By Bill Conroy
After a few long days visiting family in California, Guillermo Eduardo Ramirez-Peyro was now fighting off sleep behind the wheel of a cherry-red Ferrari. Transporting the exotic coupe — a $200,000 612 Scaglietti — back to New York was to be the highlight of the Christmas holiday out west. But in reality the vehicle's tight quarters and the brooding silence of his girlfriend — Kelly Schroer — were making for an uncomfortable last leg of the journey.
Ramirez-Peyro
pulled himself together, slipped out of bed and opened the door. In
front of him were several Joplin police officers with their guns drawn.
While he had been asleep, Schroer had gathered up her possessions and
quietly run off. She checked into a nearby Quality Inn and immediately
called the front desk to ask the attendant to flag down a pair of cops
she had seen conversing in their patrol cars in an adjacent lot.
Kelly Schroer declines to talk to Riverfront Times when reached by phone to discuss the kidnapping charges facing her ex-boyfriend. Her brother, Jeff, is a bit more willing.
After a few long days visiting family in California, Guillermo Eduardo Ramirez-Peyro was now fighting off sleep behind the wheel of a cherry-red Ferrari. Transporting the exotic coupe — a $200,000 612 Scaglietti — back to New York was to be the highlight of the Christmas holiday out west. But in reality the vehicle's tight quarters and the brooding silence of his girlfriend — Kelly Schroer — were making for an uncomfortable last leg of the journey.
Ramirez-Peyro recalls that they were heading toward the southwestern border of Missouri when Schroer's phone began to vibrate.
"I
saw the 1111111 [on the screen], and I knew it was the cops," he says.
"I said, 'Hey, Kelly, the police is calling you.' She said, 'No, I don't
want to answer.'
"And
then they call once again, and she did not want to answer. And I don't
even force her to call or not call or speak," continues Ramirez-Peyro, a
soft-faced Mexican with wispy black hair.
The
couple, both in their forties, would continue east on Interstate 44 for
a few more miles without speaking. Schroer, a strawberry blonde from
Ramirez-Peyro's new hometown of Buffalo, New York, considered her
boyfriend too controlling. He, in turn, didn't trust her.
They
met last summer in a Buffalo bar, and their relationship had been a
prickly one from the outset. Within a few months of dating, Schroer
accused Ramirez-Peyro of harassing and physically abusing her — a
complaint that led a New York court to issue a "stay away" order of
protection against Ramirez-Peyro in early December. That same month,
police in the Buffalo suburb of Tonawanda picked up Ramirez-Peyro for
violating the order. He was soon released, and a few days later Schroer
signed an affidavit, prepared by Ramirez-Peyro's attorney in Buffalo,
stating that the allegations of harassment and abuse she made "are not
true."
"He
never physically hit or abused or hurt me, and I want to be able to
spend time with him without there being a violation of a court order,"
Schroer wrote in an affidavit.
Now,
alone in the cramped Ferrari, whatever reconciliation the two arrived
at before setting out on their cross-country journey was gone. As they
entered the city limits of Joplin, Ramirez-Peyro exited the highway and
pulled the sports car into the parking lot of a La Quinta Inn. By 11
p.m. he was in bed and out cold. He awoke an hour and a half later to a
pounding on the door. Schroer was gone.
| Greg Houston |
Once
the officers arrived, Schroer breathlessly launched into a story that
seemed almost too outlandish to believe. Ramirez-Peyro, she told the
patrolmen, was an extremely dangerous man holding her against her will.
"He
has cartel contacts in the U.S. that will kill my family, and I'm
afraid what's going to happen now. He's going to have them killed,"
Schroer told the cops, according to a probable cause statement.
Schroer
then handed one of the patrolmen her smartphone, on which the officers
could read for themselves the articles about how Ramirez-Peyro — better
known by the nickname "Lalo" — had once been a police officer in Mexico
before becoming a top lieutenant for the powerful Juárez Cartel. In that
role Ramirez-Peyro had overseen multiple murders in a home, just across
the El Paso, Texas, border, that came to be known as the "House of
Death." And the story didn't end there.
This
Lalo character — fast asleep in Room 365 of the adjacent La Quinta —
was more complicated than that. According to the articles, while working
for the cartel Lalo had also been an informant for U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement. He later became an embarrassment to the American
government when it got out that one of its own undercover operatives
participated in gangland killings south of the border.
It's
a hell of a tale, and, if Lalo's version is to be believed, includes a
government conspiracy to discredit him. One thing is certain, though:
The story of the alleged kidnapper and former cartel snitch in a Ferrari
is one of the sexier cases to hit rural Newton County in a long time.
