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Sinaloa and Juarez Cartels behind the attack at the cock fighting ring

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

Subject Matter: Sinaloa Cartel, Juarez Cartel
Recommendation:See linkto article on the shootings

In the aggression at the cock fighting club Santa Maria, members of La Linea were after the two principal drug distributors in the State, according to the Attorney General of Chihuahua



Reporter: Norma Ponce and Juan Jose Garcia
The Attorney General of Chihuahua informed that motive of the massacre in the Club Gallistico Santa Maria that left six dead and fourteen wounded, was a dispute between drug dealers of the Juarez and Sinaloa Cartels.

The Attorney Generals office informed that the members of the group known as La Linea were after Hector Murillo Tavares, El Cochiloco, and Josue Otero, two of the principal distributors of drugs in the State Capital and who are pertinent to the criminal group Gente Nueva of the Sinaloa Cartel.

Meanwhile, the investigation of the attack advances, and it is known that Murillo and Otera were sought by the authorities, and that the authorities considered them as the principal drug distributors in the North-west of Chuhuahua and one of the principal objectives of the Attorney General of the State.



Yesterday a video surfaced of the multiple executions by the commando of La Linea. The ministry continues the operation to catch those responsible for the killing, Saturday night in the clandestine cock fighting arena at kilometer 10.5 of the highway to Cuauhtemoc.

"Various subjects with faces covered with hoods, fired guns at those inside, where four people died and two more while they received medical attention, as well as 14 people being injured, including two children of 7 and 10 years respectively.

According to the reports of the investigating agents of the Unit of Crimes against Life, it is known that the gunmen traveled in a gray Suburban truck and a Blue Dodge Avenger.

Local deputy Nadia Siqueiros condemned the events, following the initiative she presented last August to increase the punishment of those involved in clandestine animal fights.

Otis: Thanks to those leaving comments pointing at this new information


Photo surfaces of murdered priest posing with weapon at dance

Chivis Martinez for Borderland Beat

21 killed in so far in President Peña’s presidential term.
6 Killed in Guerrero in less than 3 years

As reported in my previous posts, two priests were among 3 killed in an armed attack in Guerrero.

The murdered priests are Germain Muñiz García, a native of Apango and parish priest of the church of San Cristóbal, in the mining town of Mezcala. And Iván Añorve Jaimes, from San Luis La Loma, municipality of Tecpan de Galeana and parish priest of the Sagrada Familia church in the town of Las Vigas, municipality of San Marcos, in the Costa Chica region.

The two priests and their four companions, attended a popular celebration in the town of Juliantla, municipality of Taxco, and were attacked directly after leaving the event when they were travelling on the federal highway Taxco-Iguala.
The victims were attending the celebration at the ranch "La Mision" of the rancher Hugo Figueroa in the celebrations of the Virgin of La Candelaria.

Although there have been press conferences by authorities and the church, there are facts that remain fuzzy, even the amount of those in the truck has fluctuated from 6 to 7.

Priests usually get killed In Mexico because they refuse to play nice with narcos.  In Tamaulipas, one priest was killed for not allowing a mass in his church, to honor niña blanca of the Santa Muerte.  Another was killed in Guerrero for refusing to baptize a capo’s baby.  His being a narco was not the reason, it was the lack of protocol that had not been met that witnesses say was the reason for the refusal.  Another priest was killed in Guerrero for his strong sermons against organized crime and violence.

So there is a story that has been published in some of the news outlets that I can’t quite grasp.  And it begins with a press conference by the governor Hector Astudillo and his state attorney general Xavier Olea.       

I must interject that many people dispute Astudillo claims including the diocese flat out rejects the governor’s account.  Normally, most people would reject what he has to say, taking into account the dynamic of Guerrero politics and the governing administration.  But there is this little issue of a blurry photograph with who the governor says is the dead priest named Germain Muñiz García.

For the sake of the story, let’s say the photo is the priest he is with some bad looking characters, all armed and the priest is  posing with a weapon.

Astudillo says the church group went to the festival and left around 7pm where they went to a house or a hotel and the priests had consumed alcohol and “had weapons”.  Obviously no one, the priests, the chemist, the fisherman, the professor had a weapon when they were gunned down.

The Catholic Bishop said the priests were to speak to the Figueroa’s about recording a record.  Añorve Jaimes was a singer songwriter.

According to Olea, there were 3 organized crime groups at the festival.  He said police were not sent to keep the peace, “because we were not asked”.  He said because Father Muñiz García took a photo with the armed men.   He asserts that an organized crime group, in opposition to those in the photo with the priest, were incensed thinking the priest must be in their favor.  And that is what provoked the attack.  Enemy groups Guerreros Unidos and Los Rojos control the area. And various cells.

Fact is that there were more than a few walking around with weapons at the request of the festival organizer to maintain security.

Could it be the priest was a bad guy in collusion?  Sure, rare in Mexico but not unheard of. Could it be that the governor has created theater to take the negative spotlight off him for the 6 Guerrero priests killed in 3 years? Sure again.  Could there be a scenario where the priest was goofing around and posed with a weapon? I could see that.  I have had friendships with priests and they are human, some are humorous, friendly people persons.  Priest are not forbidden from drinking alcohol.  Drinking to excess is off limits.

I don’t know the context for the photo but if these armed men were at the service of the organizer, perhaps someone asked him to pose and in bad judgement, he did.

There simply are not enough facts and evidence to say what happened and why.  We most likely will never know.  All I am sure of, they were gunned downed with 50 gunshots impacts to the truck.

And all those guns the Governor says the priest group were in possession of,  were nowhere in sight, all the victims and the truck were void of any weapons.

San Luis Potosí: Attack leaves 3 dead and 4 wounded

Translated by El Profe from Valor Por Tamaulipas
               
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This morning a commando of heavily armed civilians with AK-47 assault rifles, commonly known as a goat horn [cuerno de chivo], riddled a group of people in the Morales neighborhood [of San Luis Potosí], leaving 3 people dead and at least one more seriously wounded, as authorities moved to the site of the attack and began with the corresponding investigation folder.

According to the facts, the violent incident occurred around 1 am at the intersection of Calle de la Plata and Morales-Saucito Avenue belonging to the Saucito neighborhood. In the area, a group of young people were chatting, when suddenly a truck with heavily armed civilians arrived and when they were a few meters away, took out the high-powered weapons and started firing at them.

After the attack, the gunmen fled at full speed to an unknown destination, while at the scene, three males lost their lives and one more had serious injuries.

Immediately agents of all the police agencies and military personnel arrived at the site to cordon off the area and keep the crime scene intact, while the experts of the Attorney General's Office began with the lifting of clues or evidence that help to reveal the identity and whereabouts of the alleged assassins.

At the same time, staff of the Red Cross provided medical assistance to the injured and due to the seriousness of their injuries had to be transferred to a hospital. The staff of the Legal Medical Service (SEMELE) will proceed with the examination of the dead bodies and transferring them to the facilities for their autopsy.

It should be noted that, faced with this new wave of violence, the authorities have been overwhelmed, and the State Police in Rioverde were victims of crime, as their radio communication antennas were stolen as well as coding devices, transmission devices, batteries and even surveillance cameras.

Another version

 
Three people were killed and four more were seriously injured in an armed attack during a house party.

The events occurred at dawn on Wednesday in Plata and Cobre streets in the Morales neighborhood, in the capital of San Luis Potosí.

Witnesses point out that armed men on a motorcycle burst onto the people, and including the deaths, there were several reported seriously wounded and taken to the Central Hospital.

On Tuesday, the Prosecutor's Office reported 13 violent deaths in San Luis Potosí during the week of January 29 to February 4. With this armed attack the figure rises to 18 murders in less than 15 days.  

Coahuila: Prison Chief caught on camera holding a weapon to the head of the prison dentist

Posted by LeChef for Borderland Beat  from Vanguardia

Israel Frias Luna, director of the Social Reinsertion Center (CERESO) of Torreón, has been relieved of his post

The State Security Commission clarified that Israel Frias Luna, director of the Center for Social Reinsertion (CERESO) of Torreón, has already been removed from his position, after the director appeared in images, threatening a doctor with a weapon while the two were the Coahuila prison.

On social networks, the images began circulating in which the prison chief appears in one of the images drawing his charge gun, and in a second image where it is placed on the head to Dr. Magadan, who is a dentist inside the prison. 

José Luis Chapa Reséndiz, Coahuila state security commissioner, reported that Frías Luna was immediately removed from his position as director of the Torreonense Cereso and is placed under investigation by the internal control body.

 "Any element of the State Security Commission that acts outside the law will be punished according
to law, we are now investigating, if there is any culpability, this person will be punished," he said.

Chapa Reséndiz indicated that, Frías Luna, depending on the results of the investigations, could face an investigation by the Public Prosecutor's Office for  possible criminal conduct.

The official confirmed that the person works as a dentist in the prison.

"Dr. Magadan works with us, he is a dentist at the center, he is the one who takes care of the inmates and until now we do not know the caused the incident but the investigation is already underway.

The people of the internal control body since yesterday (Tuesday) and all day today (Wednesday) was taking statements from the administrative staff, including Dr. Magadan himself to clarify the facts, "said Chapa Reséndiz.

Authorities and experts clash over presence of CJNG in Mexico City

Translated by El Profe for Borderland Beat from La Silla Rota
           
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Chocan autoridades y expertos sobre presencia de CJNG en CDMX


Official PGR reports contradict their current refusal to recognize the presence of the organization in Mexico City, while experts confirm it.

by RODRIGO GUTIÉRREZ GONZÁLEZ

Monday morning, narcomantas allegedly signed by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) appeared on Periferico between Rio Hondo and Chihuahua in the Progreso neighborhood of the Alvaro Obregon delegation; illustrating an alleged immersion of the criminal group in the capital.

After this finding, the question arises: Does the CJNG operate in Mexico City?

This is what the authorities say

According to a document of the Attorney General's Office (PGR) obtained via transparency, dated November 2017, the CJNG is the drug trafficking group that has the most presence in the country.

Jalisco, Colima, Michoacán, Guanajuato, Nayarit, Guerrero, Morelos and Veracruz are the eight states where the criminal organization has been detected.

As for Mexico City, the PGR rejects the existence of a drug trafficking group with marked territory, thus ruling out the Tláhuac Cartel.

However, in July of 2017, news program "En Punto" ensured that in a document made by federal authorities -without mentioning which document and by which authorities they had access to- it is pointed out that the CJNG had a presence in 17 states, among them Mexico City. That is, nine states more than those referred to by the PGR.

Those documents referred to by "En Punto" ruled out areas such as Michoacán, Colima and Veracruz, indicated by the PGR, and added Baja California, Baja California Sur, Tamaulipas, San Luis Potosí, Aguascalientes, Hidalgo, Tlaxcala, State of Mexico, Oaxaca, Chiapas, Quintana Roo and Mexico City.

