One of Mexico's most notorious drug lords says he's out of the business, but it's not that simple

Rafael Caro Quintero Sinaloa cartel Mexican drug cartel trafficker
Rafael Caro Quintero Sinaloa cartel Mexican drug cartel trafficker

(Rafael Caro Quintero, during an interview with Proceso published in July.Proceso)

In the '70s and '80s, Rafael Caro Quintero was one member of a triumvirate that built a sprawling drug empire in Mexico.

In a wide-ranging interview with Mexican magazine Proceso last week, Caro Quintero — who is still wanted by both the US and Mexican governments — rejected reports that he was up to his old tricks, even denying that he was ever a major trafficker, and disputed rumors that he had gone to war with his old cartel associates.

“I know nothing of cocaine. I made my roots in marijuana, nothing more,” Caro Quintero said during the interview. “I sold it here, among the ranches … I never trafficked [drugs] to the United States,” he added.

Caro Quintero's decades-long reign came to an end in 1985, when he was jailed for 40 years for his involvement in the kidnapping and killing of US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent Enrique "Kiki" Camarena in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Caro Quintero was suddenly released in 2013, after a court overturned his conviction on a technicality. A higher court quickly reversed that decision, and new warrants for his arrest were issued, but he had already slipped away and has lived in hiding until recent weeks, when rumors emerged that he was taking on his old compatriots in an effort to reestablish himself in Mexico's narco scene.

Caro Quintero claimed in the Proceso interview that he exited the drug business in 1984 and has not returned since.

"I was a drug trafficker 31 years ago, and from that moment I am telling you that when I lost the crops from" the Buffalo Ranch in Chihuahua state, where Mexican authorities, tipped off by Camarena, destroyed a multibillion-dollar haul of thousands of pounds of marijuana in 1984, "there I ended that activity," Caro Quintero told Proceso.

"And never have I exercised it [since] and I'm not going to do it. I stopped being a drug trafficker and I say to you again: Please, leave me in peace."

mexico drugs marijuana
mexico drugs marijuana

(A soldier guards marijuana that is being incinerated in Tijuana, Mexico.AP)

There are good reasons to doubt Caro Quintero's protestations about his role in the drug trade.

Working in the drug trade since his youth, Caro Quintero likely doesn't know any other way of life. What's more, since both the US and Mexican governments are looking for him, there's probably little to dissuade him from further criminal activity.

"What does he then lose moving some kilos here or there?" Mexican security analyst Alejandro Hope asked in his column in Mexican newspaper El Universal this week.