"This
is really more intrigue than I'm used to dealing with. I'll tell you
that," confirms prosecutor Jake Skouby. "Basically, I-44 runs through my
district, and that's how I caught this case. That's it."
| Newton County Jail |
| Guillermo Eduardo Ramirez-Peyro, a.k.a. "Lalo", in his December 29 booking photo. |
Dressed
in an orange jumpsuit, his limbs shackled, Lalo enters the Newton
County courthouse and labors to lower his six-foot-two-inch frame into a
chair next to his public defender. It's late July, and he's in court
for a hearing regarding the charges of kidnapping and violating a
protection order that have kept him an involuntary guest of the Newton
County jail since December 29.
Lalo's
hair is longer than it was in his mugshot, and his body is thinner — a
result, he says, of the crummy prison cuisine. As the lawyers debate his
case before the judge, Lalo sits expressionless, occasionally looking
down at his attorney's notes.
In
April the court reduced his bond from $250,000 to $125,000. Around the
same time, some individuals Lalo says he does not know offered to
provide the funds necessary to secure his release. Captain Richard
Leavens, with the Newton County Sheriff's Office, confirms that an offer
was made to bail out Lalo. But the inmate refused the assistance,
fearing they might be with the cartel. Lalo says he has heard from
inmates associated with the Latino gang MS-13 that his old associates in
the Juárez Cartel have placed a $500,000 bounty on his head. Attorney
Mark Conrad, a former supervisory agent with ICE's predecessor agency,
U.S. Customs, says that figure seems a bit inflated.
"Heck, for $10,000, they could get the job done," he says.
Still,
for now it could be that jail is safer for Lalo than the streets. And
the cartel is not his only adversary. Lalo believes the charges he's
currently facing are trumped up in order for the U.S. government to
finally deport the former spy it no longer has a use for.
"I'm
absolutely going to be killed by the Juárez Cartel or the Mexican
government, which is basically the same thing," says Lalo, speaking by
phone to Riverfront Times.
That
the cartel would want him dead is not all that surprising to Lalo. But
that the U.S. would now be complicit in it by seeking to deport him is
something he never foresaw back in 2000 when he crossed into the United
States at El Paso and offered to provide ICE with intelligence on drug
trafficking and other crimes.
Lalo
says he had his reasons for offering to help the U.S. government. For
starters, he didn't really like or trust his new colleagues in the drug
trade. He also stood to make a good sum of money serving as a stool
pigeon for the feds.
Lalo
(short for Eduardo, his middle name) says he grew up "kind of spoiled"
in upper-middle class surroundings in his home state of Durango. His
parents were both civil engineers, and while his siblings chose careers
in medicine and engineering, Lalo opted to enter the less lucrative
field of law enforcement, working for the Mexican federal police.
ICE
began paying him thousands of dollars per case for his information, and
the return on investment for his tips proved substantial. In a
four-year span Lalo's work for ICE — which included counterfeit
credit-card, illegal-cigarette and drug-smuggling investigations —
resulted in the arrest of more than 50 people and the seizure of some
660 kilos of cocaine and in excess of 20,000 pounds of marijuana,
according to one accounting.
Eventually
the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency also began using Lalo as an undercover
operative in its larger efforts to stem the flow of narcotics across
the border. But the DEA lost faith in Lalo and severed ties with him
after he was busted smuggling 100 pounds of marijuana into New Mexico in
June 2003.
"Confidential
informants are liars 99 percent of the time," cautions former DEA
deep-undercover agent Mike Levine. "The worst thing you can do is
believe them. You have to check out whatever they say, even if they tell
you it's nice outside."
Yet
ICE wasn't as willing to let Lalo go. It was only natural that its
cartel operative would have to break a few laws in order to not blow his
cover. So after a U.S. prosecutor intervened to get the drug charges in
New Mexico suspended (and later dismissed), Lalo returned to his
clandestine work for ICE.
By
now Lalo had wormed his way into the confidence of Humberto Santillan
Tabares, one of the major players within the Juárez Cartel. One of
Lalo's primary jobs for Santillan was to oversee a house at 3633
Parsioneros Street. On the outside the home was like so many walled-off
houses in Juárez. But in reality the modest, cinder-block abode was an
execution chamber for Santillan and the crooked Mexican state cops who
served as his assassins. Santillan's men buried at least a dozen
lime-covered corpses in the back yard of the property. As news reports
would later detail, some of the victims were tortured and murdered at
the house on Parsioneros Street; others were brought there after being
assassinated elsewhere. Santillan and his men referred to the murders in
code as carne asadas, Spanish for barbeque.