In 2015, based on an information request, the PGR reported in the official letter SJAI / DGAJ / 04529/2015 that in Mexico there are nine drug trafficking cartels that operate through 43 criminal cells. While the new Generation Jalisco cartel not only operates in Jalisco, but spread to Colima, Michoacán, Guanajuato, Nayarit, Guerrero, Morelos, Veracruz and Mexico City.

Previously, in 2015, the Deputy Attorney General for Organized Crime Investigation (Seido), referred to the presence of the CJNG in Mexico City.

In the same year, the Drug Control Administration (DEA) pointed out that five criminal groups have a "slight" presence in the capital: the Beltrán Leyva Cartel,  The Zetas, the Gulf Cartel, the Knights Templar, and the Sinaloa Cartel, without mention of the CJNG.

For his part, the head of the Mexico City Government, Miguel Ángel Mancera, reiterated once again that drug trafficking groups do not operate in the capital and that the self- proclaimed Tláhuac Cartel, the city government's main priority, is a violent organization but does not reach the level of a cartel.

This is what the experts say

Javier Oliva, specialist in public security and researcher at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), recommends taking the appearance of this narcomanta with some skepticism due to the political / electoral context that the country is experiencing, as well as in the capital.

"I do not rule out, in the variable of analysis, the electoral circumstances" says the specialist.

In an interview with La Silla Rota, Oliva mentions that the use of narcomantas in visible places to send messages has already been abandoned, "it has practically disappeared".

The UNAM researcher assures that the CJNG operates not only in Mexico City, but also in the greater Mexico City area, the State of Mexico.

He adds that not only the CJNG, but other criminal organizations of this type operate within the capital.

For Oliva, the interest of Mexico City for the cartels is the high consumption of drugs in the capital.

"The [consumer] market is very bulky," says Javier Oliva, adding: "Mexico City is a place of consumption, not of coming and going."

Víctor Manuel Sánchez Valdés, specialist in public safety and columnist in this publication, holds the theory that said narcomanta was placed by a criminal cell of the CJNG to intimidate a criminal enemy.

In this case, the criminal group would be Unión Tepito, a group that currently has an internal war with La U.

The Sánchez Valdés theory is strengthened after one of the subjects mentioned and threatened in the blanket was Víctor Hugo Ávila or Víctor Hugo Ramírez, "El Huguito", one of the leaders of La U, who was arrested last October, in Paseo de la Reforma, when he was carrying a merchant kidnapped in a van. Two days later he was released.

"Most likely, in fact, is that the manta’s author is the Unión Tepito that is still faithful to the people of "Pancho Cayagua" (founder of the criminal group killed in October last year). Cayagua people worked hand in hand with the CJNG "

"It's like when you hit the little brother and go for the big brother," says Victor Manuel. In this case the younger brother is the Unión Tepito and the big one is the CJNG. "Although in reality the older brother is not interested in coming to defend the younger one.”

On the reason for the presence of criminal organizations in the capital, Víctor Manuel Sánchez Valdés mentions that it is as much for drug dealing in the city as money laundering.

While the best profits are given outside the country, Sánchez Valdés sees local drug dealing as a sufficient gain with less risk, since the chances of being caught by authorities of a developed country that are more difficult to corrupt are higher than in a system like Mexico.

"When you have higher income, you have to put it one way or another into the financial system in order to try to get money that can be used in a legal way, that is, money laundering. Where is it difficult to launder more money? Where there's more money. Where does it call less attention to deposit large amounts of money? In very large cities. In our country there is Mexico City, Monterrey, Guadalajara, Cancun, for the dimensions of the market "

      
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Marines on an operation in Tláhuac
                       
For Sánchez Valdés, in Mexico City there are at least 10 organized crime groups operating. 
  • The CJNG would operate in Tlalpan, Xochimilco, Coyoacán, Tláhuac and Iztapalapa. 
  • The Sinaloa Cartel in the Cuauhtémoc, Miguel Hidalgo, Venustiano Carranza and Iztapalapa delegations. 
  • The Zetas in the Cuauhtémoc and Iztapalapa delegations. 
  • The Gulf Cartel in Gustavo A. Madero and Iztapalapa. 
  • The Beltrán Leyva in Cuajimalpa, Miguel Hidalgo.
  • The Knights Templar in Benito Juárez and Iztapalapa 
  • La Familia Michoacana in Tlalpan, Magdalena Contreras, Gustavo A. Madero, Iztacalco, Tláhuac and Iztapalapa. 
  • Guerreros Unidos in Tlalpan, Magdalena Contreras, Azcapotzalco, Cuauhtémoc, Gustavo A. Madero, Iztacalco, Coyoacán and Iztapalapa. 
  • Cartel de Tláhuac in Tlalpan, Xochimilco, Coyoacán, Tláhuac, Iztapalapa and Milpa Alta. 
  • The Tepito Union in Magdalena Contreras, Benito Juárez, Cuauhtémoc, Gustavo A. Madero, Miguel Hidalgo, Iztacalco, Coyoacán, Venustiano Carranza and Iztapalapa.
Alejandro Hope, security analyst, in his article "Plata o Plomo," published today by El Universal, says that organized crime operates in Mexico City and the cases of Tláhuac and Tepito set an example.

About the CJNG, Hope relates “suspicion" that organization does have a presence in the capital, where they would move large quantities of drugs and wash money.

As for the narcomanta, Alejandro Hope doubts that it is the CJNG, since the activity of the cartels in the capital is more cautious.

So he puts some theories on the table:

•  It was placed by a local CJNG commander without permission from his bosses to intimidate rivals.

• False members of the CJNG are responsible, using the name of the cartel to perform other criminal activities such as extortion. This, clearly without the "permission" of the Jalisco cartel.

• An enemy group of the CJNG could have placed it as a distractor.

Fighting for the Plaza: CDS Vs CJNG in Pacific States

Translated by Yaqui for Borderland Beat from: Economiahoy
Feb 7, 2018
Extra Material from: Universal

Mexico, which in 2017, experienced its blackest year with 25,339 homicides, is living a reconfiguration of the map of violence with three municipalities in the western state of Colima among the most dangerous in the country, warned today the NGO Citizen Council for Public Safety and Criminal Justice.

"There is a change in violence, in the configuration of the clashes between criminal groups; from the north of the country, which we had before in the states of Tamaulipas, Chihuahua and Coahuila, now it is moving towards Colima, in the Pacific Region," said the president of this civil entity, José Antonio Sanchez Ortega.

"The change towards the Pacific is due mainly to the fact that the Jalisco Cartel Nueva Generación (CJNG) and the Sinaloa Cartel (CDS) are fighting in this area for control of the plaza and drug trafficking routes " the expert said.



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1 Tecomán                                                      

2 Manzanillo                                        
3 Chilapa
4 Acapulco
5 Tijuana
6 Beaches of Rosarito
7 Los Cabos
8 Apatzingán
9 Chilpancingo
10 Navolato
11 Zihuatanejo
12 Colima
13 Iguala
14 Tlalnepantla
15 Zacatecas
16 La Paz
17 Fresnillo                                                 The Most Violent States and Municipalities of 2017 :
18 Guadalupe                                                                   Guerrero and Colima
19 Center
20 Victoria

According to the president of the Citizen Council for Public Safety and Justice , José Antonio Sánchez Ortega, the Cities with the most violent deaths during 2017 are Tecomán and Manzanillo , in Colima; Chilapa and Acapulco , in Guerrero; Tijuana and Playas de Rosarito , in Baja California.

Los Cabos , Baja California Sur; Apatzingán , Michoacán; Chilpancingo , Guerrero; Navolato , Sinaloa; Zihuatanejo , Guerrero; city ​​of Colima; Iguala , Guerrero; Tlalnepantla , State of Mexico; city ​​of Zacatecas; La Paz , Baja California Sur; Fresnillo and Guadalupe , in Zacatecas; Centro , Tabasco; Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas.

Sánchez Ortega affirmed that Tecomán, with a population of 129,000 inhabitants has become the most violent Municipality in Mexico with a rate of 172 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants, 3 among the list of 20 most violent Municipalities, not only entered the list for the first time, but did so to occupy the first place.

However, the activist said that the most dramatic change in the map of violence in the country is the inclusion of three Municipalities of Colima: capital Colima, Manzanillo and Tecomán, that no previous ranking had figured among the list.

The City of Colima registered 223 intentional homicides last year and obtained a score of 103.8 in the municipal violence index.

He said that with 103.3 points in the Municipal Violence Index, which is the highest recorded so far and more than four times the same indicator of national violence, which was 23.40 points in 2017, Tecomán is the most violent municipality in the country .

"Apart from the capital city of the state, the two most violent ones in 2017 were added to Zacatecas; Fresnillo and Guadalupe, " Sanchez Ortega said at a press conference.

This index score is based on the NGO's  own calculation from data obtained on homicides,  kidnappings, robberies with violence, extortion, violations and injuries.

 The ten most violent Municipalities in Mexico are: Tecomán (103.8), Manzanillo (77.21), Chilapa de Álvarez (75.92), Acapulco de Juárez (72.85), Tijuana (70.16), Playas de Rosarito (70.08). , Los Cabos (70.05), Apatzingán (67.51), Chilpancingo de los Bravo (65.8) and Navolato (65.4).

Thus, three of the ten most violent localities belong to the southern state of Guerrero, two to Colima, two to Baja California, one to Baja California Sur, another to Michoacán and the last to the state  of Sinaloa.

In intentional homicides, Tecomán also tops the list with a rate of 172.51 per 100, 000 inhabitants. It is followed by Chilapa de Álvarez, with a rate of 134.8, and Manzanillo, with 118.01. Acapulco is in sixth place with 834 dead and a rate of 97.7 per 100, 000 inhabitants.

The twin city tourist center of Los Cabos, in Baja California Sur, is in ninth position with a rate of 96.57 homicides per 100, 000  inhabitants and 317 murders.

The study includes the 230 municipalities which  had 100, 000 or more inhabitants in 2017, according to the demographic projections of the National Population Council.

In the 230 municipalities in 2017  had a total of 81,100,000  inhabitants, who constituted 65.68 % of the population of the country and where 82.26 % of the six crimes referred to also take place; ie : intentional homicide, kidnapping, rape, assaults, frauds, and  robbery with violence and extortion.

Mexico closed 2017 with 25,339 intentional homicides, an unusual high figure in two decades of records and represents an increase of 18.91% over the previous year.

The NGO reported today that the data offered by the Executive Secretariat of the National Public Security System (SESNSP) is incomplete and lower than the real figure, since they do not count the number of victims, but the number of investigative files opened due to a criminal event.

For the activist it is not enough to deploy more than 5,000 elements of the Federal Police and the Criminal Investigation Agency of the PGR  to complete arrest warrants against the main generators of violence in the country.

From: LetraRoja
Feb 8, 2018

Sinaloa State is ranked as the state with the highest number of alleged crimes of femicide in the country, according to Criminal and Emergency Information with a Gender Perspective published for the first time by the Ministry of the Interior.

