Quantcast
Channel: Borderland Beat
Viewing all 14998 articles
Browse latest View live

"Mexico Is a Contradictory Situation-Economy is doing Well, BUT....."

$
0
0
Borderland Beat
 
A Forbes reporter "Looking Back at 2012: A Year of #Mexico #Drugwar Tweets"
this post is popping with information and great links- hashtags take you to the tweet, without # takes you to the full referenced article where the photos and graph were from......
Relative recognizes victim
Nathaniel Parish Flannery
On a warm afternoon in Mexico City, I sat down in a restaurant and reviewed my tweets about Mexico from 2012. I think that over the course of the past year the dialogue about Mexico started to shift from the “Under Siege” drugwar theme towards a conversation that focused on the paradox of impressive economic activity taking place in the context of frightening cartel violence.
Although grisly organized crime-related violence persists in many parts of the country, in 2012 many media outlets started paying more attention to the country’s strong underlying economic potential.
On January 3, 2012 I tweeted that Goldman Sachs Asset Management Chairman Jim O’Neill said that as costs in China rise, “ #Mexico might be the big winner.”  On January 20 I tweeted a link to this New York Times story and explained “There has been a definite shift of violence away from the border and back to the interior states.”
In this article I wrote for The Global Post about Mexico’s #OCCUPY movement, I explained “The violence, once mostly contained in the pressure cooker along Mexico’s northern border, is now bursting out in an increasing number of cities and towns throughout the country, even singeing the capital city. Violence is emerging as a serious problem in cities from the agrarian state Michoacán to beach-side vacation destinations like Acapulco and Veracruz.”
On February 2 I tweeted that “according to @CIDAC the top googled cities in #Mexico for insecurity are Torreon, Zacatecas, and #Acapulco.”
On February 6 I tweeted a link to my article “Mexico’s Silicon Valley fends off cartel concerns.”
Mexican video game masters creating new game in "Silicon Valley" aka Guadalajara
 In the article,I explained that Guadalajara Mexico is emerging as a high-tech IT service hub, even in the context of rising cartel violence. I wrote:
Incidents like the case a few weeks ago where two dozen headless bodies were dumped in the center of the city are part of the reason why a Google search for “Guadalajara IT” turns up the auto-responses not only of expected results like “Guadalajara IT jobs” and “Guadalajara IT industry,” but also “Guadalajara is it safe.”
Guadalara, a city in a state dealing with rising levels of inter-cartel violence, is home to IT operations run by HP, Dell, Intel, and an ecosystem of smaller companies.
On February 9 I tweeted “I’m reading the latest travel advisory to #Mexico:’Millions of US citizens safely visit Mexico, 150K cross border daily.’” I then tweeted that “U.S. Dept of State says #Mexico is safe: just not Juarez, Durango, Nuevo Leon, Sinaloa, Tamualipas, Guerrero, Jalisco, Nayarit, Michoacan…”
On February 13, after attending an event at the Americas Society in New York I tweeted “Tonight at @ascoa @ChrisSabatini said costs in #China are rising but for #Mexico to benefit “security gains have to be deepened.”
On February 17 I tweeted a link to this photo by Dominic Bracco and explained “a couple is killed in #Juarez ‘A single bullet entered the man’s skull & took all 3 lives.’”
Young couple executed in Juarez, she was pregnant
On February 20 I tweeted a link to this interview with Council for Foreign Relations Mexico expert Shannon O’Neil in which she explains “Mexico is a place that’s seen a huge escalation in violence. Under President Felipe Calderon over the last five years, we’ve seen almost 50,000 people killed in drug-related murders.
But at the same time, Mexico’s economy has actually been doing quite well since the end of the global recession. Mexico was the hardest hit in Latin America but it’s recovered quite quickly, and in part it’s been due to a huge boom in manufacturing along the border tied to U.S. companies and to U.S. consumers.”
On February 29, I tweeted an article I wrote for The Atlanticabout artisan tequila production in the hills of Jalisco, Mexico in which I explain that “Overall, according to figures from Mexico’s secretary of economy, tequila production has more than doubled since 1995. In 2011, Mexico exported more than 163 million liters of the agave-based alcohol, up from 64 million in 1995.”
On March 6 I tweeted “An analyst from @EurasiaGroup just told me #Mexico is ‘a contradictory situation – economy is doing relatively well, but security = problem.’”
On March 10 I tweeted a link to a “Good article in Spanish w/ graphics & maps on the recent cartel attacks in Guadalajara,” the home of the expanding tech and tequila industries.
Also on March 10, I tweeted that “After gunmen burn 25 cars, police arrest cartel leaders in Guadalajara, find 30 machine guns & also grenades.”
click on any photo to enlarge
On March 16 I tweeted a link to this Harvard Revista article and explained “w/ widespread violence it is easier for criminals to engage in predatory activities.” On March 18, I tweeted a link to this New York Timesarticle and explained that “In 14 of #Mexico ’s 31 states, the chance of a crime’s leading to trial and sentencing = less than 1%.”
On April 3 I tweeted that “Last week, at least 280 people were killed in #Mexico ’s  #drugwar” and also explained that U.S. President Barack Obama said that as a good neighbor, “We have a responsibility to make sure not only guns but also bulk cash isn’t flowing into #Mexico.”
On May 3 I tweeted “I’m reading an article about how un-manned drones helped seize 3150 kilos of pot on the #Texas #border. Meanwhile, 60K are dead in#Mexico.” On May 13 I tweeted a link to this Los Angeles Times article and explained “In the last 8 years, 130 U.S. #Border Patrol agents have been arrested & 600 more are under investigation.”
 
Also on May 13, I tweeted a link to this New York Timesarticle which explains that “With 50,000 murders over the past six years linked to Mexico’s drug war, the amount of suffering faced by survivors cannot be overstated. But as they mourn their lost loved ones, grieving Mexicans must also grapple with suspicion from those who wonder if the victims were asking for trouble and if their relatives might be outlaws, too.”
On May 14 I tweeted “18 mutilated bodies turned up in abandoned vehicles along a highway near Guadalajara #Mexico.” On June 3 I tweeted “w/less than 10% of the world´s population, countries in#LatAm experience more than 30% of all homicides” and also shared a comment from Guatemala’s president who said that when it comes to drugs, we should “stop following a failed policy.”

Full Length Video "Reportero": 74 Journalists Killed in Mexico in 11 Years

$
0
0
 Borderland Beat

This documentary was released yesterday on POV.  It is a factual, in depth account of the danger of narco reporting in Mexico.  Filmmaker Bernardo Ruiz is Mexico born and immigrated to the US as a young child. 
 
Tiring of the same type of reporting on  the subject he wanted more, in his words; " “there was just body count journalism, I kept hungering for a deeper story”. ..and deep this is, covering journalists of Zeta Magazine, the assassination attempt on Blanco and the successful killing of Francisco Ortiz with his small children in the car.  By interviews, footage and photos the journalists give the accounts of high profile incidents and criminal events. 

Such as an account that will have you on the edge of your seat, when Sergio receives a call from a person saying he had something for him.  It was a CD and when Sergio played it he was jolted by disbelief and fear.  It was the interrogation of a Sinaloa leader of the Mexicali cell, face sweaty and obvious fear as he answered questions and gave information that exposed many high profile officials.  [magazine cover is at left]

Footage  recounts what they decided to do with the CD and the process.  Much of the film has footage of the events spoken about.

There is a link to the full length video at the bottom of my post.  if you wish to skip the post and go directly to the film, keep watching beyond the credits to view the interview with the filmmaker.......Paz, Chivis


In 1980, the Mexican media didn't look favorably upon reporters like Jesús Blancornelas who challenged the party line. After being fired by five newspapers, Blancornelas took matters into his own hands, founding Zeta and initially managing it from the United States. The paper, owned by journalists, attracted other talented journalists, including Sergio Haro, who first joined as a photographer in 1987.
Héctor Félix Miranda, Zeta's co-founder, became one of its most popular columnists, writing humorously about the foibles of Mexico's politicians and social elite, using tips from readers happy to see these once-untouchable figures brought down to earth.
 "My work in Zetais proof that freedom of expression exists in Mexico," said Miranda. "That others don't practice it is their own fault." It was assumed there would be some pushback, but what happened was horrific and unexpected:
On April 20, 1988, Miranda was shot dead by thugs who worked for Jorge Hank, son of one of Mexico's most powerful families. Hank was never investigated and would later be elected mayor of Tijuana.
Gradually, the government's hold over the media loosened. But Zeta was developing a far more deadly enemy. By the early 1990s, drug trafficking was becoming a major industry along Mexico's border with the United States.
Cartels generated huge sums of money and used it to fund lavish lifestyles, recruit a revolving network of dealers and pay off police and government officials. The drug gangs' violent rule enveloped the entire border region. "As journalists, we couldn't ignore this real problem," says Zeta co-director Adela Navarro, "so Zetabegan to investigate narco-trafficking."
Blanco
Taking a stand against the traffickers had its price. In 1997, Blancornelas was ambushed by 10 gunmen working for a cartel that had moved from Sinaloa to Tijuana to traffic shipments of cocaine into the United States. Blancornelas survived only because, in a moment of poetic justice, shrapnel from one of the gunmen's bullets ricocheted and struck the gang's lead assassin in the eye, killing him.
In 1997, Haro left Zeta to found another independent newspaper, Siete Días, with Benjamín Flores. Flores was an ambitious reporter, and the paper took an aggressive stance against local drug lords.

