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Journalist Anabel Hernandez cancels visit to Chihuahua due to threats

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Patricia Mayorga Proceso (3-23-13)

Translated by un vato for Borderland Beat

CHIHUAHUA, Chih. (proceso.com.mx).-- Journalist Anabel Hernandez denounced the lack of protection from authorities from death threats she has received. which forced her to cancel her trip to Chihuahua, where she was to present her book, Mexico en Llamas (Mexico in Flames).

In an appearance by phone, she explained to her book's presenters and the audience at the Republican Loyalty Museum that the Federal District (DF) authorities had referred her case to the Office of Attorney General (PGR: Procuraduria General de la Republica).

Agents of the PGR are the same people who have threatened her, so they cannot guarantee her safety, said Hernandez, and she stated that international entities such as the French government, have interceded so that the DF government will continue to provide bodyguards.

The journalist reproached the government for not guaranteeing the safety of journalists or that of all citizens, because it doesn't care about them.

Also, she recalled other journalists like Ana Lilia Perez and Lydia Cacho have also had to leave the country. In Ana Lilia's case, she went into exile in Germany and Cacho has had to leave Mexico constantly.

Hernandez also spoke about the government of ex-president Felipe Calderon Hinojosa:

"It has been three months since he left power and we are dealing with a legacy of violence, of organized crime, there is a pitched battle, Chihuahua is living through it. And it shows: there's retail drug sales, kidnappings, extortion, there's violence throughout the border."

She pointed out that Enrique Pena Nieto has not offered an analysis of the country's status, how Felipe Calderon Hinojosa left it; neither does (Pena Nieto) say how many cartels there are, what kinds of arrangements they have, what is his plan of action.

That "is serious because we need to know; Felipe Calderon is not held accountable, that's why he is able to smile at us from Harvard. He (Pena Nieto) does not explain how he's going to change this. Neither do we know the Sinaloa Cartel's situation that has provoked the fury of the drug cartels and triggered the violence; Who's going to inform us?" she asked.

She said that the commitment from the press is strong in the face of the vacuum that the government is (surreptitiously) promoting and the impunity that prevails.

"Enrique Pena Nieto, as governor of the State of Mexico, denied the presence of criminal organizations, he tried to cover up the violence and today we have the State of Mexico in flames," the journalist declared. 

Because of this situation, she believes that reliable and timely information is required, and she called for the citizenry to be aware of the seriousness of attacks and murders committed against journalists, because this is not just about the death of a person, but a violation of the right of society to be informed.

"We need to remain strong," she said.

The vicar general of the Cuauhtemoc-Madera Diocese and the book's presenter, Camilo Daniel Perez, said that the country's situation is not because of a failed State, it's not even because of a lazy and corrupt State, but because of a criminal State.

"The book is a witness, clear, striking of the children of corruption and the complicity of high government officials, at all levels, that are responsible for creating a Mexico in flames. Anabel says there has always been corruption; the authorities had entered into agreements with the cartels, who paid so that they would respect boundaries... the lords of the narco are politicians and businessmen," he explained. 

Perez emphasized the legacy that Calderon left the country, from Anabel's point of view: the infinite power of drug trafficker Joaquin Guzman Loera, El Chapo, who is untouchable; unpunished murders and the victims of the so-called war against drug trafficking; the destruction of the National Action Party (PAN: Partido Accion Nacional); the country controlled by crime, and the return of the Institutional Revolutionary Party  (PRI: Partido Revolucionario Institucional) to Los Pinos (the Presidency).

The priest summed up the book's six chapters that assert that Calderon Hinojosa will be remembered as the president of extermination. "From the religious point of view, for me, he was a profoundly fundamentalist person, with an iron ethic about some things and lax in others."

Most worrisome in the book, he stresses, is the content of Chapter 6, which "talks about mercenaries, of smaller criminal organizations that do not belong to any cartel, but hire themselves out to the highest bidder: criminal organizations, businessmen, private parties, politicians-- it is the worst legacy."
 
Antonio Villegas Flores, coordinator of the "Discussion Circle" and organizer of the event, stated that they had presented Anabel Hernandez's book in Puebla, Queretaro and the Federal District (DF), and they had to cancel in Xalapa because they cannot travel on the highways because of the danger.        

7 Executed in Uruapan, Michoacan found sitting in white plastic chairs

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Borderland Beat

Updated: 4 of the Seven Identified. Names to follow.
Uruapan, Michoacan. - Early Saturday morning, motorists circulating about Paseo Lázaro Cárdenas, reported to police that on the roundabout, "Glorieta de la Pepsi, were seven dead, male bodies, hands tied, seated in white plastic chairs.  The rotary (traffic circle) is nearest the corner of Calle Niza, between the neighborhoods of Joyita and Los Viveros, in the vicinity of the Pepsi bottling plant. They were executed with a final gunshot to their heads, cartulinas lay on their chests.Two of victims had messages nailed to their bodies with icepicks.

Cartulinas said, "Warning, this is going to happen to all muggers, pickpockets, thieves of cars, homes and pedestrians, kidnappers, rapists and extortionists." 

The deceased are between the ages of 25 and 30 years, though one reportedly looked closer to 40. Some victims had tattoos and wore cholo type clothes, similar to what's worn by those who are often engaged in cleaning cars' windshields and asking for change from motorists according to reports.  


PGJ Inquiry

After finding seven dead persons sitting in white plastic chairs in a roundabout of Las Palomas, the prosecutor investigator assigned the Regional Deputy of Uruapan Justice to launch an investigation. From these facts it is known today, around 05:30, the state police was informed by C-4 (the Centre for Communications, Computing, Control and Command) on the roundabout traffic circle known as the "Glorieta Pepsi", seven males were found dead. State police officers of the Lázaro Cárdenas promenade, arranged the transfer of the seven dead bodies who died from a gunshot to the head. 
It is presumed that the victims were executed in the same place because  they found shell casings from a firearm in the soil.

Update According to reports from the State Attorney, four of the seven individuals have been identified as Santiago Gómez Ramos, 31, laborer, Jorge Alberto Téllez, 28 windshield washer: César Basilio Órnelas 17 years old minor, who was also a windshield washer and Alberto Rodríguez Vega, 29. The bodies of seven men were found shot to death, sitting in plastic chairs, with the coup de grace and a message of warning on a card in Uruapan, Michoacan. 

(With information and photo from Techie, 2 smaller one thanks Chivis)

Guerrero: 7 Police Killed 2 Wounded Suspect LFM

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

 
In Guerrero statesix off-duty federal agents and a security officer were killed as they sat in the "Hotel Las Vegas Bar”. Authorities said armed men arrived in several trucks and burst into a bar in Ciudad Altamirano and with AK47s opened fire late Friday.  Caps of both AK47 and 7.62X3 were found at the scene. 
According to initial investigations, the murder could be related to the arrest of one of the members of the La Familia Michoacana cartel that took place last week.
Both states on Mexico's western coast have seen a surge of violence in recent years attributed to drug cartels.
The policemen were identified as Edwin Lopez Casanova, Hector Escribano Escribano, José Benito Velazquez, Jose Alejandro Mariano Juanchi Anwar Ortega Santamaría, José Fernando Aparicio Ocasa Alcántar and Samuel Nieto, assigned to the security of the region of Tierra Caliente.

Two elements of the Federal Police, Samuel Aparicio Fernando Nieto Moscosa and Alcantara,  were wounded by gunfire in the attack.  They were taken to the Clinic of the Americas and listed in critical condition.  No prognosis was reported.

Note: there are reports of 7 police killed and 2 injured however there are also reports of 4 police and 3 civilians killed and 2 police injured.  I suppose it makes little difference I simply wanted you to know that there is conflicting reports.  Another version is 3 officers dead, 4 civilians and 2 injured officers. 

There is also another version that came several hours after the news broke that 2 officers were getting money from an ATM and the gunman jumped from their trucks upon which the officers ran into the bar, they were unarmed, and the gunmen followed and opened fired.  I find that version very unlikely.


Lydia Cacho:Most Killings of Journalists are Ordered by:Government, Military, Political Parties

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Chivis Martinez for Borderland Beat-Submitted by Forum administrator DD
A shocking revelation from the journalist previously kidnapped and wrongfully imprisoned.  She was awarded asylum in the US but decided to return to Mexico.  She states narcos are not the sole cause of journalist kidnappings, that in fact the majority of those kidnappings are ordered by Government, political parties and the military among others.

 Mexican journalist Lydia Cacho. Lydia Cacho was prosecuted for publishing a disclosure of an investigation in which a network was unveiled of child pornography and trafficking in Mexico.
 

