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Mexico: High tech cartel operations

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Guest Reporter-Thank you "Doc" for sending the story in....Motherboard link at bottom
Tijuana drug drone
Tunnels, catapults, drones, and manned semi-submersibles.  Breast implants, fake carrots, and puppies…..

These are just a few examples of smuggling tactics used by Mexican and Central American organized crime groups to move illegal drugs and people across borders and past law enforcement. But they also exemplify the kinds of innovative behavior and problem-solving prowess that in other, legal contexts, such as Silicon Valley, often result in groundbreaking businesses. However, reductionist and neocolonial theories of Mexican cartels have for too long hamstrung efforts to properly understand these complex entities and capture the vast potential therein, according to Dr. Rodrigo Nieto-Gomez. We, in essence, have failed to study these organizations within the right framework.

D
r Rodrigo Nieto-Gomez is a research professor at the Naval Postgraduate School, studying "criminal entrepreneurship" in drug cartels, who beat Amazon to using drones for delivery by years, use modified potato guns to shoot cocaine and marijuana bundles over border fences, and represent the "true libertarian, Ayn Rand capitalism."

In a wide-ranging interview with Motherboard, Nieto-Gomez speculates on the future of drug smuggling (flying and submarine drones), and describes the Silicon Valley-like relationship between a Mexican investor class and the smuggler-innovators, who sell a share in future returns in exchange for capital to fund high-risk/high-tech R&D efforts to beat police interdiction.

Don’t you think if people really knew the odds of being captured or killed while working as a drug dealer they might reassess their career choice? But what are the odds of becoming the next Steve Jobs or Elon Musk? They are tiny. But they fuel the dreams of 90 something percent of entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley that will probably fail. It’s ambition. These are low probability high reward kinds of environments. And that is highly ambitious behavior that you want to encourage. Those are the people that see a problem and don’t get deterred. They change everything.

One of the biggest missed opportunities on the War on Drugs is that we haven’t identified a way of filtering out these high-risk tolerant people that we are losing to organized crime. We aren’t providing any alternatives for them to take the exit and leverage some of the skill sets they acquired in a way that would be both high-risk and high-reward and also legal.

Motherboard: What are you currently working on?

Nieto-Gomez: My key research agenda right now is based on analyzing criminal entrepreneurship. When you see what it takes to smuggle drugs from Mexico to the US, those are the kinds of skill sets we go and admire at a maker’s faire in San Mateo [California]. You take a compressor and mix it with a potato gun and you start shooting cocaine or marijuana ... over the border. It’s freaking amazing. It’s completely unhindered by regulation. If you want to see what true libertarian, Ayn Rand capitalism looks like, don’t look at the US, but Mexico, and specifically the drug cartels.

Organized crime, and organized crime in Mexico especially, is often portrayed as a top-down enterprise. What have you found through your research regarding these “cartels” or organizations?

It’s not the one that Mario Puzo sold to us in The Godfather, with the puppeteer’s hand controlling every puppet. I don’t think that’s a good representation of organized crime and I don’t think it ever was.

What we see in Mexico is more akin to Silicon Valley, and the relationship with venture capitalists and startups. You’re good at what you do so I’ll fund you. I’ll give you access to the narcotics, you sell them for me, and you make some money. Out of that money you hire somebody else to help. You start to create your small little enterprise. If one day one part of the operation is captured or killed it’s just one start-up. The different organizations in Mexico will have hundreds of operations like that operating at the same time and in the same chain.


Note by Borderland Beat:

Newly FAA approved The Sky Runner promises to be a valuable new tool for the military and incredible toy for big guys, but it got my mind stirring of ways the machine could be used in the narco world.  It is a manned all-terrain vehicle that is also an aircraft. It has a short takeoff and landing requirement, low flying at max 10k ft, cruise speed 45mph, and ground speed max at 75 mph. It can transport passengers or cargo.  First thought was the rugged Sierras mountain range.  Price is 119k USD.  ATVs are already heavily used in the Sierras, but this one can transport and fly.  I wondered what your thought are, especially those who are more familiar with aircraft than I am…..

Below is military version


Detailed info


Drug cannon discovered in Sonora

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Published from ZETA
Translated by El Wachito

Mexican police have found a 'homemade cannon' used to launch drugs across the border



According to the CNS (Comisión Nacional de Seguridad), the federal police seized a vehicle modified with a cannon that was used to launch packages of drugs across the Mexican Border.

The agency stated through a bulletin "CNS, through a joint effort with the federal police, detected a vehicle with modifications which were apparently used to launch packages of drugs through the Sonoran border".


The confiscation of the vehicle occurred in Agua Prieta, were security elements detected the vehicle parked with no licence plates and with the doors open. "An air compressor was found in the inside, a motor tank, an air tank, and a metallic tube that was three meter long (resembling a homemade bazooka)", detailed the CNS.



The rooftop of the vehicle was cut open in order to allow the metallic cannon to launch the packages.

The CNS stated, that the cannon was most likely to be used around the border area into the United States.

According to an investigation the vehicle confiscated was reported as stolen during July 1, 2016 in Hermosillo, Sonora. The vehicle and the modifications were secured by the Public Prosecutors Office.

The Investigation into the Murder of " Beto Cervantes "

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Translated by Yaqui for Borderland Beat   Zeta  Sept 17,  2015

By :  Saul Ramirez Esparza

That the death of Alberto Cervantes, leader of the group Explosion Norteña, had been preceded by a "kidnapping "is something the Deputy Justice of Playas de Rosarito has ruled out.  In addition, according to  Attorney Patricia Ortega, by descriptions by witnesses and others, it is possible to draw a "certain direction", that the case is not isolated and the information connects it to other crimes in Tijuana. 

But there is relevant data that the prosecution does not have in its possession, for example, Ballistics Bank report specifying whether the Super 38 weapon has been used in other crimes.

In addition, although the information dictates that prior to the execution there was a struggle, when he was found, the body of "Beto" had about 28 injuries, including scrapes and tears in the skin, a bullet wound in the left region of the neck and a projectile in the chest.

"We can not expose a particular line of research, what I can say is that we have interviewed several witnesses, we can only comment that the man was not pushed out of a vehicle, but was walking in the street", stated the assistant attorney of the Rosarito area of ​​Baja California.

Thursday morning, September 1st, the singer and writer of narcocorridos left a home in the neighborhood of Constitution in Rosarito, on Michoacan Street, and as if they were waiting, immediately a gold Chevrolet Suburban pickup truck pulled along side of Cervantes. According to witnesses, the car traveled with one to two people, and  it was the driver who got out and hit the musician forcefully, they struggled and shots were heard, although only one cartridge was found at the scene. 


Raydel Lopez
The man or men responsible advanced some meters south on the street Michoacan and made a  "U" turn to get back to where the wounded body of Cervantes laid and  stopped for a moment then fled. Everything indicates that the deceased was walking toward his home in that municipality. 

Authorities and medical services found Cervantes lifeless, dressed in shorts and T-shirt midriff, without cell phone, but with his wallet and identifications; wounds and bruises on various parts of the body with blotches of blood that came from the head, specifically the neck. 

The report of the Forensic Medical Service (SEMEFO) determined that he bled to death and that  the jugular vein was lacerated.

His widow has provided no relevant information on the case, nor mentioned previous incidents or conflicts. She only explained that since 2007 - a year after he was shot in the neighborhood of Guaycura in Tijuana "for a mess of skirts" - until 2015 he was imprisoned and put under arrest on several occasions. 

 The Attorney General of the State (PGJE) obtained from the Joint Unit Regional Intelligence ( UMIR) information on three internments in prison: 2007 in the penitentiary in Tijuana for ties to organized crime, the date when Cervantes was arrested during a meal with Raydel López Uriarte “El Muletas” ("The Crutches"), who managed to escape -; in 2008, in a prison in Mexico City; and in October 2014, also for ties to organized crime in the CEFERESO of El Salto, Jalisco.

Mochomo: Psychiatric Eval ordered for Alfredo Beltran Leyva

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Lucio Borderland Beat with C.E.M.
By Narcomics fo Borderland Beat
The two day hearing scheduled for Alfredo Beltran Leyva last week, was postponed and and a continuance filed by the defense granted.  In its place a status conference was held.

The reason for the continuance was a request for a psychiatric evaluation.  The evidence to support the request is under seal.  And most likely will remain under seal.

The move is an unusual one, especially at this late stage of the case, Alfredo pleaded guilty and the hearing was pre-sentencing.  The hearing ordered by the judge was considered favorable to the defendant.

This most certainly not a ploy to stall, as part of the filing the defense attorney submitted evidence proving his preparedness for the hearing.


See order below…




Community Police Remains Found In Tixtla; Armed Group Kidnapped Him the Day Before

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Translated by Valor for Borderland Beat

Celso Nava, a member of the Regional Coordinator of Community Authorities (CRAC) in Tixtla, Guerrero, was found dead a few hours after having been kidnapped.  Police reports indicate that on Saturday, an armed group took him.

The body was found on the bypass that connects Tixtla with the state capital, Chilpancingo; however, some members of CRAC “Mi Patria es Primero” (My Fatherland Comes First), which is one of three divisions of the Community Police, that is based in the neighborhood of El Fortín, denied that Nava was part of that organization.

This isn’t the first fall suffered by CRAC, as it is worth noting that last November 27, a few days before the extraordinary elections that would dictate who was mayor of Tixtla, Los Ardillos, a criminal group that operates in the area, assassinated four community police members.

The attack occurred a few blocks from the headquarters of the organization.


Human Head & Narco Message Left Outside Tecate's Police Station

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Translated by Chuck B Alamada for Borderland Beat from a ZETA article
Written by Isaí Lara Bermudez (ZETA) Friday, 16 September, 2016

TECATE, BAJA CALIFORNIA NORTE-Last Friday evening, someone left a human head on the privately owned vehicle of a security member of Tecate’s Police Chief, Bartolome Lam Canto. Along the human head, the perpetrators also left behind a cardboard with a narco message directed at the Chief of Police. Several Investigative agencies secured the crime scene while detectives collected evidence.

