The attorney general for the Mexican state of Nayarit — and a part-time Chula Vista resident — is expected to board a plane in San Diego under FBI custody and fly to New York Friday, where he will face federal drug-trafficking charges.

Edgar Veytia, 46, was arrested on a warrant March 27 as he tried to enter the United States at the Cross Border Xpress, a bridge in Otay Mesa connecting San Diego to the Tijuana Airport. Trips here are common for Veytia, as he is a U.S. citizen and maintains a home in Chula Vista, said Jan Ronis, one of his San Diego-based attorneys.

The indictment out of the Eastern District of New York accuses Veytia of conspiring to manufacture, distribute and import heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine and marijuana. The indictment does not name alleged co-conspirators or an organized crime group.

The U.S. government is seeking to seize up to $250 million in proceeds linked to the alleged crimes.


Veytia, who goes by the nicknames “Diablo,” “Eepp” and “Lic Veytia,” is accused of joining the conspiracy in 2013 — the year he took office as Nayarit’s top law enforcement official. On Friday, he appeared in San Diego federal court in a rumpled pale yellow dress shirt, brown slacks and ankle restraints, dressed in preparation for his flight to New York later in the day. He admitted he is the same person in the New York warrant and agreed to be transferred there — in time for a 9:30 a.m. hearing in Brooklyn on Saturday. His wife, sister and son, who are also U.S. citizens, watched from the courtroom gallery, Ronis said. The family did not speak to reporters afterward. Nayarit is a largely agricultural state bordered by scenic beaches on the Pacific that has developed into a resort destination known as the Riviera Nayarit. The coastline is less populated than Mazatlán to the north and Puerto Vallarta to the south. The state has been the site of increased drug cartel activity, including a gun battle in the capital city of Tepic in February between members of the Beltran-Leyva cartel and the Mexican military in helicopters. The region’s reputed Beltran-Leyva boss was killed in the shootout, as well as seven associates. Veytia, a close ally of Nayarit’s governor, projected a law-and-order image and once said his state is not “fertile” for organized crime, according to the Los Angeles Times. He joins a recent slew of Mexican politicians and law enforcement officials being prosecuted in the United States on corruption charges.

kristina.davis@sduniontribune.com


Twitter: @kristinadavis