
#JUSTICEFORKIKI
#JUSTICEFORKIKI
Justice for KiKi

"Rafael Caro Quintero, a cartel kingpin who unleashed violence, destruction, and death across the United States and Mexico, has spent four decades atop DEA’s most wanted fugitives list. Today we can proudly say he has arrived in the United States where justice will be served. This moment is extremely personal for the men and women of DEA who believe Caro Quintero is responsible for the brutal torture and murder of DEA Special Agent Enrique "Kiki" Camarena. It is also a victory for the Camarena family. Today sends a message to every cartel leader, every trafficker, every criminal poisoning our communities: You will be held accountable. No matter how long it takes, no matter how far you run, justice will find you.”
~DEA Acting Administrator Derek S. Maltz
Enrique "Kiki" Camarena
July 26, 1947 - March 5, 1985

Enrique (Kiki) S. Camarena was born on July 26, 1947, in Mexicali, Mexico. He graduated from Calexico High School in Calexico, California in 1966, and in 1968 he joined the U.S. Marine Corps. After serving in the Marine Corps for two years, Kiki was a Calexico fireman, Calexico police officer, and an Imperial County Deputy Sheriff. Kiki joined the Drug Enforcement Administration in June of 1974. His first assignment as a Special Agent with DEA was in a familiar place - Calexico, California.

In 1977, after three years in Calexico, he was reassigned to the Fresno District Office in Northern California. Four years later, Kiki received transfer orders to Mexico, where he would work out of the Guadalajara Resident Office. For more than four years in Mexico, Kiki remained on the trail of the country's biggest marijuana and cocaine traffickers. In early 1985, he was extremely close to unlocking a multi-billion-dollar drug pipeline. However, before he was able to expose the drug trafficking operations to the public, he was kidnapped on February 7, 1985. On that fateful day, while headed to a luncheon with his wife, Mika, Kiki was surrounded by five armed men who threw him into a car and sped away. That was the last time anyone, but his kidnappers would see him alive.
It is believed that Special Agent Camarena's death actually occurred two days later, but his body was not discovered until March 5, 1985. He was 37 years old and was survived by his wife Mika and their three children—Enrique, Daniel, and Erik. During his 11 years with DEA, Kiki received two Sustained Superior Performance Awards, a Special Achievement Award and, posthumously, the Administrator’s Award of Honor, the highest award granted by DEA.
Kiki's Family
-
Kiki's sisters Norma, Myrna and Lourdes, visit the DEA Sacramento District Office
Download Original ImageKiki's sisters Norma, Myrna and Lourdes, visit the DEA Sacramento District Office
-
Mika Camarena at DEA LA Red Ribbon event in 2024
Download Original ImageMika Camarena at DEA LA Red Ribbon event in 2024
-
Kiki's sisters Norma, Lourdes and Myrna with SAC Bob Beris
Download Original ImageKiki's sisters Norma, Lourdes and Myrna with SAC Bob Beris

Letters from the Camarena Family

DEA Remembers Enrique "Kiki" Camarena
#REDFORKIKI




