Of the 676 officially registered cases in the nation , as of December 31, 2017, 82 correspond to Sinaloa, and both Culiacán and Mazatlán are located in the first and second place, respectively, within the 100 municipalities with the highest number of femicides in Mexico, followed by Navolato and Ahome.

Specialists rate this as embarrassing for a state where gender alert remains active.


According to the data, Sinaloa appears above states such as Veracruz, which registers 79 cases; Oaxaca, with 58; and the State of Mexico, with 57.

Captured : “El Z 43 “, José Maria Guízar Valencia, US Citizen

Translated by Yaqui for Borderland Beat from: Milenio


José María Guizar Valencia was captured during an operation of the Navy and the Federal Police.

Feb 9, 2018

Since 2014 the United States has offered a reward of $5,000,000 for information leading to the arrest of "El Z40". Elements of the Ministry of the Navy in coordination with the Federal Police captured José María Guizar Valencia, "El Z43" , also known as "Charly", "Chema" or "Carlitos ", identified by the federal government as the leader of Los Zetas and one of the 122 priority objectives , revealed federal officials. 

The Americans have pointed to "El Z43" to be behind the murder of an undetermined number of Guatemalans , when the Zetas took control of the border region between Mexico and Guatemala. 

Through his Twitter account, the Interior Minister, Alfonso Navarrete Prida, congratulated the Marinas and civilian staff for the operation that led to the capture of the "priority objective", although did not mention his name. 

This Friday, Renato Sales Heredia, National Security Commissioner, will officially announce the capture in the Ministry of the Interior. 

Until the close of this edition, the authorities did not offer details of the area where the operation against "El Z43" took place . 

The Office of Narcotics and International Affairs reported that "El Z43" assumed full control of Los Zetas and is responsible for trafficking thousands of kilos of cocaine and methamphetamine to the United States. 

The Narcotics Rewards Program, founded in 1986, offers up to $5,000,000 USD for information leading to the capture of major drug traffickers operating outside the United States. 

José María Guizar Valencia, is a US citizen and is reportedly behind the execution of Veracruz policemen, in events that occurred last year. 

According to the State Department, he became Los Zetas leader after the founder of the criminal group, Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano, "El Lazca" , and the arrest of his successor, Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales, "El Z40" . 

Guizar Valencia has complete control over his group , which allied with the faction led by Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales, "El Z40" , currently imprsioned, the US officials warned at the time. 

CTNG: “El Kaibil” Detained After High Speed Chase

Translated by Yaqui for Borderland Beat from: Unimexicali


                                                    Jose Angel N, "El Kaibil", CTNG
Feb 4, 2018

Authorities in Baja California reported the arrest of José Ángel N, "El Kaibil", considered a priority criminal target due to his alleged collaboration with the Cartel Tijuana Nueva Generación and his probable involvement in homicides and kidnappings. 

Intelligence work of the State Preventive Police in coordination with the Municipal Police led to the location and detention of José Ángel known by the alias of "El Kaibil" who is alleged leader of a criminal cell dedicated to executions mainly in Playas de Rosarito in the Santa Fe and Campos neighborhoods.

"He had an active arrest warrant for the crime of theft of a motor vehicle and an admission to the Tijuana Social Rehabilitation Center," authorities said.

The subject driving with excessive speed on board a vehicle in the vicinity of Colonia Constitution  for which he was asked to stop. ''El Kaibil" ignored the police , led them on a chase, then tried to flee on foot but he was apprehended.



"This person is identified as a member of the cartel Tijuana Nueva Generación with the nickname of ''El Kaibil'' or ''El 18'', who leads a criminal cell dedicated to homicide and drug dealing," the official of the Coordination Group said. 

Two others linked to the CJNG fall:

Two alleged members of the New Generation Jalisco Cartel (CJNG) dedicated to safeguard a safe house were also arrested in Tijuana. During the operation weapons, drugs, radio communication equipment and an fake police uniform were confiscated. 

The detainees are: Eduardo "N", 26 years old, originally from Guanajuato, and Edgar Oliver, 31 years old and originally from Veracruz.


Corrido singer, Javier Reyes "El príncipe del Corrido" Gunned Down

Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat  From Reforma,  and Facebook

Corrido singer Javier Reyes, known as "El principe del Corrido", was murdered early this Friday in Colonia San José, Tláhuac Delegation.

Reyes, 33, was known to compose a corrido for  the late leader of the Tláhuac Cartel.

Javier Reyes, was gunned down  in the streets of the Tláhuac delegation. The murder occured   between the streets of Hoja Seca and Luis Alcaráz, in the San José neighborhood. The singer is known to be the one who composed a corrido to Felipe de Jesús Pérez Luna, "El Ojos" leader  of the Tláhuac cartel, killed by federal forces last year.

It is also known that Javier Reyes, sang at parties organized by the son of El Ojos, whom they call "El MK". MK replaced his father as leader of the cartel. 

"And I remain in force with allmy people, commanding the cartel always very forward, my name is: El Ojos, el Mal, I'm Felipe Pérez," sang "El principe del Corrido."

According to the first reports of the Attorney General's office, at 1:20 hours the singer was found badly wounded, by preventive police.

The singer had been chased by another vehicle through the streets until they caught up with him and opened fire.  He was on board his Buick truck, Enclave type, wine-colored, with Mexico State license plates.

Patrols were informed of a shootout and when they arrived at the scene, they found the wounded man still alive,  they requested the support of a Civil Protection ambulance to transfer the wounded to the General Hospital of Tláhuac.

However, around 4:00 hours, Reyes died as a result of the gun shot wounds he received in the attack.



Guachochi Chihuahua: El Gabacho Jefe de Plaza killed in confrontation

Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat



Thursday afternoon the Chihuahua Public Prosecutor's Office announced a confrontation between state police and armed groups in the municipality of Guachochi, where one person died and another was injured.

According to the official report,  members of the Sinaloa cartel opened fire on state police officers conducting a routine patrolling of the area and during the clash a person identified as Rafael PV, alias "El Gabacho", was killed.  The deceased man is jefe de plaza for the region and operator of the Sinaloa cartel.

After a quick intervention of the troops assigned to the Division of Rural Operations, the capture of Julián GO was achieved, who is a member of the same CDS cell.


Weapons as well as packs of cocaine were secured.

Seven killed after commando storms Jalisco restaurant

Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat- from Koneocho  video from Milenio

7 Killed in El municipality de San Pedro Tlaquepaque in the greater Guadalajara area and last Saturday 10 killed in Guadalajara 




A commando killed seven people Thursday in the municipality of San Pedro Tlaquepaque, Jalisco.

The events occurred in the seafood restaurant "Don Cangrejo", located in the Guadalupana colonia, where at least 10 armed individuals arrived and, without saying a word, began shooting the patrons.

Six of the victims died inside the establishment and the seventh in the aid station. A waitress was injured.

After the attack, survivors called the emergency services, but when the paramedics arrived at the site they found six of the people shot were without vital signs.

A survivor, who received four hits, was taken to the aid station to receive first aid, but minutes later he died.

According to the authorities, at least four of the victims were carrying firearms.

Last Saturday 3, the Jaliscians lived a bloody day in the metropolitan area of ​​Guadalajara, with a total of 10 executions.

The morning of that day, five men were killed in the living room of a house located in the Santa Paula neighborhood in Tonalá.

In that same colony, in the street González Camarena, at the junction with Guadalupe Sigala, they found.  inside a vehicle,  the bodies of two young people each with a head bullet wound.

In the municipality of Guadalajara, a man of approximately 50 years was shot dead at the junction of Vallarta and Duque de Rivas. His body received at least five bullet impacts and was found lying outside a pharmacy.

On the Planetarium's Green Cross, a 25-year-old man was taken to the aid station to receive medical attention for gunshot wounds to the neck and chest, but minutes later he died.


Lastly, a man was shot and killed in the Las Juntas de Tlaquepaque neighborhood.





Narcos create panic and terror in Acapulco colonias

Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat  from Reforma

120 commercial establishments closed due to the situation of insecurity.


Acapulco, Guerrero.- Several colonias in Acapulco are paralyzed by the terror imposed by drug traffickers.

The paralysis occurs after 72 hours in which the port registered murders, fires of transport units, shootings and persecutions.

In the neighborhoods Jardín, Azteca, Almendros, Miramar, Jardín Mangos, Palmas, Tehuacán and Muro, a de facto "curfew" prevails from 8 o'clock at night.

In those colonies dozens of schools, health centers, churches and stores are closed; public transport operates partially, affecting trips to and from other points in the port. And no one leaves his house after nightfall begins. 

Of the 600 units, including taxis and urban trucks, operating in the area, less than half provide service.

"Those who dare to use the services  know that their life is in danger," revealed a trucker leader.

The zone in question connects Pie de la Cuesta with the traditional Acapulco, and the paralysis also affects shops and hotels in other places.

The schools and establishment closed after Wednesday night, when an urban transport truck was burned and two shootings were recorded in Colonia Jardín Mangos.

In another incident, the body of a person was found in the trunk of a taxi next to a cardboard with messages of threat to other drivers. [the attack on taxi drivers stems  not only from the rise of piso, but the refusal of drivers to collect piso on behalf of narcos]

Alejandro Martinez Sidney, leader of the Federation of Chambers of Commerce in Acapulco, said that in recent weeks, a new group of extortionists is demanding a fee from businesses.

"Many are already paying double quota, which in some cases is up to 1,000 pesos a day that they pay to each group," said Martinez.

The businessman pointed out that, so far this year, 120 commercial establishments closed due to the situation of insecurity.


Elements of the Army were deployed to the west of the port to reinforce the surveillance.

Navy confused a vegetable vendor with "Mayo Zambada" and detained him

Char for Borderland Beat republished from Cafe Negro-El Portal Politico de Sinaloa


Culiacán, Sinaloa.- The special group of the Mexican Navy that killed four assassins during a confrontation outside a party hall in La Limita de Itaje, was looking for Ismael El Mayo Zambada, leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, and during the operation arrested a merchant, whom was  confused with the alleged drug trafficker.

Relatives of Antonio Valenzuela Iribe, 70, who is one of the two detained by the Navy, reported that the arrest of the merchant was illegal, and that during the operation the sailors also simulated executing at least 10 young people who were in the party ordering them to say where the "M" (Mayo Zambada) was and where the weapons were hidden.

"The sailors grabbed my grandfather and put a hat on him and compared it to a photo. Then a sailor approaches me and says: what's that man's name?  I say: Antonio Valenzuela, why? And he tells me: he is not called that. And I answer again and I say: Who are you confusing with? And he says: “we're not confusing him, it's Mr. Mayo Zambada."


They said that after the confrontation outside, the sailors broke in and violently forced all the men to lie on the floor for four hours, and that they were stripped of money and jewels.

They said that during the deployment, registered between Tuesday night the 30th and the morning of January 31, Antonio Valenzuela was at his table, inside the party room, when he was arrested, and not outside when the shooting occurred.

