Mourners heap flowers by Mexican drug lord’s coffin

CULIACAN, Mexico, (Reuters) – Mourners trickled into  a palatial chapel in the heart of Mexican drug trafficking  territory yesterday to pay their respects to late drug lord  Arturo Beltran Leyva, shot dead by security forces this week.

Eight men struggled to get a 20-foot-long (6-meter) floral  arrangement made of hundreds of red roses through the glass  doors of the chapel in the northwestern city of Culiacan, where  Beltran Leyva’s body was delivered on Saturday evening.

Known as “The Boss of Bosses” or “The Beard”, Beltran Leyva  died in a hail of bullets on Wednesday when elite navy troops  swooped on a luxury condominium near Mexico City in the biggest  victory of President Felipe Calderon’s three-year drug war.

One of Mexico’s most-wanted drug bosses, Beltran Leyva  smuggled tons of cocaine to the United States each year,  laundered huge sums of money and is alleged to have ordered the  murders of senior security officials after his brother, who  worked with him, was arrested in early 2008.

Brutal turf wars that have escalated since Calderon  deployed the army against drug cartels in late 2006 have left  more than 16,000 people dead across the country since then.

Family members identified Beltran Leyva’s bullet-pocked  body after the shootout, which disfigured part of his face.

An entire airliner was rented to fly his body from Mexico  City to Culiacan, capital of the mountainous state of Sinaloa,  where he grew up with other smugglers like No. 1 fugitive  Joaquin “Shorty” Guzman, a former ally turned bitter rival.

Mexico’s drug cartel leaders live large, moving between  dozens of secret luxury mansions where they hold lavish parties  livened up with teenage beauty queens and live bands who praise  their exploits in “narco corrido” ballads.