Top Mexico Police Official Is Assassinated
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

MEXICO CITY — A top police official and national coordinator in Mexico’s battle against drug trafficking and organized crime was assassinated inside his home here before dawn yesterday.
Edgar Millan Gomez, 42, was the third-ranking member of Mexico’s Public Safety Secretariat, which oversees law enforcement. Two other high-ranking federal security officials have been shot in the past week in Mexico City.
A college-educated professional with 20 years of law enforcement experience, Millan Gomez was precisely the kind of man President Calderon is counting on to rebuild Mexico’s tarnished and ineffective police forces.
He was shot eight times after arriving at his home in the Guerrero district of central Mexico City about 2:30 a.m. on his return from work.
Police sources told the newspaper El Universal that the so-called Sinaloa Cartel was believed to be behind the attack. The cartel is one of several organized crime groups that have grown rich transporting Colombian cocaine, locally manufactured methamphetamines, and other illicit drugs to the United States.
On May 1, Millan Gomez held a news conference in Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa state, announcing that 12 suspected hit men working for the Sinaloa cartel had been detained a day earlier after a shootout with police and army soldiers.
At the time of his death, Millan Gomez was acting director of Mexico’s Federal Preventive Police, one branch of the nation’s police forces.
“This morning, Mexico lost one of its most valuable men, a security professional who placed himself at the service of his country,” the Public Safety secretary, Genaro Garcia Luna, said in a news release.
Bodyguards arrested Alejandro Ramirez, 34, at the scene. He was wearing latex gloves and was armed with a handgun equipped with a silencer.
Officials said Mr. Ramirez has served two prison sentences for armed robbery. They released a picture of the suspect taken moments after arrest, showing a young man drenched in sweat, a bandage over the corner of one eye.
Two bodyguards also were wounded in the incident.