Witnessed: Devil in the Ditch - Borderlands | 4. The Door
Episode Date: September 21, 2021Sheriff Thompson tightens his grip on power in Far West Texas, but rumors swirl his reach is even greater than that. Want the full story? Unlock all episodes of Witnessed, ad-free, right now by sub...scribing to The Binge. Plus, get binge access to brand new stories dropping on the first of every month — that’s all episodes, all at once, all ad-free. Just click ‘Subscribe’ on the top of the Witnessed show page on Apple Podcasts or visit GetTheBinge.com to get access wherever you listen. A Campside Media & Sony Music Entertainment production. Find out more about The Binge and other podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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From almost the very beginning of my journey into the worlds of Robert Chambers and Rick Thompson,
I've been trying to get in touch with a guy named Monroe Elms.
Monroe seemed like he might be able to offer an inside account.
He'd once been Presidio County Judge, meaning he'd worked hand in hand with the sheriff.
And he had grown up in the same world as Chambers,
passing back and forth across the border
as a young man in the 1970s.
I knew Monroe was still in the area,
living somewhere way out in the country,
but I just couldn't find him.
Then I mentioned my frustrations in passing to one source.
Martha Stafford, the school teacher who remembered Martha as the epitome of small town America,
and she gave me an email address.
It turned out she was Monroe's ex-wife.
Monroe responded to my email right away.
He wrote, I believe that I know more than most people about these two men.
Then he added with almost a boast than anyone in West Texas.
A few hours later, my field producer Ryan and I arrived at Munro's small
Stucco bungalow.
From Campside Media, the first season of Witnessed, this is Borderlands.
I'm Rob Domingo, Chapter 4, hi Ryan. Ryan and Monroe.
Nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you too.
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They live in an old silver mining town
that's mostly been abandoned,
but it's full of havenlinas.
They run up to his porch each night at dusk.
Monroe, he feeds them.
When I was young, I used to shoot him,
and I destroyed too many of them.
This is my way of paying back for what I should not have done.
I found out they eat rattlesnakes and they're immune to the venom.
So I'd rather have them here and no mojave rattlesnakes running around.
Eventually we sat down in a little covered patio area
and Monroe's yard and started to talk.
Get your drink.
Oh, he's in wild 30's here.
You own wild 30's here, guys.
We can just sit down there.
How did you first meet the sheriff, no of him, et cetera,
before becoming county judge?
That was the first question I asked Monroe, but he didn't answer directly.
Instead, he started unspooling this wild tail about coming of age in the borderlands.
But this wasn't some tangent.
It was a story that took me right to the heart of the cocaine boom,
and the rise of the most powerful drug cartels in the world.
And I learned what I thought was Spanish until I got to college.
It all started when Munro was a teenager.
And he made friends in the Mexican border town of Oinaga,
including an older businessman named Mr. Rohana.
Yeah, he kind of adopted me because I like to hunt
and masculine type things where his
sons didn't. They didn't like to go hunting doing that kind of stuff.
And one day in 1974, Mr. Rohana decided that masculine Monroe should make some
masculine connections. He invited Monroe 19 at the time, over to Oonaga,
brought him into the back room of a bar,
and took him over to a table where three men were sitting down, all wearing dark sunglasses.
Mr. Rohana told the three men in Spanish that I was good with whiskey, guns, and women,
and that he expected them when I came to Mexico to watch over, protect me,
and make sure that I was safe. Wherever I went, they were supposed to send somebody with me.
The guy in the middle looked like the leader.
He stood up and he stretches on out and he said, my name is Amado Carrillo Fuentes.
That's Amado Carrillo Fuentes.
Later to become the famed Lord of the Skies,
because of his ability to fly drugs into the U.S.
At the time, his feet were still on the ground.
He was just the favorite nephew
of a powerful Mexican drug lord.
Very much on his way to becoming a bigger deal.
But Monroe didn't know any of that.
He just saw a notably well-dressed guy around his age, talking with two other guys, one
of whom turned out to be Colombian.