The human head was left on a brown sedan vehicle which belongs to one of Chief Bartolome Lam Canto’s security staff members along with the cardboard which contained threats directed towards all those working with members of the Sinaloa Cartel. The vehicle was parked in front of the police station at the time of the incident.



Photo Courtesy
The green cardboard contained the following message:

“THIS WILL HAPPEN TO ALL OF THOSE PEOPLE THAT ARE WITH THE AKILES SISTERS OR RANA HERE THE SKY IS PEARL. THE DICK IS HERE, SIT ON IT. CJNG AND CTNG

From what is visible, the message left for Chief Bartolome Lam Canto and his agency is signed by Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion (CJNG) and the Cartel Arrelano Felix, under the acronym of CTNG which stands for Cartel de Tijuana Nueva Generacion.  

Municipal agents have admitted to ZETA that Chief Lam Canto only has three or four patrol vehicle patrolling the entire city and assigns only a handful of officers to fixed location.

Just a few weeks ago and a few blocks away from the Chiefs home, the home of one of his commanders was shot up.With this latest human head found, there have been 38 murders so far this year in the MagicalTown (Pueblo Magico) and countless people injured as a result of gunfire.

UPDATE: Saturday, 17 September, 2016


A day after the discovery of a human head left on a vehicle belonging to one of the security members of Tecate’s Police Chief, Bartolme Lam Canto, the body to that head was located. The remains were found in a dirt road southeast of the city. The victim was wearing a blue shirt, jeans, and black boots. Additionally, the victim had obvious burn marks about his back, buttocks, and legs which according to investigators, were caused by the perpetrators.

Photo Courtesy of ZETA
An investigator told ZETA: “They tried burning the body but it didn’t catch on fire.”

Unlike the human head where the perpetrators left a cardboard with a message, authorities did not
find a message with the rest of the body. Authorities have identified the victim only as Alejandro and are currently investigating any possible ties with organized crime or links with the municipal police including any connection with the Chief of Police since the head was left outside the police station.

The body was found in an isolated location close to the tunnel in the Valle Verde neighborhood of Tecate.

Quick Fact: Tecate has around 40 square miles and a population of about 65,000

Two Catholic Priests Kidnapped from Church and Killed

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Translated by Chuck B Alamada for Borderland Beat from a 24 HORAS article
Tuesday 20, September, 2016

VERACRUZ-This morning (Tuesday September 20), armed men forced their way into a Catholic church located in Poza Rica, Veracruzwith the intention of kidnapping two priests. Hours later, the lifeless bodies of the two priests were located near a placed called “La Curva del Diablo” (the devil’s curve). According to reports, a group of armed men arrived at the Nuestra Senora de Fatima church in the Petromex neighborhood where they kidnapped priests, Alejo Nabor Jimenez Juarez and Jose Alfredo Juarez de la Cruz and their assistant.

Photo Courtesy of 24 Horas
Neighbors of the church notified police of the kidnapping and an operation to find them was launched.

Minutes later, the assistant was located alive near the Poza Rica-Papantla roads with obvious wounds. It was determined that the assistant was able to escape his captors. Hours later, the bodies of the two priests were found also near the Poza Rica-Papantla road, in the Reforma Escolin community located within the Papantla municipality.

Both priests were tied and showed obvious signs of multiple gunshot wounds in different parts of the body to include the face.

Photo courtesy of El MUNDO
According to the Centro Catolico Multimedial, there have been 14 priests and one seminary student murdered as well as two priests that remain missing in Mexicosince President Enrique Pena Nieto took power in 2012.  

Veracruz is currently the bloody stage that has witnessed a war between Los Zetas and Jalisco Nueva Generacion which both seek to take over the narcotics trafficking routes to the US, the theft of fuel from PEMEX, as well as kidnappings, extortions against residents and migrants from Central America.

Dozens of Catholic Priests murdered under Calderon-EPN administration

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by Lucio for Borderland Beat- this is a republished post from March 2015-see post of today of two priest murdered this week by using this link
Mexico is the most dangerous nation for priests in the world

Catholic Priests, are among the bravest drug war heroes of Mexico, and they are being killed at an escalating and appalling rate. Few are reporting the full story, or are reporting the numbers inaccurately, including the Catholic Church.

The fact that Mexico is one of the most dangerous places on earth for reporters is well known, what is far less written about is the violence perpetrated against  Catholic Priests.

Mexico is officially now the most dangerous place on earth for Catholic Priests.  While long in the top group of most dangerous places for priests, Mexico is now its leader. For the sixth consecutive year, Mexico tops the list in murders and disappearances of Catholic priests in Latin America.

What must be established, murders and kidnappings of priests receive little attention outside regional reporting hubs.  It is a perplexing, how a story of dozens of  priests being murdered by cartels during  2 administrations goes unrecognized, or for example, a story  about 5 priests being killed in November–December of 2013 in Tamaulipas and Veracruz,  is but a tiny blip on the media radar. 

Inaccuracy of numbers
It must be pointed out, that priests are kidnapped, often from churches or rectories, but  the "disappearance" never budges  from  being labeled as such,  to being counted as “killed” or "dead", unless there is a body. Those  kidnapped and not found, are  not recorded on a drug war casualty list. 

In fairness, neither is any other group of people, which renders summations weak and without merit. 

 Nonetheless, the point being, as the title of this post says;  '"dozens" of priests killed during the Calderon-Peña Administrations', astonishing in of itself, still is an accurate tally. 

Then there is misreporting, much like municipalities are known to ascribe to, in attempting to lower the rate of violence.


For example, with four days remaining in 2012, in the state of Michoacán, padre Santiago Álvarez Figueroa, vanished. Although he had received dozens of death threats leading up to his disappearance, Authorities were quick to discount he had fallen prey to organized crime, instead this story was offered, “we think he was in an automobile accident”, this was reported by Jesus Reyes Garcia of the governor’s office, who later revised the version when the vehicle of the priest was not found and parishioners rejected the account. 

What is known, Father Santiago, 27, had just finished celebrating Mass in the tiny town of Jacona, he entered his car and headed home to his hometown of Paredones. He called one of the nuns, advising  he was on his way back home.  

He never arrived.

Reyes is now incarcerated for collusion with organized crime, he was temporary governor while Governor Fausto Vallejo Figueroa was in the U.S. getting a new liver.  Vallejo Figueroa resigned on the heels of the controversy of his son’s arrest.  His son known as ‘El Gerber’, was arrested after a Tutateca video of him with the Caballeros Templarios leader surfaced.

Santiago’s  body was never found.  He is not listed as murdered, he is with the other priests in perpetual limbo on the “disappeared” list. His Bakersfield, California, family, has no doubt he was murdered by organized crime, most likely the culprits are Caballeros Templarios.

Torture, including rape prior to murder

Organized crime killings of priests are particularly brutal.

The recovered bodies of priests depict odious, barbaric torture and killing. Decapitation, dismemberment, incineration, strangulation, drowning, torture and rape are the methods used against priests in additional to the “conventional” killing methods of gunshot, or stabbings.

Take the case of  Padre John Ssenyondo of Chilapa, Guerrero.  The Ugandan priest loved his adopted country of Mexico, and wanted better for its people. He had lived in Guerrero for 5 years, preaching to the most impoverished if Mexican populous.  And by all accounts his parishioners loved the outgoing priest with the quick wide smile.

But they also worried about his safety.  For his sermons had become strong and firm against organized crime.  Many think that was his downfall.  

In April of 2014, Padre John disappeared while traveling back from conducting mass (service) in the mountains of Guerrero.  His disappearance went almost without notice, if not for the discovery of a mass grave.

The Catholic Church was quiet about the case, the regional rector of the cathedral, Javier Casarrubias Carballido,  never commented on the missing Priest.
Parishioners spoke among themselves, a persistent rumor was that a cartel leader asked the priest to baptize his child, and the request was denied.  That scenario seems unlikely, since in the Catholic religion, the sins of the father would be deemed irrelevant to the child.
  
The other scenario is the more likely of the two, the priest would not heed to warnings to  halt sermons against organized crime. He had begun drawing the link of local officials and organized crime.

A mass grave was discovered in the outskirts of Chilapa, Chilapa is about 30 miles east of Chilpancingo, the state capital.

The remains of Padre John were among the 13 bodies buried in a mass narco fosa. The bodies were decapitated and dismembered, and incomplete. Padre John’s skull and various other bones were discovered, he was identified by dental records.

Why are priest targeted?

Long held rumors of priests ingratiating themselves towards organized crime groups for financial gain, benefiting their parishes, is persistent, but inaccurate.  That would be the exception not the norm.  Organized crime regards priests as the enemy. The following lists a few of the reasons why.

Sermons: outspoken priests, who preaching against organized crime, and the collusion of government officials and police.  Organized crime groups prefer to remain under the radar, and feel threatened by those who may encourage an organized backlash against their activities.  Same can be said about municipal governments and police. 

Assisting Economic Migrants:   Migrants, mostly from Central America, are highly exploited by cartels, and are at the core of narco occupational diversification.  For example the sex trade, kidnapping, extortion, human trafficking, and forcible recruitment into cartel work including becoming sicarios (hitmen).  Those who shelter migrants and advocate for migrant issues, interrupt business, resulting in bottom line impact.  Catholic clergy are the operators of 95% of migrant shelters.  They are also their greatest advocacy group, in and out of Mexico.

Who can ever forget the images of 72 migrants slaughtered in Tamaulipas in 2010?  72 human beings, executed for the crime of refusing recruitment into the Los Zetas cartel.

Throughout Mexico Catholic Priests create a safe haven for migrants.  Priests provide migrants shelter, assistance, medical care and other forms of care.  Cartels consider this an intrusion into their source of revenue.  Priests who run the migrant shelters such as Casa Migrante’s are constantly being threatened.  


