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Border Patrol Agent guilty of engaging in organized criminal activity, acquitted of murder in Padre Island decapitation case.

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Posted by DD from material at El Paso Proud  and Texas Tribune and Borderland Beat archives


contents of Joel Luna's big black safe


In the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas a Cameron County jury on Tuesday (today) found Border Patrol Agent Joel Luna guilty of engaging in organized criminal activity but acquitted him of the murder charge that could have put him in prison for life without the chance of parole. He is expected to be sentenced to 20 years in the state penitentiary.



His younger brother Eduardo, an alleged hitman for the Gulf Cartel, was convicted on all four counts, including capital murder. He was given a mandatory life sentence without parole. Prosecutors had already taken the death penalty off the table in the case.
Eduardo Luna

Both Luna men were on trial for the same four counts, which included engaging in drug trafficking and organized crime — and murdering a would-be snitch who threatened to rat them out. The body of the victim, Franky Palacios, was found naked and decapitated in the waters off South Padre Island almost two years ago.  


His common law widow, Martha Sanchez, gave a tearful statement  after the verdicts were announced.

"The violent assassination of my husband Franky changed my life forever," Sanchez said in Spanish. "I lost peace, tranquility and the feeling of purpose in my life.”

During the trial Sanchez was portrayed as hostile to her common law husband. The state’s star witness — the elder Luna brother, Fernando — testified that he had received text messages from Sanchez calling Franky a "fucking traitor" and warning that he was going to divulge the drug trafficking operation to law enforcement. 

Fernando said he forwarded her texts to Eduardo the day before the alleged hitman shot Franky in the head at an Edinburg tire shop, and prosecutors described the messages as a major catalyst for the murder.

 
Because it involved a U.S. Border Patrol agent, the case stoked concerns about federal law enforcement corruption along the U.S.-Mexico border. After the verdict was announced, Joel Luna waived his right to have the jury decide his punishment and agreed to a 20-year sentence. The sentencing is scheduled for March 2.

The federal agent, who had been on "indefinite suspension" at the U.S. Border Patrol before and during the trial, also waived his right to appeal as part of the agreement.

 “I think what comes out of this for the public is the evils of drugs and money and corruption," said Assistant District Attorney Gustavo Garza, who prosecuted the case. "Eventually this country is going to have to deal with its insatiable appetite for illegal drugs. It doesn't lead to anything good for the society.”

Asked if the verdict left the U.S. Border Patrol with a black eye, Garza said, "Any time that you have a peace officer who has sworn to uphold the law and protect the public and then goes rogue — that is not a good experience for the organization." 

Joel Luna's attorney, Carlos Garcia, said he was disappointed.

"I thought that through the state's witnesses we were able to pretty much establish uncontradicted that my client had been put in a bad spot by his delinquent brothers, and his brothers did everything they could to keep secret from my client their wrongdoing," Garcia said. He said Luna's family was "devastated."

"They were living the American dream," he said.
**************
On November 7, 2015, Borderland Beat reported in a story posted by Texcoco De Mora  about the arrest and charges against Border Patrol Agent Joel Luna in connection with the beheading of a Honduran man in March.

On July 6, 2016, Borderland Beat republished a story from  Center for Investigative Reporting, this story focuses on law enforcement corruption and gives much more detail on the South Padre Island decapitation story.

These are excerpts from that reporting.

 


SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, Texas – It looked like a crab trap floating in the calm waters of Laguna Madre, just off South Padre Island. At least, that’s what the man who spotted it while boating with his two daughters would tell police.

But when he poked the floating mass with a pole, he discovered otherwise. He dialed 911 and told the South Padre Island Police Department what he’d found: “a headless body floating in the bay.”

Blood still was dripping from the neck when Cameron County Sheriff’s Deputy Ulises Martinez arrived, he later would report. It looked to him like the head “had been cut off with one swift motion with a fine, sharp cutting instrument.”

The grisly discovery came at a busy time on the island. It was March 16, 2015, the frenzied start of Texas Week, when thousands of spring-breaking college students descend on Padre to guzzle from beer bongs and get rowdy. Maybe one drank too much, fell in the water and collided with the wrong end of a propeller-driven barge?

That was an early theory, but Cameron County Sheriff Omar Lucio, with more than a half-century in law enforcement, sensed something more sinister.

“We’re just across the border from Matamoros,” he said. Investigators couldn’t find the man’s head, and there were other suspicious cuts on the body. Mexican drug cartel payback often comes at the end of a fine, sharp cutting instrument, Lucio observed.

“It’s just kind of the way that they handle people,” he said. “They take revenge that way.”
Luckily, the body still had hands. Using a portable fingerprint reader from U.S. Homeland Security Investigations, police quickly matched the prints to Jose Francisco Palacios Paz.


Before he was found naked and decapitated days after his 33rd birthday, Palacios – “Franky” to his friends – worked at Veteran’s Tire Shop in Edinburg, one county over. In no time, authorities came to suspect that tire repair wasn’t the only thing going on there. It’s where they think Franky – about to rat out a drug trafficking operation with links to the powerful Mexican Gulf Cartel – met his end.

Over the ensuing weeks, the investigation led authorities on a meandering journey through the Gulf Cartel’s internal bloodletting, featuring tales of a supposed double-crossing cartel hitman, a U.S.-born narco-turned-folk legend and a major mafia capo nicknamed “Commander Pussy” now locked up in a federal prison in Beaumont. And by last summer, they had arrested four of Franky’s tire shop associates on murder and drug trafficking charges.

With fall trials expected, authorities say they have turned up the familiar markings of mafia muscle and hardball tactics that experts have come to associate with 21st-century cartel warfare – complete with a severed head supposedly secreted off to Mexico to prove a snitch was dead.

All of which would sound familiar to anyone versed in Gulf Cartel etiquette, had it not been for one late-breaking and quite unexpected development: the alleged involvement and eventual arrest of a U.S. Border Patrol agent.

......
Dirty cops and dirty Border Patrol agents are nothing new. More than 130 officers employed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection have been caught in alleged acts of mission-compromising corruption – often by letting drugs, undocumented immigrants or both into the country – over the past decade. While that’s a tiny fraction of the total number of agents, report after report has suggested the known cases may be the tip of the iceberg.

Still, even hardened South Texas lawmen long accustomed to cartel violence were surprised by Luna’s indictment for murder — a cartel-inspired beheading no less. How did a decorated Iraq War veteran sworn to protect the U.S. border end up in an orange jumpsuit potentially facing life in prison?

For weeks, homicide detectives, including an investigator from the Texas Rangers, attempted to answer that question.

Even the circumstances of Joel Luna’s birth are a matter of dispute. He has a U.S. birth certificate indicating he was born in San Juan, Texas, on May 20, 1985, which would have been found during his initial vetting process with the Border Patrol. But authorities recently discovered a Mexican birth certificate for him, issued in Reynosa, Mexico, three years after his birth was reported in the United States. The discovery prompted authorities to place a detainer on Luna at the Cameron County jail, meaning if he is ever set to be released from custody, federal agents can hold him for possible deportation.

Joel is on the right
His lawyer and family members say that Joel was born in Texas and that — like many kids who grew up along the border — his parents later obtained a Mexican birth certificate to meet school admission requirements.
 
Joel mostly grew up in Reynosa, at least through elementary school — and after that on weekend visits. His cousin Maria Lepe called him a “very honest kid” who did his best to care for an ailing, diabetic father.

Joel was about 12 when his parents sent him to live with Palomo in Hidalgo County, where he stayed for less than two years before moving again with associates of his father, his aunt said.

Joel was drawn to ROTC, and in high school, commanders took him under their wings, giving him rides back and forth to class, Palomo recalled. It surprised no one in his family when he joined the Army after graduating from Pharr-San Juan-Alamo High School. He served in Iraq and earned a number of honors, including the coveted Expert Infantryman Badge.

Joel’s achievements were a source of pride for the extended family. He’d gone farther than his brothers in school. Honorably discharged from the Army in 2008, he entered on duty with the U.S. Border Patrol in 2009 and in a few years was working at a highway checkpoint an hour north of the border in Hebbronville. Joel never forgot about his family in Mexico, helping care for his father until he died in 2011.

According to court records, Sanchez’s 13-year-old son told investigators that he saw “stacks of dollars brought from Reynosa, Mexico” and had seen “marijuana inside (PlayStation) games at the tire shop.” The teenager also said Franky had told him “that he was a Gulf Cartel member and that they would chop off heads.” Another girlfriend said he had boasted of smuggling immigrants into Texas.

When investigators showed up at Veteran’s Tire Shop the day after the body was found, they identified at least three people who worked there: Aaron Rodriguez Medellin, 23, whom everyone called “El Guero;” Nestor Manuel Leal, 19; and Eduardo Luna, 25. The shop was co-owned by Fernando Luna, 35 – Eduardo Luna’s older brother.   The murder victim also worked there prior to his death.

Later DNA testing revealed the blood found on the walls of the tireshop was from the body of Franky Palacios, the Honduran whose headless body was pulled out of the shallow bay by South Padre Island. 

The Luna brothers’ cellphones yielded clues and mysteries that, over time, would help investigators flesh out the story of Franky’s murder.

Text messages in Spanish were sent the day before Franky went missing from Fernando’s phone to Eduardo’s phone, and they alerted police to a possible motive.

“This Franky is a fucking traitor,” one of them read. Another warned that “at any moment he is going to snitch on you,” court affidavits indicate. A third, possibly garbled and using improper syntax, said Franky “is going around saying and your brother sells drugs.” The identity of the brother isn’t specified.

.....when a Border Patrol agent winds up in jail on murder charges, it raises a few questions. Why didn’t federal authorities find his conflicting birth certificates? The nation’s largest federal law enforcement agency long has been dogged with questions about loose vetting procedures during and after hiring.