Even to this day, I've never seen the quality of shirts that this guy had on and his
wraparound sunglasses. He was really decked out and nice clothes. We continued
drinking and the man on the left I said you're not from this area. Where are you
from? He laughed and he said no. I'm from Medeging, Colombia. I said, oh, what are you doing here?
What the hell are you lost or what?
And he said, no, I'm an exchange student.
A Colombian exchange student?
Who just happened to be hanging out
with the next generation of Mexico's cartel leaders?
Monroe was getting a front row seat to Narcoe history
to the formation of the cocaine routes
from Colombia, through Mexico, that would change the world and eventually transform a young
Robert Chambers from a small time outlaw into a West Texas drug kingpin.
And Monroe kept this front row seat for a long time.
So after my first introduction with a model, I basically spent every Friday night, Saturday
and Sunday in Okinawa to party in with those guys.
And that was my life.
Munro insists he was oblivious to what his new friends did for a living, at least at first.
But he couldn't avoid the truth for long.
There was the time Amato's new bodyguards failed to recognize him at a nightclub.
Monroe walked up to greet Amato and...
All the guys at this table jumped up with a 45 and were going to shoot us dead.
And everybody in the club is on the ground.
The music stops, the lights come on.
But then a Molo jumps up in front of us and says, no, it's Monroe, don't shoot.
And if that hadn't tipped Monroe off on a Mato's line of work,
there was the night a Mato introduced Monroe to his mentor, Pablo Acosta,
the Oanaga Fox, the biggest drug lord in the area.
He had a gold chain with Jesus on the cross, and that was his look, and he had a Levi jacket
that he wore.
So he comes up and he sits down next to a mother when I, and he says, who the hell are you,
Gringo, in English?
And I said, oh, my name is Monroe.
He says, what are you doing here?
What are you doing with all these guys?
And I said, well, party.
He said, you like to party?
And I said, well, hell yeah, I do.
And he said, well, you and me gonna do a lot of party.
I said, good.
And he said, well, you and me are going to do a lot of partying. I said, good.
This whole time, Munro was still answering my first question.
And it was at this point he finally got around
to share Frick Thompson.
First thing Pablo said after that was, who do you know in Marfa?
He said, do you know Rick Thompson?
I said, well, hell, everybody knows Rick Thompson.
Are you his friend?
I said, well, yeah, I've never had any trouble with Rick.
This was true.
In the 1970s, Munro hadn't yet had any trouble with Rick.
The sheriff had taken over from the murdered Hank Hamilton
less than two years prior.
But of course Munro, like everyone in the Big Ben region, would come to know the sheriff
well.
The thing is though, when I started to interject and ask Munro more directly about the
sheriff, his mood suddenly changed, he got fidgety, nervous.
For the storytelling from the wild nights of his youth hanging out with notorious drug
lords, he opened right up.
But when it came to Rick Thompson, his answers became short and guarded, full of caveats.
And if he did start to tell a story, he'd interrupt himself with stipulations and conditions.
When I became county judge off the record, again, I can't put this down.
There's so many things that I know that I can't come out and say because I'd be liable
if they took me in a court that sued the shit out of me.
But eventually Monroe did open up to me about the sheriff on the record.
And maybe that's because as we continued to talk about life in the big bend
during the 1970s and 1980s, his presence was simply unavoidable.
He had such control of so many different things.
Like if you folks were here talking to me now about whatever he would know it.
Anybody came into Marfa and he would run checks on them, see who they were.
And to cover people came to town, he knew who they were.
So he had a lot of things going his way I guess you know.
Monroe soon learned about the influence the sheriff had firsthand. It was 1990 and at
just 34 years of age, Monroe was running for county judge. He thought he could bring
fresh energy to the job. But as soon as Monroe declared his candidacy, he heard a clear message.
There were people who wanted him out of the race entirely.
He didn't have proof.
But he believed those people were allies of Sheriff Rick Thompson, who was backing Monroe's opponent.