The book “The Demons of Eden”, describes  Mexico’s organized crime   and  pedophilia involving several public figures. Since its publication in 2005, Cacho has not ceased to receive threats.
Cacho’s work resulted in her own kidnapping and torture.  At one point, Cacho said, she was abducted, taken on a harrowing 950-mile drive from Cancun to Puebla and briefly jailed. Allies and in Mexico and the United States were able to arrange for her release.
In February 2006, a recording was released  of a phone call between the governor of Puebla and Kamel Nacif, in which the latter thanks him for the  favor done by Marin in arresting  and prosecuting Lydia Cacho.
Despite what Cacho described as overwhelming evidence, her kidnappers were never convicted.

Following the trial, Cacho said, she had to meet sources wearing disguises because people feared being seen with her.
 
Cacho publicly named those she believed responsible for her abduction, comments that made her vulnerable to legal action.

She refused to be silent, however, and eventually defamation laws in Mexico were reformed because of her case.
 

From CNN: Torture, sexual assault, kidnapping and death threats have not silenced Mexican investigative journalist Lydia Cacho.
 She has courageously reported on corruption, drug violence and sex trafficking in her home country for several decades, sometimes even exposing the corrupt practices of government officials and high-powered business people.
Fearing for her life, she was forced to flee Mexico last summer, but has now returned there to continue her work.
In the video, Cacho tells CNN’s Hala Gorani why she continues her fight to report the truth, despite the horrendous challenges she faces.
 Anonymous Blogging:

If anyone thinks bloggers are not in danger we need only to remember the gruesome executions of Nuevo Laredo blogger to remind us.

Global Voice posted an article about the subject which is posted in full on BB Forum by DD. 

An extraction:
 In Mexico last month, a drug cartel offered a bounty of MX$600,000 for information on the identity and location of a person who has been using social media to report on drug violence  in the northern state of Tamaulipas. The drug war has had a stark, chilling effect on Mexico's press, with sometimes lethal violence against journalists forcing news outlets to censor their coverage of crime. But this and other recent incidents have shown that both professional and citizen journalists alike are now facing these threats.
Link to Guide HERE
 Citizen Reporters-The New War Correspondents
As with any internal conflict, information is vital and thus very important to control. Media outlets and governments now self-censor their own content – some because they are said to be collaborating with cartels, others because they have been explicitly threatened for covering “uncomfortable” news. In response, citizen journalists have been working to fill the gap by reporting on the violence they see around them.
The New War Correspondents"  a new study from Microsoft Research, describes the changes that the conflict has brought about for information flow in Mexico:

                                              Click on any image to enlarge

"El Canelo" Detained - Regional Leader of Sinaloa Cartel and Nephew of ‘Nacho’ Coronel

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Humberto Rodríguez Coronel, alias "El Canelo," alleged regional leader of the cartel Pacific  was arrested in Durango. He is a nephew of deceased Ignacio Coronel Villarreal, "Nacho Coronel" a former leader of Sinaloa Cartel killed in 2010.
Staff of the Secretariat of the Navy-Mariines of Mexico (Semar) arrested six people accused of kidnapping, forced disappearances, drug  trafficking  and distribution of drugs into the United States. Humberto Rodríguez Coronel , alias " el Canelo" regional chief of the Pacific cartel was among the arrested

Semar said the arrest happened yesterday at 436 General Matías Pazuengo Street, in the subdivision Sahop, Durango.

The other detainees include the brother of "el Canelo," César Alejandro Rodríguez Coronel, alias "el Boch," Flavio Ayala Mendoza , "el Lalo," Jesus Hilario Nevarez Peña, "el Pepe", and Ricardo Gutiérrez Trinidad, alias " el Richard."

Humberto Rodríguez Colonel "el Canelo" is from Canelas, Durango, and is regarded as presumably responsible for homicide, kidnapping and distributing drugs in the state, and its transferring them to the northern neighbor. 
Along with the detained  criminal suspects, they also  also seized three R-15 rifles, two AK 47 magazines for different handguns, 85 cartridges for different guns and 175  cartridges for AK 47. There was also a bag containing white powder characteristic of cocaine, a bag of a granulated powdered synthetic drug characteristic of meth, and two bags of dark masa colored powder with characteristics of heroin.




UPDATE: 13 Killed In Altamirano, Guerrero

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Borderland Beat

UPDATE: The full story, I think,  from Hotel Las Vegas Bar and other attacks in the surrounding area including a neighboring business of the bar in which a man was killed.  13 in total for The Bloody Friday Seige in Guerrero see below.
 
The attack by gunmen in the Hotel Las Vegas Bar and a neighboring business, located behind the town hall of the municipality, left at least five members of the Federal Police (PF) dead and three civilians killed, with 4 wounded.  Also in the Sierra de Ajuchitlán, it was revealed that four people were killed by organized crime members.
It all started around 11:30 pm last Friday, where off duty PF officers were inside the bar. At some point assassins entered and blasted AK47s targeting the officers but also hitting civilians at surrounding tables.  After the shootout they fled in trucks
At the scene four men were killed, two of them belonging to the PF, and were identified as Edwin Lopez and Hector Casanova Escribano Escribano,  the other two, civilians,  names are unknown.
 
Paramedics and Emergency Medical Rescue arrived at the facility to assist those wounded, who were taken in ambulances,  however, three of them died before receiving medical attention and were recognized as José Benito Velazquez, Jose Mariano Juanchi and Anuar Santa Maria Ortega of who are PF.
Wounded survivors are: Toribio Gorrostieta Arzate, a teacher and his neighbor Conafe Cutzamala de Pinzón, Jose Fernando Aparicio Alcantar, 23 years old and Moscosa Samuel Nieto, 25, of the latter two are PF members.
Two individuals declined medical attention but received bullet friction leg wounds,  as was the case for an  unknown number of persons said to be military.   
Directly after the attack on the bar, criminals attacked a neighboring business and killed Wilber Pineda Pineda, 30 years old. 
The violence did not stop there, ministerial authorities received a report that the Sierra de Ajuchitlán, municipality of Coyuca de Catalán, four others were killed by hit men of  organized crime.
Simultaneously, in the Lomas del Valle, the occupants of a van opened fire on the frontage of the home marked with “60”, but fortunately there were no casualties.

Lost count?
Bar:
5 members of PF killed
3 Civilians Killed
4 wounded needing hospitalization
Neighboring Business:
1 Killed
Home close by:
4 Killed
 
 
 
Photo sources for the bottom 3 from Esquenia Agencia
Sources used to write this post:  CB WEB, IM Noticias Radio, PorEsto

Man gets nearly 22 years for role in Juarez Wedding Kidnapping and Murder

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Borderland Beat
A 23-year-old man was sentenced Thursday in U.S. District Court in El Paso to nearly 22 years in federal prison for his role in the kidnappings and murders of a New Mexico bridegroom and his relatives by a drug cartel hit squad during a wedding in Juárez.

The wedding abduction in 2010 was one of the more shocking acts of violence during a war between the Juárez and Sinaloa drug cartels.

District Judge David Briones sentenced Gonzalo Delgado Chavez to 21 years and 10 months in federal prison. Delgado was also ordered to pay a $2,000 fine and will be under supervision for five years after he is released from prison.

Delgado pleaded guilty in federal court in October to a charge of conspiracy to commit murder on foreign soil in the deaths of bridegroom Rafael Morales Valencia, 29; his brother, Jaime Morales Valencia, 25; and their uncle, Guadalupe Morales Arreola, 51.

Rafael Morales was a U.S. citizen from La Mesa, N.M., whose family is originally from the city of Namiquipa in the central part of Chihuahua. The brothers grew up in the United States.
Family members had said the wedding took place in Juárez because that is where the bride was raised.

The case was investigated by the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration.
On May 7, 2010, Sinaloa cartel gunmen kidnapped the three men and fatally shot another man in the parking lot after bursting into the wedding ceremony at Señor de la Misericordia Catholic Church.

Three days later, the bodies of the men were found in the bed of a truck. The men appeared to have been tortured.

According to a criminal complaint, Delgado, who is also from Namiquipa and was allegedly a smuggler for the Sinaloa cartel, was a family friend and was paid $1,000 to identify members of the Morales family to the hit squad.

The U.S. Attorney's Office said that Delgado was hired by Irvin Enriquez, whose father had been murdered by La Linea (the Juárez cartel) because he was associated with the rival Sinaloa cartel.

"Based on the false belief that the victims were part of La Linea and that Guadalupe Morales-Arreola worked for the person responsible for his father's death, Enriquez solicited the assistance of Jose Antonio Torres-Marrufo and his purported team of assassins to exact revenge," stated a news release by the U.S. Attorney's Office.
On Feb. 28, Enriquez, 25, was sentenced in U.S. District Court in El Paso to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty in November to a charge of conspiracy to kill in a foreign country.