 "Benjamín was very young, but grounded," says Haro. "Daring and audacious. But given the kind of reporting he was doing, I thought Benjamín didn't understand what he was getting into." Flores was murdered just days after his 29th birthday; his killer was apprehended but set free by Mexico's judiciary.
 
Haro retaliated through the press. "We mocked [the killer's] release, with photos of all the kilos he was trafficking," he recalls. A couple of days later, Haro's own life was threatened. Guards were appointed to protect him, while at Zeta, Blancornelas employed more than 20 bodyguards.
In a testament to how bad things have gotten in Mexico, Reporterofeatures a spokesman from a car armoring service that offers customers varying levels of protection. "Level four can withstand an AK-47, and level five can withstand armor-piercing AR-15s," he says impassively.
"If you want to protect yourself or your family from threat of kidnapping, we recommend level four, four-plus or five. Six or seven are for someone who . . . feels someone wants to kill him."

Francisco Ortiz
Blancornelas decided that Zeta's most explosive reporting should no longer carry a byline, but reporter Francisco Ortiz insisted on keeping his in a report — complete with names and photos — on organized crime figures who had received fake IDs from the attorney general's office. Ortiz was gunned down in 2005, moments after he buckled his two children into the back seat of his car. Going forward, articles with sensitive information would carry a collective byline reading simply, "Investigation by Zeta."

Sergio received a death threat the morning after this headline
 On Nov. 23, 2006, Blancornelas, indomitable founder of Zeta, passed away not from a bullet, but from stomach cancer, and Navarro took the reins. To this day, beginning every Thursday evening, the 92-page weekly is printed just outside of San Diego and trucked to Tijuana.

In 2012, Zeta marked its 32nd year of publishing truth to very deadly power. "Only the gunmen who killed Héctor Félix were arrested," says Navarro. "The mastermind is still on the loose. The case of Blancornelas' attack remains unsolved. The crime against Francisco Ortiz in 2004 also remains unsolved. . . . The criminals have impunity. Impunity to kill whomever they want." But Zeta continues.

And after 25 years of reporting, the deaths of three of his colleagues and threats against his own life, Haro knows he has every reason to walk away. "It's easier to look the other way and not cover this issue," he says in Reportero.

"But in the end you would become another accomplice. For the rest of my life, I only want to be a reporter." He writes every week, telling the stories of the residents of northern Mexico during this wave of unprecedented violence.
David Barron Corona:The shooting attack against Blancornelas was prompted by an investigative piece in Zeta describing how the Arellano Félix cartel recruited gunmen from violent street gangs in San Diego’s Barrio Logan neighborhood. The leader of the Barrio Logan assassins was a veteran gangster named David Barron Corona, who earned the Arellano Félix family’s loyalty by saving two of the brothers from an ambush. Blancornelas published an article identifying Barron Corona as one of the top cartel enforcers.

A few weeks later, Barron Corona and a team of assassins ambushed Blancornelas while he was on his way to work. The assassination attempt failed only because Barron Corona was killed by one of his own gunmen when a bullet ricocheted and struck him in the eye.

Died with his finger lingering on the trigger
Barron 

VIEW REPORTERO VIDEO

Link to full length videoat POV HERE
Sources:  POV at KPBS, Street Gangs, photos Zeta and screenshots from film

4 die in Zacatecas state

$
0
0
By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A total of three armed suspects were killed in armed confrontations with Mexican Policia Federal agents Monday, as intergang firefights continue in Zacatecas and Fresnillo municipalities, according to Mexican news reports.

A news report which appeared Monday evening on the website of El Sol de Zacatceas news daily said that armed suspects in Guadalupe municipality was  where armed suspects exchanged gunfire with a Policia Federal road patrol.

A group of armed suspects travelling aboard a Volkswagen Jetta sedan was ordered to stop by federal agents in Las Quintas neighborhood.  Instead, the suspects opened fired on the road patrol and initiated a pursuit on a road towards Monte Bello colony.  That road was a one way road.

Armed suspects crashed their vehicle into a residence and then attempted to flee, but were caught by police gunfire and were killed at the scene.

A subsequent search conducted by Mexican Army and Naval Infantry units failed to turn up more suspects.

Meanwhile gunfights continued in Zacatecas municipality last Sunday around avenidas  Torreon and  Quebradilla Sunday.  A local police cordon briefly blocked the area.

Also, an unidentified man in his 40s was found shot to death in Zacatecas municipality Sunday.  The victim was found on Mexico Federal Highway 54 near the Jardines del Recuerdo cemetery.

Separately, intergang gunfights continued in Fresnillo municipality last Thursday night, centering around Arboledas colony.  No one was reported hurt in those gunfights.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

Saltillo: 3 Men Executed and Casa Migrante Death Threats Continue

$
0
0
Borderland Beat

Two unrelated stories but both from Saltillo.  The first is a report of the execution of 3 men.  The second is one I touched on in my comments in the past few days.  It is in regards to "Casa Migrante" in Saltillo.  These migrant shelters are ones we  assist with our "Project 72".  It is a fairly large shelter with 110-130 migrants being accommodated each day.  Brave Catholic Priest operate Casa Migrantes and their lives are always in jeopardy, I explain why in my post following the El Diario article.
 

El Diario
Tortured, with bound hands and executed by the coup de grace, the bodies of three men - one of them an employee of a used car lot - in Colonia Loma Linda.

The bloody incident occurred in the first minutes of Wednesday in the eastern sector of the city.

It is unofficially reported that families of the victims appeared before the Public Ministry representative for legal procedures, they also knew that they could run a relative of one another.

The victims were identified as Cecilio Casas Padilla, 53, employee of a used car lot and  brothers Enrique and Miguel Sanchez.

Later, in a statement, the Attorney General launched an investigation of Coahuila for the  triple homicide.

The report notes that the triple murder was committed on Tuesday 8 January at 23:50 hours in the stated colonia.

The incident report was received at the State Emergency System 066, via anonymous calls, but the bodies were found shortly after 00:15 hours Wednesday.

In that sector three people were reported dead, all being  males,  they were located on a dirt road from a vacant lot located between Calle Nopal and Chaparral, the colony of Loma Linda.

For the now deceased were found tied hands yellow plastic ties and were displaying firearm projectile impacts in various areas of the body.

The prosecutor arrived at the scene, as well as  Expert Services,  staff from the Medical Examiner, and officials of the Deputy of Research to perform the corresponding investigations.

 

Reinforcing security at the Casa del Migrante
by Chivis Martinez
For over a week death threats have been received at one of the migrant shelters in Saltillo. Death threats have been delivered against the managers of the shelter.  Father Pedro Pantoja has also received death threats, but it has not been made clear by authorities  who is issuing the threats or why. 
Over one week ago I heard about the threats, and at that time I was told the threats were against the entire shelter and everyone in the shelter.  It now appears to be more specific than first thought.
Reports state:
Authorities announced that different state police forces are guarding Casa del Migrante, after the death threats they have received against several of its executives.
"We are investigating the death threats he received in recent days by  Father Pedro Pantoja de la Casa del Migrante," the Attorney General of the State (PGJE).
 In a statement, the agency added that "The relevant inquiry PGJE started and is gathering evidence to identify the source of these threats.."
On Tuesday, Amnesty International (AI) and the Network of Civil Human Rights All Rights for All (Red TDT) called for the intervention of state authorities at the increasing threats of staff working at the shelter.
Shelters and Priests operating shelters are frequently under attack by cartels.  They oppose safe havens for economic migrants as migrants they are a valuable resource for criminal organizations. A,side from extortion, they are forced into criminal activities,  recruited into cartels, or exploited and used for other the drug criminal activities such as  the sex trade.
Economic migrants migrating from Southern Mexico and Central America on their journey to the United States, are not the only source narcos prey upon. It is a common practice for narcos to be waiting for United States deportation buses along the border and literally snatching deportees as they are forced by the U.S. into walking across international bridges and into Mexico with little or no resources.
Senseless protocol dictates that the United States supplies Mexico with a list of ages, and sex of the deportees and the exact point of entry, date and time the buses are scheduled to arrive.  As bad as that is, many deportees are not a citizen of Mexico, in essence undocumented migrants are forced into unlawfully entering a country in which they are undocumented. 
This is with full knowledge by the United States.  They are deported with a blue bracelet and deportation papers that depict their country of citizenship.
 

 
 

"It Will Be an Eye For an Eye" Guerrero Community Takes Action

$
0
0
Borderland Beat Translated by 'J' the Mover

Thumbs up all around as citizen police set up check points at all entrances and exits
 Community members anticipate "it will be an eye for an eye"   in retaliation of narco violence against the community..
 
One of the community police said that the communities have no other alternative but to retaliate for the crimes committed against them in past few years them by narcos,  which include extortion, kidnapping and murder.