How did the agency allow one of its own to stay on the job months after his two brothers were arrested for murder and more than two years after he alerted them to a Gulf Cartel threat against his family? Why didn’t the $42,000 bank deposit by his wife’s half sister — now said to be drug money — set off any alarms?

The Border Patrol referred all questions about Luna’s case to the the U.S. attorney’s office in Houston, where spokeswoman Angela Dodge declined to comment.

 Generally speaking, the Border Patrol doesn’t include checks of any foreign databases, including criminal records or birth certificates, said agency spokesman Carlos Diaz. During the hiring process and every five years, the agency looks at financial information, such as “unexplained affluence,” but he didn’t say how deep into family members the checks go.

 Gus Garza, the lead prosecutor in Joel Luna's case said that as far as he is concerned, the alleged criminal act of one Border Patrol agent doesn’t tar the entire agency. But the fact that investigators are connecting a federal official sworn to secure the border to a Mexican cartel hit job – executed on U.S. soil – worries him a great deal.

“Of all the cases I’ve prosecuted, murder case, etc., this represents a step higher,” Garza said. “I’ve seen and I continue to see a move, an effort, to bring the culture of violence from across the river to South Texas. … The message is, ‘Don’t squeal. Don’t finger anyone. Don’t identify anyone, or you are going to get beheaded.’ “

********
DD;  Read the full story of the evidence accumulated against Joel Luna in the Borderland Beat story.  including the clincher that probably sealed his fate- the "big black safe" which Luna purchased at "Sams" that when opened contained drugs, his commemorative  Border Patrol badge, nearly $100,000 cash, and a gold plated engraved 1911-style .38-caliber Super pistol – a model frequently associated with cartel assassins
stamped with “Cartel del Golfo” on one side and the likeness of St. Judas on the other,  Embossed on the handle was the word .“Pajaro” ("Bird") .  Joel Luna's brother Eduardo was nicknamed "Pajaro".

"EL Lobo"Hodoyan of the CAF gains his freedom

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Zetatijuanaarticle

Subject Matter: Alfredo Hodoyan Palacios
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required


Reporter: Zeta Investigations
After 20 years in prison, Alfredo Hodoyan Palacios, of the Arellano Felix cartel, won an amparo and his liberty. He was exonerated of a quadruple homicide of Federal Agents and a Taxi driver in Mexico City in 1996. Before a Judge had condemned him to 50 years in prison. Statements made against him by persons including Everardo " Kitty " Paez were declared void. "El Lobo" was imprisoned in three Federal Penitentiaries the last of which was Cefereso # 15 in Chiapas. (Otis: El Lobo was one of the infamous "CAF narco juniors", most cartels recruit from the poor and working classes, the narco juniors were sons of well to do families from Tijuana, the narco juniors sought power and status through a life of crime with the Arellano Felix clan).

In 2002, a Judge condemned him to 50 years in prison. He was imprisoned for 20 years in maximum security prisons like Altiplano, also in Tamaulipas and Chiapas. Today he saw Tijuana again, his city, where he had a relation with the Arellano Felix brothers, who he knew since his childhood.

The First Tribunal in Penal Matters of the Second Circuit, with residence in Toluca, Mexio State, conceded an amparo promoted by Miguel Alfredo Hodoyan Palacios and with it his liberty. The Judge of Guarantees left with effect the sentence for the homicides of four persons and associated crimes.



The protection of the Federal Judgment that arrived for the nicknamed "El Lobo" advertised the existence of illicit proof in the penal cause that was brought in 1996. He was accused of qualified homicide by the sub delegation of Federal Judicial Police in Tijuana. Ernesto Ibarra Santes, two of his colleagues and a taxi driver in Mexico City, as well as belonging to the Cartel Arellano Felix.

According to the ruling by the Judges by majority, not unanimously, " even when the crimes were credited, the responsibility of the claimant was not demonstrated in the commission of the crimes, as this was said in different statements of the co-guilty that were collected in violation of the right to an adequate defense".

For what was seen as criminal association, two of the magistrates arrived at the conclusion of that " it was not proven either the elements of the crime or the criminal responsibility of the complainant, because this was held with the statements of the co-accused and the public documentary, one of whom practised in the United States of America, whose demonstrative effectiveness was affected because they did not give notice of the availability of the assistance of counsel".

The start witness statement was given by a sicario of a criminal organization, Everardo Arturo Paez Martinez "El Kitty", detained by the PGR in November of 1997 and extradited to the United States at the start of May of 2001. "El Kitty" was involved in the assassination of the Federals.

In the divided judgment of the Superior Court, a Judge voted against the resolution and did not share in the majority decision. That judicial officer believes that there is a "collision of rights and a possible diplomatic conflict, therefore I think that the best thing is to request of the Supreme Court of Justice of the nation to exercise its power of attraction".

Benjamin and Ramon Arellano Felix
That is to say, the trial should not have been resolved in the court. Or in its defect, is pointed out the dissident Judge, it was possible to grant to amparo for "effects" and not the " plain and simple" judgment", as it finally happened. According to the Judge it was right to "outlaw those statements in which those persons were not made aware of their right to an adequate defense".

Doctor Santes

With the amparo obtained, "El Lobo" Hodoyan was freed of the accusation of the assassination of the Doctor Ernesto Ibarra Santes, a man seen as incorruptible, commissioned by the PGR to the plaza of Tijuana, to diminish the operations of the CAF. It was "El Yankie", as he was called the Commander in Chief of the State, of the then PJF and who was administratively called Deputy.

 The death of the Doctor by profession, but a Policeman by vocation, happened on September the 14th of 1996, only two days after the arrest of the brother of Miguel Alfredo, Alejandro Hodoyan Palacios, who was eventually held at military installations and handed over to the DEA in the United States, to finally disappear, and to date his whereabouts are unknown.

Ibarra Santes had flown that morning to Mexico City to meet with the PGR. At the airport he took a taxi accompanied by two Federal agents, Israel Moreno flores and Juan Aaron Rosas Gallegos. When they were travelling down the Avenue Insurgentes on the corner of Gomez Farias, they were attacked with gunfire from different angles by an armed commando were waiting for them. The thee policeman died together with the taxi driver Juan Arturo Hernandez Lizarde.


Investigations launched by the authorities arrived at the conclusion that the attack was orchestrated by the brothers Ramon and Benjamin Arellano Felix, who were disgusted at the persecution that he had initiated against them, and his discourse before the press, where he affirmed he was finished with them.

Among the suspect of the quadruple homicide were ex military Gerardo Cruz Pacheco "El Capitan, the gunman Francisco Cabrera Castra "El Piedra", and Miguel Alfredo Hodoyan Palacios.  (Otis: also suspected was Fabian Martines Gonzalez "El Tiburon"). The first were apprehended months after by the PGR, and sent to Cefereso #1 Altiplano. El Lobo was captured in the United States together with Emilio Valdez Mainero "El Radioloco", they were extradited to Mexico in January of 1998 and also sent to Altiplano at Almoloya de Juarez.

In September of 2002, a Judge of the Federal Penal Processes in Mexico State found El Lobo, La Piedra and El Capitan guilty, and sentenced them all to 50 years in maximum security prison. On top of that El Lobo was given in total 176 years in prison including a fine of 17,500 pesos in compensation to the families of the dead taxi driver and relatives of the Federal policemen.

Emilio Valdez, who was also convicted of criminal association, was the first to leave Altiplano after three years. Immediately he devoted himself to a legal battle in Tijuana to recover the property seized at the time by the Federal Attorney General.

In Tamaulipas

Owing to events happening at Altiplano prison between members of the CAF and people of Osiel Cardenas Guillen, in 2004, Alfredo Hodoyan was sent to Cefereso #3 Santa Adelaida, in Matamoros, where he stayed for more than a decade.

The amparos promoted by El Lobo were constant, firstly because he wanted to return to Altiplano, after disciplinary sanctions restricting the sale of various products in the Federal prison shop.

The last years he spent in Tamaulipas were more tranquil. His amparos were more for the claim of rights than any punishments he was receiving. Thus, in 2009 when he was denied access to the delivery of documents related to his defence drafted by his lawyers, through the family. After that were a litany of complaints because he allegedly was not receiving sufficient quantity of food.

The penitentiary authorities responded to his demands by saying that the inmate Hodoyan was proportioned food sufficient in quality and quantity and that the food standards were supervised by a nutritionist, before and after their preparation.

Since his arrival at Matamoros prison, El Lobo had difficulties with the administrative authorities. He had an obsession to watch TV, and promoted such in his amparos. Since 2004 one was authorized and was taken to the prison by family members. He retained the right to keep his TV and received various TV's until 2011, when due to a disciplinary sanction, it was removed, along with his electrical socket, headphones and aerial.

El Lobo had ten days of punishment for disturbing the peace in the prison and failure to follow the instructions of the prison guards. He could not leave his cell during those ten days or receive visits from family or other inmates. His TV was removed for 6 months, during which time his conduct was being assessed. His alleged infringement was being naked in front of the other inmates, but before the disciplinary council he defended himself by saying after taking a shower, he had a fit of coughing and dropped his towel.

Months passed and his tv was not returned, while authorities monitored his behavior, to his dismay in 2013, the authorities denied his amparo and removed all of his electronic equipment.

In Chiapas

Owing to the closure of Cefereso #3 Noreste, in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, for remodelling, Hodoyan was transferred in November of 2015 to Cefereso #15 in Villa Comaltitlan, Chiapas. while other prisoners were transferred to other prisons in the country.

He now had a stay in a more tranquil prison, but as always he attempted to reclaim his rights and stimuli. In March of 2016 he complained that the prison authorities gave no response to his multiple requests, like authorizing his lawyers in the visits register.

In the Courts of Tapachula district he promoted more than a dozen amparos in the of "Lobo". In April past he claimed that the penitentiary personnel did not apportion him more food and liquids and did not enter judicial documentation, and that he lacked medical attention.