I was told they didn't want me around.
The best thing I could do would be to leave and don't come back.
And I said, well, you know, I'm too far into saying to leave.
And I'm going to win the election.
And so I had several death threats.
People would just call me and tell me they wanted me dead
and they were gonna kill me or whatever. They would trash talk and hang up.
He won his election all the same, but even after that Munro said he was still
being targeted. About a month after I was elected and being county judge came home and my house
there was rampsacked and my dog was shot you know they trashed it out. To be clear
Monroe believes the sheriff and his people were behind this incident but I had no
evidence so what did I do if you can't go to the sheriff and say,
somebody trashed my place.
So Monroe's plan to end the intimidation campaign against him
was to send a plea to Sheriff Thompson
by way of the drug lord of motto,
Corio Fuentes.
And why would that work?
Monroe knew the sheriff and the drug lord
were linked by one man, Robert Chambers.
I went to an attorney, and I told the attorney that I knew Chambers was working for a motto
and Chambers and Rick were friends.
So I figured that they're in line to connection.
And Monroe figured if his plea had the backing of his old friend Amato, then it would get back to the sheriff via chambers.
And the sheriff would take it seriously.
And the crazy thing about this convoluted plan is it worked.
Monday morning Rick was in my office saying, let's go get coffee.
So I knew that he had received some type of call from Hottis.
A model had contacted him through chambers or through some way because his attitude changed like that.
And it was, we need to work together.
But what working together meant for Sheriff Rick Thompson turned out to be something that Monroe, even with his connections, was not prepared for.
That's coming up after the break.
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There are deep oddities in this case. de la vida. Y a la verdad, hay que tener una gran parte de la vida. Hay que tener una gran parte de la vida.
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en número globales de clientes en 2020 y 2022. officer whose name kept popping up. A lead investigator for the DEA named Dale Stinson.
When I started asking about him, people like Rod Pountain,
Robert Chambers Old Lawyer, made it clear
that Dale had a specific reputation.
Some federal law enforcement guys
like that realize that they're there to hold the line
and sort of make it presence and do what they can.
And some people like taking win the war on drugs.
And at the time, I think he was one of those.
And he was the true believer.
He was gonna keep fighting the war on drugs.
I wanted to meet that true believer.
And eventually, I did.
All right, so Dale, one thing I noticed, who is that behind you?
That's Clint Eastwood.
You don't recognize him?
That's a magnum, the most powerful handgun in the world.
Dale, like Rod Pontin, is one of those guys whose office walls are kind of a monument to their
lives.
Lined with memorabilia, photographs, chotch skis, and in Dale's office, Clint Eastwood was
one of the hardest things to ignore.
He's grimacing at you while sticking a pistol in your face.
I'm a poster for a dirty Harry movie.
The series about a vigilante cop, pursuing own brand of justice when wimpy bureaucrats
and weak laws aren't up to the task.
Do you feel lucky?
Why do you have a picture of a dirty harry on your wall?
Just for old time's sake, I've got a picture of a...
Kiki Kamarena on the wall up there too, the Time Magazine cover.
The man on the Time Magazine cover would play a key role in the lives of some of Monroe's
friends in Mexico, and in the story of Robert Chambers and Rick Thompson, because his life
and death had a colossal impact on the whole story of the war on drugs.
Dale and Kiki met in Wadalajara, Mexico in 1984 when they were about the E.A. agents
working with the Mexican federal police on drug enforcement.
We had an operation going on that where we were trying to identify the heroin labs and
the marijuana gross.
We used to travel around Mexico and try and find organizations and labs and grow fields and things like that.
Together they saw firsthand how drug trafficking from Mexico into the US was booming.
They were making this big change. They were not only being a transportation company
for the Colombian cocaine cartels, they were actually owning a part of that.
And it was in 1985, shortly after Dale headed back to work in the U.S. that Kiki disappeared.
U.S. Drug Enforcement Agent and Rika Kammarena disappeared two weeks ago in Guadalajara.