Catholic based Rehab Centers:Alcohol and drug rehab centers have become fewer in number than two years ago.  There were a string of attacks by cartels, resulting in the destruction of centers or mass killings of inhabitants.  19 killed in a Chihuahua rehab in photo at left.


Cartels exploit the centers, extorting and forcibly recruit sicarios and drug traffickers, often death threats are realized when a rehab group resists. Others are killed for failing to pay for drugs or betraying a dealer.

Supporting Autodefensa Movements:  Autodefensa groups are organized as a union consisting of 13 states.  Some priests are  targeted because of their support of these groups, or direct involvement.
Refusing requests:  In the narco world,  it is notable that there are large groups of Santería followers. Although the religious based cult is syncretized with Catholicism and Mesoamerican, it is strictly condemned by the religion.  Small “Santeria Chapels” are erected that seem to pop up overnight, that “honor” the Santeria offshoot Nuestra Señora de la Santa Muerte.

While there are millions of good people, often the marginalized people of society, which practice the “religion”, with no intention to harm others.  It is organized crime that have taken it to a sinister level, thinking that Santa Muerte will protect them from harm or imprisonment while they conduct criminality, including murder.
                                          This Santa Muerte chapel was bulldozed in Allende
                                                 This Acuña chapel was  destroyed in 2013

In 2013, Tamaulipas and Veracruz priests began receiving demands that Catholic altars in churches feature statues of Santa Muerte. Going further that masses be said in honor of Santa Muerte.  Parishioners say It is because of the refusals that some priests disappeared.

Extortion: Cartels treat priests/churches no differently than any other business in Mexico, they too are victims of extortion.

Three padres in the cross-hairs
Mexican priests are as a group vulnerable to attack, but there are priests that are standouts in the field of danger.

Gregorio Lopez, better known as 'Padre Goyo' Michoacán 
Padre Goyo, is arguably the most outspoken priest in Mexico today.  Of the 7 Apatzingán Michoacán priests whose life have been threaten in 2014, he tops the list of most reviled by organized crime, and corrupt government, both municipal, state and federal.

A champion of the autodefensa movement, he was directly involved with the group. The bullet proof vest wearing priest is a close friend and ally to the imprisoned autodefensa leader and social activist, Dr Manuel Mireles.

In 2014, Goyo’s brother, “Luis Jerónimo”, was kidnapped by the Caballeros Templarios, with a message for his priest brother….. CT kidnappers sent a warning to Goyo, to back off his involvement in the AD movement, and foremost, no further complaints about their activity and conflicts to the press and on the pulpit. For his part, if anything Goyo stepped up his game, on speech tours of the US and contacting U.S. government officials about the run-away violence and corruption.

Recently, Padre Goyo appeared before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and met with New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez,  on the last leg of his US tour,
“We in Mexico, are terrorized and are governed by organized crime,” he charged.
Luis Jerónimo, 39, was released after a few days of captivity and then decided to leave Mexico and appeared before the immigration authorities at the border crossing of San Ysidro, California to seek asylum. 

However, instead, the immigrant was sent to a detention center , where he  remained for nearly a year without being granted bail and exposed to immediate deportation. 

"It is inhuman what they did with this immigrant is a clear example of what happens when it is not well known law that confers asylum. He was a perfect candidate for his release in a few weeks and with a minimum bond "said Alex Galvez, immigration attorney who secured the release of Jerome.
Bishop Raul Vera López -Coahuila
Vera López is an avowed advocate for human rights and social justice. He is another priest who sets aside his personal safety in favor of expressing his views against abuse of power, corruption, absence of the rule of law and violations of human rights. He is an advocate for the marginalized people of Mexico, bucking the Vatican, he publicly welcomed gays into the parish.   

He opposes the fact that, although Mexico is not really a poor country, more than half of its 110 million people live below the poverty line.  He stresses they also increasingly live in fear. Waves of murders and violence have followed in the wake of criminal cartels’ brutal warfare to control the cartel drug trade.   

He has traveled to D.C. to speak about cartel violence, drug trafficking, human trafficking, and corruption of Mexico. He has also demanded investigations into the thousands of migrants who have gone missing while passing through the state of Coahuila and clamored for a DNA database to identify bodies.

He and Padre Goyo traveled to D.C. to the Human Rights Commission to report of the Iguala abuses and murders, a year before the now famous attacks in September on students by police.

He operates one of the largest migrant shelters in Mexico.  It is located in his home base of Saltillo, the capital of Coahuila.  Borderland Beat administrator Chivis Martinez has assisted the shelter since the murder of 72 migrants of Tamaulipas.  She reports the shelter is exceptional, temporarily housing over 100 migrants.

While padre Goyo toured the U.S. his friend Bishop Vera traveled to Berlin. In Berlin, outspoken bishop of Saltillo, presented a petition of 7,500 names to the German interior minister, asking for the suspension of negotiations over a security accord between Germany and Mexico. 

The accord would facilitate collaboration in the fight against organized crime.  The bishop says that any additional force given to Mexican police would be used against citizens. 
“It won’t be used against organized crime because organized crime and the government are very good friends. They have an understanding between them.  Ayotzinapa demonstrated that.”
The heavily awarded priest was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2012.

Padre Alejandro Solalinde Guerra
In 2007 Solalinde founded the shelter “Hermanos en el Camino” in Ciudad Ixtepec, Oaxaca, whose mission  is to provide a safe shelter for migrants and to offer them food, medical and and legal aid.

Since then he has been a target of both corrupt local government and cartels.

Padre Solalinde has been arrested and imprisoned for his work with migrants.  Cartels send death threats to him on a regular basis, ordering him to cease speaking about migrant abuses and sheltering migrants.  Solalinde says there are over 100,000 migrants that have disappeared since the beginning of the Mexican drug war.

“Ma'am, tell the governor  that it shall only be over my dead body…”

The priest recalls the harassment during the government of PRI governor, Ulises Ruiz, and how he resisted the persecution: 
"Ulises Ruiz was behind a mega business using migrants. Two municipal presidents in Ixtepec wanted to make a business with the arrival of the immigrants through kidnappings, extortion, etc. 
But I was in their way.  I was and am a hindrance for the PRI. I have not allowed it, nor am I going to allow it, even at the cost of them doing a number of things to me, they even were going to kill me.
"I confronted Ulises Ruiz, not personally, because I don't have the displeasure of knowing him, but in Washington he sent a spokesperson and there in the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights on March 20th, 2010. I said to the rapporteur, 'The governor Ulises Ruiz, the only thing he asks for is the closing of the shelter or, failing that, he asks that it is placed on the other side of the bridge."
At the moment Solalinde intervened and asked some key questions: 
"Why are they want to get rid of it? Perhaps it is a problem for the businesses that the governor wants so he can exploit the migrants, to kidnap them and do all of that to them? Ma'am, tell the governor that it shall only be over my dead body. I explained to Rodrigo Escobar, the rapporteur, about the ruthless zone of exploitation and slavery and human trafficking they want to set up. That's why the situation is getting worse. Now Ixtepec has changed parties. It is with the PRD, it no longer attacks us and it has had goodwill while approaching us."
In May of 2012 Padre Solalinde left Mexico in exile for two months, this after a near kidnapping and an undisclosed specific threat.

He is also a supporter of Dr. Mireles and is a co-member of “Yo soy autodefensa”.
       Padre Solalinde visits abandoned migrants deported from the U.S. but far from Central American homes.  
The U.S. mostly deports central Americans just over the south border and orders them to walk into Mexico, Tijuana is filled with displaced 
migrants.  With no resources, constant threats, they are sitting ducks, men and women lost in limbo.

Tamaulipas and Veracruz 5-6 priests kidnapped/killed in 2 months

In the last months of 2013, at least 5 priests were taken and all presumed dead in southern Tamaulipas.
Carlos Ornelas Puga, (left) was kidnapped on November 3rd.  He was taken at gunpoint, from a parish in the municipality of Jiménez, although he belonged to the diocese of Ciudad Victoria.  The Catholic Church did not confirm this for over a week.  

On November 29, 2013 priests Hipólito Villalobos Lima and Nicolas de la Cruz Martinez were executed in the parish of San Cristóbal de Ixhuatlán de Madero, Veracruz.

In December two additional priests vanished in Tamaulipas, "In recent days two other priests disappeared from Ciudad Victoria," said the church source who asked to remain anonymous.

The murdered victim was identified as Guillermo Amaro Caésar, who died from a beating by suspected members of organized crime using bats.  However, state authorities downplayed version, says the priest was victim of an ‘assault”.  

Also in December 2013 another priest beating, who belongs to the parish of the Good Shepherd was also reported. It is presumed that he refused to officiate a Mass requested by organized crime to be held in the church and dedicated to Santa Muerte.

The authorities of the Catholic Church and the state government are dilatory or have not given information regarding the attacks against priests. 

Also in 2013.

February: Bishop José Flores Preciado,  in the Temple of Christ del Rey, in the city of Colima, Colima.  The 83 year old was beaten to death.The day after the killing, Bishop Jose Luis Amezcua Melgoza revealed that 30 of the of the 123 priests of  Colima, had been the victims of attempted extortion, including himself.

July: Father Ignacio Cortés Álvarez, “Nachito” was the priest in charge of the parish, “María Auxiliadora” in Ensenada, Baja California.  The priest had suffered over 2 dozen stab wounds.  His killers found the priest in the rectory living room, where the murder took place.  Ensenada is one of the most violent cities in BC.
In 2014 Guerrero lost three priests 

September- José Ascensión Acuña Osorio
November-John Ssenyondo
December- Gregorio López Gorostieta

The not so solid numbers in the cartel war against Mexican Catholic priests

Numbers are all over the place.  To achieve the greatest accuracy in numbers requires researching
regional newspapers and media. Often it is only there that a story will appear.   Then there is the issue of kidnapped priests whose body are never found, of never making the killed list.  

In effect, if the skull of padre John Ssenyondo had not been found in October, he would still be on the missing list.  The fact that the Church has been reluctant to confirm or report kidnappings of priests only  compounds the problem, and gives greater protection to cartels.

