the Exodus cheese cut. :D
 

Hash Zeppelin

Ski Bum Rodeo Clown
Premium user
ICMag Donor
Veteran
^Fromunda my toilet.

I bet there is tons of u.s. agents that work for the cartels. they pay way more, and they are even scasrier than the u.s. government.
 
I

idoreallytry

i probly would to can you blame them,,the cash is a big teaser,,peace
 

anikas88

Member
Yeah hes the only one. lol. i bet there is corruption running through both sides of the border. Blame the mexicans if you want but corruption and greed knows no color or race. The dea is full of these corrupted individuals.
 

Hammerhead

Disabled Farmer
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Yeah hes the only one. lol. i bet there is corruption running through both sides of the border. Blame the mexicans if you want but corruption and greed knows no color or race. The dea is full of these corrupted individuals.


I completely agree with this. There are many more that have not been caught
 
Top