According to U.S. officials, there are indications that he. Supreme Court had been in the U.S. Supreme Court in the U.S. Supreme Court had been in the U.S.
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Supreme Court had been in the U.S. Supreme Court had been brutally tortured, then murdered.
The death rocked America. It was like the politicians had suddenly woken up to just how
brazen and violent Mexican cartels had become.
Dale was assigned to Operation Leanda, which would eventually discover that corrupt Mexican
officials and police at the direction of cartel bosses were behind Kiki's murder.
The Reagan administration started to put serious pressure on the Mexican government to clean
up their act, and they demanded arrests, infighting erupted between the cartels.
Drug lords like Pablo Acosta and Monroe's old friend Amado Corrio Fuentes had multiple
targets on their backs, so did their deputies, so did a lot of Mexicans
in the drug trade.
But of course the drug trade wasn't controlled exclusively by Mexicans.
And what those on the ground like Dale knew all too well was that that violent business
made so visible by the torture and murder of Kiki, was being facilitated
by American citizens.
I'm not just talking about the users driving the demand for drugs, nor those small-time
fixers and borderland smugglers.
I'm talking about the individuals with power, pulling all the strings.
And unlike most higher-profile Mexican drug lords, those American individuals they could
often operate without a rousing suspicion.
Back when Dale was working in Mexico, he used to hear rumors about someone in America called
La Puerta, which means the door.
This person, this door, they decided which drugs entered through their stretch of the U.S. border and which drugs didn't.
I'd heard little snatches of conversation about Lapuerto in Guadalharam.
There was a guy, one of the commandantes Jose Benavidez,
commandante of the Mexican federal judicial police, and he joked around about La Puerta.
But who was La Puerta?
Dale didn't know.
Maybe it was all kind of a myth, a personification
of a complex process, not a real person.
Or maybe it was one person, a powerful person. That was about
all-daily new. And he wasn't the only one hearing about this character. In the big
bend region of Texas, other people were hearing about La Puerta too, except there was no
ambiguity about who they were talking about. Jack McNamara, the local
GADFLY journalist who published the
Nimbini News, he'd heard the stories.
I knew one person who worked in
Brewster County was a native of
Percedio and she said that in
school the kids called the
sheriff La Puerta, the door.
The sheriff of Presidio County, Rick Thompson, was La Puerta.
That's exactly what Thompson was.
Thompson had connections in the U.S. and he had connections in Mexico.
And Rod Pountain, Robert Chambers' lawyer, he was hearing the same things.
Well, they called him La Puerta.
That was the thing they formed among the Mexican population on the border, which means
the door, which means the smuggler had to go through him or you got in trouble.
More after the break.
Everything that was presented to me I just swallowed completely home.
We are one of the richest families in the world that could never change.
Or Steinberg's like we are Steinberg's.
Women?
The family was drawn together by the money.
I was so aware of this could come to a screeching box.
You think I would have stopped?
And then all of a sudden, the volcano erupts.
I'm Aria Levy, and this is the just enough family.
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When I spoke with former Presidio County Judge Munro Elms, his initial hesitation to talk about Sheriff Rick Thompson was pretty understandable.
The sheriff had been Munro's colleague, they'd worked together, and come to like each other.
It hit close to home.
But Monroe had another reason as well.
A lot of his insight wasn't first-hand.
And many of his stories came from his conversations
with one specific, very well-placed source.
A secretary that used to work for Rick.
She quit Rick.
She was afraid of Rick. and so I knew all the
inside stories from Rick's office. Her name was Catherine, work there, she lives in Austin
now. And that's why I worked so hard to track down
this Catherine in Austin. I had to if I was ever going to understand how the sheriff really
operated away from his law and order persona.
Because Catherine, who went by the name Kitten Love back then, was the sheriff's secretary
in 1991, the most fateful year of his career, when he was at the peak of his powers.
And soon I would find out this Catherine remembered everything.
Hello.
Hi, I'm Aspik, Catherine. This is Shade. Hi, Catherine. This is Rob everything. Hello. Hi, I'm Aspik Katherine.