For the record, this is more or less the ‘Official’ accounting for the Calderon and EPN administrations.  On face value it is horrific enough, but nowhere near depicting the factual numbers or the  complete story of,  the cartel war against Mexican Catholic priests. 

During the Felipe Calderon administration:

12 priests murdered
162 recorded threats against priests in one year
1000 extortion crimes against priests
During the Enrique Peña Nieto administration there have been 10 priests murdered
Noticeably missing are numbers of missing or disappeared priests.

States with the greatest number of crime against priests

Most of these states are in southern Mexico, where the most marginalized peoples live. The impoverished, indigenous, darker skinned Mexicans who are prejudiced against, including the government who traditionally suppresses people of the south, and denies southern inhabitants basic resources afforded citizens in other regions.

Guerrero
Jalisco
Oaxaca
Veracruz
Michoacán
Hidalgo
Puebla
Aguascalientes
Federal District (DF/Mexico City)
Chihuahua
Coahuila

Julián Leyzaola a hero or a villain? or both?

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Excerpt taken from Gente de la Tia Juana
Posted and translated by El Wachito

The controversial Julian Leyzaola came to Tijuana when the city needed him the most. Kidnappings and extortion's occurred on a daily basis, even the taco stands, ice cream shops, and the guy with the crutches selling lottery tickets in la Zona Rio paid his tributes to the cartels.

There was a huge lack of morals and values from the drug traffickers, which in reality weren't drug traffickers, but only a group of abusers and unjust traffickers of drugs from those times.

"Tjuana was enduring its darkest days when Julián Leyzaola Pérez rose to prominence in 2008 and 2009 as a tough-minded police chief who taunted drug traffickers, chased down criminals, even arrested his own officers—winning both ardent followers and vehement critics."-Sandra Dibbler reporting for San Diego Union Tribune

Like its said in the drug trafficking world, drug traffickers are not supposed to mess with the people. Drug traffickers are supposed to allow the citizens to live in peace and tranquility, with no kidnappings and abuses. It was supposed to be the other way around, citizens should be empowered and supported, however in Tijuana, during that time period the practice was different.

The Lieutenant Colonel was a man with an extraordinary military career, from a military family, brave, and we cant deny that he has great talent. Did he violated the human rights of criminals? yes, certainly, but if it wasn't like that under the current governmental circumstances, then how was he going to accomplish the mission?

Julian Leyzaola(Right) as a captain in the desert dealing with an ingrown toenail.

How do you stop el Teo, Muletas? How to move out of the way  a 7-7 (Cousin of  El Gordo Villareal Heredia), Gordo Villareal, who dedicated themselves to kidnap and extort citizens? Not even a single businessman was able to live in peace and the majority of them decided to leave the country due to the insecurity that the city was going through. Insecurity that was supported by the administration of "El Inge", who tried to assume control over whatever was left of el CAF.

If it wasn't that way, how were we going to end with all the criminals who weren't even considered to be drug traffickers, but only a bunch of coward kidnappers? Even the police accepted the extortion and kidnapping of businessman, taco shop stands, junk-yards, even the guy selling tacos al vapor in La Sanchez Taboada "El Chan", paid his fees.
Julian Leyzaola was admire by many young man for always being out there chasing criminals in the streets. - El Wachito

People who make enough to make it through the day, and who with sacrifices support their families were living under terrible circumstances of insecurity and the insecurity could only be stopped with the strategy of the Lieutenant Colonel Julian Leyzaola. Of course, we cant deny that he abused innocent citizens because he did. He kicked the head of a dead man, but he will never admit that under any circumstances.

He allowed what in the militia is known as war chaos. He allowed this to happen because of his military formation. For me, an error that is still being used by his creation "El Bombero" Gomez Miguel. The question is, he is a man of honor, he is a man who speaks the truth and takes accountability for his actions, but why he keeps denying the torture and abuse of innocents?

Then, he is not 100% sincere, saying that he didn't torture is almost the same as saying that Salinas didn't steal from the country. He did it and there is people who are grateful that he did it (including myself). But he doesn't have the bravery to accept this, and that turns him into a liar and a coward just like any other politician who lies in order to avoid prison.

His strategy of torture was really simple back then because he detained drug addicts and confined them in a bunker for 24 hours with no drugs, then with the necessity of drugs and a good beating, they were left with no other option than to speak. Back then drug addicts were used by the cartel as hit-man. Nowadays is not like that.


The state government and the municipality are still paying the cops detained by the Lieutenant Colonel. Most of them acquitted of their crimes and cashing checks that have cost the citizens of Tijuana millions of pesos in taxes. The police of the Lieutenant Colonel abused so much of their impunity that the citizens woke up and now they stand for their rights.

Not because you are hooker your gonna let yourself get rape. We all have rights and people are now defending themselves. If the Lieutenant Colonel wins the next 3 years of the election, what would his strategy be? He will not solve the insecurity that we live in the streets. He is brave, and a protagonist but his own ego has brought him down.

In words of Vicente Fox, "You cannot fight drug trafficking, you must control it, just like the DEA does". If the Lieutenant Colonel wins the state elections I would like to know what his security strategy would be? Will he be the Mesias we need? The savior we need?


Julian Leyzaola is currently appealing the elections through the magisterial tribunal.-El Wachito




Demand for Inquiry Into Police Abuse of Women May Embroil Mexico’s President

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Posted by DD Republished from New York Times


MEXICO CITY — International human rights officials are demanding an investigation into the brutal sexual assaults of 11 Mexican women during protests a decade ago — an inquiry that would take aim at President Enrique Peña Nieto, who was the governor in charge at the time of the attacks.

The demand is part of a multiyear examination by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights into abuses during a 2006 crackdown ordered by Mr. Peña Nieto on San Salvador Atenco, a town in Mexico State where demonstrators had taken over the central square. During the operations, which left two dead, more than 40 women were violently detained by the police, packed onto buses and sent to jail several hours away.

The case was brought by 11 women to the international commission, which found that the police tortured them sexually. The women — a mix of merchants, students and activists — were raped, beaten, penetrated with metal objects, robbed and humiliated, made to sing aloud to entertain the police. One was forced to perform oral sex on multiple officers. After the women were imprisoned, days passed before they were given proper medical examinations, the commission found.

“I have not overcome it, not even a little,” said one of the women, Maria Patricia Romero Hernández, weeping. “It is something that haunts me and you don’t survive. It stays with you.”

For Mr. Peña Nieto, the human rights commission’s call for an investigation is another blow to a presidency under siege. Corruption scandals and continued violence have already dragged his approval ratings to the lowest of any Mexican president in a quarter-century. His invitation of Donald J. Trump, the Republican presidential candidate reviled in Mexico for his statements critical of Mexican immigrants, plunged his administration even further into controversy.

The assaults are also a reminder of countless other cases in the country that remain unresolved, including the haunting disappearance of 43 college students two years ago. International officials contend that the investigation into that case was actively undermined by Mr. Peña Nieto’s government.

The president’s office noted that the commission did not accuse Mr. Peña Nieto of wrongdoing or explicitly name him as a target of the investigation into the sexual assaults. Beyond that, his office said, legal cases in Mexico that have thoroughly investigated the attacks have never held him responsible.

“There is no one who can point to an order permitting the abuse of force,” said Roberto Campa, the under secretary for human rights in the Mexican Interior Ministry.

But the international commission found Mexico’s efforts to investigate the abuse insufficient so far. Instead, it demanded a much more thorough inquiry to uncover responsibility across the entire chain of command, which would most likely make Mr. Peña Nieto part of the investigation because he ordered the crackdown.

It also called for disciplinary or criminal action against any authorities who contributed to the denial of justice for the women.

The commission delivered its findings last week to the Inter-American Court, an independent judiciary with legal authority over Mexico. If the court agrees with the commission, it can order Mexico to broaden its current inquiry into the case, a requirement that could force the state to investigate its own president.

The commission suggests that the state government under Mr. Peña Nieto had sought to minimize and even cover up the events. Perhaps the most lurid example is whom the government chose to prosecute: Rather than go after the police who committed the sexual torture, the state initially prosecuted the women instead. Five were imprisoned for a year or more, on charges like blocking traffic, detentions the commission found arbitrary.

Days after the episode, the state denied the accusations of the women, essentially calling them liars. Mr. Peña Nieto told a local newspaper at the time that it was a known tactic of radical groups to have women make accusations of sexual violence to discredit the government. Others in his administration made similar claims.

Since then, while the government has acknowledged the veracity of the accusations, not a single person has been convicted of any crime related to the assaults in Atenco. Most recently, five doctors charged with ignoring evidence of sexual abuse had their cases dismissed.

The case is an example of the lengths victims must go to in pursuit of justice in Mexico. The women endured more than 10 years of threats, intimidation and psychological trauma. They watched as men who assaulted them walked free.

But by refusing to drop the case, the women pushed it to an international level, making it a symbol of the broken rule of law in Mexico and the widespread impunity that ensures it never heals.
While it is unlikely that Mr. Peña Nieto’s government will conduct an investigation into whether he knew of or covered up the assaults, the admonition of an international body is a deep embarrassment for him.

Having been presented to the court, despite several attempts by the Mexican government to delay and derail it, the case offers a rare opportunity for accountability in a country where only a tiny percentage of crimes are ever solved. The women refused to settle the case for years, with legal assistance from the human rights organization Centro Prodh, turning down promises of free homes and scholarships. In interviews with all 11 victims, a fundamental desire emerged: a public reckoning of what happened to them and who ordered it.


The residual trauma of the assaults has marked each woman differently. For some, family and friends offered a way to recover, if not entirely, and move on with their lives. A few found ways to connect their struggle to the broader push for justice and rights in Mexico. But others found no such comfort, with time’s passage a useless salve.

These are the 11 Plaintiffs, and their words.