Guerrero - Community police from Ayutla de los Libres expected that if the groups of organized criminals take revenge on the community, the community will do the same thing in return:  "we know who they are, where they are, and we also know their families.  It will be an eye for an eye."
In an new year interview that took place  on the Ayutla de los Libres reserves,  most community members covered their faces with handkerchiefs and balaclavas. Coordinators justify these actions by the complicated situation of living in a state of insecurity.
“We did not see any effective action against organized crime and for this reason this movement has been create with the intention of liberating the people.  We, the citizens and the families, decided that we had enough harassment because we were no longer able to walk in the streets.  The night is dark, but the day is also.”
Robust and short in stature, the man who is recognized as one of the leaders of the movement indicated that the action that they have implemented is no longer only about vigilance, as it was in Olinala and Huamuxtitlan in 2011.
“We are going to locate  people who are not satisfied with living in a normal society  and we are going to kick them out. The villages are fed up and for this reason we decided to organize ourselves against those called ‘hit men’”, he comments.
He indicated that as he has advised the Attorney General (PGJ) on Monday night, that  they have detained three men who are accused of collaborating with organized crime: “They have a lot to do with this problem, because we found them with weapons and evidence that they were involved in kidnappings.  That is why there are conditions to re-educate them.”
With respect to the possibility of delivering the men to the Public Ministry of the Common Law (MPFC) as the authorities have suggested, he said that the agreement is that the people are going to defend by their own methods, but those detained will be subject to re-education in a house of justice under the Regional Coordinator of Community Authority (CRAC).
-click any image to enlarge-
They still remained in Ayutla this Thursday but they anticipated that they will then be turned over to Tecoanapa and afterwards to other locations.
He added that their activities had already been reported to the Secretary of the Navy, the National Army and the State Administration, because the agreement is to maintain the fight against crime in an indefinite way.
And preventing reprisals on the part of the members of the organizations that they are confronting, another member of the leadership noted: “The people can do no more and are going to have to act maybe in an unlawful way, but it is clear that they are left with no alternative and that if necessary they will have to see an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.”
Against those who might doubt these men, he specified: “They (the criminals) also have family and that they will be hurt in the same manner that the criminals hurt people, so I hope that they do not do here what they have done in other places.”
Although it is calculated that 500 men have been mobilized, the leaders have indicated that there are at least 700 but that they are going to recruit more.
He said that with so many people have joining the mission he has been able to gather a large amount of information with respect to who is a part of the criminal cells:”
 “We have names and addresses, everyone is located and we want to make it clear that if something happens with our families, the same will happen with their families, they may fight like men or better yet, retreat and live life in an honorable manner.”
It is assumed that the stance  can be lamentable, but he says that in these moments the communities have no other alternative.
 Source: Milenio

Citizens Warn Criminals "We Will Lynch You"

$
0
0
Borderland Beat

Here is another story of citizens becoming fed up, then used a page from the book of narco terrorism to deliver their warnings...and it's working..



Residents of Xochimilco are worried over increasing assaults and robberies, they hanged banners in which they threaten of lynching thieves.
Ciudad de México.- Villagers of Xochimilco send a warning to thieves: if they catch you, you will be lynched.
Neighbors worried about the wave of robberies to businesses and houses, hanged on the main avenues of the community, banners with a warning.
These messages were placed three months ago and, since that time, there has not been any robberies registered.
Previously, commerce and houses of Santa Cruz Acalpixca, a village located on the highest part of Xochimilco- about 8 kilometers of Periferico Sur- , were defaced after delinquency tagged them  with drawings believed to be warnings.
“One day”, remembered Alicia, a neighbor of San Gregorio Atlapulco, “they broke into several houses and businesses (of Santa Cruz). They were marked with something like a gun and bullets and the next day they were found robbed.” And when people saw the same drawings outside of the businesses of San Gregorio, about 2 kilometers of Santa Cruz, they decided to send a warning to the thieves.
“That was the cause of the organization: the primary cause was fear”, said Luis Reyes, neighbor of this village.
Then the people removed the marks and made the banners with the threats: “Neighbors united against crime, we are tired of so many acts of crime, (delinquency)  don’t become the suspect, if you are caught stealing, we will act directly on you and you will not be sent to the authorities “We will lynch you!”.
The concerns extended to the village of San Luis Tlaxialtemalco, where the same warnings were placed.
Now, on the principal avenue of both villages, a banner greets the travelers. In one banner, it is reads:
 “Neighbors united against delinquency. Any rat (thief) will be lynched”
In another they warned:
“Thieves if we catch you, we are not going to send you to the authorities… We are going to lynch you!!”.
And apparently, it has worked; for the three months that the banners have been hanged there, there has not been one robbery conducted, subsequently, no lynching's.
Jose Luis Perez Martinez, coordinator of Public Safety of Xochimilco, said that there has been an desperate approach by the residents  and the SSP was notified to take precautions.
“We have had meetings with the corporations to begin operatives and make ourselves present. I told the attorney directly, but they became upset because there is no formal complaint”, he reported.
He added that the majority of the people don’t have the means of denouncing to the Public Ministry, nor they trust the police officers.
Daniel Cunjama, investigator of the National Institute of Penal Science, said that in zones where a social connection- characterized by a very intimate connection between the neighbors-, there can occur a lynching if the community feels threaten.
“When the safety , talking from the point of view of the State [ meaning the Police], is not enough to provide safety to those who needed, the reaction of these groups is to take justice on their own hands”, he says.
Source: Noticias Terra
Thank you goes out to the BB reader who sent the story in

Monterrey: Homicides Down 31% in 2012- But Now Rising

$
0
0
Borderland Beat

Bloody Start

Monterrey • Nuevo León has had a violent start of year, after registering in its first nine days, 44 executions, returning to standard indexes of criminality of  bloody 2010.
Meanwhile the preventive, state and municipal police keep decreasing by the operation of control of confidence and the resignations of elements that arrived from the center and southeast of the country.
2012 closed with a global decrease of around 31 per cent in the figure of executed but emerging January as "hot" since the beginning of the year.
Last year, months like November, June and July registered number of victims  of 40, 56 and 68 executed, while in 2011 there were months that had more than 200 deaths.
THERE HAS BEEN 114 HOMICIDES SINCE DECEMBER
In nine days of 2013 ,the 44 executions have already exceeded the 50 percent increase of the 70 homicides registered in December.
-click to enlarge-
 Meanwhile, since the beginning of the new federal administration, from December 1 to date, the number of deaths related to organized crime amounts to 114.
According to declarations of the secretary of communications of the State Government, Jorge Domeme Zambrano, the violent journey is caused by the confrontations between rival groups of the organized crime, basically because of the retail of drugs.
The bloody disputes in the entity occurred after the Federal Government made an important retreat of the troops of federal forces.
Nationally, Nuevo León is the fourth entity with increased homicides  by organized crime.
In 2011, one thousand 827 people were murdered while last year the figure was of one thousand 260.
 
Milenio

9.4 Tons of Marijuana Confiscated Was Chapo's Loss

$
0
0
Borderland Beat

The discovery occurred in an abandon mechanic workshop on the TJ street of Tehuacan in the colonia Ejido Francisco Villa.
The 9.4 tons of marijuana confiscated by the State Preventive Police in the border town of Tijuana allegedly belongs to the Sinaloa Cartel.
The assumption of ownership of the confiscation being the Sinaloa cartel was due to the name “Beny” that appears on some packages, and  Beny  is identified as collaborator of the Sinaloa cartel, a  criminal organization lead by the drug trafficker Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.
Some packages had red spray paint and the name “Capulin”, but others were marked with a number representing its weight.
It was not verified if the weight was the correct one since the weighing of the drug was in total of all packages confiscated. 
Authorities colluded  that after  the collection of the drug, it gave a weight of 9 tons with 43 kilograms.
The drug packages were not uniform in weight, size or shape. .
 
Source: El Debate
 


9 die in Zacatecas and Jalisco

$
0
0
By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A total of 9 unidentified individuals have been killed in ongoing drug and gang related violence in Jalisco and Zacatecas states since last Friday, according to Mexican news accounts.

A report which appeared on the website of El Sol de Zacatecas news daily said that three unidentified bodies in an advanced stage of decomposition were found Friday near a mine entrance in Noria de Angeles municipality.

Security forces were dispatched from nearby Fresnillo municipality to aid in the recovery of the bodies.  The mine was reportedly near the village of La Tinaja.  Noria de Angeles is halfway between Fresnillo ans San Luis Potosi cities in the eastern part of Zacatecas state.

The bodies were all male and appeared to have been shot and dumped at the scene.

Meanwhile in Jalisco state six unidentified individuals were killed, including three men found dead in Guadalajara, according to Mexican news accounts.

A news report posted on the website of El Siglo de Durango news daily Friday said that the three victims were found near the intersection of calles Inglaterra and Quetzal in Moderna colony.

The bodies were all male and had been stuffed into black garbage bags.  Three victims had been decapitated.  The news report said that it is possible more bodies were included in the find.

The report said witnesses watched as armed suspects travelling aboard three vehicles dumped the bags at the scene at around 0000 hrs Friday morning.

At around the same time in southern Guadalajara, police agents found the body of a man inside an abandoned Volkswagen Jetta sedan.  The find as made on a road leading to  the village of El Verde in El Salto municipality, part of the the Guadalajara metropolitan area.  The report fails to mention how the victim was killed, only that he was found stuffed in the trunk of the sedan, and was found with a plastic bag over his head.