![]() |
| Greg Houston |
For
Lalo, the killings began in August 2003, when he participated in the
slaying of a Mexican attorney by the name of Fernando Reyes who had
arranged to meet Santillan to discuss moving a large stash of marijuana.
Santillan had other ideas; he planned to whack Reyes and steal his drug
load. Inside the House of Death, Santillan's corrupt cops tied up Reyes
in duct tape and covered his head in a plastic bag. Lalo got in on the
action too, but only, he says, because his fellow cartel members were
having such a hard time subduing Reyes.
"They
just look at me, saying, 'Hey! Help us!'" recalls Lalo. "So I pulled
his left leg like that, so they put him on the floor."
When Reyes wouldn't suffocate fast enough, Lalo says one the dirty cops slammed a shovel against
the victim's head, breaking his neck. Lalo made an audio recording of
the entire gruesome slaying, in which Reyes can be heard pleading for
his life, and provided the tape to his ICE handlers. A memo drafted by ICE agents after
that murder confirms Lalo's participation in the homicide. But even
with that knowledge, officials with ICE and the U.S. Department of
Justice approved keeping Lalo in the field, where more murders would
play out. And they did, with Lalo present for at least two more killings
inside the House of Death.
"After
going through everything that happen [with the Reyes murder], [ICE]
said, 'If something like this happens again, don't record it. Now go
back [to Juárez] and see the state police and do whatever Santillan told
you, and supervise the people making [the grave to bury Reyes], or
whatever they have to do, and then come back to the [ICE] office,'" says
Lalo today.
"I
report all these situations to ICE, but they don't say nothing,
really," he continues in his fractured English. "They don't really do
nothing. It not happen on U.S. soil, and nothing we can do, so they just
listen to it, but not show no interest in that."
But
the House of Death wouldn't be the cartel's — and ICE's — secret for
long. In January of 2004 Lalo informed his handlers that Santillan and
his henchmen were planning to take out an undercover DEA agent and his
family whose Juárez address was coughed up during the torture and
execution of three drug mules at the home on Parsioneros Street.
The DEA, once made aware of the threat, evacuated all personnel from Juárez.
Moreover, in learning about the assassination plot, the DEA also became
aware of the full extent of ICE's and Lalo's association with the House
of Death murders.
Soon after, the DEA special agent in charge of El Paso, Sandalio Gonzalez, fired off ablistering letter to
his ICE counterpart in El Paso (and a copy to U.S. Attorney Johnny
Sutton of the Western District of Texas) decrying the needless loss of
life as a result of the ICE informant's "homicidal" activities, his role
in the threat to the DEA agent and the complicity of ICE in the whole
sordid affair.
"Your
CS [confidential source] knew on January 13, 2004, that Santillan was
planning a 'carne asada' for the Parsioneros house the following day,
and nothing was done about it until Santillan called your CS on the
night of the 14th to check the names of our agents," Gonzalez wrote. "By
that time, three more human beings had been tortured and killed."
Lalo
was now a political liability for the ICE. Still, the agency needed him
for one more task: nabbing Santillan. On January 15, 2004, Lalo lured
Santillan to El Paso by arranging a meeting with him to discuss cartel
business. ICE agents then arrested the cartel chieftain following a
prearranged traffic stop initiated by El Paso police.
The
feds got their target in Santillan, who's currently serving a 25-year
sentence for drug trafficking. And, Lalo, his cover now blown, found
himself a marked man.
![]() |
| Photo: Bill Conroy |
| Newton County prosecutor Jake Skouby says the Lalo case is "more intrigue than I'm used to dealing with." |
"She's having a tough time dealing with this case," Jeff Schroer says from suburban Buffalo.
"Did
[Lalo] tell you about the restraining order in Tonawanda, New York? All
the violations?" Jeff Schroer asks. "I don't even know, but there's a
whole shit-ton of detectives up here waiting to get their hands on him."
The
Erie County District Attorney's Office in New York confirms that a case
against Lalo for "harassment, unlawful imprisonment and criminal
contempt" was presented to a grand jury in February, a little more than a
month after Lalo was taken into custody in Joplin, but no charges have
been brought to date. The D.A.'s office says the case remains open.
"They
had talked about transferring the charges to New York because that's
where the events originated," says Captain Leavens with the Newton
County Sheriff's Office. "[The prosecutor's office in Erie County] had
been in contact with our prosecutor's office, but I don't know where
that stands now. We've not heard anything further on this."
