Huehutenango, Guatemala — He called himself a simple onion farmer, a Mayan Indian with four kids and a fourth-grade education.
U.S. prosecutors knew better.
By his late 30s, Felipe Diego Alonzo had built a crime route stretching from Central America to Texas, allegedly paying off Mexican drug cartels along the way. He tooled around Guatemala’s western highlands in a loaded silver Ford Ranger pickup. When the police finally raided his ranch, they found a study in rural narco-chic: wooden chalets, a swimming pool, a show horse valued at $100,000.
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