In June he promoted four amparos. He insisted about his lack of medical attention and inadequate food and drink, he was granted a protection of justice for proportioning of the medical diet that he required. Another demand was promoted for segregation and isolation, and more that he was denied the ability to exercise within his cell, and the usual refusal of authorities to allow him to watch tv. In this last request and in another he received permission to do outdoor exercise in an amparo granted by Judges.

July past he claimed he had been held incommunicado and in November he promoted an amparo of guarantees not to be transferred to any other prison. This amparo judgment was pending, and the constitutional hearing was dated for January the 20th 2017, being a few days before the close of this edition he gained his freedom.

Original article in Spanish at Zetatijuana

The following is not part of the original Zeta article and is some background info by OBFW from a New York Times article for Clarin on"who El Lobo" is, and some of his history prior to imprisonment.

when the man in the video tape started to reveal the secrets of the most violent gang of narco traffickers in Mexico, he could not hide his nervousness. Alejandro Enrique Hodoyan had been a junior member though well positioned in the organization of narco traffickers. He recounts form the centre of the scene and relates with a pausing voice how his brother and a circle of friends from infancy united into a criminal gang that killed dozens of policemen, Judges, rivals in the business of drugs and innocents.

Killing was a game for them, Hodoyan told Mexican investigators. They had no remorse, after killing someone, they would laugh and go to dinner. His testimony included in eight hours of video tape and more than 200 pages of transcriptions, is seen on some sides  of the border as a step forward in the fight against narco traffickers in Mexico.

The Mexican functionaries said that his revelations already accelerated the renunciations against dozens of police officials accused  of having links to the organization with base in Tijuana, headed by the Arellano Felix. Hodoyan, a North-American citizen who was born in San Diego, and lived the major part of his life on the other side of the border in Tijuana, was kidnapped, and detained illegally for eight days by officials from the Mexican Army.

After he told his family how he was tortured with electrical probes. North-American diplomats were advised about Hodoyan a short while after he was imprisoned, but they did nothing to help him. When his family reported him as missing, an anti-narcotics agent from the Embassy of USA defended their handling of the case by saying that Hodoyan had not complained at any time of being tortured before any American official in Mexico.

The story of the experiences of Hodoyan were collated from interviews with his family, US officials in Mexico and the Mexican Courts who knew him as an informant. In December 1996, the military who supervised his interrogation handed him over to the US appointed principal officer on drugs in Mexico, who was appointed partly because of his success achieved in the fight against drug trafficking using information supplied by Hodoyan.

Two months after, this official, General Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, was imprisoned accused of collaboration with Amado Carrillo Fuentes, El Senor de los Cielos, the fallen leader of the Juarez Cartel. The Mexican functionaries suspected that a grand part of the information extracted by the General was given into the hands of Carrillo Fuentes. Since then, the army increased its investigations into another thirty-three officials, including four Generals, on charges of corruption and narcotics.

The Hodoyan brothers were from a good family, they were not good candidates for a career for a life in crime. Their mother, Cristina, of 55 years was a devoted Catholic from a honourable Mexican family. His father, Alejandro Hodoyan Ramirez, 63, was a civil engineer very respected in Mexico.

The Hodoyans hoped to raise their children with the best of American and Mexican cultures. His three sons and only daughter were born in San Diego, but the family lived on the other side of the border in Tijuana, a city where drug trafficking, worth billions of dollars in recent years was an attraction, even for young people with good educations.

The Hodoyan children grew up in the discos of Tijuana where teens experimented with cocaine in the manner of wealthy young Americans. Mixing with Mexican gangs whose stars were rising in the sale of cocaine. One of the most rapid was Ramon Arellano, a gang known to members of the Hodoyan family in the high society of Tijuana.

It was summer, but Ramon had put on a Mink jacket and leather trousers. He wore a thick choker chain with a large gold cross encrusted with emeralds, said a Hodoyan relative, everyone was asking who he was. Mexican courts described Arellano as a compulsive murderer who killed for pleasure and who had been involved in more than 60 homicides.

He and his brothers began their careers as provincial drug dealers, but shot and bullied their way to seize control of drug smuggling along a western swath of the USA-Mexican border. One by one friends of the Hodoyans since childhood were drawn into the Arellanos circle of riches and violence.

Fabian Martinez Gonzalez, a grade school classmate of Alex Hodoyan younger sister grew up to become "El Tiburon", or the shark, He is accused of being one of the Arellanos most feared gunman and was wanted for murder in Mexico.

Fabian Martinez Gonzalez "El Tiburon"

In Tijuana the Arellanos bought their way in the cream of society, in a normal situation, a family like the Hodoyans would never find themselves involved with traffickers.

And a little background from the New York Times on Ernest Ibarra Santes

The 50-year-old Ibarra had taken over the notoriously corrupt Tijuana federal police force just 29 days earlier and quickly became an outspoken critic of corruption among his own troops. He was the sixth senior law enforcement official from the city to be gunned down under mysterious circumstances this year.
The series of high-profile slayings has highlighted the growing violence of the Mexican drug wars. But it also has fueled conspiracy theories that government officials and rogue law enforcement agents -- as well as powerful drug lords who have long controlled the gritty city just south of San Diego -- may be involved in the murders.
None of the six killings has been solved. Ibarra, an 11-year veteran of the Mexican federal police force, was a classic example of a police officer with enemies on both sides of law. As a result, the circumstances of his death were all the murkier. They were compounded by government reports that $50,000 in cash was found in one of his suitcases in the trunk of the taxi.
Was Ibarra murdered by the nefarious Tijuana drug cartel? Or was he set up by disgruntled members of his own force? Was he a crooked cop on the take, like so many of the colleagues he criticized? Or was the cash planted by police who seized the bullet-splattered taxi? Considering police failures to solve the previous five murders of Tijuana law enforcement officials, it is unlikely that these questions and others raised over Ibarra's assassination will be answered.
Ibarra charged into his new Tijuana job last month criticizing his own force and contradicting his bosses before the local press, a sin that recently landed a former Tijuana law enforcement official, Ricardo Cordero Ontiveros, in jail.
"Police had become so corrupted that they weren't just friends of the traffickers, they were their servants," Ibarra told the Tijuana reporter for the Los Angeles Times in an interview two days before he was gunned down Saturday morning in Mexico City, where he was scheduled to meet with his bosses at federal police headquarters.
Ibarra's allegations echoed those made two months earlier by Cordero, who had worked for the federal attorney general's office in Tijuana before his resignation last year. Days after Mexican and international newspapers published Cordero's remarks, he was jailed in Tijuana on charges widely considered to be punishment for his outspoken views.
Ibarra, who began his Tijuana posting on Aug. 16 after a nationwide purge of more than 700 allegedly corrupt federal agents, saw half of his 120-member force fired in his first few days in office: some as a result of the mass dismissal, others as a result of his own housecleaning.
The Tijuana police commander also was vocal in promoting himself as an enemy of the leaders of the Tijuana drug cartel run by the Arellano Felix brothers, considered the most violent, powerful drug mafia in Mexico along with their biggest rival, the Juarez cartel.
Ibarra had directed a police sweep of four houses purportedly owned by the Arellano Felix brothers on Thursday, two days before he was killed. The four properties were seized along with 170 pounds of cocaine and 11 pounds of marijuana, according to government statements.
He had labeled Tijuana the cartel's "sanctuary," in contradiction to statements by federal officials senior to him that the Arellano Felix brothers no longer operate in Tijuana.
A common thread connecting all six Tijuana law enforcement assassinations has been their involvement in drug investigations. But another, more political motive has been given for the deaths of some of the five previous victims. Several of them had taken part in investigating the country's biggest unsolved murder, the March 1994 assassination of presidential heir apparent Luis Donaldo Colosio in Tijuana.
The case has raised as many conspiracy theories in Mexico as the assassination of John F. Kennedy provoked in the United States. Many Mexicans believe the murders of some of the investigators were part of a government coverup to whitewash the clumsy Colosio investigation. CAPTION: DANGEROUS PROFESSION: TIJUANA, BAJA LAWMEN
Three murders of police officers this year have led many Mexicans to believe that they are connected to a coverup of the flawed investigation of presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio s assassination in March 1994.

Commandante Cano of Old School Zetas in Ciudad Victoria arrested

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Proceso article with additional pictures from Valor por Tamaulipas

Subject Matter: Ciudad Victoria, Old School Zetas
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required


Reporter: Proceso Redaction
In a rescue operation that freed two people, authorities detained Jose Luis Cano Lumberas, alias El Cano, Pepe Cano, or Commandante Cano, considered as leader of one of the groups that has committed multiple crimes in common law and Federal jurisdiction in Ciudad Victoria.

According to Police files, the group led by Cano Lumbreras has carried out crimes like kidnapping, extortion, robbery and homicides, among others in the Tamaulipeca Capital.





According to information supplied by the government of Tamaulipas, two kidnapped persons were freed and together with Cano Lumbreras they detained Saul N, Jesus Mario N and Erik N, as well as two other subjects.

The operation was carried out during the night of Wednesday the 31st in the Villa Jardin Colonia of Ciudad Victoria without a confrontation or victims. "The elements of the PGJE carried out investigations derived from denunciations of kidnapping", signalled the communication.

In June of last year, El Cano had been detained in an automobile with a large quantity of money on the Monterrey to Ciudad Victoria highway, but after was freed.

In parallel investigations by the PGJE are ongoing into common law crimes, while the PGR are investigating Federal crimes  in relation to activities  by the group of Cano Lumbreras, signalled the information.



Various weapons were also confiscated during the raid.

Unofficial sources signalled that El Cano is identified as Plaza Boss for one faction of Los Zetas. ( Otis: VpT article title says he is from Vieja Escuela Zetas, or old school Zetas.

Original article in Spanish at Proceso

El Chapo had pretrial hearing in NY today

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Chivis for Borderland Beat

Still complaining about accommodations 

“El Chapo” appeared in a Brooklyn, New York, federal courtroom today for a pretrial hearing.  U.S. Marshalls escorted the Sinaloa capo from high security Manhattan prison cell.

