|
Boat is hers as well as the 4.7M home on the right |
Like other wealthy Mexicans with
homes in Coronado, Gordillo kept a low profile. “They’re just like normal
people, I see them, once in a while they go for a boat ride,” said Ken Allen,
who maintains her neighbor’s yacht and said that for years he has observed the
occupants of Gordillo’s residence.
“I think she liked to get away
from the hustle and bustle of Mexico City,” said one Coronado resident, who did
not want his name used to protect his own privacy. “I ran into her every now
and then, she was always polite, normal and unassuming,” he said. But “when she
took a call on her portable, she switched from unassuming to very much in
command.”
One Coronado Cays resident said
he would occasionally see Gordillo at the spa at Loews Coronado Bay. “She
sometimes would be walking the treadmill with a helper who would be holding a
phone, or a towel or water,” said the man, who also asked that his name be
withheld. “There would be a driver outside.”
The Mexican newspaper, Reforma,
reported that Gordillo was arrested Tuesday at Toluca airport outside Mexico
City (photo above) after flying in from San Diego. Hours later, the front door of the
Coronado Cays house was wide open, and the lights were turned on but nobody was
answering the doorbell. Alerted by a U-T reporter, Coronado police stopped by
the residence, and secured the property after finding no one inside.
Gordillo’s name is nowhere on the
county property record for the residence, which identifies the owner as
Comercializadora TTS, S.A. de C.V., a Mexican corporation. Mexico’s attorney
general, Jesús Murillo Karam, said in a Mexico City news conference on Tuesday
that the company is linked to Gordillo’s late mother, Zoila Estela Morales
Ochoa. The company also owns the house under construction across the street.
Both Morales and Comercializadora
are named in a lien filed against Gordillo’s residence by the Coronado Cays
Homeowners Association in December, saying that it was owed $1,162.
Gordillo was involved in a
traffic accident in Chula Vista in December 2006, after running a stop sign on
Proctor Valley Road and striking another vehicle, according to court records.
According to a police report of the incident, Gordillo told officers that she
had lived in Coronado Cays for 25 years, but admitted she did not have a
California driver’s license, telling the officer “she had not bothered,” to get
one.
A Humble Beginning in Chiapas (AP)
Elba Esther Gordillo began her
career as a school teacher and became one of Mexico's most flamboyant and
powerful political operators, displaying her opulence openly with designer
clothes and bags.
For years, the 68-year-old union
leader beat back attacks from dissidents, political foes and journalists who
have seen her as a symbol of Mexico's corrupt, old-style politics. Rivals long
accused her of corruption, misuse of union funds and even a murder.
But prosecutors had never brought
a charge against her until Tuesday, when she was arrested and accused of
embezzling $160 million in union funds to pay for everything from a house in
San Diego, California, and plastic surgery procedures to her Neiman Marcus
bill.
Gordillo was detained as she
landed at the Toluca airport near Mexico City on a private plane from San Diego
and whisked away by authorities.
Born in the impoverished southern
state of Chiapas, Gordillo was just 15 years old when she joined the National
Education Workers Union, then considered a sort of electoral army for the
Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which governed Mexico for 71 years.
She followed the path of most Mexican politicians, rising through a series of
union, party and government posts. She was a senator for the PRI and also
served in Mexico's lower house.
When a strike by dissident
teachers led President Carlos Salinas to oust the old boss of the teacher's
union in 1989, the job fell to Gordillo, who was widely seen as a reformer.
The union post made her one of
the most powerful figures in the PRI at a moment when democratic reforms were
starting to erode the party's hold on power, as well as its unquestioning
subservience to Mexico's president.
Even before the PRI lost the 2000
election to the National Action Party's Vicente Fox, Gordillo began hedging her
bets. She was the guiding force behind the creation of the New Alliance Party,
which was based on members of the teacher's union and was once headed by one of
her daughters.
She participated in a
high-profile discussion group that included prominent social activists and
opponents of the government, including Fox, and her friendship with him
infuriated some PRI officials, who managed to prevent her from becoming leader
of the party in 2005. She was expelled from the party a year later for
supporting other parties' candidates and for founding the New Alliance.
The new party, along with the
vast spread of the teacher's union itself, has given Gordillo special leverage.
Because it is large enough to swing votes from one large party to another,
rivals have negotiated for its backing.
Her support was considered key in
giving both Fox and Felipe Calderon the presidency, as well as blocking her
rival, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, from reaching Mexico's highest office.
She maintained close ties to
Calderon and was seen as the force behind the humiliating firing of Education
Secretary Josefina Vazquez Mota in 2009. Officials said the firing was revenge
for Vazquez Mota mocking Gordillo after it was widely reported that the union
leader was going to offer Hummers to subordinates.
In the middle of the Hummer
controversy, Vazquez Mota jokingly offered a toy Hummer to one of her advisers
at a private dinner and Gordillo heard of the incident and became enraged.
Witnesses recall seeing Vazquez
Mota's legs trembling so much she had to sit down as Calderon announced her
resignation.
Critics accused Gordillo of
amassing more than a dozen properties worth millions of dollars. The newspaper
Reforma once published a story analyzing one of her outfits and reported she
was carrying a $5,500 purse and wearing $1,200 shoes.
She has acknowledged some of the
wealth, saying part was inherited and part she earned through her job that paid
her about $6,000 (80,000 pesos) a month.
A company that Mexican
prosecutors said was registered to her dead mother's estate owns two
multimillion-dollar homes in Coronado, a wealthy peninsular enclave across the
bay from downtown San Diego. The homes are across the street from each other in
a gated community that caters to retirees and people with second homes.
A modern six-bedroom home with a
three-car was purchased in 1991 for $1.15 million and is currently assessed at
$4.72 million. A boat was docked behind the house Wednesday.
Coronado police visited the home
Tuesday night after a newspaper reporter called to report that the front door
was wide open, said spokeswoman Lea Corbin. No one was inside, and police
closed the door.
The company, Comercializadora TTS
SA de CV, owns another property across the street that was purchased in 2010
and is currently assessed at $4.08 million. A wood frame sits on the property.
Lothar Kramer, 85, has lived next
door to the six-bedroom home since 1985 and said he rarely saw anyone at the
home and didn't know who lived there