In Zapopan municipality an unidentified 33 year old man was shot to death at a grocery store near the intersection of calles Paseo de los Manzanos and Paseo de las Jacarandas in Praderas de San Antonio colony.  According to the report, the victim was separated from a group of friends who were held at gunpoint, then was shot and killed on the spot.

Both .223 caliber and 9mm weapons were used in the shooting.

Lastly, in Zapotlanejo municipality an unidentified man was found shot to death in Los Altos de Jalisco colony near the intersection of calles Abasolo and Independencia.

Jalisco state and its border with Michoacan was on the the main locations in Mexico that Mexico's interior ministry said would be reinforced with additional Policia Federal troops in the wake of a large uptick in shootings and gang violence.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

3 Asian Organized Crime Groups Supply Chapo With Precursor

$
0
0
Borderland Beat
The powerful Chinese Organized Criminal Group the centuries old "Triads", get a cut of all trafficking of each group.  They operate a structure that gives them a cut of each layer of production from the lab or farm to the trafficker.  The names at the bottom are no exception.  This is from the same report that Vato posted also in fragmented format of the Proceso 1888 report, but this is the Asian element.



MÉXICO, DF (apro).- Los tentáculos del cártel de Sinaloa que encabeza Joaquín El ChapoGuzmán han llegado ya al continente asiático.The tentacles of the Sinaloa cartel headed by Joaquin El Chapo Guzman have reached the Asian continent.
El capo, uno de los hombres más poderosos del mundo, según la revista Forbes, es todo un empresario del narcotráfico que opera como un holding con presencia en Colombia, Ecuador, Perú, Bolivia y Argentina, donde proporciona no sólo la logística y protección, sino una red de complicidades y las condiciones para el tráfico de estupefacientes, a quienes funcionan como los gerentes de su empresa.El Capo, one of the most powerful men in the world, according to Forbes magazine, is a drug entrepreneur operating as a holding company with operations in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Argentina, which provides not only the logistics and protection, but a sophisticated network of complicity and environments for drug trafficking.
En Perú, por ejemplo, la Cuarta Fiscalía contra el Crimen Organizado mantiene abierta una investigación sobre la presencia del cártel de Sinaloa en su zona fronteriza con Ecuador, donde la estructura de El Chapo está integrada por delincuentes colombianos, ecuatorianos y peruanos que protegen la producción de cocaína y mantienen el control sobre las rutas para traficarla ( Proceso 1888 ). In Peru, for example, the Fourth Organized Crime Prosecutor has open an investigation into the presence of the Sinaloa cartel in Ecuador, where the structure of El Chapo organization consists Colombians, Ecuadorians and Peruvians protecting production of cocaine and maintaining control over the routes for trafficking  (Proceso 1888).
Como en toda empresa, la organización delictiva cuenta además con proveedores de distintos productos para elaborar su mercancía. As in every business, the criminal organization also has different facilitators to develop their merchandise products.
Tres de ellas, según la Procuraduría General de la República (PGR), son organizaciones criminales asiáticas que abastecen al cártel de Sinaloa de precursores químicos para la fabricación de drogas sintéticas.Three of them, according to the Attorney General's Office (PGR) are Asian criminal organizations that supply the Sinaloa cartel of precursor chemicals for the manufacture of synthetic drugs such as meth.
Según un informe de la dependencia, la Subprocuraduría Especializada en Investigación de la Delincuencia Organizada (SEIDO) descubrió, en reuniones con representantes de países latinoamericanos, que hay tres organizaciones trasnacionales criminales que surten al cártel liderado por El Chapo .According to a report by the agency, the Deputy Attorney Specialized Investigation of Organized Crime (SEIDO) found, in meetings with representatives of Latin American countries, there are three Asian criminal transnational organizations that supply the  Sinaloa cartel led by El Chapo.
Dichas organizaciones son: Sun Yee On (Nueva Virtud y Paz), Sap Sze Wui o 14 Kilates –al que también se conoce como el Cártel Wo– y Tai Huen Tsai (El Gran Círculo).They are: Sun Yee On (New Virtue and Peace), Sap Sze Wui or “14Karat” -which is also known as the Organized Criminal Group  Huen Tai Wo-and Tsai (Great Circle). Éstas también mantienen vínculos con los Caballeros Templarios , que dirige Enrique Plancarte, de acuerdo con la PGR.They also maintain links with the Knights Templar, led by Enrique Plancarte, according to the PGR.
Las investigaciones realizadas por la dependencia que dirige Jesús Murillo Karam han confirmado el vínculo que tienen las organizaciones criminales asiáticas con las mexicanas, y ha alertado de ello a sus similares latinoamericanas. Research conducted by the agency headed by Jesús Murillo Karam confirmed the link with Asian criminal organizations with the Mexican cartels, and warned the Asian groups are much like the Mexican Cartels.
Proceso

Death squads; Soldiers with a license to kill

$
0
0

Proceso (1-12-13)

Jorge Carrasco Araizaga

Translated by un vato for Borderland Beat

Since last September, the Nation's Supreme Court ruled that the case of the Ojinaga "death squad" should go to a civil court, but it has not ordered this and the case remains in the hands of the military justice system. It isn't another case of abuse, but rather the story of systematic murders committed by a group of soldiers and officers who were acting like an organized crime armed group. This is part of that story, reconstructed by Proceso based on court files and the testimony of the participants.

MEXICO, D.F. (Proceso).- The afternoon of June 22, 2008, almost three months after the start of the Chihuahua Joint Operation ordered by Felipe Calderon, a platoon from the Third Non-quartered Infantry Company in Ojinaga (CINE: Tercera Compania de Infanteria No Encuadrada), under the command of Major Alejandro Rodas Cobon, went out to patrol the Mulatos area, a ranch east of that city.

The officer climbed into a Lobo pickup with extended cab that had been seized from drug traffickers and painted over in military green with the number 8013148, as if it were an official vehicle. The driver was Sergeant Second Class auto body repairman Andres Becerra Vargas. Maj. Rodas Cobon carried his duty weapon, a 9mm MP-5 submachine pistol, and another personal pistol, in .40 caliber, with blued finish.

In one of the trails going towards Mulatos, the soldiers saw a civilian in an all-terrain vehicle. He was wearing oversize jeans, white sleeveless T-shirt, and his head was shaved. The major called for the Army's urban patrol for Ojinaga, which was commanded by Infantry Lieutenant Gonzalo Arturo Huesca Isasi, who was in a Hummer at the front of his platoon of riflemen.

On the way back to CINE, on the dirt road between Mulatos and Ojinaga, the military squad again met up with Esau Samaniego Rey, "El Cholo" or "El Azteca." Major Rodas ordered Sgt. Becerra to stop the truck. He ordered him to spotlight the suspect with the pickup's headlights.

"I've got this fool on my list," Rodas Cobon told Becerra, a reference to the database of drug traffickers he maintained as second commander of the Third CINE, for which he was also known as Lince 1 (Lynx 1). The company commander, Jose Julian Juarez Ramirez, Lince, was on vacation.

Rodas Cobon called Verde (codename for Lt. Huesca), and ordered him to lift up the detainee's T-shirt, and turn him around in a circle so that the major could finish identifying him. He identified him as a "fucking azteca", that is, a member of the group Los Aztecas, armed branch of the Juarez cartel.

Rodas Cobon pulled out his cell phone and called Infantry Corporal Guillermo Arce Garcia. "I hope your wife is there with you," he told him, and ordered the driver to take him to that soldier's home. When they got to the house located on 14th Street of Colonia Porfirio Ornelas, the took the detainee, who was already blindfolded, off the truck. The corporal's wife identified him as the person who had attempted to kidnap the couple's son.

The major ordered Lt. Huesca and his men to take the detainee to the CINE base and to "work him over" to make him identify his boss, who ordered him to kidnap the minor, who was with him and how much he was going to get paid. "If possible, kill him," the major told the lieutenant, according to the statement that the driver sergeant made to the military court in Criminal Case No. 1982/2009.

Huesca took the detainee to a hut that was behind the dining hall of the military base. "I kept hearing the civilian's screams from the pickup truck, where I went to sleep," the driver sergeant goes on to say. Around 4:00 in the morning, Sgt. Alberto Alvarado Vazquez woke him up to to give him orders from Major Rodas to fill up the pickup's fuel tank and to fill up two extra 60 liter (about 15 gallons) fuel containers, one with gasoline and the other with diesel.

"I asked what the diesel was for, since the pickup used gasoline. The sergeant told him, 'It's all screwed up. We went too far with the fucking azteca'". Becerra states that Rodas Cobon ordered him to go out with Lt. Huesca to carry out a job. He parked the pickup beside the hut and they loaded "something wrapped up in a blanket". Lt. Huesca and Sgt. Alvarado got into the cab and, in the rear, Infantry Corporals Carmen Omar Ramirez Jimenez and Rufino Pablo Cruz, as well as soldiers Azael Santiago Luna and one known as El Tacuarin or Pareja.

According to the driver, Huesca ordered him to take the highway to Camargo. After an hour or more on the road, before they got to the La Perla mine, he told him to take a dirt road on the El Trece ranch. They took the road to Los Berrendos ranch, went past that, and, after driving about half an hour more, they got to some structures made out of wood and sheet metal. Huesca ordered El Tacuarin to climb up on a hill with a radio to tell them if anybody was coming.