Because of security concerns, last week a judge ordered the hearing to be conducted via web cam, but Chapo requested an in court appearance, which was granted.

Chapo’s 27 year old wife, Emma Coronel, was present in the courtroom, who Chapo quickly spotted as he entered the courtroom, both broke into smiles.

Prosecutors contend that Chapo led the Sinaloa Cartel for 30 years and during that time ordered kidnappings and killing of thousands.

The Guzman complaint machine has not let up in any of Chapo’s prison transfers and his move to NY is no exception.  In a news conference after the hearing, his attorneys, along with his wife, complained about Chapo’s accommodations.

Pointing out that Chapo is kept locked in his cell for 23 hours a day, with only one hour of exercise time and visits by attorneys.  His wife says she has not been allowed to visit him.

El Chapo is being held in a prison unit called “the shoe”, used to house mob bosses and terrorists.

In the conference, Chapo’s attorneys suggested that the extradition that moved Chapo to U.S. jurisdiction was flawed and possibly illegal.  This seems to have taken a page out of the El Mochomo defense, which in fact the extradition order is problematic.  Multiple charges were added after his extradition, which is unlawful and is a valid defense in the case of El Mochomo.  Chapo’s attorneys are claiming this may have happened in the case of El Chapo.

Judge rejects El Chapo's lighter security request, saying "I think we all know the reasons"

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By Chivis Martinez for Borderland Beat

The defense team of El Chapo sought relaxing of the tough security measures their client is subjected to.

However, Judge Brian Cogan, slammed the door shut on that possibility this morning at the pretrial hearing.  Perhaps assuming that citing the reasons why would be redundant, without mentioning the capo’s previous prison escapes, he simply said;

 "They're taking extra security measures. I think we all know the reasons for that."

The transfer from the ultra-high security SHU unit at Metropolitan Correctional Center in lower Manhattan to a Brooklyn federal courthouse is an indication of what security measures are being taken with El Chapo.

The 12 car convoy caused the outbound Brooklyn Bridge to be closed for 15 minutes.

A visit request for El Chapo’s wife was deferred to prison officials to make the decision.  Prison officials have previously denied the request.  His next court appearance is scheduled for Cinco de Mayo, 2017.

Check out conditions, rules, etc, Documents below;
Procedure booklet for SHU unit at MCCSHU 
Correctional  admission manual (will be posted later in the day)


Holland bank "Rabobank" accused of money laundering and colaboration in Mexico crimes

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Riodoce article

Subject Matter: Rabobank
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required


Reporter: Paulo Monaco Felipe for La Jornada
We want Rabobank investigated because they and complicit in narco trafficking and because they are indirectly responsible for the disappearance of a person, and thousands of crimes committed in Mexico, said Fernando Hernandez, academic and Mexican activist who lives in Holland, who is a friend of a person disappeared in Durango in December of 2010, his identity is omitted for reasons of security.

An economist with a Master of Arts in International Development and a Doctorate in Human Geography, Hernandez has studied in England and the United States. Now he lives in Holland and urges legally to the authority of this country that they are required to implement its reputation as defenders of human rights.

Today he filed a lawsuit in the courts, to demand that they investigate the Dutch bank Rabobank for collaborating with the drug cartels in the commission of all kinds of crimes.




This prestigious finance business in Europe, with a triple A rating among specialists, is under suspicion of money laundering for Mexican organized crime in a branch office that was in Calexico, United States.

"We know that Rabobank didn't command the death of my friend and probably have not commanded the death of anyone, clarified Hernandez via telephone. We are claiming that they are mondy laundering for the Sinaloa cartel, as such the bank has legitimized the deaths that are a by product of the business of organized crime. Is Rabobank responsible for the death of my Uncle? No. Is it guilty of money laundering? Yes, and we believe that money laundering  leaves victims, and my friend is one of the victims of the Sinaloa cartel, for whom Rabobank launder money.

The legal conflict is unpublished: we want to generate a precedent, to procure justice for a topic that exists in a vacuum, explained Hernandez, who leads the claim under the association civil name of the SMX collective (https:smxcollective.org/), a group of Mexican residents outside of Mexico, who have as an objective to denounce the havoc that has caused the current strategy of internal security, with close to 200,000 dead and more than 40,000 disappeared in about 10 years, according to estimates of victims organizations.

We have complained that in prisons there are thousands of detainees held unjustly because maybe they aren't responsible for deaths and disappearances, while the bankers are free, none behind bars, says SMX Collective. By Rabobank, "we ant to bring to trial those who benefit from the silver that the cartels generate.

This group of Mexicans have started the legal battle in Holland, because the laws of this country enable a local trial whenever a company of that nationality is part of a crime, even if it is outside of their borders, in addition because they distrust other systems.

the Rabobank case is already being investigated by the American justice system, after effective deposits at the Calexico branch increased by thirty nine percent between 2008 and 2013. It is presumed that portion of the increase in the movements correspond to the policy issued by the then President Felipe Calderon, who limited dollar deposits in banks in Mexico, so even small Mexican businessmen crossed the border to operate on the other side. However, the Calexico branch received so much money that it needed one or two trucks a week to take away all the money.

Both the bank and the US justice system have remained silent on the progress of the investigation, infiltration of the press, especially Bloomberg, indicates that the biggest movements in cash volume happened in 2010 and 2011; also that they have detected themselves at least three cases in which assets have already been seized, gymnasiums linked to an operation of cocaine trafficking in Mexico; money laundering by a customs agent in San Diego, California, and money laundering by the former owner or a car dealership in Calexico.

According to informants, Bloomberg mentioned that this past May that two high executives, named Laura Akahoshi and Stephen Byron, would be investigated, equally that Ronald Blok, who was executive president of Rabobank.

The Calexico branch closed in January of 2015 and since then silence is the premium. Fernando Hernandez and companions of Smx collective fear that if its claims about Rabobank in the United States happen, the same thing will happen as did to HSBC, where there was only a fine and a non disclosure agreement. That is why they have launched their action in Holland, which boasts a defense of human rights, the bank executives would have to go to jail because they legitimize what happens in that country, and not seek financial compensation: we want justice.

They will move forward, then they will impel more initiatives in order to show the world the current situation in Mexico. This fight is deemed interesting because it is launched by a recognized lawyer, the Dutchman Goran Sluiter who took on in trial the Presidents of Nigeria, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. It is part of the office of Praken d'Olivera, who specialize in human rights  and international justice, a firm that years ago managed to prevent legally the presence in Holland of Jorge Zorreguieta, former military linked to the last military dictatorship in Argentina and father of the current queen of Holland.

Original article in Spanish at Riodoce

Florida heroin bust reveals something bizarre: Drugs covered in Donald Trump’s face

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Heroin, like cocaine and marijuana, seems to inspire an endless supply of monikers once the drug hits the streets.

In case you needed a refresher, there’s “dope,” “smack,” “China white,” “brown sugar,” “Mexican mud,” “black tar,” “horse,” “snowball,” and “Big H,” just to name a few.

Florida law enforcement officials announced this week that there’s a new name for the deadly drug: “Donald Trump.”

After a six-month investigation into local drug dealing, the Hernando County Sheriff’s Office last month confiscated 5,500 heroin packages, some of which included an image of the president’s face and name, according to NBC affiliate WFLA.

Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, addressing the media at the Hernando County Emergency Operations Center on Friday, was not amused, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

“All I want to say to this drug dealer is, ‘Big mistake by putting the president’s picture on this,’ ” said Bondi. “Big mistake. Because he is going to be our most fierce advocate in taking this junk off of our streets. Can you believe this? Big mistake.”


She added: “I’m going to make sure [Trump] gets one of these packages when the case is all over to put in the Oval Office to remind him of all the good he’s doing.”

Bondi found herself at the center of a controversy during the presidential campaign last year, when it emerged that Trump had failed to disclose an improper $25,000 contribution to a political group connected to the Florida Republican, who was at the time considering whether to open a fraud investigation against Trump University.

The donation, made in 2013 by the Donald J. Trump Foundation, violated federal rules that prohibit charities from donating to political candidates, The Washington Post reported in September. Trump and his team also failed to disclose the gift to the Internal Revenue Service, instead reporting that the donation was given to an unrelated group with a similar name — effectively obscuring the contribution.

Trump brushed off questions about the donation in September, saying: “I’ve just known Pam Bondi for years. I have a lot of respect for her. Never spoke to her about that at all. And just have a lot of respect for her as a person. And she has done an amazing job as the attorney general of Florida. She is very popular.”


The heroin bust — the largest in county history, according to Sheriff Al Nienhuis — also turned up heroin-filled envelopes named after Colombian cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobar. Some bore the name of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, the notorious Mexican drug kingpin. Most of the drugs were seized Jan. 27, the Times reported, but authorities didn’t know why they were labeled with different faces.

Was it a political message? A joke?

Nobody can be sure.

Authorities are, however, sure about who is being blamed for allegedly bringing the drugs into the county: Kelvin Scott Johnson, a 46-year-old Hernando County man.

Johnson has been charged with heroin trafficking, cocaine possession and driving with a suspended license, according to Hernando County records. Johnson is being held at the Hernando County Detention Center on a $75,000 bond.

If convicted, Johnson faces 15 to 25 years in prison, the sheriff said.

“This individual is definitely someone that we don’t want selling poison to our brothers and our sisters and our sons and our daughters,” Nienhuis said, noting that Johnson has been arrested 13 times in Florida alone, according to the Times.

Nienhuis accused Johnson of purchasing heroin in the northeastern part of the United States and shipping it to Florida, where it was intercepted by a postal worker who alerted the sheriff’s office, according to WFLA. Once authorities had been alerted, detectives opened an investigation and began monitoring Johnson’s movement, the station reported.

The Times reported that detectives arrested Johnson during a traffic stop after he’d recently returned from the northeast. Inside his car, Neinhuis told the paper, investigators recovered a package with 5,000 doses of heroin at a street value of between $50,000 to $100,000.