“I made the conscious decision to survive, to 

be alive and well today, to feel pretty again, to 
love me and see me in the mirror and 

recognize the person I saw. It was that they 

stole from me, my way of being, of loving, of 
feeling.”
Patricia Torres Linares, 33
 “The stigma that falls upon you is terrible. 
My boyfriend didn’t want to be with me, 
friends used to treat me as if I was going to 
break all the time, as if I was made of glass. I 
had to come to terms with the fact people — 
my family included — didn’t know how to 
treat me.” 
Norma Aidé Jiménez Osorio, 33

“I have not overcome it, not even a little. It is 

something that haunts me and you don’t 

survive. It stays with you. I could never tell 

my son and my father of the fact I was raped 

by not one but several policemen, because 

they would have gone mad.”
Maria Patricia Romero Hernández, 48
 
“My life plans were ruined. After what  


happened I had no short- or long-term plans, I 
just figured out how to get my life back 

together, to regain trust and hope that this 

world wasn’t a horrible place.”
Bárbara Italia Méndez Moreno, 37

“This process of 10 years has been very 

difficult and at the same time very beautiful. 

Regardless of the fact we started it so hurt, 

so broken, physically and emotionally, we had

 and held each other and we didn’t let it 

destroy us.”
Mariana Selvas Gómez, 32


“They took the most valuable thing from me, 

which is time, because no one would sell 

their time, not even one second for a 

thousand dollars. You can’t ever get that 

time back.”
Suhelen Gabriela Cuevas Jaramillo, 30






“The fact we are going to the Inter-American 

Court is a way of accepting that we were 

really affected. It was not an accident but 

rather a state practice towards social 

movements, and the people in general, and it 

is a step forward into putting an end to all of 

this.” Georgina Edith Rosales Gutiérrez, 60



“The stigma is very harsh. I didn’t go to 

college. What am I supposed to do? Because 

of the criminal record no one would give me 

a job recommendation.”
Yolanda Muñoz Diosdada, 56








“My kids were emotionally destabilized by 

what happened. My son, who was 8 at the 

time, promised he would become a lawyer to 

get me out of jail. My youngest daughter 

used to draw policemen with blood 

all over them. She was 6 years old then.”
Cristina Sánchez Hernández, 50


 “That has been the hardest, most enraging 

part of this entire process, watching those 

who attacked us go free. I was full of anger, 

thinking nothing happens, even when you find

 the guilty party, the very person who

 attacked you, they walk away free.”
Ana María Velasco Rodríguez, 43


 “It hurts to know that the Claudia of before 

Atenco is gone. She was someone who would


 fight for equality and for other people’s 

rights, and she did it without fear. Now, I am 

scared all the time.”
Claudia Hernández Martínez, 33





 
Continue reading the main story

An armed commando belonging to el Chapo takes control over a Beltran Leyva stronghold

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Translated by El Wachito for Borderland Beat Original article available at Riodoce, 9.22.16

By Miguel Angel Vega, reporting for Riodoce

A dozen of armed man, under the command of Aureliano Guzman Loera "El Guano", took control of a small town known as Huixiopa in Badiraguato which was a controlled area under the people of the Beltran Leyva brothers.

From that town were deployed the armed commandos that took control of La Tuna last month and invaded the house of Consuelo Loera, mother of el Chapo Guzman. The armed commando killed at least two locals.

According to a patrol conducted by Riodoce(news chain from Sinaloa), the town was abandoned because the local residents ran to other nearby ranches or to Culiacan due to the daily armed clashes.


"This is a war zone and at any moment one can start hearing the "Cohetazos" (gunshots), we recommend you to leave by where you came from", claim one of the gunman, who was wearing a hat with the #701 emblema, which makes a reference to Joaquin Guzman. The same gunman stated that they were people of "El señor Guzman".

According to the reports the residents ran away from the place several days ago, the clashes are happening on a daily basis, and the presence of armed man of el "Guano", suggests that the war in that region is being won by the Guzman Loera family.

El Guano Guzman, brother of el Chapo
During the patrol it was noted that the gunman were not attacking civilians because the only two residents who were making their way to Arroyo Seco, were allowed to make it through the checkpoint.

The gunman clarified that the war was not against the government or civilians, it was against the people that belonged to the Beltran Leyva.

"Those we are going to shot", stated one of the gunman, all of them armed with AK-47 rifles, with drum magazines, grenades, radios and ammo.

The presence of the government was nule. Throughout the inspections conducted by Riodoce and by the statements made by the gunman we can conclude that the clashes will cease until one side completely annihilates the other.

From the top municipality, to Bacaroragua, place where the asphalt ends, we cannot appreciate the presence of any police corporation, no army elements or marines.


The town mayor of Badiraguato, Mario Valenzuela, recognize that since the military left the zone a few weeks ago, the clashes have resume and therefore has resulted in the abandonment of the towns in the region.


Sinaloa: Cessna stopped carrying weapons to Los Chapitos

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Borderland Beat Guest reporter Siskiyoukid From Riodoce

BB Note:  The war between the Chapitos and Beltran Leyva presented itself in June, when the home of El Chapo’s mother came under attack.  It was largely assumed that the perpetrators were Beltran Leyva.  Since that date the conflict has heated up to a full struggle for power and control of the region. The theory is Beltran Leyva initiated the attack to force a “show down” with El Chapo’s people and gain greater control of  territory in the region. Each group is from the region and has controlled areas.  This week Chapitos took control of  Huixiopa in Badiraguato, which was controlled by Beltrn Leyva.

Because of the money seized, (the amount of money they concede was in the plane) and the few quantity of weapons, it is more likely that the shipment was already dropped and was stopped after the delivery.....Article begins below


A military operation in Culiacan resulted in the confiscation of weapons slated for Los Chapitos, group of organized crime operating in this city.

The delivery was tracked from its departure point identified as Mexicali, Baja California.  Around 150 soldiers, members of five reaction teams, participated in tracking and seizing the shipment.

General Alfonso Duarte Mugica confirmed that at 10:00 on Wednesday, they arrested the first civilian, who was driving a Chevy Silverado Pickup truck and from whom they secured three short weapons [pistols].

The Commander of the third Military Region said that this was the first indication of a delivery that was coming in.

At 11:30 Wednesday morning the Cessna small plane, registration XB-MUG, white with blue stripes, was intercepted at a landing strip in the town of Benito Juárez.

At the time of being encircled by the military, the pilot tried to take off, but one of the military trucks intercepted it, hitting one of the wings, destabilizing it and stopping it from fleeing.

With this maneuver two soldiers ended up with injuries and burns. The injuries sustained are not considered serious.

The pilot and four crew members were arrested and placed at the disposal of the PGR [Attorney General's Office], as well as weapons that were seized, consisting of  a Barrett rifle 50 caliber rifle, four AK47 automatic rifles, and five packages of 500 Peso bills that were sealed in plastic, totaling 700 thousand pesos. (35k USD)

Official sources claim that the conspirators intended to enter Culiacan with weapons and money, for work with the sons of Joaquin Guzman Loera, El Chapo.

The detainees were identified as Hector "n", who is from Angostura and who showed his pilot's license.

The crew were identified as Daniel "N" and Marco Antonio "N", both originating of Culiacan, as well as Carlos Martin "N", originally of Caborca, Sonora and Jose "N", of Altar, Sonora.

Clandestine Graves in at Least 16 States of Mexico

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Translated by Yaqui for BorderlandBeat  El SudCaliforniano Sept 17, 2018 Orginazacion Mexicano
BB Note: At his term end Claderon estimated over 25k dead in clandestine graves in the border states.  Mexico does not count economic migrants missing from other countries, and the missing are never moved to the dead count unless evidence is located to prove their death......Amnesty International estimates 12k per year migrants 'go missing'.


                           The Federal Government Recognizes 27, 638 Missing Persons

NGO's Say There Are More

Unsolvable links are shared by clandestine graves with missing persons; with nefarious links that expose a widespread reality that has existed for decades and intensified in the 21st Century for Mexico. How many are there? Where are they? Why are they here? Who killed them? The figures are uncertain, but the terror and the pain are perpetual.

Throughout Mexico in tropical forests, under bushes and thickets, on the prairies, savannas, and deserts of the terrain there are clandestine graves.
But also they are in the empty lots in cities and towns. There are virtually thousands of corpses that do not appear in any statistics, never the less they are homicides.

Anything new? No. Value what is said by Francisco Rivas, Director General of the National Citizen Observatory:

"Enough already with making excuses such as "before it was worse,  we did not to know what to do, we didn't know what to combat or who created this situation, we did not effectively address the security problem. Enough of the looking for justifications that allow for the reproduction of so much violence and delinquency. If the current trend of social statistics remain we will actually end 2016 with 19,560 direct victims of homicide and many more victims who will pay the consequences of a country where it's institutions have failed to guarantee social peace nor has respect for human rights."


To the findings of the clandestine graves, those of whom we do not know, who they are? They continue to sprout like moss and ferns in any season, in every ecosystem or habitat.

Between January 2014 and July 2016 the people located, but gender undetermined, totaled 968 Mexicans and 83 foreigners. The largest number appeared to be in the age range of 20 to 24 years (151), followed by the age of 25 to 29 (145) and the 30 to 34 age group (120).

These are the statistical figures presented by the Executive Secretary of the National Public Safety System, Federal Jurisdiction. These are the total number of persons related to preliminary investigations initiated during the period between Jan 2014 and July 2016 and remain unaccounted for by the Court as of July 31st, 2016.

The states with the highest number of missing persons according to the Federal Courts are: Guerrero, 280; followed by Vera Cruz, 195; Tamaulipas, 146; Coahuila, 49;(Coahuila alone est 1300 by NGO)  Michoacan, 41; Mexico City, 35; Oaxaca, 30; Nuevo Leon, 28; Chihuahua 26; and Sinaloa, 24; according to SESNSP.

As for the regular state courts, add 20,636 men and 6,792 women. This is the total number of records of missing persons related to preliminary investigations under state jurisdiction as of July 31st, 2016. Of these, 25,339 are Mexican and 139 Foreigners, although there are another 1,950 that remain "unspecified".