"My family member was interrogated, and it turned out they determined that my grandfather was Mr. Mayo Zambada, which is a lie."

They contend that sailors planted an AK-47 assault rifle and an AR-15 rifle, as well as cartridges, in the vehicle that Antonio Valenzuela had parked outside the party room, and that was the pretext to stop him. They said they did the same with the other detainee, who was also inside the room and they planted a tactical vest with cartridges.

They assured that the white Hyundai vehicle of the merchant was transferred by the sailors to the facilities of the delegation of the Attorney General's Office, before the experts arrived who reviewed the units that were hit by bullets during the confrontation.

The family of Antonio Valenzuela denied knowing the four young people killed by the Navy and had no knowledge if they were escorts of any of the people who were at the party. They also denied having a relationship with El Mayo Zambada.

The official version issued by the Secretariat of Public Security of Sinaloa on the fact indicates that the elements of the Navy carried out a patrol in the area of ​​La Limita de Itaje, when they were met with gunfire, when they repelled the aggression, they killed the four alleged gunmen identified as Manuel Filiberto Tapia Arellano, José Saúl Félix, Daniel Armando Serrano, and José Alonso Angle Castañeda.

The SSP also reported the securing of six long guns and four pistols, as well as cartridges and the arrest of Héctor Román, and don Antonio, originally from Tamazula, Durango.

As for the execution simulations, the relatives said the sailors were choosing and taking the young people out for interrogation.

"I heard that they saw one and said: you, come; and they stopped him and asked him questions first, I do not know what kind of questions. And to make them afraid they fired gunshots. Doing that to terrify them, because according to them (the sailors), at the party was El Mayo and that those who were there were from his cartel.  My family has no ties to him."

They explained that Don Antonio Valenzuela was first put at the disposal of the Public Ministry accused of belonging to organized crime, but that this crime was already rejected by the federal authorities and that now he only faces charges for carrying a firearm exclusively for the Army.

Family members said that at age 70, Mr. Antonio continues to work honestly and has never had problems with any authority. 

"My grandfather is a merchant. He works hard every day from 6 am. He goes to Los Mochis, Guasave, or places here near Culiacán to buy fruit or vegetables in season; loads his  double wheeled truck and returns home,  and sells to all the nearby colonies or small towns. A job where he does not earn much but it is honest labor. That's why what happened is so painful. He is a hardworking person who has worked his ass off all his life and who is an innocent but was arrested and detained anyway."

"El Z43": Hiding in Plain Sight in Mexico City

Translated by Yaqui for Borderland Beat from: Milenio


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Feb 11, 2018

Identified as the last of the active founder Zetas , the last of the "numbered" of the criminal organization, José María Guízar Valencia, "El Z43" , took refuge six months ago in Mexico City, where he was a regular gambler at horse races at the Hipódromo de las Américas.


That was one of the activities he carried out in the capital city , from where even with his diminished power,  he managed drug trafficking operations and organized crime in the southeast of the country.



"Z 43", for whom the US government offered a reward of $5,000,000 hid in the suite of a hotel in Colonia Roma, for which he paid a monthly rent of 20,000 pesos. Intelligence reports to which Milenio had access, reveal that at least since August 2017, Guízar Valencia had moved to Mexico City, but he did not completely cease his business as head of the Tabasco plaza for the Los Zetas cartel .


                                            Hotel Marabella Colonia Roma, Mexico City

Guizar Valencia sought to pass unnoticed, he was alone, without the security circle with which he normally moved or the escorts and assassins with whom he unleashed a wave of violence in entities such as Veracruz and Chiapas.

"Z 43's" love of horses, which included buying horses and betting on them made him a frequent customer at the Hippodrome, which is in the Miguel Hidalgo delegation.


The federal authorities managed to document the constant visits to the betting area and his other movements, which allowed them to prepare the operation against Guizar Valencia.

Officials said the Zeta's regional leader preferred to hide in Mexico City because it made it easier for him to go unnoticed, contrary to his areas of operations, "where he was known."

Alone, as he returned to his hotel in Colonia Roma, "Z 43" was captured in the street, the last of the "numbered" heads of Los Zetas , the 43rd leader of a story that began with "El Z1", Arturo Guzmán Decena,  who built up the armed wing of the Gulf Cartel in 2001.

For the federal government, 17 years after its creation, the fraction of leaders of the criminal group ended with the capture, without a single shot, of "El Z43" .

It concludes a stage in which several military deserters of the Special Forces Aeromobile Group (Gafes), an elite body of the Army, created the fearsome Zetas and became hit men in the service of capo Osiel Cárdenas Guillén.

In a few years, they achieved a power that made the Barack Obama administration classify them in 2011 as an "unusual and extraordinary threat to the stability of international political and economic systems" due to their degree of dangerousness and violence.

Wedding Party Photo:

A photograph held by Milenio shows Guízar Valencia along with nine "legendary" Zetas who not only met to commit a crime, but also to socialize. The image was captured in 2010, the year in which the violent Zetas were at the top of the drug trafficking scene; they are seen embracing, as great friends or family members. 

The ten "greats" attended the wedding of Salvador Alfonso Martínez Escobedo, "El Ardilla" , in Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas, in which the godfather was the late Zeta leader Heriberto Lazcano, "El Lazca".

These were times of splendor for these criminals, who in the same year became independent of the Gulf cartel. In 2010 they were no longer the armed wing of the criminal organization, but one more cartel.

Of the men shown in the photo, three of them were killed and seven were captured during operations by federal and military forces.

It is observed from left to right to Francisco Antonio Medina Mejía, "El Quemado" , killed in April 2012; "Commandante Gallo" , who lost his life in January 2012; Fernando Galaviz or Juan Carlos Gutiérrez, "El Pinky" , arrested in March 2013.

Óscar Omar Treviño Morales, "El Z42" , arrested in March 2015; Salvador Alfonso Martínez Escobedo, "El Ardilla" , captured in October 2012; José María Guízar Valencia, "El Z43" , arrested on February 8, 2018.

Carlos Alberto Oliva Castillo, "La Rana" , apprehended in October 2011; Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales, "El Z40" , apprehended in July 2013; Mauricio Guízar Cárdenas, El Amarillo , arrested in July 2012 and José Luis Peña Brizuela, "El Pompín" , killed in August 2011.



The fall of each one of them represented the diminution of the Los Zetas power . In recent years "El Z43", Jose Maria Guitar Valencia, was in charge of the Plaza de Tabasco, he turned the southeast into a bastion, from there he  kept active the drug transfer operations from Colombia to the US.

The intelligence reports indicate that he had protection from local authorities to prevent operations, but he also deployed violence in states such as Chiapas and Veracruz.

Extraditable:

Guízar Valencia, also known as "El Charly" and "El Amo" , is  Mexican-American and formed part of the list of 122 priority objectives identified by the federal authorities, and of those 109  have now been neutralized.

The National Security Commissioner, Renato Sales confirmed the arrest of "El Z43" , operator of the transfer of drugs from Colombia to the US and one of the main generators of violence in the southeast region of Mexico and Guatemala.

He explained that the US government has already requested Mexico for his extradition, since "El Z43" has arrest warrants in Washington, Dallas and Laredo, although he is also accused in Tabasco, Puebla and Chiapas of crimes against health, arms trafficking, organized crime, homicide and kidnapping.

According to Mexican authorities, he was born on November 1, 1979 in Venustiano Carranza, Puebla, and began  drug trafficking in Michoacán in 1998, and  continued in 2001 in Tamaulipas.

In 2003 he began the recruitment of cells to seize the Palenque plaza in Chiapas; which in  2005 expanded its activities to Veracruz and by 2007 he  was in charge of the transport by land of cocaine from Colombia to the US, passing through Guatemala.

Sales Heredia said that Guízar Valencia "established connections with other suppliers in Central and South America, derived from control in the southeast of the country, in 2013 the defendant expanded its operations to the center of the Republic, mainly the state of Puebla."


Note: The claim "El Z43" was born in the state of Puebla contradicts the previously published information by Milenio that Guizar Valencia was born on that same date , Nov 1, 1979 in Tulare California ; see my BB Post on Friday Feb 9, 2018 

Ex Tijuana Pitcher Esteban Loaiza detained in San Diego in possession of more than 20 kilos of Heroin and Cocaine

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

Subject Matter: Arrest of Esteban Loaiza
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required


Reporter: Carlos Alvarez
The ex Mexican baseball pitcher, Esteban Antonio Loaiza Veyna, was detained this afternoon, Friday the 9th of February, in San Diego, California, United States, on charges of transporting drugs for sale.

The Sheriff's department of Condado, San Diego, informed that the ex sportsman, 46 years of age, and born in Tijuana, Baja California, faces charges after being detained for possession of more than 20 kilos of heroin and cocaine, charges that carry a fine of 200,000 dollars.


The ex pitcher and ex husband of the dead singer Dolores Janney Rivera Saavedra, better known only as Jenny Rivera, has a date before the Court of Condado, San Diego on the 14th of February to determine his legal situation.

According to information given out by the Sheriff's department, Loaiza Veyna was detained by elements of the said corporation and detained in their centre at South Bay.

In July of 2006, Loaiza Veyna was detained in Oakland, for driving while drunk at excessive speed in his Ferrari. In the same month, but in 2013, the ex pitcher was arrested in Tijuana together with various persons who were caught drinking beer in a taxi in the North Zone of the city.

Loaiza Veyna played with major league teams in the United States: the Philadelphia Phillies, the Chicago White Sox, the New York Yankees, the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Texas Rangers and the Oakland Athletics, with who, he signed a contract for 21.4 million dollars.

He also played with the Red Devils of Mexico City and with the Aguilas de Mexicali, in the Mexican Pacific league. In addition, the Mexican baseball player was the starting pitcher in the 70th anniversary game of the American League, during the All-Star game, held in Chicago in 2003.

Sinaloa Cartel: Massachusetts biggest drug bust 33 pounds of fentanyl

Chivis Martinez for Borderland Beat from Boston Herald

Enough drug to kill every man, woman and child in the state 


Federal agents and Boston police have seized more than 33 pounds of fentanyl — enough of the deadly synthetic opioid to theoretically kill every man, woman and child in Massachusetts — funneled in by Mexico’s  Sinaloa cartel.

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Allowed wiretaps after
being busted
A lengthy wiretap operation by a joint task force including Drug Enforcement Administration agents and Boston police resulted in an

early-morning sweep of the drugs and 37 suspects, including alleged kingpin Robert Contreras, 42, of Roxbury.

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley called the investigation “one of the longest, most far-reaching and most successful state wiretap investigations in Massachusetts history. ... But it did not stop there. It continued up the ladder to identify a second group at the top of the domestic pyramid, one with direct ties to Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel.”

Contreras was ordered held on $1 million bail during his arraignment yesterday on charges of trafficking fentanyl, heroin and cocaine.
The six-month investigation first led to the arrest late last year of Edward Soto-Perez, 43, of Roxbury, who led a group that would distribute drugs obtained from Contreras throughout Massachusetts and as far away as Pennyslvania, Conley said.