The rest of the soldiers in the back of the truck tore down a shed to get firewood. They piled it up about three feet high. Infantry soldier Santiago Luna went to the truck for the diesel, while the two corporals unloaded the body. They poured the fuel over the body and the pile of wood. Corporal Carmen Omar Ramirez went for some dry brush, lit it with a cigarette lighter and threw it on the pile.

It took between five and six hours for the body, including the bones, to burn completely. They loaded the ashes of the campfire on the pickup and they dumped them along the way with shovels. Then, with handfuls of weeds, they cleaned the back of the truck. The group returned to CINE between 4:00 and 5:00 p.m.

(Extracted from a report published inProceso 1889, already in circulation)      

January 13th Badanov's Buzzkill Bulletin

$
0
0
by Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

Since December 11th, 2012, Mexican Army units throughout Mexican have seized 11,488.275 kilograms of marijuana, 99 kilograms of marijuana seeds,147.2 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine and 9.1 kilograms of cocaine and 2.125 kilograms of heroin, according to official Mexican government sources.
  • A Mexican Army unit with the 5th Military Zone seized more than two metric tons of marijuana in Chihuahua state December 11th.  An army checkpoint near Samalayuca stopped a tractor trailer rig from Guadalajara, Jalisco, bound for Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua.  Hidden among foam bricks soldiers found 3,948 packages of marijuana totalling 2,815 kilograms.  The driver was detained at the scene.
  • An army unit with the Mexican 42nd Military Zone seized more than one metric tons of marijuana in Chihuahua state December 11th.  The unit was on patrol in Ciudad Guerrero municipality when it rolled up on three abandoned vehicles.  Inside soldiers seized 2,315 packages of marijuana totalling 1,060 kilograms of marijuana. Additionally a press used to process the marijuana and a trailer were seized.
  • A Mexican Army unit with the 45th Military Zone seized a quantity of marijuana in Sonora state December 9th.  The unit was on patrol in Trincheras municipality when it rolled up on an abandoned aircraft which had a total of 425 kilograms of marijuana in 42 packages.  In additional soldiers located three drums with 150 liters of aviation fuel at the location, and three bags of marijuana seeds totalling 44 kilograms.
  • An army unit with the 24th Military Zone rescued an unidentified kidnapping victim in Morelos state December 15th.  Acting on a an anonymous complain the unit located the victim in Xochitepec Villas colony in Xochitepec municipality. Two unidentified individuals were also detained at the scene.  Additionally, soldiers seized two handguns two weapons magazines, 20 rounds of ammunition, personal quantities of marijuana, .700 kilograms of marijuana and a vehicle.
  • A joint operation involving a Mexican Army unit with the 45th Military Zone and Policia Federal seized quantities of crystal methamphetamine and  cocaine in Sonora state December 19th.  The security forces were at a military checkpoint in San Luis Rio Colorado municipality.  Security agents found 146.3 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine and 2.7 kilograms of cocaine in 129 packages in a false bottom of a fuel tanker truck.  The driver was detained at the scene.
  • A military unit with the Mexican 2nd Military Zone seized drugs in Baja California state December 18th.  The packages of heroin were found strapped to the legs of two unidentified suspects near the baggage claim area of the Abelardo L. Rodriguez International Airport in Tijuana.  A total of 2.125 kilograms of heroin were located.  the two suspects were detained at the scene.
  • An army unit with the Mexican 2nd Military Zone located marijuana in San Felipe municipality December 19th in Baja California state.  The unit rolled up on an abandoned aircraft containing 350 kilograms of marijuana.  Another vehicle was also seized at the scene.
  • A Mexican Army unit with the 8th Military Zone seized almost one metric ton of marijuana in Tamaulipas state December 18th.  The military unit was on patrol when soldiers found 933.075 kilograms of marijuana in 119 packages hidden in the brush in Camargo municipality.
  • An army unit with the Mexican 8th Military Zone seized a quantity of marijuana in Tamaulipas state December 19th.  The unit located 17.1 kilograms of marijuana in eight packages hiddden in the brush in Matamoros municipality near the Rio Bravo.
  • A Mexican Army unit with the 8th Military Zone seized a quantity of marijuana in Miguelo Aleman municipality in Tamaulipas state December 19th.  The unit located 124.8 kilograms of marijuana in nine packages hidden in the brush near the village of Los Angeles.
  • An army unit with the Mexican 8th Military Zone seized a quantitiy of marijuana in Tamaulipas state in two separate operations December 21st and 22nd.  The find were made in Nuevo Laredo municipality on the banks of the Rio Bravo where soldiers seized 314 packages of marijuana totalling 1,287.6 kilograms.
  • A Mexican Army unit with the 34th Military Zone seized a quantity of cocaine in Quintana Roo state December 23rd.  The seizure took place at the Cancun International airnport in Cancun where soldiers secured 7.1 kilograms of cocaine in ten packages.  Two unidentified male suspects were detained at the scene.
  • An army unit with the Mexican 9th Military Zone raided a location in Sianaloa state seizing quantities of drugs and munitions December 26th.  The raid took place in Culican municipality in the Los Angeles colony.  Drugs secured included .900 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine and a small quantity of marijuana.  Weapons and munitions secured included four rifles, three handguns, a grenade launcher attachment, a grenade, 22 weapons magazines, 511 rounds of ammunition.  A truck and a radio were secured by military personnel as well.
  • A Mexican Army unit with the 44th Military Zine seized more than one metric ton of marijuana in Oaxaca state December 27th.  The military unit was on patrol near the village of San Marcos La Chinilla in Miahuatlan de Porfirio Diaz municipality when it came upon the drugs in an abandoned location. Total seized included 1,300 kilograms of marijuana in 90 packages.  Two rifles were also found at the location.
  • An army unit with the Mexican 9th Military Zone secured weapons and munitions in a raid in Sinaloa state December 28th.  The raid took place at a residence in Culican municipality on Bulevar Rotarismo in the city.  Weapons and munition secured included nine rifles, five handguns, one grenade launcher attachment, 93 weapons magazines, 13,788 rounds of ammunition.  Vehicles seized included four vehicles and one motorcycle.
  • A military unit with the 44th Military Zone secured more than three metric tons of marijuana in raids over three days in Oaxaca state between December 25th and December 28th.  The raids took place near the villages of Romadito and San Vicente Coatlan where soldiers seized a total of 3,175 kilograms of marijuana in various packages.  A total of 45 kilograms of marijuana were also secured.
Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

The 150 Million Dollar Seizure

$
0
0
Casa de Bermudez

By ACI - Borderland Beat

The year was 2007 and Mexico was in the process of ramping up its war against the cartels.  A strange feeling overtook the nation as the drug war escalated further than anyone could have predicted.    Most Americans never noticed the blood being spilled next door and few outside of the law enforcement remember the name Pedro Antonio Bermudez Suaza.  There was event which did catch the media’s attention for a brief moment.  Perhaps you can recall a plane which crashed into the Yucatan in Mexico.   Authorities discovered inside the wreckage 3.7 tons of pure cocaine.  This discovery,would turn into one of the largest cash seizures in history one hundred and fifty million dollars in all.  


Simple Living 
Pedro Antonio Bermudez Suaza had been in the game a long time; he entered into the world of drug trafficking back in the early eighties.  He got his start working for Pablo Escobar and the Ochoa clan in Medellin, Colombia.  He would regularly fly consignments out of the country to partners further north.  He was quite successful at this venture and decided expanding was a good option, so slowly he began to build on his empire. 


In the late eighties and early nineties Pedro Antonio Bermudez Suaza had successfully relocated his operation to Mexico City.  As the Medellin Cartel lost power and the Cali Cartel took over as the predominate traffickers in the region, Bermudez Suaza saw the shift in power and began working with the Cali Cartel.  In Mexico he found that he was welcomed, his connections back home served him well.  He was in a perfect position to play a pivotal role within the international drug trade.  He was to become a facilitator  between one world and another.  He for a time worked with the lord of the skies, Amado Carrillo Fuentes.  Following the death of the lord of the skies, Bermudez Suaza began working with the federations as it was known then.   
Another of his Properties 


At the turn of the century Bermudez Suaza had become a key importer for the Sinaloa cartel.  He was very useful to the organization.  He wasn't just a facilitator between the Mexicans and Colombians but also an innovative smuggler.  He is said to have received his nick name, the architect, because he pioneered the use of drug tunnels.  Drug tunnels have become a highly effective way to crossing drugs over the border.  Some say tunnels are responsible for the majority of the drugs making it through the border.  It was this ingenuity and his ability to stay useful that Bermudez Suaza managed to survive in a game which allows for few mistakes.



Pedro Antonio Bermudez Suaza's mistake came when Mexican authorities found his plane which had crashed into the jungles of the Yucatan.  Authorities discovered along with the cocaine, recordings implicating Felipe Bermudez Duran, Bermudez Suaza’s son.  At least this is what is believed.   What really happened is up for debate.  Some claim the tape was fabricated and that until this point in time Pedro Antonio Bermudez Suaza was able to remain off the radar for the most part.  The tapes according to this alternative version of events were in fact a cover for the informant.  It was actually through the work of a confidential informant that he was apprehended and his properties seized.   As with all things Mexico the truth is buried in there somewhere.