The sheriff said that if 10 percent of the confiscated batch ended up in the hands of new users, it could have created 500 new addicts.

“It is the one area in law enforcement where we can be a little bit proactive and take this stuff off the street rather than responding to a death or an overdose or a burglary,” Nienhuis added. “We can hopefully prevent some of that stuff by working hard to get this stuff off the street.”

The Washington Post

THE BORDER WALL: MAKING MEXICAN DRUG CARTELS GREAT AGAIN

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After a campaign of “sending rapists,” “deportation force,” “whip out that Mexican thing again,” and “bad hombres,” the Trump administration has moved from the theatrical to the practical in its first steps to build a new wall along the U.S.-Mexican border. Prior to the inauguration, President Donald Trump’s transition team approached the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Interior Department about a new physical border. In his first week in office, Trump signed an executive order instructing the Department of Homeland Security to repair existing portions of the border fence and to build new sections as authorized by Congress in 2006. Although the new administration is clearly moving to fulfill its campaign promises, the results of a new physical barrier will likely have a counter-intuitive effect: Mexican drug cartels will grow stronger.

Since 2006, when the Mexican government declared war on the drug cartels, the United States has increased its law enforcement, military, and intelligence cooperation with its southern neighbor. With U.S. support, Mexican authorities have been able to kill or capture 33 out of the 37 most dangerous cartel leaders. The recent extradition of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman to the United States is a testament to the value of high-level cooperation between the two countries. As a result of these notable successes, several larger cartels have fractured and have descended into in-fighting.


However, in the midst of the pressures leveled against them and despite the significant damage to their organizations, Mexican cartels have adapted and continue their trafficking enterprises. In the face of new border realities, they will adapt again based on the rules of the game that they follow.

Rule 1: A Cartel’s Business is Business

In many ways, drug cartels are similar to legitimate profit-making enterprises. They seek to fill market demand or stimulate new demand for their products. Mexican cartels profit by using their capabilities to expand into new drug markets and to smuggle drugs and other illicit commodities through innovative and secret means. Mexican cartels are “vicious firms,” earning money as organizations engaged in providing vice (primarily drugs, but also counterfeit consumer goods and human trafficking services) across a sovereign border.

The only law that cartels do not break is the law of supply and demand. Increased security along the border will not change demand for the goods and services that the cartels supply. In fact, as new barriers along the border increase risks for the cartels, they will innovate smuggling operations, raise their prices to keep profits flowing, and stimulate new domestic markets in Mexico and on the U.S. side of the border. These adaptations occurred after 9/11, the last time the United States seriously tightened its border security.

Rule 2: Borders are Opportunities, not Obstacles

Flowing from Rule 1, a new border is a boon for Mexican cartels because they provide incentives to generate profit. Thwarting border protections is an industry in its own right.  Whether it is developing tunnels under the border or providing false documentation to get through a border checkpoint, Mexican cartels will still own the market for the ways and means to move products to the United States. Paradoxically, cartel profits may increase if NAFTA is renegotiated in ways that raise costs to Mexican manufacturers. Some cartels are deeply embedded in legitimate parts of the Mexican economy and have logistics positioned along the border to assist in the movement of legal goods smuggled through ports of entry to avoid high tariffs. Although NAFTA greatly eased the ability of drug cartels to move their products through looser customs inspections, drastically curtailing many provisions of NAFTA provides increased opportunities for smuggling.

Cartel opportunities for southbound smuggling from the United States into Mexico may also increase if the Trump administration clamps down on remittances sent to Mexico from Mexicans in the United States as a way to pay for the border wall. Cartels are adept at moving large sums of money into Mexico. They have used “cloned” vehicles that resemble official cars to transport money close to the border where they can pass it to their associates on the other side. Cartel members have also routinely placed hundreds of thousands of dollars on vast numbers of gift cards to reduce bulky shipments of cash and thereby decreasing law enforcement’s ability to detect the movement of money. Cartels will likely continue to find ways to innovate such tactics in an environment where moving legitimate money southbound becomes more difficult.

A new border wall will be accompanied by the hiring of 5,000 more Border Patrol officers and 10,000 immigration agents. However, more agents and officials equal more opportunities for profit and corruption. To move products through tightened security, cartels have routinely focused on penetrating Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Since the Mexican drug wars began in earnest in 2006, almost 200 Department of Homeland Security employees and contractors took nearly $15 million in bribe money. “Owning” one of these officials allows the cartel to sell access to particular portions of the border to any paying customer.

Ironically, other potential money making opportunities for Mexican drug cartels are in the areas that will undergo new construction of the border wall. Many portions of the border exist in isolated regions. Construction crews living and working far from populated areas will be susceptible to illegal ways to fend off boredom. This is similar to what occurred in remote parts of the United States where fracking sites blossomed as well as incidents of prostitution and drug use. Along the southwest border, Mexican cartels could have a ready-made customer base.

Rule 3:  Cartels have their own STEM Programs

Similar to legitimate businesses, Mexican cartels seek to innovate by relying on core competencies of their employees. But a cartel’s science, technology, engineering, and mathematics competencies are directed towards their more important STEM programs — surveillance, trafficking, extortion, and murder. Tunnels with running electricity, HVAC systems, and rail lines are only small examples of the technical prowess of Mexican cartels.  They have used sophisticated methods to jam and “spoof” Border Patrol’s surveillance drones. Mexican cartels have even hired technical experts to develop custom made “narco drones” to deliver drug loads over the border.

Beyond technical achievements in trafficking, cartels have used extortion and murder to compensate for any curtailment of the drug trade. For example, in 2013, Monterrey, Mexico experienced a wave of kidnappings as violence among the cartels interfered with their ability to move drugs to the United States. Cartels have also extorted teachers, threatening them with death if they do not hand over large portions of their paychecks to local drug gangs. A new wall will also create jockeying for the control of new access points, which often turns violent. In previous periods of heightened violence, the ancillary market for murder created multiple opportunities for new hitmen to enter the fray, which at one stage led to a glut in the market and a drop in the price of contracting a killing in Mexico.

Rule 4: Cartels are also Patriotic

While El Chapo was on the run after his second prison break, he took the time to Tweet a threat against candidate Donald Trump for insulting Mexicans. Members of Mexican cartels often view themselves as patriots, just like any other Mexican. They are not isolated from their communities, but are rather deeply embedded. As two scholars on gang violence described, “they spend more time hangin’ than bangin’.” The cartels have invested in the local communities by supporting soccer teams and throwing celebrations on important national holidays. If U.S.-Mexican relations sour, the cartels are well positioned to support, and benefit from, a new rise in Mexican nationalism. As they have in the past, cartels would use their local influence and their money to bolster political campaigns, but, this time, aimed at those campaigns touting Mexican sovereignty and anti-Americanism. Nationalism couched in anti-Americanism would help the cartels if Mexican political parties view standing against cooperating with the United States as an electoral advantage. Some of this political positioning was already occurring in Mexico even before Trump’s election. However, reducing or ending cooperation in areas like law enforcement, intelligence, and defense would be a gain for Mexican cartels. The threat of extradition to the United States would also likely begin to recede for cartel members as Mexican politicians refuse to undertake any actions that would look like a political gain for the Trump administration.

The Game may have Changed, but the Old Rules Still Apply

The rules that Mexican drug cartels have used successfully in the past demonstrate how the cartels can change their practices to thwart state actions which interfere with their ability to make money. These same rules mean that a new border wall will not end or significantly reduce the capabilities and power of Mexican drug cartels. From the days of tequila smuggling into the United States during Prohibition, illicit trafficking across the southwest border has remained a constant. Only with enhanced cooperation between the United States and Mexico in an atmosphere of trust can the Mexican drug cartels be tackled. A new border wall will only undermine these efforts, to the benefit of the criminal groups that have fueled much of the distrust along both sides of the border.

War On The Roks


Zetas: "El Cano" Killed in prison, 3 days after his arrest

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Chivis Martinez for Borderland Beat

Tamaulipas Coordination Group (GCT) confirmed this afternoon that the death of José Luis Cano
Lumbreras, 37,   (El Cano), was recorded,  inside the Sanctions Enforcement Center (CEDES) of Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas.

The GCT explained in a statement that the incident occurred shortly before 19:00 pm when the Cano was led to its module after attending a hearing. At that moment he was ambushed by a group of prisoners who, strangled him.

El Cano was Plaza Boss for Vieja Escuela Zetas, or old school Zetas.  He was arrested on Tuesday January 31st.

Please use this link for detailed background information on El Cano and his arrest,  in Otis' previous post.

Extraditions are complicated

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Zetatijuana article

Subject matter: Extradition of top capos of all cartels
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required

The extraditibles
Reporter: Luis Carlos Sainz
Before an uncertain political collaboration against crime, extraditions could be bogged down between Mexico and the United States. More than 60 narco traffickers and some foreigners are in prison awaiting this process. Before a tightening of security, trade, migration and diplomatic measures from the USA, Mexico has an ace up its sleeve, ensures the Spanish researcher Jesus Perez Caballero. Z-40, La Tuta, El Viceroy, El Cuini, and fugitives like Rafael Caro Quintero, El Mencho, El Azul, and El Mayo Zambada are currency.

Before Joaquin El Chapo Guzman, Mexico delivered in extradition 86 alleged criminals to the United States in a matter of nine months. In exchange the American Government delivered to our country  seven, in the same manner to be processed. Now the panorama in materials of extradition appears uncertain, when there are more than seventy alleged narco traffickers waiting to be sent to the American Union.

The delivery of the ex leader of the Sinaloa cartel during these last days of the administration of Barack Obama as president of the United States could have been the last friendly extradition between these two countries, one can hear the voices of analysts about this subject, into which type of leader Donald Trump will convert into.