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Robert Contreras is the direct link to Sinaloa Cartel
  
“We allege that the Contreras organization worked with members of the Sinaloa cartel, one of the most powerful drug-trafficking organizations in the world, who imported huge quantities of narcotics into the northeastern United States,” Conley said. “In fact, we believe they were so high in the distribution structure that the next level up would take us outside the United States. Evidence suggests that the Contreras organization would receive those cartel narcotics and distribute them to the Soto-Perez group and others, who would in turn supply lower-level dealers.”

In total, 77 pounds of drugs were seized, including heroin, cocaine and opiate tablets in addition to the fentanyl. Authorities said they confiscated $300,000 in drug money.

Michael J. Ferguson, DEA’s special agent in charge of the New England Division, likened fentanyl to a weapon of mass destruction.

“You take a sweetener packet that has 1,000 milligrams in it that you put in a cup of coffee. It takes only two milligrams and it’s lights out for an individual,” Ferguson said. “We’re talking a couple of grains of salt or sand. It can kill you if you inject it in your arm, if you snort it up your nose or simply breathe it in the air. Drug traffickers are now lacing fentanyl not just with heroin, but with cocaine as well. As well as in pain pills, counterfeit pain pills made to look like Percocet.”

The 33 pounds of fentanyl seized is enough to kill more than 7 million people in its raw form, a law enforcement source told the Herald. The Bay State’s population is 6.8 million, census figures show.

The Mexican towns where even the police fear to tread

LeChef for Borderland Beat from El Pais  written by Zorayda Gallegos 

With officers gunned down, abducted or run out of town, Chihuahua precincts are close to defeat

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Patrolling the streets of Práxedis, in el Valle de Juárez.

Jorge lives in an improvised campsite in Práxedis, a silent town in the north of Mexico where few cars or people venture out on the streets. He is a member of the state police force, sent in by the Chihuahua state governor to combat the terrifying rate of violent crime. It is the state police that now handle a substantial portion of law enforcement in the area.

The Valley of Juárez, a region of Chihuahua bordering the US, has been a war zone riddled with organized crime for the past 10 years, due to its location at the crossroads of the routes used by drug traffickers and people smugglers. “We’ve been here since 2015 – there were no local police left because they had either been killed or abducted,” says Jorge at the precinct. When he first arrived here, he felt as though he were driving through a ghost town. “People didn’t come out on the streets, but bit by bit things have gone back to normal,” he says.

Práxedis and Guadalupe belong to the Valley of Juárez, a region surrounded by desert that was previously a prosperous cotton-growing area. But since the drug traffickers moved in more than 10 years ago, the territory has been a battleground for the Sinaloa and La Línea cartels smuggling drugs and people across the inhospitable gulf dividing this part of Mexico from the US.

 
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Panoramic view of  Ciudad Juárez,  Chihuahua.

The violence was largely responsible for the high number of murders in the state of Chihuahua in 2010, when it racked up a historic 3,903. The murder rate dropped dramatically in 2013, and though it began to climb again after 2016, the death toll in 2017 was still less that half of that at 1,566. In the volatile years between 2007 and 2015, any local police officer who had escaped death or abduction simply fled.

Lourdes López explains how her son was “carried off” along with four other policemen in Práxedis in 2009. “That was nine years ago and there’s been no justice,” she says. Her son had never used a gun and was never trained to do so. “He wanted to be a policeman ever since he was a boy and he was a good person who didn’t deserve what he got,” says the 62-year- old mother, who left town several days after her son was seized.

Martín Hueramo, a former mayor of Guadalupe, says that the municipal police were not prepared for the situation they found themselves in. “Towns had to confront organized crime with unarmed police officers whose only experience was with minor offenses. Nine policemen were killed in Guadalupe in various shoot-outs, and three human heads were left in an icebox. It was a terrifying era,” says Hueramo, who was granted political asylum in Texas. In that period, the population of Guadalupe fell from 13,000 to 2,000, he adds, although it has since bounced back to 5,000.

The last municipal policeman to work in Guadalupe, Joaquín Hernández, was killed in July 2015 after being lured to a phony crime scene. The municipal police department there was among the most frequently attacked. Between 2007 and 2010, it often closed down completely. In December 2010, it was shut down definitively when its head, Erika Gándara was “carried off” by a criminal group who sought her out in her own home. She was the last police officer left in the precinct following the death, disappearance or resignation of her colleagues. In 2014, the police station reopened with Máximo Carrillo at the helm, but he was killed in June 2015. He was then replaced by Joaquín Hernández, who was killed only three weeks later.
 
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A policeman walks in the barracks  in the locality of Práxedis, in Chihuahua.
The situation wasn’t much different in Práxedis. The last police officer in town was Marisol, a young 20-year-old criminology student who made international headlines as “The Bravest Woman in Mexico.” She lasted less than four months before death threats forced her to flee across the border into the US. After she’d gone, no one else offered to step up to the plate and the state police moved in on surveillance shifts.

To date, Guadalupe’s police precinct has no plans to reopen, according to the town council secretary, Fausto González Pérez. “It exposes people to danger,” he says. “If we issue a job notice, some courageous soul might come forward, but it’s a delicate matter.” The prison cells of the precinct are currently being used to store wine, and the money that once went towards the town’s security has been otherwise spent on sport and cultural activities. “These are difficult times,” says González Pérez. “Right now we are in a wilderness, but we are rebuilding the town.”

Beleaguered by crime

Chihuahua’s municipal police force is not equipped to deal with serious crime. A recent report in a Juárez newspaper reveals that there are towns such as Guachochi with 53 police officers but only 15 bulletproof vests. Meanwhile, in Rosales, there are 42 police officers without vests working on an average salary of $200 a month. The state government has had to intervene in as many as nine towns, either because the police are ill equipped or because the police department has become corrupt. Last year, in Ahumada, the director of Public Security, Carlos Alberto Duarte, and six of his men were arrested on criminal charges. Several months later, however, Duarte was back in his job.

Video released of SEIDO Agents Abducted by CJNG

JD for Borderland Beat from youtube Animal Politico and Reforma

The two agents of the SEIDO who disappeared on February 5, were abducted the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación.  

They were forced to participate in a video.

In the video you can see the two men wearing a white shirt that reads "SEIDO" in black letters. Both are surrounded by armed and hooded men.

In the recording, the agents denounce  "abuses" in the anti-drug operations  the federal government and the pair read a message against the secretaries of the Interior, Alfonso Navarrete, of the Defense, Salvador Cienfuegos and of the Navy, Vidal Francisco Soberón Saenz.
It is to undermine the State and humiliate the institutions, said the activist Isabel Miranda de Wallace.

“I hope that there is no fool who believes everything the agents  were told to say." she said. "Because it's obvious that if they put a gun on you, you're going to say you raped your grandmother, why? Because you're threatened, it's undoubtedly organized crime exerting  great power."

Alfonso Hernández Villavicencio, 28, and Octavio Martínez Quiroz, 26, were abducted.by CJNG  in the limits of Nayarit and Jalisco. They worked in the kidnapping division of SEIDO a part of the attorney general’s PGR agency, the top investigative agency in Mexico.

During the weekend, a video on social networks was broadcast in which the investigative agents, launched the accusations  and criticisms.

The agent is reading the script; he speaks of "agents who torture, rob, kidnap without respect towards women, children and the elderly, who are the principal victims”

And a warning; “This will happen to our associates from other agencies who commit these acts while hiding behind a badge.”

"This case personally touches me a lot and alarms me, firstly because the agents are people investigating kidnappings, they went to a baptism of a relative and obviously  someone detected that they were police," Wallace said.

"I understand, that they were wearing a cap that brought the code of SEIDO  and this is like telling the criminals 'look here I am.'


I urge the public not to believe in those videos."

About the agents

The attorney General's Office (PGR) reported that the young have barely a year working at SEIDO.  According to records of the Criminal Investigation Agency (AIC) they began on January 16, 2017.

There are no public records that public servants had worked before in that or another federal agency.
Both entered the PGR with the position of non-commissioned officer and were assigned to the "investigation of crimes" in the anti-kidnapping area of ​​the AIC.

Hernandez Villavicencio, 28 years old, studied criminology at the University of Ixtlahuaca CUI, in the State of Mexico.

Before entering the PGR, the agent worked as an escort in the Auxiliary Security Corps of the State of Mexico (CUSAEM) between February 2014 and June 2016.

In said corporation, Hernández Villavicencio was assigned to Region XXXI and held the position of "Officer A".

Martínez Quiroz, 26 years old, obtained his degree in Law from the Universidad Autónoma de Tlaxcala.

The only previous professional experience that the young man reported when entering the PGR was as "auxiliary" in a legal office between January 2011 and December 2013.

PGR did not give any personal information of the two men.  In the video, Hernández did send a greeting to “all of his family” and a separate greeting to his children.

The video did not reveal any noticeable signs of torture.

A baptism brought the agents to Nayarit

According to the investigations, the agents went to a personal commitment in Nayarit, apparently a christening.

However, before returning to Mexico City, they were picked up by members of the CJNG, the criminal organization that maintains control in that area.


The PGR informed on Sunday that the AIC has already initiated the necessary investigations and that it will not spare efforts or resources for the search and location of the agents.

The story of 'El Negro's' secret corrupt life dug up by Prescott man

LeChef for Borderland Beat republished from AZ Central By Dennis Wagner

 An ex-cop in Prescott digs into the corrupt life of "el negro" with FBI records and uncovers a secret plot to kill Mexico’s president.

Mexico City’s police chief was not an imposing man: short and pudgy, with thick jowls.

But as Mike Rothmiller sat across from Arturo Durazo Moreno 35 years ago, the air of authority was unmistakable.

Durazo, known as “El Negro,” was a lifelong friend to President Jose Ernesto López Portillo, and one of the most powerful men in Mexico.

Rothmiller was a lowly Los Angeles police detective who had traveled south with his partner Kenny Hamilton to work out an intelligence-sharing deal in preparation for the upcoming Los Angeles Olympics.

THE ENTENTE

An LAPD informer close to Durazo — a former Colombian police officer who immigrated to the United States — had set up the entente. And a police cavalcade had brought the detectives totheir meeting with the chief.

Then, immediately after the introductions, Durazo leveled an accusation: The American guests were CIA agents posing as cops. Through a translator, Durazo brushed off their denials and began talking about arms shipments and drug smuggling.

“You know what I do for the CIA and the Contras?” he asked.
That comment, which made no sense at the time, echoes in Rothmiller’s memory. Only years later, would Americans learn about a secret U.S. campaign, then underway, to arm insurgents fighting Nicaragua’s leftist government.

In that moment, however, it seemed that Mexico’s top cop was trying to sidetrack their negotiations.

Rothmiller and Hamilton tried to steer the conversation to counter-terrorism. There were reports that a Colombian organization known as the 19th of April Movement might be plottingan attack on the Olympic games. The detectives wanted help from Mexico to prevent an attack.