His main contact for cocaine in Colombia was a man by the name of Olmedo Gomez Cruz, though he had many others.  He was thought to have died in Colombia under unclear circumstances.   Castro Jaramillo, Mejia Molina and Tobon Calle managed the trafficking side of the business.   Aristizabal Mejia, Ramirez Duque and Pelaez Lopez operated front companies for Bermudez Suaza in Colombia.   Luque Aguilera operated front companies based in Spain and Pablo Agustin Meouchi Saade managed front companies for Bermudez Suaza in Mexico. Andre Rodriguez Fernandez helped with logistics inside Mexico.






His organization notoriously sold drugs to war torn parts of Africa including the Congo and Sierra Leone destined to end up in the hands of warlords.  These warlords would use the drugs to increase their hold over their soldiers.

Pedro Antonio Bermudez Suaza was arrested in Mexico City in 2008.  The Mexican Government was reluctant to extradite Bermudez Suaza to New York to face trail, waiting two years to extradite him.  The Mexican government eventually capitulated and Bermudez Suaza was extradited to the United States June 15, 2010.     
On his way to NYC

Through his years of smuggling Pedro Antonio Bermudez Suaza amassed a fortune.  When it was all said and done more than 150 million dollars in drug proceeds would be seized and a major broker of cocaine to the Sinaloa Cartel would cease to be.  Bermudez Suaza had managed to successfully navigate the treacherous path of an international drug trafficker for over two decades without being caught or killed, a success in the underground world of the cartels. 

In most drug cases in Mexico the proceeds from illicit gains are rarely taken after a criminal goes to prison but in the case of Pedro Antonio Bermudez Suaza nearly all of his assets were accounted for.  This is only possible if a launderer has began to work with the law enforcement.  With that being said authorities seized 30 luxurious properties, 35 ranches, three airplanes and 76 commercial properties, among others.  Also seized was a collection of 18 antique cars worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.   

He was also the owner or part owner in the following businesses; Air Taxi Antioqueño  Agroganadera Los Santos, Group Llanogrande in Rionegro, Diego Aristzabal M Y. Asociados LTDA, Ganareca S.A., Renta Liquida S.A.S., Luis B Mejia Asociados Y CIA LTDA., Fumagro S.A., Broker CMS el Agrario S.A., Bosques De Agua S.A.S., Roseville Investments S.A., Tremaine Corp., Gruopo Iruna S.A. De C.V., Industrailzadora Purecorn, S.A. De C.V., Grupo Jezinne, S.A. De C.V..  In addition he was also named in the US indictment of the Sinaloan Cartel so there is some overlap in regards to front companies.  Several of these businesses are still active today.








Freed Child Assassin Resumes Old Habits

$
0
0
Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

 
When El Ponchis  is released I think we can say we can expect much of the same as this thug, only as an American citizen Ponchis  is free to “come home” to the United States.
When one hears the term “Child Sicario” we think of Ponchis is, the 12 year old child assassin convicted of four killings, but suspected in many more,  which began in his early teens.  However, he was not the first infamous child hitman of Mexico, that dishonor goes to Iván Adrián Pizaña Rojano, aka  El Ivancito .
His gang was made up of El Negro, El Chocorrol, El Furcio and El Güero. All were arrested and the last to be released was El Ivancito , the others were younger and Mexican law dictate their release at the age of 18. 
His gang was named “El Invancitos”, and they were convicted of 7 executions but implicated in at least 19 others.
He was charged with armed robbery, kidnapping and murder. It was his gang of teenagers who terrorized the neighborhood of Ermita-Zaragoza, in Iztapalapa.  Before his arrest, his girlfriend gave birth to a son.  He was captured as he made  a visit to see his son. 
He was incarcerated at the Center for Justice of Adolescents until the age of 22.
His mother had threatened to file complaints with the Human Rights Commission of Mexico City,  protesting that prison officials were unlawfully detaining her son.   He had served the full five year sentence, the pressure worked and he was released on November 14, 2012.
Immediately he picked up his life of crime where he was 4 years ago, and his reign of crime appeared  seamless to his life prior to his arrest, armed robbery, assault, armed assaults on public roads and   kidnapping.  On December 26, a murder.
On that day, El Ivancito threatened the family of Francisco Javier Ángeles Gutiérrez attempting to  force them to withdraw criminal charges against him after he inflicted injuries on the family.  

Accompanied by his new gang he then shot and killed the 21 year old Francisco then fled the scene.  Residents who witnessed the murder came forth and were willing to identify the killer as Invancito.
For Ivancito, this time  there is no easy incarceration at the cushy narco teen center where it is reported he was a capo of sorts to his fellow inmates, this time  he was taken to the San Fernando Men’s South Detention Center, where he has no protection, no activities and severe restrictions.
At his arraignment on the 11th of January at the headquarters of the Attorney General of Justice he protested his innocence saying “besides being a student, I am a good Catholic and I did not kill anyone”.
The prosecutor reports he will ask the judge for the maximum penalty under the law with mitigating circumstances referring to his previous homicide history.
His aggressive and wide-ranging time of terror since his release was stunning. 
He was free for a total of 57 days.
 
Sources used to write this post: Univision, Gaceta, Cronica

El Chapo's Wicked Web Weaved-Tentacles Revealed

$
0
0
Borderland Beat
Mexico City (January 14, 2013). - The tentacles of Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman's network infiltrated deep into to the Armed Forces, the PF, and PGR during the six year administration of Felipe Calderón. 

Judicial records to which Reforma had access detailed that the Sinaloa Cartel acquired grenades and training from a marine captain identified as Ramiro Campos Lomelí, currently in prison. 

The same Ramiro Campos Lomeli gave up a partner when he was arrested in April 2012 after being appointed by Esteban Luis Amezcua as cartel middleman.

"Amezcua asked me to get about six 40 caliber grenades (and in order to get them) I was looking for a fellow marine with the rank of First Mate,"he testified. 

Presumably the captain charged 36,000 pesos in exchange for giving the weapons to "Rosario," who was representing the interests of "El Chapo." In addition the marine also received 5000 cartridges for an AR-15 from the Army, according to a criminal case filed in the Tenth Court in Criminal Matters DF.

Upon being arrested, "Rosario" said that the organization got guns from the PF in February 2012. In addition, the PGR knows that cartel intermediaries agreed to SEIDO investigations against collaborators  of "El Chapo."

Chapos' public relations team informed

A PR team from the Sinaloa Cartel managed to buy a ton of cocaine stored in a PGR, holding facility, acquired grenades from the Secretary of Navy, cartridges from the Army and information on investigations from SEIDO.

Judicial records to which REFORMA had access detailed confessions of a military person, a lawyer and two protected witnesses, who claim that this team might have paid $250,000 for the investigation against Juan Carlos Moreno Flores, "El Calentura", alleged operator of Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman in Guerrero. 

Sinaloa Cartel's team of "publicrelationistas" told of having knocked on the doors of Army officials at various levels, even tried in 2012 to meet with General Germán Jiménez, then commander of the Tenth Military Zone in Durango, to stop the persecution of Cabrera Sarabia clan linked to "El Chapo" which controlled the country's northwest, according to the criminal case 57/2012 of the Tenth District Federal Court District of criminal matters in DF. 

They only managed to meet a General named Castillo, assigned to the same zone. According to testimony, although they got drunk, they did not reach General Jimenez, who was released on February 1, 2012, amid an escalation of violence in the State. 

Nothing had reached the ears of the PGR but for a woman linked to the organization of the Beltran Leyva who suffered the kidnapping of some relatives. First, she spoke with rivals of the Sinaloa Cartel to locate her loved ones and in exchange for favors.

Along the way she recorded telephone conversations then offered these recording later to the PGR to inform on the Cabrera Sarabia. The woman became the protected witness "Libre" when the clan was crumbling.

The search for relatives starts
Andrés Vázquez Vela y Judas Fabián Vázquez Cisneros were last seen on March 11, 2011. Presumably they were kidnapped on la Avenida Felipe Pescador in the capital of Durango. One was uncle and the other a  cousin of the woman identified as "Rosario", who since 2008 has been located by the FBI as an operator of the Beltran Leyva cartel in Nogales, Sonora, where she charged fees of 1,500 dollars for each illegal immigrant who crossed the border. 

According to her statement to the authorities, "Rosario" mobilized to locate family members, but did not go to the authorities but to the state of Durango, but instead she went to the jail to interview a criminal, who in turn got her the Blackberry PIN  of Luis Alberto Cabrera Sarabia, "Don Beto." 

Rosario said that in July 2011 she met on a farm with "Don Beto" and she asked for help to locate her relatives.

"Pay attention because the state authorities found a narcofosa in a house in Fraccionamiento Las Fuentes. Tell your family to do a DNA test, possibly your families are among the bodies," said regional chief Sinaloa Cartel. 

Cabrera questioned what "Rosario" would be willing to do in exchange and she answered him with what ever was necessary. 
At that moment, "Don Beto" told her that there was a shortage of 40 gauge grenades, known as "deodorants." "Get me "deodorants" and let's see how much of a fucker you are because those things you do not get easily," said Don Beto." 

On August 6, 2011, the Attorney General of Durango reported finding a clandestine grave in Durango, where they found the family of "Rosario." 

They offer support and weapons 
"Rosario", known as the Beltran Leyva operator, traveled to Mexico City in search of contacts that would help her get 40 caliber grenades.

