MEXICO CITY - An owner of a northern Mexico casino where 52 people died in an arson attack had received extortion threats and didn't pay, a federal prosecutor said Thursday.
Casino Royale owner Raul Rocha Cantu received demands of $50,000, then $140,000, Jose Salinas of the Mexico Attorney General's Office told the Televisa network.
Salinas said "it wouldn't be appropriate" to say how the threats were carried out or by whom.
Rocha, who said he fled to the U.S. in fear of his safety after the Aug. 25 attack, gave his statement to the Mexican Consulate in Miami. He and co-owner Jorge Rocha Cantu were ordered to appear by Mexican authorities.
Raul Rocha told authorities he arrived at the casino in the industrial city of Monterrey as smoke poured from the windows and doors.
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"He started getting calls from acquaintances asking how he was doing," Salinas said. "He decided to leave the country for his protection."
Gunmen entered the Casino Royale in the industrial city of Monterrey, spread gasoline and set the building on fire, trapping and asphyxiating dozens of gamblers and employees. Most of the victims were women playing bingo and slots.
A state police officer and five alleged members of the Zetas drug cartel have been arrested in the case. Mexican authorities have identified another 18 suspects and are offering $1.3 million for information leading to the arrest of each.
Officials also have launched a corruption probe after leaked videos showed the brother of Monterrey Mayor Fernando Larrazabal taking wads of cash inside the nearby Casino Red days before the attack on the Casino Royale.
Zetas' antennas confiscated
Meanwhile, the Mexican navy said it has dismantled a telecommunications system set up by the Zetas and has arrested 80 people, including six police officers.
Navy spokesman Jose Luis Vergara said forces confiscated 13 antennas the cartel set up in several cities around the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz to provide communication between the gang's cells.