Mexican authorities arrested Torres, a reputed Sinaloa cartel lieutenant known as "El Marrufo," "El 14" and "El Jaguar," last year in Leon, Guanajuato.
Torres is among several reputed Sinaloa cartel bosses indicted on multiple charges by the U.S. government.

dborunda@elpasotimes.com;

Daniel Borunda may be reached at  546-6102
Follow him on Twitter @BorundaDaniel

Interview With a Former CDG Including Organization Information

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Borderland Beat-Submitted by BB reader  "Jose" and translated by  BB reader "Perla"

Interview ex member of CDG:

First of all, how much time have you been working for this organization (CDG)?

-More than 6 years

What was the cause of the internal war of CDG?

-The primary cause was the death of M3 
 
Was it ordered to killed M3 or what happened? Why all of a sudden rojos  vs metros?

-The situation is as follows: CDG had a pact with CDS, Costilla was who managed to pact with el Chapo, they had in mind join CDG & CDS; however a fraction of CDG did not agreed which was the group of the metros commanded by M3 at that time, denying to cooperate, his death is ordered (M3’s death), the metros and Mario Pelon (X20) take the situation personal and it is when the internal war begins in CDG.

The reds are conformed by : Kalimanes (people of Commander Sierra), the Alacranes (People of Costilla), Group XW (commanded by Commander Wicho until his capture, now they are under orders if XW-2), R’s commanded by R1, the X’s commanded by Coss, the ciclones (cyclones) loyal to the Cardenas until the capture of the nephews of Osiel, now they are part of the XW; this group operates with CDS, they joined them so that CDS control all Tamaulipas leaving out CDG, now the metros.

The metros: Commanded by X20 (Mario Pelon) and Metro 4 (Negro, suspect to be brother of M3). The group is formed by Metros and Deltas. Deltas are located in Baladezes and the Metros from Diaz Ordaz to Rio Bravo.

What will be the fate of CDG and CDS?

-Very simple, CDS will domain Tamaulipas and CDG will disappear from the map of the traffic of drug. [Chivis: many of us stated this from the beginning-why doesn't CDG see this?]

What was the strength in CDG?

-The union and the line of Commanders
 
The Commander, How does that work?

-Very simple, you have a leader and he assigns the commanders in charge of each region or plaza (high rank), these commanders are in charge of recruiting people and create their group and in that group, there is another line of commanders in charge of the following.

Commander of body guards: Its task is to organize all the people that is used for war and for protection to the chief.

Commander of Sector: He is in charge of watch over the assigned colonies

Commander of guards: its task is to distribute the haws or guards around the city to give location of elements of the army, marine, federal police and also is in charge of watching that rivals don’t enter the city. Generally, at the entrances of every city, there are two watching over.

Bookkeeper: Is in charge of handling the numbers, meaning that he handles the account statement of the expenses in matters of finance and drug

With these elements, you could handle a cartel very well and in Mexico just 1 cartel uses this very good method and that is the Sinaloa Cartel, the Guld Cartel used it until a few months ago, 6 months to be exact.

Why is it said that Reynosa and Matamoros is the cradle of CDG?

-Very simple, there is where the drug is crossed (to US)

Why in those sectors, why not in Rio Bravo or any other part?

-Very good question, the reason is the following; in other cities it is very difficult to cross the drug since many towns are very simple which allow the army to identify us.

To finish this interview, what should we await for in the next months regarding insecurity?

-Well, a lot, I would say, since CDS is fighting strong here in Tamaulipas and the violence is going to increase when CDS and CDG confront



Interview With a Former CDG Including Organization Information

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Borderland Beat-Submitted by BB reader  "Jose" and translated by  BB reader "Perla"
Note: some readers can see the first post of the interview, others cannot.  So here it is again.  Let me know.  My apologies, and I can see the first post  just fine...(?)
Interview ex member of CDG:
First of all, how much time have you been working for this organization (CDG)?

-More than 6 years
What was the cause of the internal war of CDG?

-The primary cause was the death of M3 
Was it ordered to killed M3 or what happened? Why all of a sudden rojos  vs metros?
-The situation is as follows: CDG had a pact with CDS, Costilla was who managed to pact with el Chapo, they had in mind join CDG & CDS; however a fraction of CDG did not agreed which was the group of the metros commanded by M3 at that time, denying to cooperate, his death is ordered (M3’s death), the metros and Mario Pelon (X20) take the situation personal and it is when the internal war begins in CDG.
The reds are conformed by : Kalimanes (people of Commander Sierra), the Alacranes (People of Costilla), Group XW (commanded by Commander Wicho until his capture, now they are under orders if XW-2), R’s commanded by R1, the X’s commanded by Coss, the ciclones (cyclones) loyal to the Cardenas until the capture of the nephews of Osiel, now they are part of the XW; this group operates with CDS, they joined them so that CDS control all Tamaulipas leaving out CDG, now the metros.
The metros: Commanded by X20 (Mario Pelon) and Metro 4 (Negro, suspect to be brother of M3). The group is formed by Metros and Deltas. Deltas are located in Baladezes and the Metros from Diaz Ordaz to Rio Bravo.
What will be the fate of CDG and CDS?
-Very simple, CDS will domain Tamaulipas and CDG will disappear from the map of the traffic of drug. [Chivis: many of us stated this from the beginning-why doesn't CDG see this?]
What was the strength in CDG?
-The union and the line of Commanders
The Commander, How does that work?
-Very simple, you have a leader and he assigns the commanders in charge of each region or plaza (high rank), these commanders are in charge of recruiting people and create their group and in that group, there is another line of commanders in charge of the following.
Commander of body guards: Its task is to organize all the people that is used for war and for protection to the chief.
Commander of Sector: He is in charge of watch over the assigned colonies
Commander of guards: its task is to distribute the haws or guards around the city to give location of elements of the army, marine, federal police and also is in charge of watching that rivals don’t enter the city. Generally, at the entrances of every city, there are two watching over.
Bookkeeper: Is in charge of handling the numbers, meaning that he handles the account statement of the expenses in matters of finance and drug
With these elements, you could handle a cartel very well and in Mexico just 1 cartel uses this very good method and that is the Sinaloa Cartel, the Guld Cartel used it until a few months ago, 6 months to be exact.
Why is it said that Reynosa and Matamoros is the cradle of CDG?
-Very simple, there is where the drug is crossed (to US)
Why in those sectors, why not in Rio Bravo or any other part?
-Very good question, the reason is the following; in other cities it is very difficult to cross the drug since many towns are very simple which allow the army to identify us.
To finish this interview, what should we await for in the next months regarding insecurity?
-Well, a lot, I would say, since CDS is fighting strong here in Tamaulipas and the violence is going to increase when CDS and CDG confront

Mexisniper gunned down by Mexicops

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By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A man identified as the shooter of a high ranking police commander in Nuevo Leon state was shot to death by police agents in a Monterrey suburb Saturday, according to Mexican news accounts.

According to a news account posted on the website of Milenio news daily, Humberto Víctor Galindo AKA El Guacho and another unidentified man said to be an accomplice, were shot to death by Nuevo Leon state ministerial police agents at a farm in Santa Catarina municipality Saturday afternoon.

Nuevo Leon state commander of the Agencia Estatal de Investigaciones (AEI), Gustavo Gerardo Garza Saucedo AKA El Jerry, was shot to death,  early on the morning of February 19th by a sniper using a .50 caliber Barrett brand rifle presumably a semi automatic rifle at a range of about 60 yards, a tiny fraction of the range of the weapon.  The police commander was just arriving at his home in the Hacienda del Carmen colony of Apodaca, which is a suburb of Monterrey, the state capital of Nuevo Leon.

According to a separate press report posted on the website of El Diario de Coahuila news daily, Victor Galindo was a Mexican Army deserter from Veracruz state who left the army eight years ago, and was the Los Zetas turf commander for Santa Catarina municipality.

Santa Catarina is located due wast of Monterrey city.

The assassination took place after Victor Galindo and another accomplice, identified as Juan Jesús Silva Saenz, threatened security guards at the gated community where Garza Saucedo resided. News accounts say Silva Saenz allegedly acted as a lookout at a nearby convenience store while Victor Galindo shot his victim.

According to the news account, Silva Saenz allegedly arranged an armed robbery of the store as a diversion and then he watched at the location, then signalled the shooter.

Silva Saenz himself was detained aboard a Ford Aerostar van as he and two other individuals travelling March 14th at a security checkpoint on the Monterrey to Nuevo Laredo highway, where security elements found 34 rifles allegedly in his possession. Among the rifles seized were AR-15 and AK-47 rifles. According to another account which appeared on the Nota Roja Konecho blog, the stop led to a second vehicle with two more AK-47 rifles and 67 weapons magazines inside.