In municipal courts, the missing persons recorded are young. An unnamed number are in the range of 15 to 19 years of age. Next are 3,547 between 20-24 years;  3,497 between 25-29; as well as 3,139 between 30-34 years of age. The last change to this number was made as of August 31, 2016.

In this case, the state with the most is Tamaulipas with 5,560; followed by the State of Mexico: 2,649; Jalisco: 2,476; Nuevo Leon: 2,311; Sinaloa: 2,220; Chihuahua: 1,799; Coahuila: 1,586; Sonora: 1,088; Guerrero: 1,047; and Michoacan: 1,043.

The Data Known

International Organizations of Civil Society are aware of what is happening. Amnesty International, for example, states in its annual 2015 Report :

"At the end of the year 2015, the Mexican Government reported that 27,638 persons were missing (20,203 men and 7,435 women) and /or in undisclosed locations; but did not specify how many of them had been subjected to forced disappearances. Generally, the few criminal investigations  into these cases had deficiencies and the authorities were not searching for the victims. The impunity for these crimes is absolute. In October, the Attorney General of the Republic appointed a Special Prosecutor to take charge of these cases."

The clandestine graves do not speak.

There are other figures published by the PGR. Until February 2016 they had found 202 graves with a total of 662 bodies (2014 and 2015). This figure was surpassed by many, because in March alone in La Mira, Michoacan they found one with two bodies; another at the Ranch "Las Camelias "near Lazaro Cardenas with two more. In Mexcaltepec, Guerrero, a grave was found with the remains of one person, in Taxco yet another, in Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz, one person; in Piedras Negras, Coahuila, one person and in abandoned fields near San Andres Calpan in the state of Puebla  were found 12 cadavers stuffed into metal drums.

April, for example, was a month of findings: a grave with six bodies by the highway to Playa Pascuales, Colima and another in the municipality of Tecoman with two more, in Caleras, Veracruz 11 graves with charred remains; 8 more near Xalapa; in La Bartolina, Tamaulipas: an indeterminate number. In Puente de Ixtla, Morelos, one and in addition in Zapopan, Jalisco, one.

In May: Chilapa, Guerrero: two, in Manzanillo, Jalisco, three graves with seven bodies; in Tlayecac, Morelos a number indeterminable.

In June: three graves in Luvianos, State of Mexico with five beheaded bodies; Mazatlan, Sinaloa  four graves with six bodies; in the neighborhood of Nueva Orleans, Chilapa, Guerrero, ten bodies; Acapulco, Guerrero: in the highlands near Cerro El Veladero: three graves with ten bodies.

July: Mazatlan, Sinaloa, two graves with eight bodies; Manzanillo, Colima three graves with seven bodies and in a fire pit in Huehuetoca, Mexico State, twelve bodies.

August: two graves with two bodies in Jacuma, Michoacan; in Acapulco, Guerrero in the neighborhood of Generation 2000 two graves with three bodies and in Degollado, Jalisco one grave with four bodies.

September: Santa Cecilia, the amphitheater of Acapulco, Guerrero, seven bodies in four graves;  Palo Gordo, Zapopan, Jalisco one grave with various bodies; Taxco, Guerrero: twelve bodies in several mass graves and in Apaseo El Alto, Guanajuato: two bodies in a grave.

These are only examples. In half the states of the Republic,16, there are more resulting from the actions of organized crime, drug trafficking, kidnapping, human trafficking, and diverse crimes of federal and/or state statues. There are also those that are made out to look like crimes of passion or other types of disappearing of bodies.

The search by Mexican citizens 

Confronting this situation, the Federal Government assures us that they are compiling a register of clandestine graves. Perhaps they have taken steps to fulfill a good part of the requests made by various organizations working on behalf of the disappeared, by creating the National Databank of Missing Persons (with reliable data) and the active participation of The Attorney General of the Republic and local prosecutors offices.

To date, the authorities of the PGR and State Prosecutors have failed to perform the work required to assess the number of graves and bodies.

Due to this, groups such as "The Other Disappeared of Iguala", The National Brigade in Search of Disappeared Persons in Veracruz (which has found 90 graves in total as of September), the Collective for Peace and the Collective El Solecita are among the many other groups involved in tracking down the graves of missing persons.

So problematic is the situation that in April 2016 the Program For Victims and The Scientific Commission for Human Identification of the Autonomous University of the State of Morelos (UAEM), in collaboration with the Retono Network and the National Commission of Human Rights (CNDH), presented a workshop called: "Theoretical and Practical Tools for the Effective Search for Missing Persons".

The aim was for the families who have decided to make the search efforts, to have the conceptual and practical tools for such an activity, with a methodology that reduces security risks such as the alteration of the site find and /or crime scene.

Some of these citizens groups who are currently finding graves attended the workshop which was held on the premises of the National Commission of Human Rights (CNDH); which involved 35 families of victims, members of various social organizations, families of missing persons from the National Network links, formed by the Association for the Disappeared of Baja California, the Collective of Families of the Disappeared from Cordoba Orizaba, Veracruz; The Life Group, Coahuila; Justice for Our Daughters, Chihuahua; Others Missing, Guerrero; and United for Life-Bloodhounds, and Sinaloa Voices along with personnel of the Commission.

At the aforementioned workshop, they said that in the context of the establishment of the First National Brigade Search by the Relatives of Missing Persons Network Links, composed of searchers in solidarity from different states, that which will be accompanied by the Autonomous University of the State of Morelos, civil organizations, the media and people with a common purpose.

( to be continued 

TJ: Armed encounter in la Zona Norte

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Original article available at El Mexicano
Translated by El Wachito

An agent affiliated with the tourist police died and two others were wounded after engaging two armed men in la Zona Norte. 


The confrontation started when the officers order a compact vehicle to stop in Coahuila street adjacent to Avenida Ninos heroes however, the gunman ignored the orders and opened fire on the officers.


Federal police who were patrolling the area joined the persecution after the attack which ended in Colonia Cienega located by Bulevar Manuel J. Clouthier and Vía Rápida Poniente.

Agent Luis Martinez Escobar was reported dead by the Isstecali hospital in El Mirador around 6:55 am.

The criminals were identified as Alberto José Martínez Jeovani and Ricardo Rivera Daniel Pulido. Alberto is reported as seriously injured. Both of them are 24 years old.  According to official investigations, both men had recently crossed the border from San Diego to Tijuana with the assault rifles.


Sinaloa Cartel: Treasury Targets Tijuana-Based Cell, Cheyo Antrax, 3 others

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Translated by Yaqui for BorderlandBeat
El SudCaliforniano Sept 24, 2016


The United States Freezes Assets of Four Mexican With Ties to the Sinaloa Drug Cartel



On Friday September 23, 2016 the United States in Washington, D.C. sanctioned four Mexicans citizens accused of drug trafficking and/or money laundering for the Sinaloa Cartel.  The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) attached to the Treasury Department identified the Mexicans as:
Eliseo Imperial Castro, alias ''Cheyo Antrax'';
Lirio Alfonso Sotelo, alias "El Atlante''; 
Javier Lira Sotelo, alias ''El Hannibal'' or ''El Carnicero"; 
Alma Delia Lira Sotelo.
Cheyo, Mayito Gordo, and Chino Antrax 
The sanction orders the freezing of the assets of any accounts maintained in the United States and prohibits them from conducting any commercial or financial transactions. The Federal Court in Southern California filed charges against Eliseo Imperial Castro and Alfonso Sotelo for trafficking methamphetamine, cocaine, marijuana, and money laundering.

Eliseo Imperial Castro is the nephew of Ismael Zambada Garcia, one of the leaders of the Sinaloa Cartel, whom the White House designated as a dangerous drug trafficker in 2002 and for whose capture the U.S. is offering a five million dollar reward.

The Treasury Department said in a statement that Eliseo Imperial Castro is a fugitive and leader of Los Antrax, a group of gunmen of the Sinaloa Cartel.


Click on any image to enlarge

Sinaloa: Six bodies dumped in Mazatlán as violence heats up

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Borderland Beat Guest Reporter "Javier B"

Six bodies were found in Mazatlán, Sinaloa.

According to information published by the newspaper El Debate, the victims were discovered about 5:50am on General Cabanillas Street. A vehicle pulled to the street, stopped and dumped the bodies of 5 men and 1 woman, piled atop each other.

The deceased were blindfolded with duct tape with feet and hands bound. 5 have been identified, one of the men and the female are siblings. Only first names were publicized by authorities:

Alfredo "N" Raul "N" Miguel "N" and Caesar "N" are the names of the males, while the identity of the female is Sotera "N".

Reports reveal they had been kidnapped on Saturday.

The bodies all had multiple bullet impact wounds.

Sinaloa has experienced and uptick in violence, in the past months due to a power clash between El Chapo loyalists, versus Beltran Leyva.

Lest We Forget; It is 2nd Anniv. of Missing 43. Photo Essay

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Posted by DD from material from NBC, Telesur, and partially republished from Huffington Post

A banner with the faces of the 43 missing students hangs in Tixtla, Guerrero, on Feb. 6, 2014. It reads, “Tixtla and El Fortín support the families of the 43 disappeared Ayotzinapa students. They took them alive, we want them alive!”

Yesterday there were marches of human rights activist and protestors around the globe commemorating the 2nd anniversary of kidnapping and murder of students from the Ayotzinapa Normal School in Guerrero state in Mexico.  

Some people say this is old news (the disappearances and subsequent investigation by the government)  and why do we continue to dwell on it.  They say we should just move on because we may never know that really happened and the students are only a tiny fraction of the total number of disappearances in Mexico over the last decade.

In answer to them, there are many reasons why we cannot allow the case of the 43 (as it has become known as) to just become a statistic and forgotten with the passage of time.   Can you imagine the uproar that would shake the world if 43 students from an American university were kidnapped and disappeared. 

The emergence of a social movement with international reach is one of the few positive developments in the Ayotzinapa case over the last two years. "We are all part of a system," said the Mexican Catholic priest and human rights activist Alejandro Solalinde during a lecture at Barnard College in Manhattan on May 5, 2015. "If we analyze reality as scattered elements we won't find answers… But if we interpret everything as part of a larger system, then we will understand what is going on."   Solalinde described Ayotzinapa as  X-rays of Mexican politics. 