For
Lalo, Buffalo was supposed to be a place where he could start life anew
without constantly having to look over his shoulder. He landed a job
there as a long-haul truck driver, allowing him to maintain a low
profile and an unpredictable schedule — all the better for staying off
the radar. Still, it wasn't always easy to shake the edgy excitement and
glitzy lifestyle that the drug trade had offered. So when a wealthy
cousin asked Lalo if he would do him a favor and fly out to California
and retrieve a Ferrari he owned, the former cartel member jumped at the
chance.
Lalo
first asked a friend in Buffalo to accompany him on the trek, but the
pal, a businessman who asked not to be named because he fears cartel
retribution, tells theRiverfront Times that
he told Lalo he was "nuts." For starters, driving a Ferrari — with
Mexican plates — through a well-known drug route like Interstate 44 was
bound to attract the wrong kind of attention. And if the cops didn't
stop the car, the late-December snows along the way likely would. The
Ferrari rides only about three inches off the ground.
The
friend insists that Lalo asked Schroer to accompany him only as an
"afterthought." He says he doesn't understand how Lalo can still remain
in Missouri nine months after his arrest.
"How
can they keep him incarcerated so long over a hearsay case, where
[Schroer] could have stopped anywhere along the line?" Lalo's friend
asks. "He didn't intend to kidnap her. That's ridiculous."
The
point of bringing the Ferrari to New York, Lalo says, was so that he
and his cousin could attend the NFL Super Bowl in New Jersey last
February. Joplin Police Department's Lieutenant Matt Stewart says the
Ferrari was towed after Lalo's arrest, but no charges have been brought
against him in relation to the vehicle. Lalo says his cousin has already
reclaimed the car.
In
her statement to Joplin police, Schroer told authorities that Lalo
"took her cell phone" and prohibited her from contacting anyone "without
his permission" throughout their journey. But according to a police
report in New York, Kelly Schroer and her brother were in communication
during the trip. Just eight hours prior to Lalo's arrest in Joplin, Jeff
Schroer filed a report with
police in their hometown of Tonawanda stating that he was "concerned
about his sister's welfare" because his phone calls with her were "very
short," and the text messages he received appeared to be written by
someone who "speaks little English." Jeff Schroer told police he
believed his sister was "being held against her will" by her boyfriend
with connections to the "Mexican drug trade."
The
Tonawanda police then contacted ICE. The agents responding indicated
that "there are no restraints" on Lalo's ability to travel. However, the
ICE agents asked to be made aware of any charges that might be brought
against him and also to be kept apprised of any developments.
Lalo,
meanwhile, contends that Schroer's kidnapping allegations are "all
lies," pointing out that he has photos of them together, smiling and
embracing during the trip. He also notes that she could have left at any
time or brought her concerns to authorities prior to them arriving in
Joplin. Lalo believes the affidavit she signed, denying that she had
ever been abused or threatened by him, is further proof that she
accompanied him on her own free will.
At
the court hearing on July 21, Lalo's public defender, Kathleen Byrnes,
raised another point, arguing that Missouri has no jurisdiction to try
this case.
"The
prosecution has filed [charges] in the case, but there are no facts
alleged concerning what particular crimes were committed in Missouri,"
Byrnes told the judge. "The probable cause statement refers to things
that may or may not have occurred in other parts of the U.S."
"There
is nothing to show why the state thinks there was a kidnapping," Byrnes
continued. "Ms. Schroer said they were on their way back to New York.
She desired to go there, and there does not appear to be any acts in the
allegations that occurred in Missouri. What did my client do in
Missouri that constitutes kidnapping?"
The
hearing ended with Judge Timothy Perigo, a middle-aged magistrate with
close-cropped hair, stating that he would draft an order spelling out
what the state needs to disclose. "The prosecution will not be required
to answer interrogatories [from the defense], but they should give the
defense some more specificity on the charges."
A jury trial is now slated for October 29.
Lalo
says he is so worn down by the course of his life since working for ICE
that he is now reconciled with his fate, even if that's prison, death
at the hands of the cartel — or both.
"I'm
not afraid at all," he says. "I'm so tired at this point in my life of
everything, that if they kill me it would be the best thing for me.
Since 2004, for me it's been job after job, one thing after thing, so
believe me, the last thing I care right now is if someone come and kill
me."
The cartel has tried to take out Lalo before.
A
few months after the arrest of Santillan, Lalo was living under
protective custody and working as a shopping-center security guard in
San Antonio when he made the fateful decision to return to the border
region of Juárez for a few days.