Nuevo Leon ministerial police agents began conducting a search of an area in Santa Catarina Saturday in the area where are five abandoned farms.

Victor Galindo and other accomplices were found at a farm called Eucalyptus, in the wooded area of ​​Parque La Huasteca colony.  According to the translation, Victor Galindo cycled his weapon's action to fire but was shot to death by police agents.

At the location police agents seized one AR-15 rifle and one AK-47 rifle.  An unknown number of other suspects were also in the area with Victor Galindo, but had apparently escaped the police cordon.

According to the El Diario de Coahuila account, state police agents did not inform Santa Catarina police about the search operation until it was over.

Los Zetas, like their Sinaloa and Gulf cartel rivals like to maintain turf bosses in many municipalities in northern Mexico.  Above the municipality level, Los Zetas maintain a regional boss as well.

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

Bloody Zacatecas: Fighting continues between Los Zetas and Gulf Cartel

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UPDATED:  Mea Culpa Maxima for not including an acknowledgment of the anonymous sources in Zacatecas.

 Zacatecas top cop denies news reports of massacre

By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A total of two individuals were shot to death in separate instances in Zacatecas state Saturday and Monday, according to Mexican news and anonymous correspondents.

However, La Jornada news daily has claimed that at least 14 individuals died the midnight gunfight which took place in Guadalupe municipality.

An anonymous correspondent in Guadalupe claimed that a small gunfight took place, also adding, "it is not uncommon to hear gunfire isolated colonies away from the center, but there is no official information or notes from the press on the matter."

According to a news account published in El Sol de Zacatecas news daily, a gunfight erupted between local Los Zetas and Gulf cartel gangs on midnight Saturday in Guadalupe municipality in Rincon Colonial colony near the intersection of Calzada Solidaridad and Vialidad San Simon.

Units with the Zacatecas state Policia Estatal Preventiva (PEP) while returning to base were diverted to the scene, but were fired on by an unknown number of armed suspects. The unit was forced to withdraw from the scene, but was ordered back in once the shooting stopped.

Police found one individual shot to death inside a pickup truck and two others nearby who surrendered to police.  A subsequent search turned up two other suspects who were also detained.

The gunshot victim was identified as Eduardo Ivan Hernandez Martinez, 23.  The three detainees were identified as Martin Gerardo Perez Campos, 19, Benjamin Muñoz Garcia, 27 and Mario Jonathan "N", 17.

Police secured two AK-47 rifles from the dead victim and one more from one of the detainees.  Police also seized four weapons magazines, 79 rounds of AK-47 ammunition and the vehicle.

The Zacatecas state Secretaria de Seguridad Publica (SSP), General Jesus Pinto Ortiz  issued a press statement denying the La Jornada Monday report of a large massacre.

Mexican cartel shooters on both side sometimes make lavish use of the tactic of evacuating their dead and wounded  as a security measure.  Zacatecas state two months ago was the focus of a commitment by at least one publisher, Luis Enrique Mercado Sanchez -- former Partido Accion Nacional (PAN) deputy and publisher of Imagen and El Centinela -- to move news of shootings from the front page to other sections.  The reason given was not to give the idea to visitors that Zacatecas state was engulfed in drug and gang related violence.

An incident which took place in Mexico state last summer illustrates the extent to which drug gangs and government officials -- separately and for their own reasons -- attempt to color events.  In one municipality reportedly some 30 individuals were killed over a two day period, which Mexico state authorities deny, even in the face of contradicting accounts by local residents that a large number of killed and wounded were witnessed.

The Mexican federal government has made it very clear to the press that it will control how and when information will be presented, sometimes going as far as slow walking information to the press.  The federal government has legal requirements that it must publish information  relating to security matters, but apparently how that requirement is fulfilled is left open to question.

In a separate incident which took place Monday the owner of a gas station in Sombrerete municipality Monday.  According to a news report which appeared on the website of Zacatecas En Linea, Ramiro Murillo was shot three times, once in the head and left by his pickup truck.  The victim is the father of Cecilio Murillo, candidate for mayor by the Partido del Revolucionario Institucional (PRI).

Senor Murillo was reportedly kidnapped Sunday, but had failed to contact anyone before he was found dead.

In other news, gunfights have taken place in Zacatecas Sunday during a cultural festival, according to an anonymous correspondent.  Gunshots were heard  near Lomas de Bernardez.  No reports have been published on whether anyone was hurt in those incidents. 

Over the weekend Zacatecas city has been the site of a festival activities of which included use of fireworks.

According to the correspondent: "...there were fireworks [which] burned down a house in the center [from a] spark apparently from rockets, [during the] the shooting, so who knows if he had used the chaos between the fire, people, drums, concert and others. The shooting was not at the center. This time was concentrated [near the] security forces."

Special thanks to our anonymous sources for the comments and insights in Zacatecas

BorderlandBeat.com reporter Chivis Martinez contributed to this news account.

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


Sources:
http://zacatecasonline.com.mx/noticias/policia/29435-asesinan-empresario-cuerpo.html

http://zacatecasonline.com.mx/noticias/policia/29402-balacera-bandas-rivales.html



Mexican Vigilantes Seize Town, Arrest Police

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Borderland Beat
ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) — Hundreds of armed vigilantes have taken control of a town on a major highway in the Pacific coast state of Guerrero, arresting local police officers and searching homes after a vigilante leader was killed. Several opened fire on a car of Mexican tourists headed to the beach for Easter week.

Members of the area's self-described "community police" say more than 1,500 members of the force were stopping traffic Wednesday at improvised checkpoints in the town of Tierra Colorado, which sits the highway connecting Mexico City to Acapulco. They arrested 12 police and the former director of public security in the town after a leader of the state's vigilante movement was slain on Monday.

A tourist heading to the beach with relatives was slightly wounded Tuesday after they refused to stop at a roadblock and vigilantes fired shots at the car, officials said.

The vigilantes accuse the ex-security director of participating in the killing of vigilante leader Guadalupe Quinones Carbajal, 28, on behalf of local organized crime groups and dumping his body in a nearby town on Monday. They reported seizing several high-powered rifles from his car, and vigilantes were seen toting a number of sophisticated assault rifles on Wednesday, although it was not clear if all had been taken from the ex-security director's car.

"We have besieged the municipality, because here criminals operate with impunity in broad daylight, in the view of municipal authorities. We have detained the director of public security because he is involved with this criminals and he knows who killed our commander," said Bruno Placido Valerio, a spokesman for the vigilante group.

Placido said vigilantes had searched a number of homes in the town and seized drugs from some. They turned over the ex-security director and police officers to state prosecutors, who agreed to investigate their alleged ties to organized crime.

The growing movement of "self-defense" vigilante groups has seen masked townspeople throw up checkpoints in several parts of southern and western Mexico, stopping passing motorists to search for weapons or people whose names are on hand-written lists of "suspects" wanted for crimes like theft and extortion.

The vigilantes have opened fire before on motorists who refused to stop, slightly wounding a pair of tourists from Mexico City visiting a local beach in early February.

The groups say they are fighting violence, kidnappings and extortions carried out by drug cartels, but concerns have surfaced that the vigilantes may be violating the law, the human rights of people they detain, or even cooperating with criminals in some cases.

Sensitive over their lack of ability to enforce public safety in rural areas, official have largely tolerated vigilante groups.




NarcoVideo:Los Aliados Sends a Video Message to CJNG

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Borderland Beat
 A narco announcement from Los Aliados (the allies) to Jalisco
In a video, the Los Aliados give a narco announcement sent to the citizens of Jalisco.
In the recording that lasts about three minutes, more than 20 heavily armed men are seen  with their faces covered. The men are members of the group Los Aliados, a new group of drug trafficking in Mexico.
In the video, four men are sitting on a table, others surrounding them. One  begins to read an announcement where he states that the group Los Aliados has arrived to Jalisco to bring an end to the members of the Cartel Jalisco New Generation (C.J.N.G), which are accused of extorting innocent citizens.
Hanging is a banner that reads: “Los Aliados for a Safer Jalisco”
 

  
Narrative:
"People of Jalisco, this is an announcement to give notice that Los Aliados are here to clean and remove all scourge, extortionist and kidnappers of the State of Jalisco that work for El Mencho.
We are tired of the fees that they charge  innocent people, merchants, and all of the people that are being extorted by the people of Mencho".
 