This is Shea.
Hi, Katherine.
This is Rob Domingo.
I'm a journalist in Austin, Texas here.
I'm trying to reach the Katherine that used to go by Katherine Johnson and lived in Marfa.
Oh, this is Shea.
Oh, okay.
When I first dialed Katherine's number, I was excited in reporter mode, chasing down yet another possible lead in a story where there were seemingly
infinite leads to chase down. But hearing her voice suddenly adorned on me, I
already knew Catherine.
Yeah, Rob, are you Rebecca's ex-husband?
I am.
I'm Catherine from Nanny's from art.
Oh yeah.
This is so funny.
Long story short, my ex-wife used to run a nanny agency in Austin, and Catherine was
one of her best nannies.
In fact, she used to babysit my own kids.
When I was babysitting your daughter, Piper, I told her this whole juicy story.
She was going really. So we started talking again. My name is Catherine Palmara and I live in
Austin. I have 200 plants, over 200 and seven kitty cats. What I'm about to tell you today is one of my stories.
I have a few others.
Catherine lives a pretty quiet life now,
but her first few decades were an adventure.
She protested the Vietnam War in Washington,
organized benefit concerts with Willie Nelson in Austin,
rubbed elbows with rock stars in San Francisco,
even stumbled into the middle of a coup in Fiji.
So in the summer of 1988,
she decided that she was ready for something slower.
Age 35, with a young daughter,
she moved back to remote small town Marfa.
It was somewhere she'd lived before.
Her mother's family were long time ranchers.
She didn't have a job lined up, so to make ends meet, she did temp work, substitute teacher,
cashier to feed store. Then one afternoon at a local festival, she was approached by the sheriff.
When he was sitting at a picnic table and he motioned for me to come over and I sit down and I did and he said how are you doing dear
and I said well not wonderful not great I can't find a job nobody will hire me
and he said well and he looked at me and he said let's see what we can do about
that and he looked at me and he said, let's see what we can do about that.
Thompson hired her to be his secretary, and although Catherine was initially grateful for the work,
her experience at the Sheriff's Office
meant any positive feelings didn't last too long.
From the very first moment that I walked in,
the prank started.
And the first one was, I got to my desk
and I looked down and there was a set of pictures.
And there had been a terrible, terrible car accident.
It was a hit on collision and it killed an entire family.
And the pictures were really, really, really gruesome.
And I sat in a very tiny room with all these men, and I think they expected me to scream and cry and run out the door.
And I didn't, I just asked, do you want me to start a file on this?
Catherine says this kind of bullying continued throughout her time in the Sheriff's office.
It could be anything from the deputies accusing her
of stealing office supplies to graphically
discussing their sex lives in front of her, to get a reaction.
But Catherine says the sheriff didn't
engage in this kind of behavior himself.
He had a different troubling personality trait.
He seemed to crave information and the need to control it.
It started from the ground up.
I mean, all the way down to a marriage that was in trouble and who were the partners seeing
and that sort of thing because that could lead to something else.
So he knew everything.
But he really wanted to know, you know, who
was coming and going, who was saying what, where people were going.
This went well beyond law enforcement intelligence gathering. Like, Catherine remembers how once
there was a new deputy in the department, my guy she thought was an honest, hardworking, and savvy cop.
He would go into detail and do a whole investigation, a proper investigation.
And he saw things and he would put them in his report and they'd come up and Rick would
edit it and I was to rewrite it and retype it before it went to the district attorney.
So Rick wasn't just monitoring what was going on when he found something he didn't like.
He'd make it bend to his will.
In this case, he'd rewrite reports because Catherine alleges
he wanted them to be totally clean, no outstanding questions, no ambiguity. Every last fact wrapped with a bow,
saying what he wanted it to say. And Catherine alleges the sheriff manipulated information
in other ways too.