Again, El Negro played tough. He said he might be willing to share information — but only if the detectives would get him access to a U.S. database of stolen vehicles.

A DIRTY PAST

Rothmiller balked. Before heading south, he’d run a background check and learned that Mexico City’s police chief was dirty. Durazo had been indicted by a Florida grand jury seven years earlier for cocaine trafficking. And, to Rothmiller’s bewilderment, those charges were somehow erased from the U.S. justice system.

Knowing the value of stolen-vehicle data to Mexican crime syndicates, Rothmiller told El Negro that a detective could never make such a deal — then held his breath.
Durazo eventually abandoned his demand. He agreed to share information on terrorist groups. And he gave the two LA cops badges with credentials identifying them as majors on the Mexico City police force.

On the flight back to LA, Rothmiller's head swirled with questions: What was all the CIA talk? How did someone make a federal drug indictment disappear? And who was this guy?

Now a silver-haired author living in Prescott, Rothmiller never saw Durazo again.
But he kept watching, and kept wondering.

El Negro would become the most notorious lawman in Mexican history, a fugitive from his own government. And the target of a frantic, worldwide manhunt by the FBI, trying to stop a presidential assassination.

That drama, previously hidden in classified U.S. government files, is partially revealed in Rothmiller's recently published book, "Secrets, Lies and Deception."

But here is the full story, never told before.

While each detail of Rothmiller's account could not be independently verified, all key facts were corroborated by FBI reports, news archives, books, interviews and other records. Some FBI documents cited in this story were obtained independently by Virginia Colwell, an architectural historian in Mexico City whose father, Jack Colwell, was among the FBI agents who captured Durazo.

THE INFORMER'S TALE

Rothmiller worked in LAPD's Organized Crime Intelligence Division.

After the Mexico trip, he continued planning Olympic security, aided by a pair of Durazo's police colonels, plus the Colombian snitch.

Over time, Rothmiller says, those sources assured him Durazo was, in fact, tied to the CIA, and they alluded to U.S. government involvement not just with Nicaraguan rebels, but with drug smugglers.

Although skeptical, Rothmiller developed an appreciation for his informer's savvy and his connections.

The informer had once served as a police officer in Bogota, and seemed to have tentacles everywhere. But he would only learn years later, while reading FBI files on El Negro, just how far they reached.

Those documents contain dozens of references to an informer known as "Source Two." The person's name is blacked out, but the identity unmistakable: the Colombian.

'SOURCE TWO': A FRONT MAN FOR UNDERCOVER STINGS

FBI reports say Source Two was so close to Durazo that he served as a personal aide when El Negro moved to Los Angeles, even registering the former chief's vehicles to his home address in Southern California.

The FBI records mention that Source Two, as a Bogota police officer, became a confidante to Colombia's most powerful politicians in the late 1960s. After the adult son of a politician was involved in a fatal shooting, FBI records say, Source Two agreed to take the blame. In return, the Colombian government helped him flee to the United States to avoid arrest.

The Arizona Republic recently tracked down Source Two at his modest California home. Clear-eyed, feisty and articulate, the balding 82-year-old sipped coffee at a kitchen table, confirming the FBI reports and asking not to be identified for security reasons.

He said he began working for Colombia's secret police as a teenager and advanced in rank, becoming close with President Guillermo Valencia Muñoz.

Source Two said he and the son of an important political figure went out with two women one evening. He fell asleep in the car, and was awakened by gunfire: For reasons that are unclear, his friend had shot one of the women.

To avert a national scandal, Source Two said, he agreed to become a scapegoat. "I was so stupid. Unfortunately, I'm a very loyal person," he explained. "I say, 'Well, I was drunk. I did it.'"

Source Two vanished to Miami, then New York, where he got a job at a customs house. During the early 1970s, he was approached there by a Colombian government official offering $250,000 for help with a cocaine-smuggling operation.

Source Two said he has always hated drugs and terrorists, so he went to federal prosecutors and agreed to be the front man for an undercover sting. When the case broke, he said, Colombian cartels posted the $250,000 bribery sum as a bounty on his head. The Justice Department gave Source Two U.S.citizenship and a new identity, placing his family under witness protection with names they still use today. The government also helped launch his new career as informer.

"I never worked for the money," Source Two said. "I am a professional law enforcement officer, and I'm doing nothing for money."

He worked primarily on salary as a contract operative for the FBI, with additional jobs for the Customs Service, Drug Enforcement Administration, IRS, U.S. Marshals Service and local law enforcement. His civilian job, distributor for a body-armor company, served as cover while he traveled the world gathering intelligence and setting up criminals.

As suggested in FBI files, Source Two was mostly a shadow — running stings without being publicly exposed.

There were exceptions, however: Court records show he led a 1,500-pound cocaine seizure by the Mohave County Sheriff's Office in Arizona. And he put a major narcotics trafficker behind bars in Texas.

Source Two said he has never counted up the investigations or criminal convictions, but there were many brushes with death. "I've been in the middle of very, very, very bad people. Many times I got set up and everything," he said, pointing skyward. "And I got protection from the Lord."

INFILTRATING DURAZO

In the late 1970s, Source Two said, FBI handlers asked him to target Durazo.

At the time, El Negro had not yet been convicted of orchestrating cocaine shipments from Colombia through Mexico to Miami, but was suspected. Source Two said he came up with a ruse, persuading an international police association to give El Negro an award for law enforcement in Washington, D.C. Source Two arranged to be Durazo's guide on tours of the FBI academy and U.S. Supreme Court.

"My expertise was infiltration," he explained. "I was assigned to infiltrate him. So I did … He once lit a cigarette with a $100 bill right in front of me."

Soon, Source Two was making trips to Mexico City, visiting his new friend, who not only gave him a badge as police major, but made him a general in Mexico's military — a title he flaunted during sting operations.

Source Two said he had no part in Durazo's Miami indictment, but isn't surprised the criminal charges simply vanished: "Like Noriega in Panama, he dealt with all the (U.S.) agencies because they needed his cooperation in Mexico."

Portions of Source Two's account are substantiated not just by FBI records, but by Albert Zapanta, now president and CEO of the U.S.-Mexico Chamber of Commerce. Zapanta, who has held numerous U.S. government positions, became acquainted with Source Two and Durazo during the 1970s in Mexico City, where the chief gave him credentials as a police major. (He also was offered, but refused, a gold- and silver-plated .45 automatic.)

Zapanta says he suspected Durazo was a CIA asset, adding, "I had to believe it had to do with arms and drugs."

He also wondered about Source Two, a "promoter of relationships" who seemed to work for U.S. intelligence. "He was a likable guy," Zapanta adds, "but would I trust him? No."

Rothmiller's impression of Source Two at the time: "U.S. agents, spies and cops buzzed around him like gringo bees. And there was no doubt he had access to the deepest secrets within the Mexican intelligence community."

In fact, Source Two became one of Rothmiller's most valuable assets, putting him onto major cases that involved cocaine shipments into California and weapons trafficking out of the country. Those investigations were underway on Aug. 10, 1982, when Rothmiller — driving near his home — was ambushed by a gunman on a motorcycle. Six shots from a machine pistol peppered hisunmarked police car. Rothmiller was not hit. But he crashed, injuring his back, and the gunman escaped.

Forced to take medical leave, Rothmiller applied for worker's compensation benefits. LAPD administrators denied them, alleging he had fabricated the shooting and injury. Misconduct charges were filed. After hearing evidence, a judge not only ruled in favor of Rothmiller, but ripped the police department, which was headed at the time by Chief Daryl Gates. Rothmiller received compensation for the injury and stress caused by an LAPD campaign of harassment and false charges.

Despite the outcome, Rothmiller's law enforcement future was over, and he resigned from the police department.

But there would be another chapter in his personal conflict with Chief Gates. And the strange story of El Negro would get more tangled.

'DURAZO WAS THE EL CHAPO OF HIS TIME'

Mexico elected a new president in 1982, Miguel De La Madrid Hurtado, who vowed to root out corruption.

Durazo lost his job.

Within months, one of his top aides published a bestselling book, "Lo Negro del Negro Durazo" (The Dark Side of Blacky Durazo), which in chilling detail revealed the former chief's role in murders, bribery, drug dealing and other crimes.

By early 1983, with rumors spreading through Mexican media that Durazo would face criminal charges, he went underground. He began jetting around the world, with a home base in California.

Rothmiller knew El Negro had a condo in Marina Del Rey's oceanfront towers, frequented a plush L.A. restaurant, and hung out with American judges and law officers.

Once again, the reality made no sense. "Durazo was the El Chapo of his time," Rothmiller recalls. "We knew he was under indictment. Why is he not getting arrested when he comes here?"

The questions remained unanswered for years, overshadowed for Rothmiller by career developments. After leaving the police force, he worked in television, eventually hosting a show on ESPN called "The Gamesman" where he wrestled alligators, soared with the Blue Angels and took on other challenges.

ROTHMILLER BECOMES A WRITER

He also began writing books.

The first, "LA's Secret Police," was published amid a furor over the 1992 Los Angeles riots spawned by the beating of motorist Rodney King. Rothmiller described the attempt on his life, suggesting a link with his investigation of drug cartels and arms shipments. He also mentioned his Colombian snitch. But the volume focused on a police spy campaign waged by Chief Gates against California political figures and Hollywood celebrities. Rothmiller's revelations helped force the closure of LAPD's Organized Crime Intelligence Division and, along with the riots, contributed to Gates' departure as chief.

Rothmiller wrote more than a dozen books — from a psychological portrait of Hitler to a historical analysis of Roman law to a humor tome about dogs.

He began paying attention to the Iran-Contra scandal, which included allegations that Reagan administration operatives coordinated with cocaine traffickers to finance military shipments to Nicaraguan insurgents. The Kerry Report of 1988, a U.S. Senate investigation, spelled out the Contra collaborations.

Rothmiller also followed investigations into the Mexico City torture and assassination of DEA Agent Enrique "Kiki" Camarena. Although the 1985 slaying initially was blamed on cartel leaders and corrupt Mexican officials, two former DEA officials in 2013 went public with claims that the CIA played a role.

Phil Jordan of Scottsdale, former head of the DEA's El Paso Intelligence Center, and Hector Berrellez, a retired agent who oversaw the investigation into Camarena's death, contend a CIA operative named Felix Rodriguez was present during Camarena's torture, and the murder was carried out in part because the DEA agent had uncovered connections between cartels and Mexican airstrips used to ferry drugs and weapons for the Contra operation.

The CIA has denied involvement in Camarena's death. Via email, an agency spokeswoman declined to provide records or answer questions about figures in this story. However, the spokeswoman confirmed Rodriguez was a CIA operative.

(In a recent Mexican television news interview, Rodriguez said the assertion that he played a role in Camarena's demise was "the most ridiculous accusation I've heard in my life." He said he was not even in Mexico at the time, and would take a polygraph test to prove it.)