According to her statement to the authorities, at a party held in Colonia Nápoles, (where soccer player Cuauhtemoc Blanco was), and there she met Ana Bertha Trujillo, a publicist of artists who in the past represented Ninel Conde. 

Rosario Said that Trujillo presented her to Luis Esteban Amezcua Bernal a lawyer and owner of an advertising company and a recording studio, but also claimed to be an official of Cisen and used a "badge" from the Secretariat Marina. 

According to Rosario's declaration Amezcua said, in the criminal case 57/2012 of the Tenth District Court in criminal matters DF that July night, Trujillo said to Amezcua, "I'm going to introduce you to someone who knows very heavy people" and presented him with "Rosario". 

Amezcua was in need of money for a transplant and Rosario sought grenades. Their needs were mutual.

From his experience as a lawyer, Amezcua had defended before a military trial, marine Captain Ramiro Campos Lomelí with whom earlier he had made ​​deals to get weapons. 

When last April 28 he was arrested, Campos did not dispute the allegations. Even told that he charged 36,000 pesos for six grenades and accompanied Amezcua to give them to "Rosario." Seeing their efficiency, she invited them Durango for a visit to Cabrera Sarabia. 

"Rosario  presented Campos to Cabrera Sarabia. At that time, he stood offering his services as well as the service to train their people in weapons and explosives because he (Campos) was a Marine Captain," said Amezcua.

The record refers that Campos also managed to get 5000 rounds for an AR-15 rifle from the Army, that which he sold (to drug traffickers) for $ 3,000, and an AK-47 rifle of polycarbonate for which they gave him 28,000 pesos. 

"My girlfriend and I went to pick up the 5000 cartridges at the Military Camp and apparently there was a lieutenant who gave him (Campos Lomelí) the cartridges," said a broker or intermediary of drug traffickers, who is a now protected witness with identified only as "X". 

Back then "Rosario" had a boyfriend named Victor Omar Martinez Farrera, who worked for a law firm as tax lawyer who accordingly told authorities he helped her buy weapons, because he had a friend named Alexander with contacts in the Federal Police, who provided him with a stock of weapons for which they paid a million pesos.

They set eyes on the confiscated drugs
The protected witness identified as "X", who accompanied the Beltran Lleyva operator "Rosario" in various transactions told authorities that after observing the ease with which they procured government weapons they decided to buy drugs seized by the PGR. 
"My girlfriend, Esteban Amezcua I went to collect $ 350,000 from North Central, as this money was sent by Felipe Cabrera in order to buy what Amezcua had offered the organization and consisted of buying from PGR warehouse  a ton of cocaine, 20 drums of 'monkeys' and 60 buckets of ephedrine, without Amezcua mentioning  who would be  the PGR contact in that operation," related the witness according to the criminal case 57/2012 of the Tenth District Court in criminal matters in the Federal District. 

However, the activity of the operators took a turn on September 18, 2011 , when the army detained in DF, José Carlos Moreno Flores, "El Calentura", representing "El Chapo" in Guerrero, which intensified military operations in Durango and Sinaloa. 

At that time,"Rosario" told to the authorities, Cabrera Sarabia asked for the research information obtained against "La Calentura" and to contact the General Germán Jiménez, commander of the Tenth Military Zone in Durango, in order to offer him money to cancel operations against the organization. 
Rosario recalls that through a woman named Marisol Herrera they managed to get an appointment with a General named Castillo, assigned to the same military zone, who thought would lead to General Jiménez. "occurred between 15 and 16 of October 2011 in one of the battalions of the Military Zone of Cinco de Mayo in Durango. "Including that meeting lasted until the wee hours of the morning because we begin to drink alcoholic beverages," says "Rosario", despite the meeting she could not meet the area commander.


39 die in central Mexico since Sunday

$
0
0
By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A total of 39 unidentified individuals have been murdered or have been found dead in Mexico state and in Mexico's capital since Sunday, according to Mexican news accounts.

A news item posted on the website of El Sol de Mexico news daily Monday said that 14 individuals were found in three separate sites Monday in Mexico state.

An unidentified spokesman with the Mexico state Procuraduria General del Etstado (PGE) or attorney general reported that six of the dead were found in Toluca, the state capital of Mexico state, all wrapped in plastic bags and stuffed inside a vehicle in  Zinacantepec colony.  Another five were found in El Seminario colony, and two more were found dead in  Santiago Tianguistenco colony.

According to a news item posted on Animal Politico website, a total of 17 dead have been found since Sunday including the 13 found dead Monday.

The report also quoted Procuraduria General de Justicia del Distrito Federal (PGJDF), Rodolfo Fernando Rios Garza saying 22 more victims have been found in Distrito Federal since last Sunday.  Violent incidents have also included three kidnappings in Venustiano Carranza and Alvaro Obregon.

Rios Garza insisted that some of the shootings and deaths in Distrito Federal have been isolated incidents, with little connection to organized crime.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

Policia Federal to reinforce Zacatecas

$
0
0

By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

Mexican Policia Federal units will continue to patrol the roads and highways of Zacatecas and more reinforcements are coming, according to Mexican news reports.
Miguel Alonzo Reyes

In a news account published in the website of El Sol de Zacatecas news daily, Zacatecas governor Miguel Alonso Reyes was quoted saying that Mexico interior minister, Miguel Osorio Chong has promised to keep Mexican federal security forces patrolling the state.

Govenor Alonso Reyes recounted a meeting with Osorio Chong last Thursday in which the Secretaria de Gobernacion (SEGOB), the official name for the interior minister, iterated federal support for security operations in the state.
SEGOB Miguel Osorio Chong

Two weeks ago in a required report, SEGOB said that Policia Federal units would be dispatched to the border area between Jalisco and Michoacan states in the wake of a spike in violence in that area.

The area to be reinforced is well south of Zacatecas state.  Another trouble spot for Zacatecas state has been the border area with Jalisco state to its south.  Already Mexican Army troops patrol the area and maintain a large base.

SEGOB last December folded the old Secretaria de Seguridad Publica (SSP) -- the controlling agency for the Policia Federal -- into a separate sub agency of SEGOB, while discussions in Mexico City among legislators continue with President Enrique Pena's newly proposed Gendarmaria Nacional continue.  What form and what mission the new police force will take remains a mystery.  Despite its new role in SEGOB, Policia Federal units are constantly being shifted to trouble spots in Mexico, much as they was used during the term of former president Felipe Calderon.

Alonso Reyes also said that SEGOB has committed to keeping Mexican Army and Naval Infantry troops in the state.  Zacatecas currently houses three Mexican Army rifle battalions in the state in the form of several rifle company sized installations.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

Drug Cartel Connection Not Ruled Out in Brownsville Mail Bomb

$
0
0
Borderland Beat


Six people hospitalized including 5 year old that some reports say opened
the package only 1 explosive detonated, the family is not cooperating with police.
in another story I am looking for details on the 3 kidnappings in Cameron County tied to the Mexican Cartels, please send me any links you may have seen.
 
BROWNSVILLE — Investigators say they believe a Brownsville family was intentionally targeted when a bomb exploded inside their home Friday morning and injured three of them.
The morning blast at a home on Resaca Vista Drive critically injured a 5-year-old girl and her parents, and left the neighborhood on the city’s north side nervous.
However, police say they have not been able to determine why the bomb was left at the home.
Police Chief Orlando C. Rodriguez told The Brownsville Herald that family members who were not injured were not giving authorities many details Friday.
“They are not providing us with any information that is of any use … Is it because they don’t want to talk or they don’t know? That is what we are trying to determine,” Rodriguez said.
At the time of the blast, four or five people were in the house, including those injured, police spokesman J.J. Treviño said. “It doesn’t seem like it was a random act,” Treviño said.
Authorities declined to say whether the bombing was cartel related. “The person or persons who had these devices delivered or delivered them knew what they were doing,” Rodriguez said. “These were not simple devices. Somebody knew what they were doing.
“This was intended to cause mass destruction,” the chief added. “This family or members of this family were targeted.”
The girl, identified as Andrea Juarez, was the most severely injured, police said. It is unknown how close she was to the package when it exploded.
Her parents — Jesus Juarez, 26, and Iviz Machado, 30 — were also seriously injured.
Rodriguez said the package was delivered sometime late Thursday night. The father, Jesus Juarez, found it Friday morning and brought it inside, Rodriguez said.
When Juarez opened it, the package exploded, the chief said.
The resulting blast blew the front door off the house and shattered the windows. It created a fire and left burn damage.
The girl received second-degree burns and was rushed by ambulance to Shriners Hospital for Children in Galveston, authorities said. Her parents were taken to Brooke Army Medical Center Burn Unit in San Antonio.
Treviño said that because of dangerous winds the victims were not airlifted.
The package contained four pipe-bomb-like devices, Rodriguez said, adding that he was being careful not to speculate because the investigation is ongoing. Only one detonated.
The three unexploded bombs in the package were rendered safe by a remote vehicle at around 1:45 p.m. Friday. A loud pop was heard down the street from the scene.
“It’s an act of God that the other three devices didn’t go off or that house wouldn’t be standing there right now. That house would have been gone,” Rodriguez said, as officers opened up the perimeter and cleared the way for an evidence team to move in to the multi-colored, two-story house.
For most of the day, the entire neighborhood was blocked off by police, who set a vast perimeter because of the explosives. The police advised residents to evacuate the neighborhood as a precaution.
Federal agents with the Department of Homeland Security and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives helped Brownsville police Friday.
At Valley Regional Medical Center, a hazardous material crew set up a station to disinfect first responders, nurses and doctors who came into contact with the victims. Rodriguez said the HAZMAT team was called out as a precautionary measure.
VRMC spokeswoman Robin Brechot said authorities requested that the hospital staff who treated the victims be decontaminated as a health precaution.
Approximately 40 staff members were decontaminated by the HAZMAT team dispatched to the hospital. Several firefighters were also decontaminated, she said.
The entrance to the hospital’s emergency room was closed off because the decontamination tent was set up there, officials said. However, the emergency room was never shut down and continued to receive patients who needed emergency medical treatment.
Drue Brown, spokeswoman for the Brownsville Independent School District, said none of the elementary schools located near Resaca Vista Drive were placed on lockdown. However, on Friday, the district increased its police patrol around the schools as a precaution, Brown said.
 