The
trip had a dual purpose. Lalo, whose ex-wife and kids were also living
under government protection in San Antonio, wanted to visit his
then-girlfriend in El Paso. He also had arranged to pick up some money
at an El Paso Whataburger. Lalo says that the money drop was tied to
some work he was still doing for ICE, but federal agents say that's not
correct. They suggest the money stemmed from the proceeds of some
property Lalo had recently sold in Juárez.
Whatever
the case, the ever-wary Lalo sent a friend to the Whataburger to
collect the money. Lalo's fill-in was sitting in his car in the
restaurant parking lot when a gunman appeared out of nowhere and pumped
four bullets into his chest before disappearing.
![]() |
| The cover of September 4 RFT. |
Lalo's
friend, who also happened to be an FBI informant, died instantly, and
ICE swept in and placed Lalo under lock and key. Over the next six years
ICE moved Lalo from prison to prison, in Texas, Minnesota and finally
New York — while pressing deportation proceedings against him.
Eventually Lalo was freed afterconvincing a U.S. appeals court that he would be murdered with the Mexican government's acquiescence if sent back to Mexico.
Last year Lalo filed a $125 million lawsuitagainst
former and current officials with ICE and the Department of Justice,
among others, claiming they violated his constitutional rights by
conspiring to keep him imprisoned against his will for years, while
seeking to return him to Mexico where he would likely be murdered. Lalo,
who earned more than $200,000 as confidential source SA-913-EP, also
claims ICE still owes him $400,000 for his undercover work. The case,
filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of New York, is
sealed and still pending.
Lalo
believes it's because of that lawsuit, and the damage it could to do
current and former government officials, that he remains locked up in
Newton County.
ICE
spokesperson Danielle Bennett says she's not familiar with Lalo's
kidnapping case in Missouri, but sees no merit in his claim.
"When
a local authority has someone on criminal charges, that's not an
influence that we would have," she says. "If he's got criminal charges,
it would be the local authority that is setting the limits for keeping
him in their custody."
However,
Steven Cohen, the Buffalo attorney handling Lalo's federal civil
lawsuit, says he is quite certain "the U.S. Attorney's Office and the
Department of Justice are well aware of Lalo and the particular
embarrassing facts and events he is witness to, and will do all they can
to marginalize him."
Gonzalez,
the DEA agent who blasted his colleagues in ICE upon learning of Lalo's
involvement in the House of Death, echoes Cohen's take: "I think [the
DOJ and ICE] would have reason to do whatever they could to prevent that
lawsuit from ever seeing light of day from a trial."
The
now-retired Gonzalez, who won a civil suit against the government after
his bosses gave him poor job marks in the wake his complaints about
ICE's handling of Lalo, asserts that the coverup in the House of Death
murders went to the top of the U.S. Department of Justice. In testimony in Gonzalez's civil case,
former DEA administrator Karen Tandy confirmed that she "personally
briefed" then-Attorney General John Ashcroft and Deputy Attorney General
James Comey (now head of the FBI), on the House of Death affair after
Santillan targeted the DEA agent.
Ashcroft,
who now heads a Kansas City-based law firm that bears his name, did not
return calls for comment. Nor did Johnny Sutton, the former U.S.
Attorney for the Western District of Texas, who now works for Aschroft's
law firm and who oversaw the House of Death case as the top U.S.
prosecutor in southwest Texas.
ICE
agents and prosecutors claim in court pleadings that they were not kept
in the loop on Lalo's murderous activities because his handler failed
to properly brief them. That agent was ultimately served up as a
scapegoat and fired by the agency. But ICE and DEA also conducted a
subsequent joint investigation into the House of Death case, the results
of which have never been made public — despite several Freedom of
Information Act requests seeking the report. Lalo's pending civil case,
if it proceeds, could result in the release of that report as part of
the discovery process.
Back in Missouri's Newton County, prosecutor Jake Skouby says no one from the federal government has contacted him about Lalo.
Joplin
PD's Stewart, though, says officers with his department work with
federal law enforcers from the FBI, DEA and ICE on various task forces,
"and they are aware of [Lalo's] case and have talked about it. But as
far as I'm aware, they haven't done anything with it."
Lalo remains unconvinced.
"They
are trying to portray me as a kidnapper, which is not true," he says.
"In my mind, I knew from the beginning from what my public defender told
me. She said, 'Oh, we got a big case here. They will make it a
high-profile case because of who you are...that you were a member of a
cartel.'"
Lalo stresses that the only current tie he has to the cartel is this: "They want to kill me."
Bill
Conroy is a freelance reporter who's written extensively about Lalo and
other players in the Mexican-U.S. drug trade for the website Narco
News. He can be contacted atnarcosphere@aol.com.
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