Against that backdrop, Rothmiller finally acted on his curiosity about El Negro, filing public-records requests with the FBI, State Department and other federal agencies. Inquiries were stonewalled or denied, he says. Then, inexplicably, the FBI mailed him a CD full of classified reports.

The documents read like a spy novel with a stunning twist. The plot, based in Los Angeles rather than Mexico, placed Mike Rothmiller as a minor character. It also revealed his former partner, Hamilton, in a shocking cameo.

DURAZO'S BACKSTORY

El Negro's legend began in Cumpas, a Sonoran village about 100 miles south of the Arizona border, where Arturo Durazo Moreno grew up. López Portillo, the future Mexican president, was his neighbor and close friend.

Both entered government service. El Negro became a member of Mexico's right-wing Guardias Blancas (White Guards), a militia notorious for violently quashing reformists during the 1960s. When López Portillo ran for president in 1976, Durazo became his personal security chief.

That relationship proved troublesome for American authorities.

According to records obtained by Rothmiller, just before López Portillo was sworn in, then-U.S. Ambassador Joseph Jova met with the president-elect to warn about Durazo'sFlorida cocaine indictment. Jova told López Portillo that Durazo could face arrest in the U.S., and urged him not to give El Negro a prominent government job. López Portillo ignored that request, creating a potential diplomatic nightmare.

But, as Rothmiller puts it, something very odd happened: "The U.S. agencies then conspire to remove the warrant from the Look-Out system. They keep the indictment secret and allow this cocaine trafficker to travel freely in and out of the U.S. during the next six years ... He (Durazo) held meetings with senior U.S. officials and, during the term of his appointment, continued his cocaine trafficking, engaged in extortion, kickbacks and murder."

By all accounts, Durazo used Mexico City's federal police department as a personal crime syndicate.

His officialsalary was reportedly $1,000 per month, yet he amassed a fortune. There were mansions in Mexico and getaways in the U.S., Canada, Spain and elsewhere. One Mexican compound featured a horse-racing track, a man-made lake, a casino and a discotheque. Another, replicating Greece's Parthenon, is now a popular museum of corruption.

When López Portillo left office in December 1982, the new president, De La Madrid, fulfilled a reform promise by replacing the capital city's police chief.

El Negro already was a subject of Mexican movies, books and ballads. Now, a criminal probe was underway. But the target, tipped off by insiders, slipped away — with help from a Colombian pal in Los Angeles.

Source Two confirms FBI reports that describe how he helped Durazo import vehicles to California, cash checks, seek visas and set up business meetings as an aide and confidante. Source Two said he solidified trust by using his influence to get Durazo's wife, Silvia, through U.S. Customs with gold elephant statues and $300,000 cash.

'THREAT TO KILL MEXICAN PRESIDENT'

By late 1983, Durazo still had not been charged with a crime in Mexico, and there was no official U.S. effort to track him down.

But early the next year an urgent bulletin was sent from the Los Angeles FBI office to then-bureau Director William Webster:

"THREAT TO KILL MEXICAN PRESIDENT MIGUEL DE LA MADRID ... THIS COMMUNICATION IS CLASSIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY. LEGAT (legal attache for the FBI), MEXICO CITY, HAS DISSEMINATED INFORMATION REGARDING THE ALLEGED THREAT BY DURAZO TO HAVE THE PRESIDENT OF MEXICO KILLED … MUCH CONCERN HAS BEEN GENERATED OVER THIS THREAT INASMUCH AS THE DEPUTY MEXICO FEDERAL ATTORNEY GENERAL HAS ADVISED THAT DURAZO MAY HAVE AS MUCH AS ONE BILLION DOLLARS AT HIS DISPOSAL."

According to the FBI, Durazo hoped that by eliminating Mexico’s new leader he could avoid prosecution.

The alert described how the chief of Mexico's Federal Security Directorate, José Antonio Zorrilla Peréz, had asked U.S. authorities if American agents could secretly capture Durazo in the U.S. — without a warrant or extradition — and haul him back to Mexico as a "forcible escorted deportation."

Zorrilla, who claimed his government allowed U.S. agents to take similar actions in Mexico, was informed such a plan would be kidnapping — unacceptable and illegal.

The Mexican official tried another tack, asking "WHAT WOULD BE THE RESULT IF SOMEONE WAS MERELY SENT TO KILL DURAZO?" The American legal attache answered that it would be "intolerable."

Finally, Zorrilla pointed out that Mexican authorities had previously cooperated with U.S. law enforcement by planting drugs on subjects in Mexico so they could be arrested. He asked if the FBI or Los Angeles police might employ a similar tactic on Durazo.

The attache once again refused, urging Mexican officials to secure a criminal warrant for Durazo that would meet U.S. legal requirements for extradition.

AMERICAN AGENTS LAUNCH A STING

The attache then suggested an alternate plan: American agents could launch a sting in hopes of drawing Durazo into a murder plot while inside the U.S. — a violation of the Neutrality Act.

How would such an operation be carried out?

The attache explained: "BY HAVING U.S. SPECIAL AGENTS OF THE FBI POSE AS MERCENARIES CONTRACTED BY DURAZO TO ACCOMPLISH THE ASSASSINATION OF THE (Mexican) PRESIDENT, THUS CATCHING DURAZO IN AN OVERT ACT …"

According to the FBI memo, Zorrilla became so excited at this proposal he volunteered to fly the U.S. attache on his private Lear jet, 'El Tigre,' to Washington, D.C., for approvals.

That same day, the FBI communique says, Mexico's deputy attorney general conferred with U.S. Ambassador John Gavin and asked for a meeting with U.S. Attorney General William French Smith to request an "urgent, direct investigation by the FBI to resolve this threat."

HELP FROM SOURCE TWO

Federal agents learned of the Mexican assassination plot from informers in California.

The first, identified in records only as “Source One,” was interviewed by FBI agents on Dec. 14, 1983. He claimed to be a close friend of the Durazo family and reported that a relative of El Negro told him, "They are going to kill the president" of Mexico.

Then came the February 1984 interview with Source Two, who told U.S. agents he'd known El Negro for years and helped him relocate to Los Angeles. According to Source Two, another of Durazo's relatives was soliciting assistance for a presidential murder.

"…HE (the relative) STATED, 'DE LA MADRID HAS CAUSED TOO MUCH PROBLEMS ... THAT SON OF A BITCH MUST DIE. CAN YOU HELP US WITH THE U.S. GOVERNMENT, SPECIFICALLY WITH THE CIA, TO GET A NECESSARY FORCE TOGETHER, OF 10 OR 20 MEN, EXPERT ASSASSINS, TO ENTER THE PRESIDENTIAL PALACE IN MEXICO AND KILL THE PRESIDENT?'"

A week later, Source Two had a follow-up conversation with the Durazo relative about who might finance the assassination, the FBI report says. Source Two said he was told El Negro would pay.

In official reports, some FBI agents questioned Source Two's trustworthiness. They wrote that, several years earlier, he failed a polygraph test and was "discontinued with prejudice" as an operative. They said he was suspected of posing as a federal officer and possessing stolen property, though U.S. prosecutors declined to file charges. They described him as a "wheeler and dealer" who consorted with "organized crime figures, thieves, con artists and present and past law enforcement officials of questionable integrity ... (He) will work for both sides as long as he gets what he wants ..."

Another FBI report suggested that Source Two was a mole — manipulating agents while gathering information to protect El Negro: "(Source Two) is known to have numerous contacts within LAPD," the memo added, "and he may use them to help Durazo."

Nevertheless, a key FBI memo concluded Source Two was "very reliable," and he might be the crucial go-between in an undercover operation.

During interviews with The Republic, Source Twodenied failing any polygraph test or possessing stolen property. He said he earned a reputation for integrity, but jealous agents concocted allegations because they resented his ability to go over their heads to top FBI administrators.

'SUBJECT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED ARMED AND DANGEROUS'

According to FBI records, Durazo lived a "playboy lifestyle," theoretically making him easy to locate.

He frequented the ritzy Westwood Marquis Hotel in Los Angeles. He bought a condo in nearby tower where the top floor cost $11 million, including helipad. His vehicles included a Rolls Royce, a Ferrari and a Mercedes Benz.

Although Durazo wasn't threatening in stature, looks can be deceiving. Most FBI teletypes ended with a warning: "SUBJECT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED ARMED AND DANGEROUS. ... DURAZO'S BODYGUARDS ALLEGEDLY CARRY UZZI (sic) SUBMACHINE GUNS AND DURAZO HIMSELF CARRIES A .45 CALIBER AUTOMATIC."

Perhaps more importantly, as a former police chief El Negro had vast resources. Agents believed he was getting intelligence from law enforcement figures in the U.S. and Mexico. Because of that, FBI bulletins were top secret — not even entered into a national crime computer.

DURAZO'S HUGE NETWORK

Durazo's crony network included prominent American politicians, judges, police chiefs and federal agents, as well as officials overseas.

Even amid the secrecy, federal communiques about El Negro zipped across the nation and around the world. Durazo was said to be in Spain, Cuba, Brazil, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Tahiti, France, Canada and Los Angeles. Dozens of FBI offices were investigating. Information was shared with the CIA, State Department and Secret Service.

In March 1984, assassination fears peaked as President De La Madrid scheduled a spring visit to Washington, D.C. The U.S. Secret Service was warned with a teletype that stressed, "THIS MATTER IS BEING GIVEN THE HIGHEST PRIORITY.

HUNTING DURAZO

On March 6 of that year, the FBI Terrorism Section in Los Angeles asked bureau headquarters for permission to launch a sting.

The application said an undercover agent would be introduced to a Durazo relative in Canada to "discuss and plan recruitment of mercenaries" to carry out the assassination. "MAIN OBJECTIVE WILL BE TO MEET WITH THE PRINCIPLE SUBJECT, ARTURO DURAZO MORENO, AND OBTAIN DETAILS OF THE ASSASSINATION PLAN... ULTIMATE PLAN WILL BE TO IDENTIFY ALL INDIVIDUALS IN THE CONSPIRACY AND NEUTRALIZE THE PLAN."

The application included projected expenses for costly undercover clothing and meals at the "most exclusive restaurants and/or nightclubs." It also listed airfares to Canada, Puerto Rico, Mexico City and Tahiti.

A decision from headquarters arrived March 23: “THE POSSIBLE RESULTS THAT COULD BE OBTAINED BY THIS UCO (undercover operation) WOULD NOT JUSTIFY THE RISKS AND EXPENSES … APPROVAL TO CONDUCT UCO IS NOT BEING GRANTED AT THIS TIME.”

MEXICAN AUTHORITIES INVOLVED

In early April 1984, U.S. officials became concerned with yet another threat — a stealth mission against Durazo by Mexican authorities. According to FBI records, the bureau discovered high-level federales were in California using intimidation tactics to locate and possibly kidnap or kill El Negro.