We are saying that Los Aliados are people of Jalisco, we are united to support the town and to finish the war that El Mencho and his collaborators created.
That is why we ask the society to stop cooperating with El Mencho. Our objective is not to kill innocent people, but to finish with all scourges of C.J.N.G and El Mencho, for a safer, peaceful and stable Jalisco
The objective of us, Los Aliados, is to see a totally changed and free Jalisco, so do not give money that is the result of an honest job to the collaborators and scourges of El Mencho.
To all the merchants we ask and we tell you to stop giving fees to El Mencho, all of you can count on the support of Los Aliados.
We are here in Jalisco to end the killing of innocent people. C.J.N.G murders daily with the purpose of having the society of Jalisco terrified,  to extort, (fees) and sell their drug obligatory.
No more extortions, fees and kidnapping; that is why we are her to remove El Mencho and his scourges.
To all the Federal and State authorities, we demand you to do your job like you should, since we are going to do ours: which is to clean Jalisco from all the scourges. For a safe and free state and that is why we demand authorities to do their job like they should.
You count on our support, since we know that you are pressured by C.J.N.G, this war is not against Jalisco or its authorities, is against El Mencho and his scourges. That is why we inform all the kidnappers, extortionists, that are members of the C.J.N.G and collaborators that we, Los Aliados, are here in Jalisco to clean and finish  the C.J.N.G. We inform you that all who want to align will be welcome with your friends Los Aliados".

GRAPHIC VIDEO:CDG Executes Zs, Dismembers, Boils 3 Men 2 Women

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat
C.D.G. Sends Zetas an “Gift for Holy Week” Executing 3 Men and 2 Women
A ghastly, graphic video depicting CDG executing and dismembering five Zeta members.  The five victims comprised of three men and two women. 

The video was sent to the facebook page of the popular ValorXTamaulipas several days ago.  They posted the photo at left.  

One of the narco blogs advertised they were in possession  of the video, but asked for 5000 “likes” before they would publish it.  It appears that some blogs regard the tragedy of the drug war as a game. 
In the extreme southern portion of Tamaulipas are two cities; Mante and González.  They are a 45 minutes drive apart.  Zetas control Mante, and their rival CDG controls González.

In the video are five kidnapped Zetas, kneeling, blindfolded, with the hands of the women duct taped together in the front, while the men have their hands duct taped in the back.
The five are surrounded by their CDG captors.  There is the usual interrogation of the five, questioned one by one, right to left, each admitting working for Zetas.  After the interrogation “Mr. Big” of CDG gives the usual warning speech that the same fate would be waiting for others going against “Golfo” (CDG).

The victims are knocked unconscious from a hit to the head by an ax.  They are then decapitated, dismembered and body parts thrown into the blue barrel of boiling acid.  On the image above one can see the flames under the blue barrel.
This process is used by cartels, and by both CDG and zetas to eliminate evidence, whereby the bodies are cooked and dissolved.
This type of despicable executed is done in what is known as “kitchens” at narco camps.  In southern Mexico a  process is used  to  destroy evidence  by constructing underground ovens to cook bodies.
ValorXTamaulipas writes:
The conflict between CDG from Cd Gonzáles and Zetas from Cd Mante has been one of the most violent, to the point that in 2010 and 2011 it was required to show an ID to enter Mante. If the person was from González he or her will not be allowed to enter the city. In response CDG in Cd González did a similar thing, they applied restrictions to people and businesses from Cd Mante.
Since then, the incursions of both criminal groups have been constant, especially in the area Temporalera de ​​Mante and in González, in the southern suburbs of the municipality. Constantly, executed victims are found in vehicles all around the gaps between Mante and Gonzalez.
On many occasions, most publications are generated only in large cities, but areas with smaller populations, have come to suffer and continue to suffer violent situations and they are ignored and what is happening in these areas don't get published in the news.

Video narrative transcript:
CDG:  What is your name , nickname and where are you from?

1st guy: Daniel Hernandez Hernandez, I am from Veracruz

CDG: Where did they pick you up?
1st guy: In Gonzalez
CDG:  What organization do you belong to and what do you do?
1st guy:  Zetas, to give money to Damien
CDG:  What is your name and nickname:
2nd guy:  Guillermo Salas Hernandez
CDG: What organization do you belong to?
2nd guy:  Zeta's
CDG:  What were you sent to do?
2nd guy:  To leave something only for Damien
CDG:  Where were you picked up?
2nd guy:  In Gonzalez
CDG:  What is your name and nickname?
3rd guy:  Daniel Aguilar Sandoval
CDG:  What organization do you belong to?
3rd guy:  The Zeta's
CDG:  What were you told to do?
3rd guy: To check the point of Matias (sounds like)  to Jose Manuel
CDG:  Where were you detained?
3rd guy:  In Gonzalez
CDG:  Who do you report to?
3rd guy:  Comandante Mante
CDG:  Who does he report to?
3rd guy:  To Ricky Santillan (sounds like) and El Danny (sounds like)
CDG:  This goes out to all the scumbags from the CDG.  Keep sending
dumbasses like these and you are going to get fucked senores.
CDG:  A message for you, Ricardo Santillan, even though you cover your
face just like Polo, that participated in the killings of innocent
people,  because that is the only way you intimidate people, by
pretending to be soldiers, lying to the people and local authorities.
For example, I have a list, Homero Cuervos, Chief of Police, who give
the whereabouts of the SEDENA and SEMAR.  Felipe aka La Pona, who gives
crooked papers so you can cruise the streets like nothing has
happened.  The Deputado, Jose Luis, who helps you launder your money.
All the people who plan to help these scumbags, we remind you that
here in the Gulf is nothing but business,  not like all you fucking
cowards that don't admit your own mistakes. Supposedly when you
whooped our asses the ones you killed were innocent people and you
killed them anyways.  Watch your back, Sandia, because in the list of
involved is your cousin, the Barritas, and your wife, La Pansona.  All
the people that support La Temporalera so you can see not everybody
wins.  Your fucking lousy estakas from San Buena El Chaneke also going
to fall bitches.
 
THE EXECUTION VIDEO IS ON THE SECOND PAGE WARNING VERY GRAPHIC!!
  
 
Thank you Lacy for your help!

El Chapo's Asia-Pacific-US Meth. Domination

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Borderland Beat
Mexico • The Sinaloa cartel controls the trafficking of methamphetamine in the Asia Pacific triangle-Mexico-United States organization that is considered a "global company" by diversifying its global market.
Its markets include North America, Europe, Asia and Australia, where they sell marijuana, cocaine, opiates and methamphetamine..

According to an article by a doctor of political science from Columbia University in New York,  Dr. José Luis León Manríquez, published in the Atlas of the security and defense of Mexico 2012, the trafficking in methamphetamine and designer drugs has had a global surge.

It is the criminal group headed by Joaquin El Chapo Guzman which has a monopoly on this type of drug.
Before completing the last six years, the government of Mexico detected the increase in the number laboratories manufacturing synthetic drugs in the Mexican states of Guanajuato, Durango, Sonora and Baja California, where five cartels are vying for control of territory that can generate consumers death within one year.

In a report on the subject prepared by various federal states after conclusive operations were conducted by the Mexican Army revealing the production centers.

The researcher, who was an adviser to the Foreign Ministry, in their study published information documented that the Sinaloa cartel has been in trafficking methamphetamine since the 1990s.

He mentioned that he was the kingpin (killed in a raid in Zapopan, Jalisco, in 2010) was the one who visualized the market potential of methamphetamine, a business that was initially controlled by the Colima cartel, headed by Amezcua Contreras brothers
"Ignacio Nacho Coronel " was also known as the Crystal King, consolidated a broad network that imported ephedrine from Asia and processed it into meth. in Mexico. Taking advantage of its ability to place other drugs in the U.S., the Sinaloa cartel began distributing free samples in that country, "he explained.

By 2012 the DEA (Drug Enforcement Agency of the United States) recognized that that criminal group already controlled 80 percent of the U.S. market.

The development of industrial-scale methamphetamine in Mexico was displaced by home production made in small clandestine laboratories in the United States.

And thanks to the penetration of the Mexican cartels in that market, the number of methamphetamine laboratories seized  began to fall between 2003 and 2006, from 10, 212 to 5, 846.

Until August 2012 the government of Mexico dismantled 712 laboratories which the military operations found in 12 states, all under control of the Tijuana and Sinaloa cartels.
In addition, 11 were located in Sonora belonging to groups Beltran Leyva, the Sinaloa cartel and Los Zetas.

In August of that same month the then Attorney General of the Republic, Marisela Morales Ibáñez, signed with head of the DEA, Michele Leonhart, a  cooperation memorandum to combat clandestine laboratories and synthetic drugs.

Federal Police Destroy Planting in Soyopa
Federal Police reported that  a marijuana plantation was destroyed in the town of Soyopa, Sonora covering an area of 300 thousand hectares and weighing more than five tons 200 kilograms.
In a statement, the corporation said that through intelligence agents discovered the fields in the vicinity of the ejido Tonichi, near Highway 16 in Hermosillo, Chihuahua route.