The primary messages emitted by the magnate have advertised that the bilateral relations will be very turbulent. In the opinion of the Spanish academic investigator, raised in Mexico, Jesus Perez Caballero, the Trump administration have declared war on narco traffickers and the most violent acts committed by Mexican narco trafficking groups, to obtain a political debt, economic or migratory, to press Mexico for the adoption of a submissive role in the politics of the new Republican Government.

America is the main commercial partner of Mexico, also in matters of justice, are the nation with which Mexico has a greater exchange of criminal fugitives, as during the period from 1st of September 2015 to the 30th of June of 2016, when 90 prisoners, four women and 86 men were extradited from Mexico, 86 of them to the USA, according to information of the PGR.

Interviewed by Zeta, Perez Caballero emphasized that during the eight years of the administration of Obama there had been a continuity in the treaty, the treaty with Felipe Calderon, like that with Enrique Pena Nieto, and inclusive of the defeated candidate Hillary Clinton, showed an understanding of the manner in which the two nations share their problems, which will not continue with Trump.

Alleged narco traffickers from different drug cartels, of the calibre of Vincente Carrillo Fuentes "El Viceroy", Hector Manuel Beltran Leyva El H,

Abigael Gonzaelz Valencia "El Cuini, the brothers, Miguel Angel and Oscar Omar Trevino Morales "El Z-40 and El Z-42"; Ismael Zambada Imperial "El Mayito Gordo", Refnando Sanchez Arellano "El Ingeniero" and the brother of El Chapo, Miguel Angel guzman Loera "El Mudo", are waiting to be extradited to the country to the North.

The present and future

The extradition of El Chapo Guzman, has been symbolic of the fight against the narco traffickers inside of the shared narrative of Mexico and the United States, just in this political moment, before Trump was invested, Mexico made this gesture towards the Obama administration, said the doctor of International Security and post doctoral grant holder of the Institute of Social Research of the Autonomous University of Mexico.

"It is clear that the Mexican government didn't want to show any hostility before Trump, in all, just in this moment this acted as a hinge, to the outgoing administration. From my point of view this can be interpreted, in the absence of more data, as a political maneuver that shows both a recognition to the outgoing administration as an opening to continue collaborating with the incoming administration", says the researcher.

Perez Caballero estimates that the delivery of Guzman Loera doesn't have to be an especially critical question, to the extent that the rights of Chapo were not violated, which had become a problematic subject by their leaks, and the possibility of activating cores of corruption that allowed him to have differential treatment in prison. Although he admits that the pace of justice was adapted tot he pace of the Mexican Executive so the extradition was possible for the date it was carried out.

About the future of extraditions of capos, concludes that the procedure and execution , the Iberian expert showed that in the topic, there have always been not only legal but political nuances, understood as a series of actions to show, to send a message to a country to which it extradites and also its institutions, to the citizenship or to the possible individuals to be extradited.

How can we understand this perspective on the possible future extraditions of high ranking narco traffickers ? Well, its going to depend on the message that it wants to give to the United States. Its going to depend on if the Trump administrations pressure, for example, to extradite certain persons. Its also going to depend on if these captured individuals can be utilized by the Mexican Government, expressed Dr Perez.

In his interview he clarified  that the extraditions also will guide the criteria of public opinion and its not the same scrutiny that the citizenry of the media can make, in the case like of El Chapo Guzman,  that every time he appears in the media, by the very nature of his media figure subjectively, that the other high ranking narco traffickers do not have this high media profile. It will have to be seen how it utilizes extraditions, if one wants to gain visibility, if one wants to send a message to the citizenry, if one wants to send a message of strength, et-cetera.

The postures

Donald Trump already has given a message of the immediate changes in his political relations, commercial, migratory and of security with the other countries of the world, among them Mexico, with its shared territories, and for that, "its probable that Trump will be less tolerant to action of a self regulation more inclined to drug trafficking.

The action of legalization, for example, its probable that Trump will be reactive, its probable also he will also implement a political hard hand towards Mexico. Its likely that any act that is perceived in the border areas between Mexico and the USA will be praised and will serve to keep the pressure on Mexico, stresses Jesus Perez Caballero.

"We are going to see how this plays out in its relation to Mexican narco traffickers or organized crime groups; how they can, is it better, with propaganda actions, to plan violent actions against the interests of the USA or the frontier. It could make the relationship more tense.

It is clear that before, let us say, elephant, to use a metaphor, as is Trump, who reacts to any act, it is very easy for the "wasps" of organized crime to bother him, they could create and action - reaction with consequences that for the time being we cannot for see.

Vincente Carrillo Fuentes
The investigator points out that it is likely that the USA will make its strategy more punitive, like the construction of the wall, or that it will imply that the cost in human rights will continue in "assisted breathing", that means the strategy of militarization.

For his part, the Mexican authorities wont implement profound actions of reform, and follow current strategy of narco counter insurgency.

Extraditions will continue to be used to send messages, for both the USA and Mexico, the proper Mexican society, as for the subject of extradition, " but I do not think there is, today, a policy of systematic delivery of high ranking drug traffickers to the USA administration, mostly because of explicit policy.

Mexico would lose its "ace up the sleeve", it would lose the possibility of to extradite or not. that is to say, also extraditions are a low policy that can be placed on the table in a volatile environment.

Narcos awaiting extradition

In addition to the narcos delivered in extradition, through the Secretary of Exterior Relations, in nine months between 2015 and 2016, Mexico transferred 17 foreigners sentenced in Mexico to their places of origin to finish their sentences given out in Mexican courts, in exchange, twenty four persons were transferred to Mexico for the fulfillment of their sentences, in accordance with the treaty of execution of criminal sentences.

On Mexican soil, in Federal prisons, the majority in the maximum security prison Altiplano, one can find fifty alleged narco traffickers of high profile that are claimed for extradition by USA, even though in not all cases have the USA effected formal petitions. Together with the capos still at liberty, the list represents seventy persons, many of them known through forms of media.

The list of extraditable starts with Hector Manuel Beltran Leyva "El H", and continues with Ismael Zambada Imperial, Servando Gomez Martinez, Vincente Carrillo Fuentes, Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, Oscar Omar Trevino Morales, Hector Manuel Avendano Ojeda, Jesus Alfredo Salazar Ramirez, Adan Salazar Zamorano, Rodolfo Lopez Ibarra, Carlos Navarro Durazo, Angel Dominguez Ramirez, Ruben Antonio Calderilla Reyes, Alfonso Lira Sotelo, Luis Arellano Romero, Juan Francisco Sillas Rocha, Carlos Herrera Avalos aka Gustavo Rivera Martinez.

Also claimed in USA investigations are Abigael Gonzalez Valencia, Fernando Sánchez Arellano, Mario Alberto Ramírez Treviño, J. Jesús Méndez Vargas, Juan José Álvarez Tostado Galván, Martín Gaudencio Avendaño, Carlos Alberto Cerda Torres, Rafael Duarte Torres, Alfonso Limón Sánchez, Felipe Cabrera Sarabia, José Antonio Torres Marrufo, Valentín Sáenz Cruz, Luis Guillermo Castillo Rubio, Rubén Garza Rodríguez, Noel Salgueiro Nevárez, Inés Enrique Torres Acosta, Fidel Urbina and Rafael Rivera Salomón.

The father in law of El Chapo Guzman, Ines Coronel Barrera, is among the list of formal requests. The list follows with, Gabino Peralta Saucedo, Juan Padilla Vizcarra, Jesús Ramón Núñez Angulo, Rafael Guadalupe Félix Núñez, Sergio Garza Treviño, Jesús Raúl Beltrán León, Arnoldo Rueda Molina, Ramón Álvarez Ayala, Miguel Ángel Guzmán Loera, Víctor Manuel Félix Félix, Miguel Ángel Aramiz Herrera, Juan Jesús Flores Lara, Francisco Javier Cantabrana Parra, Lucio Hernández Lechuga, Alfredo Andrade Parra, José Meléndez Tarín Óscar Mogollón Restrepo and Gerardo Álvarez Vázquez.

For the persons not currently detained it mentions Rafael Caro Quintero, Emilio Sajid Quintero Navidad “El Cadete” (Cousin of Caro), Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada García, Juan José Esparragoza Moreno “El Azul”, Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes “El Mencho” and Fausto Isidro Meza Flores “El Chapo Isidro”.

Capos of all colors are codified to be carried to USA justice with multiple charges in their Federal courts.

Original article in Spanish at Zetatijuana

Guerrero: Police ignore calls for help as 50 sicarios terrorize town

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Javier for Borderland Beat material posted on Mx News Daily from Universal and El Sur


It was a night of terror for a small town (330 inhabitants) in Guerrero this week when at least 40 armed men kidnapped seven people, peppered homes with machine gun fire and robbed some residents of cash and belongings.

The attack on Chacotla began at about 10:30pm and wound up some five hours later and despite calls to 911, municipal and state police offices and the Army, authorities didn’t turn up until the following day. The town of 800 people is located 40 minutes from the state capital of Chilpancingo.

On Wednesday, five of the kidnap victims were found dead.

Upon their arrival in the town the gang blocked the main road before seeking two people in particular: sons of Gabriel González, also known as El Tigre, a 42-year-old man who no longer lives in the community.

The gunmen took González’ sons, aged 21 and 16, along with their mother before nabbing two of González’ nephews, 22 and 17, from their grandparents’ home.


A third man managed to escape with his daughter before the gangsters arrived at his home but his wife instead became the sixth kidnap victim. The seventh was taken from the neighboring town of Mazatlán as the criminals fled. ( click on image to enlarge)

Residents say they heard several of the armed men identifying themselves as members of the Union of the People and Organizations of Guerrero (UPOEG) community police but that organization later denied any involvement.

Other names were also mentioned: that of Isaac Navarrete, leader of the Sierra cartel, and Celso Ortega, chief of Los Ardillos.

Later Tuesday morning the kidnappers contacted the victims’ relatives, demanding ransoms that totaled 1.5 million pesos, about US $74,000. The amount was later reduced to 1 million but the families, all farmers, were unable to raise the money.