Among those suspected: federal security chief Zorrilla and Miguel Aldana Ibarra, then director of INTERPOL in Mexico. The U.S. legal attache in Mexico City confronted Zorrilla, warning that foreign agents would be arrested if they tried to take out Durazo on U.S. soil. Zorrilla denied running a covert operation and suggested that El Negro had concocted such a rumor so he could challenge extradition if arrested.

FBI AGENTS GET A TIP

By June 1984, the threat of a De la Madrid assassination was prompting executive-level communications. A teletype to FBI headquarters noted: "The President of Mexico, MIGUEL DE LA MADRID, has personally conveyed this sense of urgency to the President of the United States, RONALD REAGAN, Attorney General WILLIAM FRENCH SMITH, and FBI Director WILLIAM WEBSTER."

That month, Mexican courts finally charged Durazo with extortion, illegal arms possession and tax violations.

The search continued for weeks with dead-end leads. Then, in late June 1984, FBI agents got a tip: Durazo would be arriving by plane at the airport in San Juan, Puerto Rico, to meet family members.

A federal greeting party was dispatched. Shortly after the flight landed, news shot across the FBI teletype: "SAN JUAN DIVISION ARRESTED CAPTIONED SUBJECT, ARTURO DURAZO, ON 6-29-84 WITHOUT INCIDENT ... SUICIDAL TENDENCIES.”

'WELCOME TO PUERTO RICO'

The arrest was a media event. But Rothmiller saysinitial accounts left out a key detail: When Durazo's family flew to Puerto Rico to meet him, they were accompanied by Los Angeles police detective Kenny Hamilton, Rothmiller's ex-partner.

Hamilton, who eventually was disciplined and dismissed by LAPD for consorting with El Negro, declined to comment for this story. At the time, however, he told the Los Angeles Times: "Durazo's just a nice, very warm guy ... When I went to Puerto Rico, it was as a friend, not as a police officer."

FBI records don't explain how Durazo got set up. But Source Two offered this back story: After being assigned to lure Durazo into U.S. territory, Source Two learned that Silvia Durazo was planning a trip to meet her husband. Source Two says he joined Silvia — and Hamilton — on the flight from Los Angeles to Puerto Rico.

WHITE HOUSE MONITORING

Stakes were high, Source Two recalls: The FBI operation was being monitored by the White House.

Durazo was not in San Juan. Source Two said he was given money to hire a private plane to retrieve El Negro, but not told the destination. Instead, FBI handlers provided a bureau aircraft, unmarked, with an agent as pilot. As the flight began, Silvia announced they were going to Curacao, an island off the coast of Venezuela.

After landing, Source Two says, he and Silvia met Durazo at a hotel and urged him to return with them to Puerto Rico, then fly to Los Angeles and seek asylum. El Negro resisted, fearful of arrest, but finally relented.

When the plane came to a stop in San Juan, Durazo stepped onto the tarmac, oblivious to what awaited. An FBI agent stepped forward, shook the fugitive's hand and applied handcuffs, saying, "General Durazo, welcome to Puerto Rico."

TOO MANY SECRETS ABOUT POWERFUL PEOPLE

El Negro was flown to Los Angeles.

In court, a defense attorney told the judge Durazo would not survive extradition because he held too many secrets about powerful people. "You can't return this man to Mexico," the lawyer said. "He'll be executed somewhere along the line."

The prediction proved wrong. Durazo was convicted in Mexico and sentenced to 25 years. He was paroled after serving just seven, and died of natural causes in 2000.

But for Rothmiller, a riddle continued to nag — not just about El Negro or the CIA, but about why someone had tried to gun him down more than three decades ago.

It was not until 2013, when former DEA agents Berrellez and Jordan went public with allegations about a CIA role in Camarena's death, that Rothmiller filed a swarm of records requests under the Freedom of Information Act.

Sorting through the files, the former detective no longer wonders how Durazo's cocaine indictment vanished, or who protected him: "I'm convinced it was the CIA because of the Contra thing," he says. "The weapons running."

In his book Rothmiller contends El Negro was "an integral player in this top-secret operation."

"How many Americans died from a drug overdose or the related violence from Durazo's trafficking?" he asks. "How many lives could have been saved if the U.S. government elected to do their job and arrest Durazo while visiting the United States?"

Rothmiller admits there's no smoking-gun proof. But, at least for an ex-cop who worked intelligence, circumstantial evidence fits like pieces cut with a jig saw.

"If you had a puzzle of Abe Lincoln, and you had everything but his eyes, you'd say, 'Oh, that's Lincoln,'" he says. "It kind of completes the circle."


The MS-13 Threat, does Trump’s Deport Push Boost MS-13?

Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat from The Cipher Brief


Note:  I agree that President Trump’s advisers have led him down the path of great hype with respect to all things MS-13.  Who will challenge the administration?  Fooling Trump about gangs is easily accomplished when 99.9% of the American public is ignorant about cartels and gangs.  Interests about Narcos, Cartels and U.S. gangs have not been cultivated in the U.S. press and Americans follow the headline and do little outside research.  In the case of MS-13, the gang has greatly diminished, but is fast growing according to some accounts.  The U.S. Government data of 2017 has a figure of 8k.  This article says 10k.  One must wonder if the administration's MS-13 publicity is inadvertently attracting some to the gang that would not have joined otherwise.  

The article addresses the announcement that the U.S. will terminate the provisional residency permits of about 200,000 Salvadorans who have lived in the country since at least 2001, leaving them to face deportation.    The government is giving until September of 2019,  for refugees who have not already done so, to apply for green card status.
Once the process begins they must stay in the U.S. until completed.  Since the refugees have been in the U.S. on or before 2001, one would think law abiding refugees would have applied and received status by now.  especially since refugees are required to apply for a status change within the first year.  The filing costs are waived for refugees. 

My note does not diminish the opinions of Vigil. He is the renowned expert and his opinion of what would transpire if the Salvadoran refugees were deported I won’t/can’t argue with.   I am just  presenting another school of thought,  that questions if there are that many refugees that have been productive members of U.S. society, why haven’t they  applied for green card status during the last 20 years?.. …CM


Analysis: Trump’s Deport Push Boosts MS-13
by Mike Vigil
President Donald Trump invoked the deadly deeds of the violent street gang MS-13 in his State of the Union address, and again this week when addressing law enforcement officials at the White House. He spoke of closing loopholes to keep members of the Salvadoran gang out, and he has also announced plans to terminate the protected status for more than 200,000 Salvadorian immigrants in less than two years.
That plan could make the problem much worse.
The effect of forcing that many people to return to El Salvador, a country with a population of only 6.34 million, is likely to only reinforce a gang that currently pales in comparison to others. The result may create a greater danger by far to both the U.S. and El Salvador.
The decision, announced Jan. 8, to end protected status for Salvadorans after Sept. 9, 2019, means those immigrants currently in the U.S. will have to return to El Salvador or be subject to deportation. In trying to strengthen the argument for the decision, Trump drew attention to MS-13, which now numbers about 10,000 in the U.S. and 20,000 in Latin America.

Yet other criminal gangs such as the Latin Kings, the Bloods and the Aryan Brotherhood are much more violent. Some are even larger than MS-13, and they have tentacles throughout the U.S.
It’s true that a large percentage of MS-13 members in the U.S. are immigrants, and some are undocumented. But the history behind that has as much to do with past U.S. policy and practices as with conditions in El Salvador.
In the late 1970’s and early 1980’s, Salvadorans began to flee their homeland to escape the civil war that brutalized their country for 12 years, finally ending in 1992.  The U.S. had supported the Salvadoran government against left-wing rebel groups. Thousands of Salvadorans began the long trek to the U.S., seeing it as the most desirable destination, with much better economic opportunities.  They were used to working hard and just wanted to carve out a piece of the American dream.
Many of the immigrants went to Los Angeles, simply because it had a large Hispanic population and work was available there.  Almost immediately, they fell prey to established Hispanic and African American gangs that robbed and extorted them.
‘Mafia’ in the Name

In response, the Salvadorans quickly formed their own gang, calling it MS-13, or Mara Salvatrucha.  According to gang members, Mara means gang, Salva is short for Salvador and trucha refers to street smarts.  The 13 stands for M, the 13th letter in the alphabet and referring to the word “mafia.”
The gang’s estimated revenue of $30 million a year is derived from a diverse criminal portfolio that includes prostitution, murder, extortion and human trafficking.
In the late 1980’s, the U.S. government began to detain substantial numbers of MS-13 members and initiated a large-scale deportation program. Most of them were sent to what is known as the Northern Triangle in Central America —  Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.
The U.S. strategy was severely flawed from the onset. It didn’t anticipate that gang members would begin a prolific recruitment program in and out of the existing prison systems in these countries.  This swelled the ranks of MS-13, making it even more formidable by transforming it into a transnational criminal organization.
A violent and bloody conflict quickly broke out in these countries between the MS-13 and their bitter rivals, the Barrio 18 gang.  The Barrio 18, which also had its roots in Los Angeles, is larger than the MS-13, counting more than 50,000 members.  The widespread gang violence over control of territory and criminal activities caused thousands of innocent people to flee northward to the U.S.
El Salvador has a murder rate that makes it the second-deadliest country in the world. In 2015, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime counted 109 intentional homicides committed for every 100,000 people.  This is more than 20 times the U.S. rate of fewer than 5 per 100,000 inhabitants.
El Salvador’s resource-starved domestic security services are unable to cope with the high crime rates.  The country’s anti-gang strategy is one of zero tolerance, but the mass incarceration of gang members has only created intolerable prison crowding. The Salvadoran government had pleaded with the Trump administration not to revoke the temporary protective status, saying the country is in no position to successfully absorb that many returnees.
A Boost to MS-13
So Trump’s policy and planned deportation will only benefit MS-13, giving it a massive influx of people unaccustomed to life in El Salvador and perceived to have large amounts of money who will be ready prey.  It also will bring a new population of potential young recruits.
Either way, MS-13 will become more powerful and empowered. The violence undoubtedly will increase, causing a still-larger wave of migration to the U.S. rather than preventing it. Many making the trek through Mexico will be exposed to the sophisticated Mexican drug cartels that now engage in kidnapping and human trafficking.
The violence and displacement of El Salvador’s citizens costs that country an estimated $4 billion a year, according to its Central Reserve Bank.  The lack of infrastructure in El Salvador and an increase in crime and violence will only serve to further destabilize the country.
The U.S. policy also will destabilize other Central American nations.  And the U.S. economy will feel a pinch, since the vast majority of Salvadorans are hardworking individuals who make significant contributions to American workplaces, business and culture.
The crafting of policy requires careful thought, with well-defined objectives and strong efforts to mitigate risks. A failure to take more well-considered steps could spiral into catastrophic consequences not only for El Salvador, but also for the U.S.
Mike Vigil is the former Chief of International Operations for the Drug Enforcement Administration. He is one of the most highly decorated agents within the agency and was responsible for numerous multi-national operations, the largest involved 36 countries. He was also responsible for developing global intelligence sharing platforms. He is the author of DEAL and Metal Coffins: The Blood Alliance Cartel.
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