Seizures

The commander of the Second Military Region reported that authorities in coordination with the three levels of government, they seized 9, 840 kilos of marijuana and arrested 27 people from the 1st to 25th of March.

They seized 43.29 kilograms of crystal meth, 33 vehicles, two boats, aircraft, 12 handguns, nine long, a thousand 274 cartridges and 700 grams of marijuana seeds.

Also seized 5,830  Mexican pesos and U.S. $ 21, said the regional command belonging 
to the Department of Defense (Sedena).



Chapo's tentacles extend to the FARC

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Iva Ventura/Excelsior El Diario (3-28-13) 

FARC Negotiating Team
Translated by un vato for Borderland Beat
Distrito Federal -- The tentacles of Joaquin El Chapo Guzman's  Sinaloa Cartel are extending into the south of the continent due to the vacuum being left by the Colombian Armed Revolutionary Forces (FARC: Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia), who are having peace conversations with the government of Juan Manuel Santos (below left).

The arrival of Mexican drug traffickers in that region puts at risk the security of the entire continent because their power is growing with the alliances they are finalizing with local criminal organizations in exchange for weapons or money.

According to Inter American Dialogue, the Mexican criminal organization is already operating in that South American country. For United States experts, the problem is alarming and governments, including that country, will have to join forces to confront a continental problem.

Douglas Fraser, retired general and former commander of the Southern Command of the United States, said that Mexican drug cartels, like the Sinaloa Cartel, have developed ties with Colombian criminal networks, like the FARC and the National Liberation Army (ELN: Ejercito de Liberacion Nacional), for several years.

He believes that the agreements will hold even if the Santos government negotiates peace with the FARC. "The Colombian government has demonstrated a capability to confront criminal networks effectively and its efforts will continue. For example, they have reduced cocaine production by more than 50% in the last five years, and imprisoned or extradited hundreds of criminals, but that battle is not only in Colombia.

"Criminal networks operate throughout the Americas, including the United States, which is why the hemispheric battle against them has to improve; the battle against transnational criminal networks is an inter-American problem, and a growing global problem."

John Arquilla, with the Rand Corporation, said that all the governments in the hemisphere have to increase the collective understanding of these criminal networks, to develop and improve the exchange of information, and to improve coordination of intelligence among them. 

"The governments will not resolve this problem by themselves. All of us, the citizens, need to work within our societies to drastically reduce the demand for illegal substances. We have to be part of the solution," he asserts. Jack Devine and Amanda Mattingly, president and director, respectively, of the Arkin Group for Latin America, said that if it is true that the Sinaloa Cartel is buying into the Colombian drug traffic, that is worrisome.

"It's another example of how drug cartels are transnational criminal organizations who are not limited by borders... President Enrique Pena Nieto will not get a ceasefire on the issue of security, as he should have expected. "The possibility that the self defense groups (in Mexico) could be taken over by cartels or that they would infiltrate the forces of law enforcement constitutes a threat of war...

"It is clear that the United States must continue to support Mexico and Colombia. The U.S. should do more... but they need to keep working with our partners in the hemisphere to decrease the supply of drugs through police training, equipment, shared intelligence and economic development," they stated.

For Oliver Wack, Colombian risk control analyst, the increasing participation of Mexican cartels is accelerating the problem.

"On the part of the guerrilla, one can observe a growing fragmentation of the group and the gradual growth of local structures that operate independently of the central command.  If the FARC were to demobilize after a peace accord, the mid-level commanders who refuse to demobilize would come forward. They would rearm themselves to maintain control of illegal enterprises."

With time, he explains, those successor groups of the FARC would be susceptible of being absorbed by large criminal organizations like the Bacrim (criminal groups, successors of paramilitary groups and now engaged in drug trafficking.) He explained that the country has seen a decrease of Bacrim from 21 to 10 since 2008, but the (the Rastrojos and the Urabenos) are becoming the principal actors.

"The Mexican cartels' strategy of expanding their presence in Colombia will probably end up incorporating these two groups, leading to a resurgence of violence, because they will work with the Mexicans, tempted by the flow of cash (and perhaps weapons), intensifying the battle for territories and routes."

(Ivan Ventura/Excelsior)   

7 killed, 3 women in Chihuahua Bar

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Borderland Beat
At least seven people were killed and two others injured after an attack inside a bar in the city of Chihuahua.

According to early police reports, four men and three women died as a result of gun shots,  perpetrated by a man wearing tactical gear. After he committed this crime, he fled on foot out into the streets of Centro.

Unofficial sources said that the alleged shooter was young. The Diario de Juarez reports that the incident took place inside Mogavi, a bar located on 21st and Doblado Streets

Elements of different police forces as well as emergency services arrived on the scene to treat the injured.

Among the casualties are two waitresses who worked for Mogavi and another employee, identified as "Chava." 
The bodies were taken to the premises of C4 to proceed with proper identification and autopsy as required by law. A major police operation responded to the call to look for the triggerman.
Six of the seven victims have been identified

Alma Aracely Miguel Quiroga, 37 años and Tayde Frías Muñoz, 37 both employees at the bar

Norma Lorena Santiago González, 41 Sergio Daniel López Montes, 38; Tomas Casillas Tarín, 44, Oscar Guillermo Payán Rodríguez, are four of the five bar patrons that were victims. 

There still remains one more male bar patron victim client to  identify.

Chihuahua is one of the most violent states in recent years have disputed criminal groups in the service of the Sinaloa cartel, led by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman and Juarez.





2 relatives plead guilty in Los Zetas case

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Borderland BeatHiding in Plain Sight after vigorous background checks
Z-40 to Take the Fall for HorsesLos Zetas' Race Horses Auctioned Off

Zulema Treviño and Alexandra Garcia Treviño Plead guilty in Zetas money laundering case


The niece and sister-in-law of the Zetas drug cartel's leader pleaded guilty Friday in a federal court to charges stemming from the criminal organization's money laundering scheme.


Zulema Treviño pleaded guilty to a money laundering conspiracy count, and Alexandra Garcia Treviño pleaded guilty to one count of misprision of a felony. Prosecutors recommended they receive probation.

Zulema Treviño is married to José Treviño Morales, the brother of Zetas leader Miguel Treviño Morales. Alexandra Garcia Treviño is her daughter.

Neither would comment after the hearing.

“It's a very difficult situation to be born into the family,” said Alexandra Treviño's lawyer, Frank Ivy. “She's doing the best she can.”

José and Miguel Treviño are also charged in the same indictment, which alleges that the Zetas laundered millions of dollars of drug money through the U.S. quarter horse industry. José Treviño has pleaded not guilty. His brother is a fugitive in Mexico
.U.S. agents last year raided ranches, houses and stables across the Southwest and charged 19 people in the alleged money laundering conspiracy.

The feds seized hundreds of horses, many of which were auctioned off in November. Julianna Holt, who with husband Peter Holt owns the largest stake in the Spurs franchise, purchased one of the animals.

Miguel Treviño, knownas “Z-40” ascended to the Zetas leadership in October. Along with money laundering and drug trafficking charges, he's wanted in Laredo on charges that he ordered five murders in the U.S. during 2005 and 2006.

American-Statesman Staff
By Jazmine Ulloa
In a winner’s circle photo of “Tempting Dash,” Alexandra Garcia Treviño and her brother stand with their father next to the prized race horse, using their hands to make the numbers “40” and “42.

The signs in the picture, law enforcement agents say, are nicknames for Miguel Angel Treviño Morales and Oscar Omar Treviño Morales, two top leaders of one of the most ruthless crime organizations in Mexico — and the young woman’s uncles.

Garcia Treviño and her mother, Zulema Treviño, have pleaded guilty to their roles in a scheme that federal investigators said was orchestrated by the Treviño brothers to launder millions of dollars in illicit drug proceeds for their violent Zetas cartel. But criminal defense attorneys said the women made their decisions to be able to raise their children.
Alexandra Garcia Treviño
Zulema Treviño pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to launder a monetary instrument, and Garcia Treviño entered a guilty plea to one count of failing to report a felony, according to plea agreements filed Friday in a U.S. district court in Austin. They were initially facing up to 20 years and three years in prison, respectively, but are now likely to receive probation, their attorneys said.

In all, 19 people have been indicted in the money-laundering conspiracy, and at least two are expected to go to trial — Francico Antonio Colorado Cessa and a third Treviño brother, Jose Treviño (Zulema Treviño’s husband and Garcia Treviño’s father), their attorneys said. The federal investigation that netted the majority of the defendants last summer led to raids at ranches, stables and homes in Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma.