When he wanted something disseminated, or he wanted to start a rumor, or he wanted to start a rumor or he wanted something disputed or he wanted a
distraction of some sort. There were three women in town and these three women
were gossipers. They were his friends and he would go and visit with them and
he'd sit down and he would leave the office and say, well, I'm just gonna go take care of that.
I got to know what he was doing
and he would go and visit them and drink a cup of coffee
and sit down and he'd plant whatever he wanted to
into these women's ears.
And he knew it would be rolling in the streets
like wildfire in a matter of hours.
It was like Twitter, early Twitter.
And if controlling the gossip of small town America sends kind of innocent,
well, and Catherine's telling, the Sheriff's Apparent manipulation of truth
took more sinister and serious forms down at the Sheriff's office.
I got into this evidence room with Rick, and he was shaking these papers, Sheriff's office.
What Catherine is alleging here, just to make it perfectly clear, is that Sheriff Thompson
was staging his evidence.
One of his deputies had written a report saying someone had been arrested with a certain
type and quantity of marijuana.
But the sheriff couldn't find the physical evidence to match the report.
Maybe his deputies had misfiled it.
Maybe it hadn't existed like they said it did. But instead of saying that, instead of admitting his department had made a mistake or worse,
the sheriff just went into the evidence fault and told Catherine they were going to
find some evidence, any evidence, that matched the report.
And so I looked at it and you know marijuana is all different. Some have stamps, some have seeds,
And so I looked at it and you know Marwan is all different. Some had stems, some had seeds, and some isyellow,
it comes from Colombia.
And she said, okay, let's put this together.
So we opened several bags and put together what looked like the description.
And while I was doing it, I thought it was some man that was on a peel.
And I thought, God, what am I doing?
This man is probably going to go back to the pen because I'm helping Rick put this evidence
together that isn't even the evidence.
So that really bothered me.
Catherine's story is about working for Rick.
They seem to me to amount to one over-arching story.
Of Sheriff Rick Thompson doing everything to maintain the image Martha Stafford, Martha from Marfa,
the ex-wife of Monroe Elms, remembered so clearly from her childhood.
Of a perfect cop running the perfect department, where the evidence always matched the reports,
and the reports were always tidy and clear for Thompson's account of things.
So the word on the street was always about how lucky Presidio County was to have a
laman like Rick Thompson.
And why?
It made Presidio County and its sheriff seem like they were above reproach.
The drug war was swirling around them on all sides, violence, corruption,
opportunity, but somehow this vast area was still just small town America, law-abiding to a T.
And Catherine saw something else behind this facade. She didn't just see how the sheriff's
office really operated. Like Presidio Kenny Judge Cindy Guevara, who remembered hearing rumors about Rick's spending
habits when she was still in high school, Katherine thought Rick seemed to be living too
large.
He was investing in real estate.
He had bought his son a premier roping horse, but his salary was only $21,000 a year.
He was a small town sheriff of a very poor county, one of the poorest counties in the country,
so you don't make a lot.
And yeah, things didn't add up.
Monroe heard murmuring, it's about Rick's apparent unexplained affluence, too.
I never pay attention to cowboy hats.
I grew up with them all my life and a cowboy hat was a cowboy
hat. And so Rick and I came here to have coffee, my ex-wife, she said, have you ever seen
Rick's hat? And I said, did every day on his head or whenever, she said, I looked at it,
it's a hundred ex-stetson. Do you know what a 100x stetson
cost? They're very expensive hats. And so everything he had was very expensive and so I guess he was
subsidized in it in a different way than I was. You know. But how was Rick Thompson getting all this
extra money? Well, during her time working at the Sheriff's Office,
Catherine got a pretty big clue,
only she didn't realize it at the time.
But in retrospect, it's impossible to ignore.
You see, when I mentioned earlier
that Catherine had lived in Marfa earlier in her life,
I was talking about back in the late 1970s.
And during this period, she'd made friends
with a charismatic local bad boy.
A self-proclaimed outlaw, Robert Chambers.
They would party together back in his wild Marfa days.
And he'd come into Marfa and bring us mountain line.