Amado Tlatempa, cousin of two of the 43 missing students—Jesús Jovany Rodríguez Tlatempa and José Eduardo Bartolo Tlatempa—believes that Ayotzinapa has elevated the moral conscience of Mexico, and will give people the courage to fight for their rights.
There are many human rights cases we still don't know about. But Ayotzinapa has opened a road to justice," Tlatempa told NBC Latino. 

"The mass kidnapping was really about silencing protestors, silencing an entire group of people, who are exposing what the government is doing bad," said Silvia García, a native from Mexico City marching in New York yesterday.

While the case of the missing "43" was at the heart of a march on Mexican Independence Day that the protestors were calling for the resignation of President Pena Nieto was not successful in getting him to resign, the lead investigator for the case in the Federal Attorney Generals office did resign this week.  Most commentators believe his resignation was the result of the embarrassment to the EPN administration over the now totally debunked government investigation.  (But as is typical in Mexican politics, within hours of his departure from the A/G's office he was appointed by EPN as an advisor to the National Security Council reporting directly to the President).

Keeping a light shined on the case of the 43 has not only resulted in the creation of a social movement, it has allowed other facts to emerge that further debunks the government version of events.




Accusations of torture, tampering with evidence, and a concerted government cover-up have also swirled around authorities.Telesur raises some interesting questions that have not been answered by the government.

"Mexican security forces managed to capture the world’s most-wanted drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman months after he escaped from high-security prison for the second time, but two years after 43 students from the Ayotzinapa teacher’s college went missing, authorities have failed to corner the cartel boss known as “El Caminante,” who played a leading role in the kidnapping and enforced disappearance of the students.

" According to an independent group of experts from the Inter-American Commission for Human Rights, local police in the town of Iguala alked on the phone with El Caminante at “critical times” throughout the night that the 43 youths disappeared from buses they had commandeered to attend a protest in Mexico City.

" An analysis of telephone calls conducted throughout the night by local police in Iguala and the neighboring town of Cocula, near the garbage dump where the government controversially claims the 43 students were incinerated, revealed some telling clues.

 "First, although Iguala police — who prosecutors accuse of kidnapping the students and handing them over to the local gang Guerreros Unidos to kill and burn in the dump — claim that they were in the police headquarters in the early hours of Sept. 27, 2014, phone records reveal at least three officers were out on patrol during critical hours in the case. GIEI experts questioned why government investigators have not addressed this inconsistency.

"Additionally, telephone records of Guerreros Unidos' gang members showed that their movements on the night of the disappearance did not match the alibis they provided in police statements. For example, one defendant claims that he was in the Cocula garbage dump — the most contested aspect of the government’s story — on the night of the kidnapping but his phone records suggest otherwise.

"Third, phone data analyzed by the GIEI show that at least two dozen police officer from Iguala Cocula were in contact with Guerreros Unidos member El Caminante during the night of Sept. 26 and early morning of Sept. 27. At least three Iguala officers communicated with El Caminante during what experts called “critical times during the chase and detention of the students.” Chief Fausto Bruno Heredia placed no fewer than 10 calls to El Caminante between 10:16 p.m. and 4:32 a.m. local time, which would suggest a high-level of coordination.

Critics of the state's official version of the events have noted that El Caminante's disappearance is convenient for a government that is widely believed to be complicit in the disappearance and likely murder of the 43 students.

Prosecutors have arrested more than 100 people in connection with the case, but convicted none. Dozens of the key witnesses upon whom the government based its claims were tortured, casting doubt on the reliability of their statements and likely making them inadmissible in a courtroom

Ayotzinapa has become an emblem of what many regard as government impunity and state collusion with criminal groups that has led to either the murder or disappearance of nearly 28,000 people since Mexico declared its war on drugs 12 years ago.

The persistence determination of the families of the missing 43 has been the leading force behind keeping the light shined on their disappearance.  The following is a photo essay republished from Huffington Post of what the search for the missing 43 looks like.

 Roque PlanasNational Reporter for The Huffington Post.

The family of missing student Julio César López Patolzin celebrates his 25th birthday on Jan. 29, 2015. His aunt and niece hold each other as a group of musicians play his favorite songs. 
When the news broke that Mexican police had attacked a group of students from a teachers college and abducted 43 of them on Sept. 26, 2014, photojournalist Emily Pederson was living in the southern Mexican city of Chiapas.

Though she was 300 miles away from Iguala, where the students were attacked, the case resonated with her. She kept seeing images of the students’ faces plastered on city walls as their disappearance became a symbol of impunity and drug war-fueled violence in Mexico.

“I witnessed the ramifications, even on people who were totally unconnected to the case,” Pederson told The WorldPost. “So eventually, I went to the school where they studied in Guerrero. I wasn’t sure what I was going to find there.”

What she found was a social movement centered around the families of the missing. Pederson spent the next two months with them, following them to meetings, traveling with them in a caravan to California and “just doing a lot of listening.”

Monday will mark the second year since the Ayotzinapa Normal School students were abducted. Their disappearance has become the highest-profile human rights case in a country where the government has a long history of “accusing innocent people to protect guilty ones,” in the words of investigative journalist Anabel Hernández.

One image Pederson views as emblematic of that legacy is a shot depicting three of the Ayotzinapa students above a poster of people disappeared during Mexico’s “dirty war” of the 1960s through 1980s.  

“A lot people really felt that connection,” Pederson said. “It was really felt as the latest in the long succession of not only a terrible drug war crime and tragedy, but a very highly charged political crime… The fact that this has been [the students’] fate is so representative of the whole trajectory of Mexican history up to this point.”

Drawings of Julio César Ramírez, Daniel Solís and Julio César Mondragón, the three Ayotzinapa students who were murdered during the Iguala attacks, on a poster at the Ayotzinapa Normal School on March 15, 2015. Below them, a poster shows images of Mexicans who disappeared during the “dirty war,” a period of intense state repression, enforced disappearances and extrajudicial executions between the 1960s and the 1980s. 
The Enrique Peña Nieto administration continues to cling to a thoroughly discredited account of what happened the night the students were attacked. Prosecutors have arrested more than 100 people in connection with the case, but convicted none. Dozens of the key witnesses upon whom the government based its claims were tortured, casting doubt on the reliability of their statements and likely making them inadmissible in a courtroom.

Independent journalists, a team of forensic specialists and two hefty reports by a group of experts fielded by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights all conclude that physical evidence contradicts the government’s version of events.

 Below are some of Pederson’s photos from her time with the families of the missing students. She is also working on a short film called “They Took Them Alive,” scheduled for release within the next two weeks. The film’s title is a nod to a chant yelled by family members and their supporters at demonstrations: “They took them alive, and alive we want them back.”

Posters of the 43 missing students cover the base of a statue in Chilpancingo, Guerrero, on March 5, 2015.

A citizen search organized by families of the missing students in the hills outside Iguala, Guerrero, on Jan. 16, 2015.
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Site of the attacks in the city of Iguala, Guerrero. Crosses on the ground mark where two Ayotzinapa students were shot. Parents of the missing students have posted phone numbers to call “if you know anything about our sons.” Feb. 13, 2015.


Epifanio Álvarez Carbajal and Blanca Luz Nava Vélez, parents of missing Ayotzinapa student Jorge Álvarez Nava, rest on the bus during a week of marching and organizing in Mexico City on Jan. 24, 2015.


Students comfort mothers of the 43 missing students at a rally at the Metropolitan Autonomous University in Mexico City on Jan. 23, 2015.

The number “43” lights up a family’s rooftop in Tixtla, Guerrero, on Feb. 1, 2015. Tixtla is home to the Ayotzinapa Normal School and 14 of its missing students.

Student survivors of the Iguala attacks and disappearances sit in the auditorium of the Ayotzinapa Normal School on March 16, 2015.


Bus stop at the Ayotzinapa Normal School. Grafitti on the structure reads, “Our protest is not violent, it is a political response to the poverty, exploitation and violence generated by the government.”


DD:  We cannot allow the memory of the 43 to end up like this.




All the photos shown here are from Emily Pederson collection.  More can be seen on Huffington Post.  She is also working on a short film called “They Took Them Alive,” scheduled for release within the next two weeks.

Chapitos & CJNG fight for the Heroin Crown

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Translated by Chuck B Almada for Borderland Beat from an El Debate article
Sunday 25, September, 2016

According to a DEA spokesperson, Sinaloa Cartel and CJNG have fought several battles in the USin a fight for territory.


United States- Despite their leader’s capture, the Sinaloa Cartel, which is now presumably under the command of Chapo’s sons, continues to be one of the major threats towards the USas the trafficking of heroin continues to increase. During an interview, DEA spokesperson, Russell K. Baer said that Sinaloa Cartel and CJNG are fighting for the crown of heroin in the US, a territory which was dominated by Colombian groups in the past.

 ”El Chapo might be in custody and perhaps even stripped from power, but his sons are very involved in the criminal activities of the cartel” says Baer

 Mexico is also being fought in the US, where CJNG has increased its wealth, influence, and ability to traffic drugs.


According to the spokesperson of the DEA, the heads of one of the factions of the Sinaloa Cartel are the two sons of El Chapo: Ivan Archivaldo Guzman AKA El Chapito, and Jesus Alfredo Guzman AKA El Afredillo (Alfredillo was kidnapped and eventually freed by CJNG last month). Despite the fight between both cartels, the group native of La Tuna, Badiraguato, Sinaloa continues being the group that has circulated the most drugs in American territory. For this same reason, the fight that these two cartels have fought in



 According to the DEA, during the last few years, Mexican cartels have now taken over the role that Colombian cartels such as Medellinand Cali used to have during decades in the past. Historically, the heroin market in the UShad been divided by the Mississippi river with Mexican brown or black heroin in the west and white heroin in the east. The white heroin was first introduced from Asia and then from Colombiabetween 1997 and 2010 according to the latest DEA report published in June.


