WOODVILLE, TEXAS: After a long wait in the visiting room of the
maximum security wing of the “Gib Lewis Unit” Rosalio Reta finally arrived for
our interview. Framed in the doorway, he looked about five feet tall, but
projected an air of menace. The demonic face tattoos helped. That face was the last thing many people saw
before they died, I thought. When he started talking, his voice was soft
and mellifluous. He had dimples.
Until his arrest in 2006 Reta was a sicario, a hit man responsible for at least 30 murders in the USA
and Mexico. He started at the age of 13, when he executed a man as an audition
to join the Zetas, the paramilitary wing of the Gulf Cartel. His fluent Spanish
and American citizenship meant he could operate on either side of the border
without attracting attention. Reta boasted to police that he enjoyed killing:
“I volunteered. ‘Me, me, me, me, I’ll kill them!’” Killing made him feel “like
Superman.” He enjoyed the “James Bond game” of tracking his prey. This is why I
wanted to interview him: you don’t meet such openly enthusiastic killers very
often.
Impressed, the Zetas dispatched the young killer to a camp in
Mexico where for six months he received training in surveillance, tracking, hand-to-hand
combat and the use of weapons. Then he returned to his hometown of Laredo,
where he and two other teenage assassins lived in a fancy neighborhood, awaiting
the summons to murder. They earned up to $50,000 per hit and were also rewarded
with big bags of coke. If the neighbors noticed anything, they kept quiet.
Now 23, Reta claims that his earlier tough talk was just
bluster. He was only 16 at the time; he was scared; his criminal career was an
accident: “I met this person who had a friend and his brother was working for
some people in Mexico.”According to Reta, this “person” invited him out to eat,
then left early. Reta, curious, hid in the truck and soon found himself at a
ranch where men with assault rifles were executing people and burning bodies in
55 gallon oil drums.
“I was so shocked at the scene that I couldn’t see anything,
I couldn’t hear anything.” But the cartel head saw him and “..that’s when he
gave me the gun. “If you don’t wanna be one of them dudes in the oil drums then
shoot this person.” What other choice did I have?”
I asked if anyone enjoyed it.
“I remember this person. He was kinda young and he would
always try and take their teeth out, cut their fingers off, cut their tongues
off, ears, nose everything. He liked torturing people. He was happy, like…
that’s everything he’d been looking for all his life.”
Suspecting that Reta was talking about himself, I pushed for
detail, but he was no fool and, like many criminals, consummately evasive. Whenever
I touched upon an uncomfortable topic, he stopped talking or resorted to
extreme vagueness. Reta is appealing one of his convictions, which would see
him freed at the age of 50 instead of 80. Loose lips sink ships.
Reta’s agenda was rehabilitation. “Why do I gotta be the bad
guy? It was kill or be killed.” I had felt sympathy before meeting him. We
don’t judge Ugandan child soldiers, after all. But Reta wouldn’t give a plausible
answer as to why the Zetas selected him as a master killer, when they had so
many other aspiring little thugs at their disposal. What did he think they saw
in him? He had no idea.
And then there were the fantastical stories. Originally Reta
was placed in the general prison population, where he was stabbed. Then he was
caught with a cache of weapons and placed in “administrative isolation”. Reta
claimed that he had confiscated them from his enemies and had no intention of
using them. I didn’t believe him. When he botched a hit in Mexico, the Zetas took
him to a room to kill him. Reta killed two of them instead and escaped. Reta
understands violence better than most of us.
And so the interview dragged on. How many people did you kill? Reta shook his head. What was your specialty? No answer. When
he did talk, he only described facts already in the public domain. Yes, he saw
people fed to wild animals; yes he was present at raffles where top Mexican pop
singers and soap stars were among the prizes. But every time my questioning approached
something of substance, he swerved away.
Bored, I asked how he spent his free time.
“Read. Try to educate myself. You’ll be surprised.
Everything. Strotsky (sic). Lenin. Marxism.”
“What is it you like about Trotsky?”
A long pause followed.
“I just like history… and I like to learn.”
Later Reta admitted that his true passion was fantasy. “You
know, elves, goblins, that stuff. I just finished a fifteen book series.” He
had to keep his mind and body occupied, as the penal system is harsh in Texas.
There are no TVs in cells, no Internet connections; the inmates are barely
allowed radios. He was locked up 23 hours a day. The night before, his neighbor
had tried to kill himself. Suicide attempts are common said Reta, but he
wouldn’t do it:
“I love life too much.”
The guards allowed our interview to run over the allotted
hour by thirty minutes. I kept waiting for Reta to drop his guard, but he
didn’t. It was only once the Dictaphone was off that he relaxed. He became
quite animated when talking about his love of Dungeons and Dragons, and that animation continued as he segued merrily
into an explanation of why he couldn’t tell me how many people he had killed.
The cartel would fly him to cities where he would enter rooms full of victims,
bound and gagged and awaiting execution: Reta’s job was to kill them, not to
keep count. And it was in that easy transition from discussing elves and
wizards to committing mass executions that I finally saw what the Zetas saw in
him.
Originally published in The Spectator, January 2013