Yes, Robert's pet mountain line again, Miko.
And we sneaky man on the bottom floor, a hotel room,
and we'd sneaky men, and there'd be a bunch of us.
One night, I guess, we were all making too much noise,
and somebody complained, and the management came,
and we had to hide the mountain lion in the bathroom.
Of course, by 1991,
this friendship might have seemed to some like ancient history.
But Rick Thompson, the sheriff who knew every last thing
that was happening in his county,
he hadn't forgotten about Catherine's connection to Robert.
And so a top deputy made one thing very clear to Catherine
when she started working there.
I was told not to have anything to do with him.
I wasn't allowed to see him or go out with him or hang around or whatever.
And I was restricted.
I was very, very restricted.
I'm sure my phone was tapped the entire time.
Why was the sheriff so skittish about Catherine talking with Robert?
Well, Robert was an informant for law enforcement, including the sheriff, but this seemed to go beyond
controlling contact with a key source. It was almost like Catherine might learn something if she got
talking to Robert, a different connection the sheriff desperately wanted to keep hidden.
Catherine quit her job after eight months, in August 1991. She hated what she saw as the
constant harassment, and she was creeped out by the seeming paranoia of the place. So she
never had a fuller picture of what was going on. But someone else did, Monroe Elms. By
the fall of 1991, Monroe had won his election and was sitting as a county judge. By now, Sheriff Thompson
had decided that actually he could work with him. And maybe because of that, the sheriff
felt like it was time for Monroe to learn how power in the Borderlands really worked,
because one day, the two of them were alone in Thompson's truck, talking about their jobs
and families. And then... Rick told me in our conversation,
look Monroe, don't you understand
that the good guys need to be in control of the drugs?
I just want to repeat that.
The good guys need to be in control of the drugs.
What Monroe is saying here, what he's alleging,
what he claims to remember verbatim, is that
the sheriff was implying, well, really flat out saying that law enforcement needed to be
involved in drug smuggling.
And I feel like it's worth reminding you here.
Monroe Elms is the former top administrative official in the county.
He has a good reputation in the area to this day. He's never had a run-in with the law.
But when Monroe says he heard this, he tried to kind of take the sheriff's remarks and stride.
And he said, well, they should be on his side and join their organization or have a mentality that
their organization or have a mentality that that these there are certain people that are going to get drugs and there are certain people that are going to supply drugs and shouldn't the good guys.
And that's what he said. The good guys supply them. And I told him I don't care who supplies them,
I don't want to have anything to do with it. Period. That wasn't my forte in life.
Monroe though, he wasn't going to report Thompson.
He wasn't going to stand in his way.
And I told him, if that's what you want to do, make money and that makes you happy, go
for it, Rick.
I'm not here to stop you.
It's not my job to stop you, you know?
And that's the way I felt about it.
Monroe, friend of cartel leaders,
wasn't going to go after a corrupt sheriff.
After all, it would have been his word against Ricks,
with no proof.
But there was someone whose job it was to go after smugglers,
no matter where they lived and how powerful they were.
Someone who tracked drug traffickers in Mexico
and lost a friend and colleague to them only a few years before.
Someone now paying very close attention to what was happening in Presidio County.
We were drowning in drugs at the time,
and they were ramping up,
and we were trying to do what we could.
That's next time on Borderlands.
Borderlands was reported and hosted by me, Rob Domingo,
and written by me, Eric Domingo, and written by me, Eric Benson and David Waters.
Eric Benson is our supervising producer.
David Waters is our executive producer.
At Campside, the executive producers are Josh Dean, Vanessa Gregoriatas, Adam Hoff, and
Matt Cher.
Our field producers are Ryan Katz and Travis Bubenek. Our associate producers are Leo
Shick and Lydia Smith, fact checking by Alex Yablon. Special thanks to Rajip Gola and Ashley
Ann Krigbaum. Scoring and sound designed by Ian Chambers and Rod Sherwood is our engineer.
sure wood is our engineer. Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.