Source Neglected War/KRGV

Security Chief and Family Executed and 2 Wounded

$
0
0
Borderland Beat
Mother killed shielding five year old daughter
 
When arriving home in Iztapalapa a police chief of the Secretariat of Citizen Safety (SSC) of the State of Mexico was murdered in an attack in which also killed two family members, and injured two others.
After the aggression, his five year old daughter and a woman that was passing by were injured, according to information of the local police.
Sunday around 21:00 hours, the Mexican agent, Ricardo Alejandro Hernandez Macias,  35 years old, arrived to his house at Manzana 23, Lote 16 of the street Jardin Tulipan of the colonia Jardines de San Lorenzo, in a Chevy Monza, with license plate LXZ3190.
As he left the vehicle to open the gate, four men  carrying fire arms, surrounded them and open fire.
Hernandez Macias fell beside his wife, Karla Coria Bracho of 27 years old, which died protecting her daughter of five years old that was injured by a shot in her hand and another shot on the right forearm, another son of 12 years old  was unharmed.
A woman of 45 years old was also injured while she was passing the scene of the crime at the time of the shooting.
The criminals escaped from the place after shooting more than 20 rounds with 9MM guns  and fled on two vehicles.
Policemen of the SSP of D.F. found hanged in the bathroom of the family residence the body of Alfonso Coria de las Rosa, 60 years old, father in law of the state agent, which was strangled with a rag and a wire cable fashioned into a garrote..

 
The sicarios apparently  awaited the arrival of the policeman and his family, inside the address, where they had already killed the killed the father in law,  said sources of the Capital Police.
The bodies were identified by relatives, while the woman who sustained a head injury, and the 5 year old girl,  were sent to the Hospital Belisario Dominguez.
.
In the Prosecutor’s office of D.F, the killings are  being investigated as death threats had been   received.  The deceased  was also a merchant of Tepit..
Source:Reforma

Alliance Between El Chapo, Canadian Mafia, Bikers, Fueled NY's Drug Trade

$
0
0
Borderland Beat

I provided two versions of this story. One I translated from Proceso today, and the other is the original 'technicolor' New York Post version.  Relish the different journalism styles. I bet readers prefer the Proceso "no nonsense style." Links provided as always below.

Proceso version
MEXICO CITY - In complicity with a motorcycle gang known as the Hells Angels and the Canadian Mafia, Joaquin El Chapo Guzman introduced marijuana to New York for the past 10 years, an operation that generated more than one billion dollars.

A five-year investigation by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) revealed that the network is led by Jimmy Cournoyer a French- Canadian, as published in the New York Post.

U.S. authorities and police in Laval, Quebec, where Cournoyer once lived, supposedly dismantled a network specializing in the cultivation and distribution of marijuana hydroponically, harvested in British Columbia.

Cournoyer had a jet-set lifestyle, a supermodel girlfriend and threw parties which unsuspecting celebrities attended, even Leonardo DiCaprio.

The marijuana was transported in vans and mobile homes across Canada with the help of the Hells Angels, authorities stressed.

Montreal mafia and Hells Angels transported drugs to New York, where trucks would take them to a warehouse in Brooklyn, according to the investigation published by the American newspaper.

"The illegal narcotics distributed by members of this criminal enterprise had an estimated value of over one billion dollars, conservatively speaking," said attorney Steven Tiscione in court documents.

According to research, the millions of dollars generated by the sale of  Cournoyer's marijuana  was used to purchase cocaine from Joaquin Guzman Loera, El Chapo, leader of the Sinaloa cartel, federal authorities say.

Later, with the sale of cocaine refinanced the marijuana operation.

The purchased cocaine shipments from El Chapo were trafficked into Canada, where it was resold, and parti of the proceeds was destined for the network that brought marijuana to the Big Apple, reveals the New York Post .

Jimmy Cournoyer was arrested in the spring of last year when he was disembarking from a plane in Cancun, Quintana Roo, because he was black listed by U.S. authorities.

Mexican authorities were able to put him on a flight back to Canada with a stop in Houston, after trying three times.

When Cournoyer landed on American soil, elements of the DEA arrested him and now faces trial on charges of drug dealing in New York. 

The original New York Post version
A rogues’-gallery alliance among the Canadian Mafia, outlaw bikers and a Mexican drug cartel supplied New York City with nearly a billion dollars in marijuana until the feds crashed the party, according to authorities and new court documents.

And what a party it was.

French Canadian drug kingpin Jimmy “Cosmo” Cournoyer made enough dough for a jet-set lifestyle, complete with a stunning model girlfriend and parties that drew unwitting stars, including Leonardo DiCaprio, sources told The Post.

A five-year probe by the DEA and police from Laval, Quebec, where Cournoyer once lived, revealed that his network allegedly specialized in growing and distributing potent hydroponic marijuana cultivated in British Columbia.

Cournoyer, now awaiting trial in Brooklyn federal court, organized the “vast international drug-trafficking enterprise that has been in existence for more than a decade,’’ prosecutor Steven Tiscione wrote in recent court papers.

“The illegal narcotics distributed worldwide by members of the criminal enterprise have a retail value of more than $1 billion, conservatively,” Tiscione wrote to a federal judge.

Until his recent bust, Cournoyer, 33, tried to stay one step ahead of the law in Quebec by garaging his astronomically expensive Bugatti Veyron and instead tooling around town in a Porsche Cayenne to throw off Canadian police surveillance teams, sources said.
The Porsche belonged to the slick drug lord’s catwalk gal pal, Amelia Racine, a willowy Canadian-Brazilian brunette who has modeled in Europe, sources said.

Her jailed brother, Mario Racine, was allegedly the gang’s trusted lieutenant. He is now awaiting extradition to stand trial along with Cournoyer in Brooklyn, officials said.

One of Cournoyer’s biggest customers in New York City was reputed Bonanno crime-family associate John “Big Man” Venizelos, who is currently out on bail in the case, according to sources and the documents.

Looking less like an alleged mobster and more like a day trader with his Ralph Lauren pastels, nautical-flag belts, Polo loafers and horn-rimmed glasses, Venizelos keeps a downtown Manhattan pad and holds a “straight job” managing “Jaguars 3,”a Brooklyn nightspot, sources said.The club is overseen by Vincent “Vinny Green” Faraci, a reputed Bonanno soldier who formerly managed the “Crazy Horse Too” strip club in Las Vegas, the sources added.

Cournoyer was nabbed last spring after stepping off a jet in Mexico as a wanted man.
At the time, he refused to board a US-bound commercial plane to the States, throwing a series of tantrums right out of the Robert De Niro comedy “Midnight Run,” in which the main character fakes a panic attack.

Cornoyer’s antics forced a total of four plane changes over two days before he was eventually flown to New York City to await trial.

The pot supply under his domain was transported in motor homes and trucks across Canada with the help of the Hells Angels, officials said. The motorcycle gang and the Montreal mob then smuggled the pot from Quebec into upstate New York, authorities said. Trucks delivered it to a warehouse in Brooklyn, sources said.

Millions of dollars generated by the marijuana sales were eventually used to buy cocaine from Joaquin Guzmán Loera, the leader of the notorious Sinaloa drug cartel — with the sale of the coke further financing the marijuana operation in Canada, feds say.

That coke was smuggled north into Canada where it was resold — with part of the profits underwriting the massive marijuana pipeline supplying New York City, according to sources and court documents.The enterprise relied on blood relations: Luc Cournoyer, Jimmy’s cousin, is now serving time after he was caught driving a motor home filled with pot, officials and sources said. Jimmy’s brother, Joey Cournoyer — seen in a Facebook photo partying with the unwitting DiCaprio in a bar in Europe — was a crew member who has not been charged yet, although the probe is ongoing, sources said. Also in the photo was Jimmy’s close pal, Ultimate Fighting world champ Georges St-Pierre.

Jimmy Cournoyer’s lawyer, Gerald McMahon, promises a vigorous court battle. Venizelos’ lawyer, John Meringolo insisted that $100,000-plus found in his house by DEA agents isn’t drug cash.

NY Postmmaddux@nypost.comProcesoSDPActualidad, Daily Mail UK, Universal
Viewing all 14998 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>