 Despite this, Mexican cartels have learned how to produce white heroin in the last few years and have become the most powerful suppliers of some major cities in the east coast such as Chicago, Philadelphia, and Washington. This has almost caused the complete elimination of the traditional Mississippiline that separated the types of heroin. Its new power in the drug market is such that in 2014, 79% of the heroin analyzed by the DEA originated from Mexico. With the Colombian groups almost wiped off the map, Mexican criminals have found an unexpected ally in China, according to Baer.

 The DEA spokesperson said that the criminals from Mexicoand China are responsible for the arrival of fentanyl to the US. Fentanyl is an extremely potent analgesic that is between 30 and 50 times stronger than heroin (fentanyl is what is suspected of causing the overdose and subsequent death of singer Prince).

“Fentanyl is being manufactured primarily in clandestine Chinese labs. We also believe that fentanyl is being manufactured in Mexicoas well. We are seeing Mexican cartels working along with Chinese collaborators to introduce heroin and fentanyl to the US” said Baer.

With the intention of tackling this problem, 14 DEA agents recently traveled to Peking and other provinces in Chinato meet with a delegation of high ranking Chinese officials. That same Chinese delegation came to the USand met with members of the government, according to Baer. In its latest report, DEA highlighted the threat that heroin represents and that it has continued to increase since 2007 and that in 2014 alone, 10,574 Americans died as a result of an overdose involving this drug. According to authorities, more Americans die from heroin overdoses than from firearms or traffic accidents.

Lawyer for 'El Chapo' Guzman says he has proof Mexican drug lord is being tortured

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Posted by Chuck B Almada Republished from Fox News Latino
Written by Carmen M. Llona (Fox News Latino)
Monday , 26 September, 2016

In a shocking claim, the lawyer for Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman said he has proof the Mexican drug lord is being tortured in prison.

Jose Refugio Rodriguez, Guzman’s lawyer, told Fox News Latino on Monday that he handed Guzman’s psychiatric evaluation to a judge to prove that his client is suffering from acute isolation – which he claims is a form of torture.

"Cruel and unusual treatment is torture," Rodriguez said.

Guzman, who is currently being held in a federal prison on the outskirts of Ciudad Juarez, presents symptoms of “generalized anxiety disorder and mild neurocognitive impairment” which “prove that he is being submitted to mistreatment during his incarceration,” the medical report obtained by Fox News Latino said.


Guzman’s legal team is fighting for its notorious client to be moved back to the maximum security El Altiplano prison in Central Mexico. The cartel king famously escaped from El Altiplano through a mile-long tunnel in July of 2015. He was recaptured in January.

“We requested this evaluation by an expert so steps can be taken so that he is not isolated anymore,” the lawyer said.



The two-hour evaluation was conducted by Dr. Julio Cesar Ayuzo Gonzales on Aug. 24.

In the report, Ayuzo said Guzman is taking medication for his anxiety but believes the drug kingpin should be seen by mental health specialists.

“I found the evaluated male seemingly older than his chronological age, fit, well preserved, clean, wearing clean clothes provided by the institution," Ayuzo wrote.

"He was oriented as for place and circumstance, but not so when it came to the date; he was sitting on a chair, he could not stay in the same position during the interview, he did little eye contact with his interviewer; his language was coherent; he speaks fast, in low volume and quantity; his affects appeared flat and incongruous, describe as 'I am not well'; his train of thought is linear, logical, with a tendency to perseverance; he denied the presence of suicidal or death ideation."

The doctor said Guzman is also having “auditory hallucinations.”

Guzman's lawyers have complained in the past that guards are so concerned about the drug lord escaping that they wake him up every hour to make sure he’s in his cell. They also have complained that he’s being kept in isolation.

The government insists  special security measures are needed following Guzman's escape last year – his second prison break.

Lawyers have filed appeals seeking to prevent Guzman's extradition to the United States, where he faces drug-trafficking, money-laundering, weapons and murder charges.

An armed commando belonging to el Chapo took control over a Beltran Leyva stronghold PART 2

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Translated by El Wachito for Borderland Beat Original article available at Riodoce, 9.25.16

By Miguel Angel Vega, reporting for Riodoce


The Guzman supremacy positioned itself through the war they were waging since June from this year against the Beltran Leyva Cartel, due to the operations conducted by Aureliano Guzman Loera "El Guano" and his gunman. After a firefight that lasted hours, Guano's gunman were able to take control of the town.


Huixiopa welcome sign
 

Huixiopa is the land where notorious drug trafficker Juan Jose Esparragoza Moreno "El Azul" was born, and it was from there where the commandos that took control over la Tuna and stormed the house of doña Consuelo Loera, mother of Joaquin el Chapo Guzman, were dispatched, resulting in the beginning of the new war.



According to persons interviewed by Riodoce, not only was the town that was considered the operations center of the Beltran Leyva taken by Guanos gunman, but the site was also completely secured and surrounded and the number of casualties remains unknown, not even the municipal government or the Procudaruria General Del Estado (PGJE), have reported deaths in Badiraguato.

"There has to be corpses laying around everywhere" stated a resident from La Tuna, who from mid June was forced to abandon la Tuna because of fears of becoming a victim from the firefights between the two armed commandos.

Once the town was taken over by Guano's gunman they spray painted Huixiopa's welcome sign with legends such as "Pura Gente de Guzman" and "#701" which makes a reference to el Chapo Guzman.


The roads are empty

In order to make it to La Tuna, land of Joaquin el Chapo Guzman, is necessary to make it through Badiraguato, then Santiago los Caballeros, Temeapa, all the way to where the asphalt ends in Bocacoragua. From there the dirt road begins.

map taken from google maps



There were rumors that in the next town, Huixiopa, the clashes between the Guzman and Beltran Leyva continue to happen, and the order to visit the area to confirm the information was given to Riodoce news.

After three hours traveling, and just before making it into Huixiopa an armed commando of 12 man armed with automatic rifles, stopped the SUV where the journalists were traveling.

An while the armed sicarios pointed their rifles at the SUV, supposedly to prevent any surprises, other two gunman approach the driver and asked who was in the SUV and where they were heading.

"We are Riodoce reporters", stated the passengers.

The gunman doubted the passengers for a couple of minutes, then they proceeded to ask for their press ID cards to confirm that they were in fact journalists, after observing the pictures, one of them stepped away to request instructions through their radio frequencies.

The other gunman that stayed with the driver ask him how far we were trying to go and the driver responded; to Huixiopa, to which the gunman responded with an expression of indifference.

A few minutes later, the gunman that stepped away to request instructions came back and requested the journalist to step down of the vehicle, and order them to wait under a tree on the side of the road.

Armed to the teeth

They were carrying AK47s, the famous "cuernos de chivos", with drum magazines, body armor, grenades, handguns tucked into their waist, magazines, and wearing ball caps with the #701 emblem which make a reference to el Chapo.

With the intent to confirm, the journalist dared to ask the gunman if they were "people of Guzman or the Beltran Leyva".

The gunman stepped away, in order to avoid the question, but at the end he stated that all of them were Guzman's people, and that they were fighting la plaza. Then, the one in charge of the gunman told the journalist:
"Its dangerous to be here because this is a war zone, and the "Cohetazos"(gunshots) can start at any moment. You shouldn't be here".

"The thing is that this is a war zone, and we cannot be responsible for you".

Suddenly we were interrupted by the sound of an engine coming towards us and the gunman quickly took defensive positions while ordering us to do the same, it was possible that it could be gunman from the enemy faction and the order was to attack.

After a few seconds, a 4 cylinder ford truck appeared with a couple on board. They were detained and questioned, however the couple explained that they were Arroyo Seco residents, and were allowed to proceed.

"The war is not against civilians or the government, its against the Beltran Leyva; those are going to get shot whenever we see them", claimed the gunman.

How many casualties have been registered during the firefights?, he was asked.
A lot

—How many are a lot?
Hundreds. This is a war, and where war happens there's casualties.

—Their casualties (Beltran Leyva) or yours?
Both sides have lost man.

—Who's winning the war?
We have taken control over the whole main zone. We have also taken control of the town they were controlling. That's all I can say.

—Did you guys know we were coming?
Since you guys made it through Bacacoragua we were told that a black SUV with a woman and a man on board, was heading towards us. Since then we were given an status on you every 5 minutes.

—Are there any civilians left on the town?
No

—Why?
All of them left. The war is not against the people.


In that moment a white Toyota Tacoma, with no car plates arrived at scene; one of the passengers stepped down, and order the journalist to come back from where they came from, "the area is hot and you guys could run into danger. We still have Beltran Leyva people around here and its dangerous to be here".Stated the gunman.

—We just want to take pictures of the burned houses that people are talking about and we leave.
Forgive us but that will not be possible. For your security, we ask you to leave immediatelystated the passenger of the white Tacoma.

And that was everything that could be negotiated. The white Tacoma escorted us all the way to the exit of the town, to make sure that we leave without incidents.

The Hysteria


Reports from the residents that ran away from the town many days ago, suggest that the clashes have occurred daily, and that the armed conflict seems to go in favor of the Guzman Loera family.


"Its our territory, and its difficult for the Beltran Leyva to finance a war during a long period of time", stated a Guzman Loera family member, who ask Riodoce to not reveal his identity.


Others claim that Ismael el Mayo Zambada decided to become involved and asked Alfredito Beltran, to calm down, and that is the reason as to why the situation deescalated.


The truth is that the residents of the area are still not able to go back to their homes for fear that the clashes continue, even though General Moises Melo Garcia, coordinator of the state security, claimed that a military base will be installed in Huixiopa for the "security of the residents".


"The problem is that we do not believe in the government; but we could use them for something", said Armida Alvarez, a former resident of Huixiopa who moved to Culiacan to escape the violence in Huixiopa.


At the moment, or at least during last week, there was no presence of government in the area. Throughout the route traveled by Riodoce on their way to Huixiopa, we did not find a single element that represented the government. At any level.

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