Early Wednesday morning, the two kidnapped women returned to their homes after being left on the shoulder of a road and walking for about two hours.

The fate of the five men was known an hour later: their bodies had been left by the side of the nearby road between the communities of Mazatlán,  El Salado, and   Lagunillas, each with two shots to the head.
The gang wasn’t done harassing Chacotla residents. During funeral services for the five executed men on Wednesday evening relatives received phone calls, allegedly from the kidnappers, threatening them with further violence and kidnapping.

Few people attended the burials as fear and apprehension prevailed in the community. Police presence in the town had been sporadic throughout the week so the bereaved residents asked authorities for protection during the funeral services and burials, but their request went unanswered.

Now, the people of Chacotla are not happy with the performance of federal, state and local authorities.

“This cannot be, we’re at the mercy of these criminal groups and the government has abandoned its responsibility of at least guaranteeing our right to live,” said one.

Late Wednesday evening, eight trucks carrying Federal Police officers turned up, set up a checkpoint at the entrance to the town and began patrols.

Marines detain "El Cochi" alleged leader of BLO in Nuevo León

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Sinembargo article

Subject Matter: El Cochi, Beltran Leyva Organization
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required

The state informed that in a communication that Palomo Castillo, 27 years of age, was detained in the immediate location of Mariano Escobedo International Airport in the town of Apodaca.


Reporter: Sinembargo Redaction
Elements of the Marines captured Elezazar Palomo Castillo, alias "El Cochi", alleged leader of the Beltran Leyva cartel in the state of Nuevo Leon.

They detailed that "El Cochi" evaded a Naval checkpoint that was established close to the base area, an action that aroused suspicion in the Marines, they ran after the vehicle on foot and detained a person and his vehicle, indicated the document.

Semar explained that Palomo Castillo has two orders of apprehension in the state of Nuevo Leon, for the alleged crimes of aggravated kidnapping and being a member of a criminal group.

El Cochi, they signalled him as an alleged operator of the Beltran Leyva cartel in the town of San Pedro Garza Garcia, he was put at the disposition of SEIDO of the PGR in Escobedo, Nuevo Leon.

Original article in Spanish at Sinembargo

Leader of the Cartel del Golfo to be extradited to the USA

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Milenio article with additional pictures from the Borderland Beat archive.

Subject Matter: Mario Ramirez Trevino "El X-20" , "El Pelon"
Recommendation: Readthis articleby our own Chivis

Mario Armado Ramirez Trevino, "El X-20" or "El Pelon", will be extradited to the USA, after a court denied his amparo to avoid being transferred to this country.


Reporter: Ignacio Alzaga
Mario Armado Ramirez Trevino, "El X-20" or "El Pelon", who had affirmed leadership of the Cartel del Golfo, will be extradited to the USA whose Government who put a five million dollar price on his head before his capture by the Army in August of 2013.

On the 15th of November of 2007 he was formally accused by the Grand Jury of the District of Colombia Court under the charges of conspiracy to fabricate and distribute five kilo grams or more of cocaine and a thousand kilo grams or more of marijuana to knowingly distribute illegaly in the United States.

He was in violation of Title 21 of the code of the United States sections 959, 960, 963 and Title 18 section 2, that sanctions to whomever conspires in agreement to distribute shipments of drugs in this country.



According to official reports, this narco trafficker assumed the leadership of the criminal organization after the capture of Eduardo Costilla "El Coss", in September of 2012, during an operation of the Marines in Tamaulipas.

El Coss
Authorities of the PGR confirmed that the Mexican Government will surrender the narco trafficker with base in the resolution of the Ninth Collegiate Court in Penal Matters of the First Circuit of Mexico City.

The Court ratified the denial of amparo that was promoted by Ramirez Trevino against the extradition that was authorized by the Secretary of External Relations in July of 2016.

The Judges considered that the extradition was just and right and that there had been no process violations during the judgment he faced.

Functionaries of the PGR signalled that they had already received the notification together with the Secretary of the Government, of the National Commission of Security and the Decentralized Administrative Body of Prevention and Social Re-adaption would continue with the arrangements to transfer him to the USA.

A few months before he assumed command of the Cartel del Golfo, he was considered second in command of the operations of this criminal organization, his contacts were other Mexican narco's sought after like Samuel Flores Borrego "El Metro 3", with him was also detained Jaime Gonzalez Duran "El Hummer".

Metro 3 left, El Hummer right

Original article in Spanish at Milenio

PGR ordered to pay 13M USD for alteration of drug trafficking plane

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Javier for Borderland Beat  translated from Reforma

Cd. de Mexico An aircraft used to traffic drugs, seized in 2000,as a part of a drug trafficking investigation, was found to have been physically altered by the PGR agency (atty general office) .  Because of the finding the two pilots involved and charged in the case, were absolved of all charges, because the  alteration rendered the aircraft unusable in the criminal process as evidence.

Additionally, the alteration will cost the PGR 13.2 million USD

The aircraft was to have been returned to the legal owner,  the firm Servicios (and) Reparaciones Aeronáuticos, but decided instead to keep the jet and add it to the PGR fleet.

Then in 2006, the jet was dismantled and sold as scrap for 70,000 pesos. The rightful owner of the plane filed a lawsuit against the PGR in 2008, and six years later the court ordered an investigation to determine any illegal administrative activity.

The federal court found against PGR in November 2015 and ordered the PGR pay 271 million pesos (13.2 USD) in damages/losses caused to Servicios (and)  Reparaciones Aeronáuticos.

The PGR was dilatory in filing an appeal,  rendering the ruling as final.

“There must be an investigation into who was in charge of this case, and determine those responsible within the PGR office. There’s more to this than just the PGR paying,” said Rodolfo Félix Cárdenas, former Attorney General of Mexico City.

During the time when an appeal to the federal could have been filed, Adriana Campos López was the head of the PGR’s legal affairs department.

Subsequently, she was promoted to an inspector’s position by the Attorney General Raúl Cervantes.

“She allowed the deadline for an appeal to pass,  who knows if she intentionally let it happen?” added Cárdenas.

“Instead of facing the consequences after such a serious offense, she was rewarded. The Attorney General must carefully analyze what transpired,” said Fernando Yunes, the Commission of Justice in the Senate

Francisco Rivas, president of the National Citizens Observatory, said such cases happen often, not only at the federal level but also  under the watch of the state Attorney Generals’ offices as well.


“Protocols define one thing and the public prosecutors decide another.”

Sinaloa: Armed commandos engage in firefights in Navolato *Video and Graphic Content*

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Original article available at Debate
Translated by El Wachito

Navolato, Sinaloa.- It was around 16:30 today Tuesday, when neighbors of Villa Juarez reported to the authorities that there was a firefight in several streets of the sector. 


A civilian captured part of the armed commando

 Authorities confirmed that rival groups engage in a firefight. The armed clash left 3 killed people, and one pregnant woman among the victims.






It was reported that the firefight started in two points of the city, one in Las Amapas over highway 50, which leads to the fishing camp La Puentes.


In the area of Quinta Bonita, the dead bodies of the man were left next to a black Ford, Explorer.


Photo of the convoy before the firefight. Notice that the vehicle at the front of the convoy appears in the vehicle with the mounted 50. cal

Over the same highway, but in south direction, the body of a pregnant woman was found outside a car repair shop; she was a victim of a stray bullet and died.


As a result of the firefight, several houses have been damaged. The neighbors claim that the firefight lasted for several minutes, where they witness how the armed commando shot their weapons from several recent model vehicles. The criminals were using tactical clothing, including bullet proof vests and frequency radios.



Another firefight was reported in Culiacan were 5 civilians were killed and 1 Mexican Marine died.

It was reported that between 6 or 8 dead bodies were stolen by the commandos that were wearing military clothes.

School was suspended in two schools and one high school.




Sons of El Chapo claim that Damaso Lopez tried to kill them

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Original article available at Debate
Translated by El Wachito

Journalist Ciro Gomez Leyva published in his Twitter account an anonymous letter were it was informed that the sons of the Sinaloan Druglord "El Chapo" were psychically attacked during an armed clash. 


The sons of Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman denounced an armed attack, according to journalist Ciro Gomez Leyva from his Twitter account.

According to the journalist, Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada was with them during the moment of the attack, however it is unknown if he resulted wounded during the attack.




Damaso Lopez, known as "El Licenciado", was a prior boss of the Judicial Police of the state of Sinaloa, Agent of the Public Ministry and Security Subdirector of the Maximum security Jail of Puente Grande, Jalisco, when Guzman Loera was incarcerated in Puente Grande.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), identified Damaso Lopez Nuñez as a main Liutenant of the Sinaloa Cartel, due to his drugtrafficking activities with Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman Loera and for playing an important role in money laundering activities.

Letter received by Journalist Ciro 

The OFAC claims that Lopez Nuñez helped Guzman Loera to escape prison in 2001: "Since then he became one of his principal Lieutenants of the Sinaloa Cartel, and became responsible for shipments of tons of narcotics from Mexico to the United States".

The accusations, then, signal that one of the principal operators of the Sinaloa Cartel is behind the aggression to the sons of Guzman Loera, who has already been extradited to the United States.


Translation of the Letter:

During the 4th of February of 2017, El Licenciado Damazo Lopez organized a meeting were he requested the assistance of Mr. Ismael Zambada and the family of Joaquin Guzman due to claims that there was evidence that Damazo Lopez ordered the kidnapping of the sons of El Chapo, once we arrived at the meeting Mr Zambada and the Joaquin Guzman family realized that damazo lopez was not present, then the confusion started, a few moments later they started shooting the bodyguards of the Joaquin family, who were immediately executed in the spot, then we realized that we had been betrayed by "Licenciado damazo lopez" by he trying to kills us and eliminate everything by the roots.

Once we were able to leave the scene intact, Mr Zambada and the Guzman family ran away from the scene, and while running we found armed people at the service of Mr, Damazo Lopez shooting at us along our route, finally we lost them in the mountains without us knowing our exact location due to us having to run away several kilometers. Finally we found a small town and the local people provided aid once we were already hurt. 