Court records show the Treviño men founded Tremor Enterprises in the United States to buy, train and breed quarter horses from a champion lineage, which they raced, winning some of the sport’s most prominent races. But the true purpose of the company was to launder millions of dollars in drug money for Mexican Zeta members and their associates, according to the filings.

Oscar Treviño was said to have worked for the gang in Mexico, and Zulema and Jose Treviño operated the gang’s quarter horse activities through various front companies in the United States, many operating in Lexington, Okla., records said.

Also arrested was Eusevio Maldonado Huitron, who, according to court documents, owns property in the Bastrop County community of Dale and has trained and boarded dozens of horses funded with drug proceeds.
In a transcript from a hearing on July 25, an FBI investigator told the court that an informant could place Francisco Colorado as an intermediary between the former governor of Veracruz, Fidel Herrera, and a deceased Zeta leader.

The money was paid through Colorado to the government of Veracruz to give the Zetas freedom to move their narcotics across the state and as a way to help Herrrera finance his gubernatorial campaign, the record said.

In an email to the American-Statesman, Herrera said the allegations were false. Colorado’s attorney, Mike DeGeurin, said his client was a well-respected businessman who owned a company that helped oil corporations with cleanup and drilling. Horses were his client’s hobby, DeGeurin said.

“It was quite a shock to Mr. Colorado, his friends and his business associates that he was roped into this,” he said.

In a plea agreement, Zulema Treviño admitted breeding and racing the horses and receiving money she knew stemmed from illegal activity. Her attorney, F. Clinton Broden, said she made the decision to raise two of her younger children.

Frank Ivy, her daughter’s attorney, said the only involvement Alexandra Garcia Treviño played in the case was that she worked for her father’s business in 2010 for three months before she was married. She is now pregnant, Ivy said.

Ivy said she risked being smeared if she had gone to trial.

“What the Zetas are doing in Mexico is violent and nasty, and that kind of evidence would harm anyone involved in the case,” ” the attorney said. “She was born into a very difficult situation.”
 San Antonio Express , Statesman




Northeast Mexico: Cartels don't believe in a change of administration

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Proceso (3-29-13)

                                                                                    click to enlarge
Translated by un vato for Borderland Beat

The narcos have shown that they do not believe in a change of government. Far from lying low to wait for a new government strategy for dealing with them, criminal organizations continue to dispute territories amongst themselves and, within their organizations, for their respective leaderships. Since Tuesday, (March) 19, Monclova, Coahuila and Reynosa, Tamaulipas, were the scene of  violent confrontations between cartels that, with no government authority able to suppress them, see the entire region as booty that will go to the most bloodthirsty among them.  

SALTILLO, Coahuila (Proceso).-- In recent weeks, Ciudad Victoria, Gomez Palacio and Monclova were transformed into the most violent cities in Coahuila, causing this state to join Tamaulipas and Durango as the most violent in the region.

Recent splits within the cartels that control the territories -- the Gulf, Sinaloa and the Zetas cartels-- are taking violence to levels similar to those in Torreon, Reynosa and Monterrey.

Beginning at 6:30 a.m. on Tuesday, March 19, there were reports of confrontations in Monclova  between criminal groups using grenades and high power weapons. Afterwards, Federal Police and Army troops intervened in the fight.

City residents informed Proceso that skirmishes broke out simultaneously at several points in the metropolitan area, which includes the municipalities of Monclova, Castanos and Frontera.

Minutes prior to 7:00 a.m., dozens of young men began to seize trucks, trailers and cars from drivers to use them to block the main streets and place as obstacles to prevent the arrival of federal forces.

"They used city buses to block the entrance to Monclova, at Castanos," says a woman who was interviewed. The same thing happened in places like Harold Pape Blvd., which runs through the three municipalities, where the federal forces pursued and exchanged fire with criminal gangs.

The State Office of Attorney General (PGJE: Procuraduria General de Justicia del Estado) reported only one of the confrontations between gunmen: "At 7:45 a.m., it was reported that in Socrates Street in Colonia Tecnologico there was a confrontation between armed civilians.

When the Federal Police got there, they were received with gunfire. At this location, a Federal Police officer dies (sic) as a result of gunfire," says the report.

(The report) also revealed that, in addition, the police secured a house in Socrates Street, where they found an AK-47 and an AR-15, eight loaded magazines and a .40 caliber grenade, also including a Jetta car without license plates (in which were found two full magazines) and a Pacifica pickup.

Hundreds of residents were trapped by the gun battles on the way to work. Schools suspended classes; students and teachers already at the schools threw themselves on the floor to avoid being hit by bullets.

Monclova Mayor Melchor Sanchez reported that 250 municipal police were deployed to protect school buildings and to prevent students from leaving,. After the confrontations ended, around 10:00 a.m., the public official confirmed that "he had reports of several killed."

For one of the witnesses, "the gunfire sounded stronger in Frontera." In that municipality, other witnesses interviewed said that "around 20" bodies were left lying on the streets and "were then  picked up by soldiers."

The gunshots and explosions lasted approximately two hours. Although official reports only reported one Federal policeman killed and one civilian wounded, conservative estimates by the residents state there were around 40 killed.

Monclova [at left] and its metropolitan zone are under the iron grip of Los Zetas, and is part of its border corridor from Ciudad Acuna to Piedras Negras. Also, it was at one time the refuge of Heriberto Lazcano, El Z-14.

This gang's control is such that when a guest arrives at one of the many underground clubs it owns, the host welcomes customers with this basic information: "You are coming into a business (owned) by the Compania." And he offers them "products" and shows them special places where they  can be consumed.

To this day, it is not known whether the men who came to "heat up the plaza" for the Zetas were from the Gulf or Sinaloa cartel, or both.

On Tuesday afternoon, March 19, they had not even finished picking up evidence in Monclova when there were reports of narco blockades and gun fights in Reynosa, Tamaulipas.

According to the State attorney general's office, "at 1730 hours, in the City of Reynosa, there were reports of confrontations between armed civilian groups, causing street blockades and one person wounded, a young woman who was a bystander." The victim, 16 years old, was shot in the leg and taken to a Social Security hospital for treatment.
                 
"The events took place on several streets in the Colonia Balcones de Alcala and, to prevent law enforcement forces from intervening, the armed groups blocked (the streets)," concluded the Tamaulipas government agency.

The criminals closed off all access into Colonia Balcones in that manner. When the military troops arrived, they had to stop and listen to the volleys of gunfire coming from a street where gunmen overran a home and its residents. It was the second confrontation of that nature reported this month.

On Sunday night, (March) 10th, right at 11:00 p.m., hundreds of armed individuals who were traveling in caravans of up to 30 pickups exchanged gun fire and grenade attacks until sunrise at several points in the city, including areas adjacent to the international bridges to the United States.

Hour prior to that, Gulf Cartel men led by Miguel El Gringo Villarreal stole about 18 pickups from six dealerships and used them in their battles. However, the Tamaulipas attorney general reported that the final result was "one collateral victim." In addition, a minor was injured while riding in the car with his father.

The official version was contradicted by a police source who informed the McAllen, Texas,  newspaper, the  Monitor, that the fighting left at least "thirty dead." The source added that the new wave of violence was the result of a power struggle in the Gulf Cartel: 

"The most recent internal disputes have immersed the city of Reynosa in shootings, like the one that took place on March 10, which lasted 3 hours, between factions of the Gulf Cartel loyal to Mario Pelon Ramirez and the groups with Miguel El Gringo Villarreal," explained the source.
                          Reynosa Below
According to the same source, the shooting started when Pelon Ramirez ordered his gunmen to erase El Gringo Villarreal and promised that they could keep whatever they could grab as booty.

Ramirez has attempted to take control of the Gulf Cartel, allying himself with his Sinaloa rivals since Jorge Eduardo Cosilla Sanchez, El Coss, and Mario Cardenas Guillen were arrested by marines in September of 2012.

Meanwhile, Miguel Villarreal, born in Texas and former plaza boss in Miguel Aleman, is in a dispute for power with El Pelon, with the support of some of the heads of the oldest Cartel families.

An ally of Villarreal, El Puma Garcia Roman, was shot in one of the nighttime battles of March 10, in which grenades, .50 caliber Barrett machine guns and armored trucks were used.

(Fragment of a report published in Proceso magazine, Edition No. 1899, now in circulation.)

Subsequent to the March 10th balaceras commenced this shootout on the 15th.  Rapid fire with only one short lull.  Amazing.  And no deaths reported "officially". 
 

The Torture Comes "From Above"

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Borderland Beat

Increases in beatings, threats, and sexual abuse against detainees

Javier Valdez / Ríodoce
Among the "techniques of torture" used by agents of the State Ministerial Police to force detainees to plead guilty are death threats, threats of raping close relatives, drowning, beating, stripping, and making the suspect feel as if he's about to be dropped from the top of a bridge. 

Human rights advocates differ on whether or not torture is on the rise, but most agree that it is rising in high-profile cases which involve a notable member of the community. In particularly visible cases, the implications of torture often can become a greater scandal than the initial crime being investigated.

Data from the State Commission of Human Rights (CNDH) shows that 2008 was the year with the most cases of torture in Sinaloa, totaling 21 complaints, of which six recommendations were issued.  In 2009, the figure dropped to 17 complaints with five recommendations. 2010 there were 14 registered complaints  with one recommendation . In There were only 10 complaints  in 2011 and one recommendation while there were 13 in 2012, with three recommendations.

In total, 75 complaints were filed by citizens against the different police organizations during the years of 2008 -2012.  16 recommendations were issued. So far in 2013,  there has been one recommendation.  It is concerning the case of Yesenia Armenta Graciano, charged with the murder of Alfredo Cuen Ojeda, the brother of the former president of the UAS and former mayor of Culiacan, Héctor Melesio Cuen, who is the current Sinaloense party leader (PAS), and 13 cases left in 2012, four were completed and nine are pending.

Juan Jose Estavillo Rios, president of the CEDH, said of 1,000 complaints last year, only three recommendations came out of the 13 in which it was considered that there were elements of torture.

"There isn't a high incidence, in contrast, it has been dropping. It is no longer a constant in the investigation process for the vast majority of crimes. Now it's only done in very significant, very private matters. Seriously, that's a fact. It is serious because in the lexicon of human rights violations these facts are significant, so much so that the United Nations Organization (UN) urged us to sign an international agreement known as the Istanbul Protocol," Rios said.

This protocol, he said, represents the unification the medical, psychological, legal criteria, and in the case of Mexico, only the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) can practice, as in the case of Yesenia Armenta.

In addition to the case of Cuen's widow, which led to a recommendation of February 25, the defense team of Juan Carlos Cristerna Fitch, who was arrested for the May 2012 murder of University Autonomous of Sinaloa professor, Perla Lizet Vega Medina, alleges that Fitch was tortured by ministerial agents twice, once as presumed guilty and the second time as apprehended



LINKS OF TERROR

"Why did you first declare yourself guilty?" The lawyer asked a young detainee.

'I could not stand anymore, licenciado."

The detainee continued: he was in the hands of agents of the state police in the town of Navolato. They were  outside in an uninhabited area. Now, they warned, we will burn you. And they poured gasoline around him. He was blindfolded and he had several whacks on his abdomen and back. They set fire to the brush. He became hysterical, but did not recognize the crime against him.

The lawyer recalled that his client told him the climax: "officers talked among themselves about his not confessing. Then one of them ordered another one to bring up his child, she's was also going to be burned. The detainee asked what girl and he was told it was his daughter, who they was brought in the trunk, gagged and with her face covered."

"No. No, please. Tell me where to sign," was his response. And he began to cry..

That was about two years ago. And he still is in the Culiacán prison for the crime of murder

II

A boy had been arrested several times for theft.  He had eight arrests in all. The final time, agents of the Elite Group discovered he had an outstanding warrant. He was taken to the area known as La Bajada del Rio in Navolato. They put him in an abandoned house, stripped him naked, and tied him to a bed, and put the buzzer on his genitals.

"He could not stand," recalled a family member. She continued, "yes and yes, he is a scoundral, he doesn't do anything at all, but for them do that to him, it is another matter. When they put the buzzer on his balls he told them it would better to kill him.

That happened in the first two months of last year. But people do not want to talk. They know that the police  can return, and do it again because there is no punishment when they abuse, beat and torture,  

III

A detainee in the city of Los Mochis, Township of Ahome , was charged with kidnapping. They beat him as much they pleased. Finally he was shown pictures of his wife and children. They recited details of his home life, and personal information. And then they announced: "Now we're going to rape your wife".

In other cases, the agents threaten to kill, kidnap, and burn detainees and their families. They placed  them on the edge of any surface: a table, or a step. They tell them they are on top of a bridge or a building. They're going to push them off and it will look like an accident, unless they accept responsibility for the crimes alleged against them..

Other resources to illicit responses entail placing a bag over the head of a detainee depriving them of air, or putting a wet cloth on their face, pouring water as if trying to drown them.

COMPLICITY

For Leonel Aguirre Meza, president of the Committee for the Defence of Human Rights (CDDHS), it is no coincidence that all detainees in high-profile cases in which there is-a direct link to  officials, from the governor to the attorney to the chief Police, obtain complaints, alleging they were subjected to torture.

"Not all investigators torture. But I can tell you that when this occurs there is complicity with the public prosecutor, with the defense counsel with and police chiefs. You will always find that confessions that are signed by the public defender, who incidentally never defend the accused, "he said.

Recently, he added, the ministerial have incurred prefabricatied guilty persons: they report that the persons they were looking for to fulfill a court appearances or presentations,  after testifying before the prosecutor, left voluntarily without any problems, returned  home, "but the truth is they are elsewhere being held incommunicado, in a safe houses, and they present them after they've been tortured and they confessed.

"So far this year, the city agency took at least six cases of torture against the security corporation and 12 last year, "and those are just the ones we know we received, and no one has thought about investigating them." said Leonel Aguirre Meza

From Above

"The torture comes from above, not from the police," affirms an investigating officer assigned to one of the special groups of the Ministerial Police.

He says that it is not as scandalous as before. Now they are careful with the hits. For him, the effectiveness, stems from the result of planting and harvesting psychological terror in detainees. It is the impact of them being naked, blindfolded and bound, and lying at the mercy of their captors.

He said that all the special groups hood their detainees.The method includes tying them up with brown tape, better known as "duct tape," and then comes the most effective resource: psychological torture that references family members and other threats.

They allow them to see a little, opening the hood or the blindfold partially to see the pictures: their children, their brothers and sisters or a wife. They tell them that they will kill their loved ones. They can drown them in water, but what is strongest is when they threaten to harm a wife, or a child. At the moment they cock the gun next to their ears, that is when they tremble. That is the fucking moment.

The agent acknowledged that Cuen Alfredo's widow, accused of his murder, was stripped naked, although he was not involved in this case. For human rights organizations, in accordance with criteria established internationally, just the fact of being stripped naked, even though there was no physical contact, sexual assault is implied. That's enough to qualify as torture.

"Also they call on the phone and they put someone on the other line to match the voice of the son or the daughter, or the wife. Obviously this is well prepared, previously knowing the ages, and other details, to make it look real. "

For him, from these methods the detainees immediately talk.  But one of the most effective methods is to make them feel that they are on top of a bridge and they're going to be dropped off. "It will look like an accident, we always tell them. And that makes them talk right away."

 TORTURE AND INNOCENCE

Rios Estavillo said that there are two thing to consider in the judicial process that follows the criminal judges,  the participation of the Attorney General of the State, the defense of the accused, to determine whether or not they are innocent, and the other thing is whether or not torture was used.

He said the criminal judge handling the case of Yesenia Armenta has not considered the recommendation of torture turned in by CEDH to the PGJE, which they turned down. But if the Third District Court, asks for information on this recommendation, since apparently the defense is promoting an injunction.

"And that is our commission, an authority of whether or not there has been torture, and it's already  been said yes, there was torture. It is the judge's decision to assess it for the process, but from my point of view, the constitutional reform of Article I, of the year 2011, requires it, " he said.

The amendment states that all authorities have an obligation to promote, respect, protect and fulfill human rights.

Regarding the response of the local Attorney, the ombudsman said that the role of the CEDH is trying to urge them to accept the recommendation in this case, but regardless of this, "if  accepted, it doesn't affect whether the detainee is detained, or released from prison."

Rios Estavillo said that the authorities should not worry about their image to the public, but to worry about the people and their rights, and that's what we should all preserve, because victims and detainees have the same rights, and are in equal circumstances.

He regretted that the ministerial agents used the location and the presentation order issued by the Attorney General as warrant of apprehension which is a violation of human rights.

"Unfortunately this is how presentation orders have been used for some time now in Sinaloa, and that is not provided for by law," he said. He reported that the victim has until next March 27 to appear before the CNDH and complain against the response by the local attorney about  the use of torture in the case against Yesenia Armenta.

He said if an authority does not accept a recommendation, and if this is not contested, the State Commission may refer the case to the State Congress to take the case, as stated in article 102, paragraph 6, of the federal Constitution.

2008 the year with more recommendations: 6

2008-2013 Total recommendations: 16

Total complaints 2008-2013: 75


Source: CEDH.

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