Gente de la Tia Juana: Report from Culiacan, Sinaloa

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Original article available at Gente de la Tia Juana
Translated by El Wachito
Original article was published in February 7th at 2PM

The war for local-drug trafficking has started in Sinaloa between Ivan and Alfredo Guzman against Damaso and his soon "Mini Lic" Lopez.


Firefight where 1 Marine was killed in Culiacan

Everything started in Navolato, Sinaloa, where after the arrest of "El Chapo" Guzman in Mazatlan, Damaso made an alliance with Cesar Carrillo, brother of the "Señor de los Cielos" and enemy of "Chapo" Guzman. 

Ivan and Alfredo were not very happy with the alliance, however after several meetings, Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada convince them that all types of "peace making deals" were good.

Even with the new alliance, smalls clashes were still ongoing. A few months later after the last capture of "El Chapo", he had already divided the local drug sale  Plaza in Mazatlan between his sons and his Compadre Damaso Lopez El Lic, then the sons of "El Chapo" made a truce with H-9 and H-2, of the Plaza of Nayarit, who are native of Mazatlan and who in the last months have been gaining ground with an alliance with Rene de la Cruz and Chonecas del aval.

Narcomanta left by H9 and H2 in a bridge of Mazatlan, "Soldiers of cardbox you will pay the 2 deads, soldier, minucipal cop and ministerial officer who ventures into my terrains. atte. Choneacas h9 h2 NICO"

According to Damaso, the truce between the sons of El Chapo and H-9 and H-2, consisted in "fucking him over", however the old wolf  Damaso hold his laugh. His Compadre Guzman was already detained, why he shouldn't attack the inexperience sons of his Compadre who were doing things wrong?

He was detained, yes, but in Mexico a lot of his friends and enemies wanted to kill "El Chapo's" sons, however Damaso didn't do anything to them because he was scared of his Compadre, who was powerful free or incarcerated in Mexico, but everything changed when he was extradited .

El "Chapo" Guzman does not represent anything anymore. The Mafia perceives him as a dead man in the United States and the moment that Damaso has been waiting has arrived and he exploded like a bomb.


In the "drug houses" of Culiacan, for example in Colonia Libertad, Wisaches, Toledo, and others... the armed clashes had already being ongoing for 4 days, with 3 strong firefights reported, and two Mexican marines have been killed in action. One strong firefight in Imala were 6 Mexican marines were killed, another firefight in Colonia Villas del Real were 4 Marines died and 5 civilians were executed, also 15 "levantados (kidnapped)", 4 of them were kidnapped after leaving the Serie del Caribe (baseball tournament un Culiacan).... 18 dead bodies have been found and a lot of disappearances. 

a Convoy of Federal police in Imala 5 days ago

It is rumored that among the disappeared people, "El Javi" personnel of Damaso Lopez is included. This is just the beginning. We will share more information in the following days. 

Clandestino: Sinaloa Cartel Documentary by David Beriain

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Original article available at DMAX
Translated by El Wachito

In Spain, the number 13 is the a number that represents bad luck and 18 represents the age when you become an adult. In El Salvador, these numbers are a synonym of death and violence. In our country, the number 701 does not represent anything. In the state of Sinaloa, Mexico, this number represents a symbol of support and admiration towards their "Mr" el 'Chapo' Guzman, who's fortune ranks him in the 701 place of the Forbes magazine. 


The war between the Mexican Cartels has already left more deaths than the number of casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan together. In El Salvador, the murder rate is the same as the one in Iraq during the worst times of the conflict. Journalist David Beriain comes back to DMAX to disclose what, and who hides behind those casualties, that have made Central America one of the most dangerous regions of the planet.



Once again, the journalist David, will showcase from the monitors of DMAX the clandestine sites that only him is able to obtain access, which has become an ability that made him one of the most recognize journalist in the industry of the documentary journalism.

 After impressing his spectators with 'Amazonas Clandestino' and with the first season of 'Clandestino', he has come back with five new documentary blocks of one hour each, divided in two thematic blocks that revolve around the most famous drug cartel of the world and the extreme violence of gangs. Two realities that the journalist will show us from first hand.

"Making 'El Cartel de Sinaloa' was a mayor challenge. We infiltrated the cartel in one of the most complicated moments, after the capture of "El Chapo" Guzman in the middle of a power struggle to succed him. It was a challenge to gain their trust in a moment where they didn't trust each other" explained the journalist Navarro. In regards to the episodes of the violence in El Salvador, Beriain assures that "Its one of the most impressive stories that we have had the privilege of tell. In a country of wonderful people, we tried to tell a story about the justice and vengeance. A story that I believe, will not let anyone down".





Instructions on how to set up automatic subtitles through youtube:

1.- Clic on the name of the documentary "Clandestino: El cartel de sinaloa temporada 2(which is actually the first episode)" so it opens on Youtube.
2.- Once the documentary is running on youtube.com, clic on the configuration icon (mechanical nut shaped) 
3.- click on Subtitles
4.- Click on Automatic Translation 
5.- Choose the desire language

BREAKING NEWS: Mexican Marines shot and killed "El H2" a Nayarit Plaza leader of the Beltran Leyva Organization *Video*

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Original article available at ZETA
Translated by El Wachito


Juan Francisco Patron Sanchez, alias "El H2" or "El Chico", leader of the Beltran Leyva Cartel, was executed this Thursday night by elements of the Secretary of the Armed Marines of Mexico (SEMAR), in Tepic, Nayarit -where he was the plaza boss-, according to a spokesman of the Presidency of the Republic, Eduardo Sanchez Hernandez, to the journalist Denise Maerker, who made the announcement through her television news show.



Also, "El H2" was executed with 7 of his sicarios, confirmed the SEMAR through their Twitter account: "Today during an armed clash between criminals and Federal Forces, Juan Francisco N. was executed with 7 other criminals".

In a video that was distributed through several social media websites, we can observe the Helicopter of the Marines flying over an area of the capital of Nayarit -colonia Linda Vista, San Juan, Arboledas and Laderas del cerro de San Juan-, after being a target of an armed attack, the helicopter shoot towards the criminals.





H2 became the successor of the criminal organization dedicated to drug trafficking of Hector Beltran Leyva, alias "El H" o "El H1", when he was detained in October 1st of 2014, in San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato.

EL H was arrested in the beautiful town of San Miguel de Allende

In July of 2010, personnel of the Army, captured his brother Juan Pablo Patron Sanchez, who was considered boss of la plaza and a principal drug distributor of drugs in Tepic.

Brother of H2
A narcomanta was found in Mazatlan, Sinaloa, in February of 2011, days after the massacre in Antares Bar, in which 6 young males were assassinated, and in the NarcoManta, "El H2" was accused as one of the principal responsible of the massacre, according to newspaper Noroeste.

At the beginning of December of last year, Horacio Oscar Rosete Mentado, a judge in charge of Legal procedures, authorized the extradition of Hector Beltran Leyva to the United States. Hector Beltran Leyva was the last brother that had the last names that the Cartel had, and he is currently incarcerated in Almoloya  de Juarez, State of Mexico.

During mid September of last year, Elements of the Federal Police arrested Clara Elena Laborin Archuleta, Alias "La Señora" in Hermosillo, Sonora, and she was the boss of the Plaza of Acapulco.

Clara Elena Laborin Archuleta 

Official information indicates that Hector Beltran Leyva and his brother Arturo, Alias "El Barbas:, initiated their Compadre Joaquin Archivaldo Guzman Loera, Alias "El Chapo", in the business of cocaine trafficking. They are cousins and they were born in the mountainous region of Badiraguato, Sinaloa.

El Barbas was brutally executed by Mexican Marines

They were allies during decades. However, the Beltran Leyva Cartel  separated from the Sinaloa Cartel, in 2008, after the arrest in Culiacan of Alfredo Beltran Leyva, "El Mochomo", who was one of the principal operators of "El Chapo", and Ismael Zambada Garcia, "El Mayo".

El Mochomo

The capture of "El Mochomo" was considered a betrayal of the Sinaloa Cartel Leaders by the leaders of the Beltral Leyva, therefore, they decided to declare a war against "El Chapo" and "El Mayo", and since then, a war that has lasted nine years, broke out in the state of Sinaloa.

"El Chapo", betrayed his own family, according to information given by the authorities. "El Barbas: was executed by Mexican Marines in December of 2009 in Cuernavaca, Morelos, and then "El H" took command and maintained a cruel war against his Ex-ally, and now ex-leader of the Sinaloa Cartel.

"El H", faces 29 investigations by the Federal Forces, and to the moment of his arrest, he was the leader of the criminal organization that had his last name and dedicated the group to the trafficking of drugs from South America to the United States and Europe.


Idalia Romelia Salazar Gonzales, ex-sister in law of "El Chapo" executed in Zapopan, Jalisco *Graphic Content*

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Original article available at PROCESO
Translated by El Wachito

Guadalajara, Jal.- Idalia Romelia Salazar Gonzalez, sister of Alejandrina Maria, who was the first wife of Joaquin El Chapo Guzman, was executed yesterday in the municipality of Zapopan.



The 45 year old woman was driving around in a white Mercedez Benz by Goya Street, in the intersection with Patria Avenue, in Real Vallarta, when she was attacked by an armed command.


According to extra-official information, the victim was in the business of exporting sports clothes to Colombia.


According to the property registry, Idalia Romelia Salazar Gonzalez was the owner of two country clubs in Fraccionamiento Real del Valle, in Tlajomulco de Zuniga, and several luxury vehicles.



In 2015, the woman was attacked in Zapopan, by an armed commando when she was traveling with her sentimental partner, Ignacio Garcia Mendoza.

Romelia being pulled out of the vehicle

During the attack, Garcia Mendoza was injured and he was sent to San Javier hospital.
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