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Z40 Miguel Treviño Morales Captured by Mexican Navy

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Borderland Beat
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CONFIRMED: Captured at 3:45AM 27KM west of Nuevo Laredo without a single shot being fired. He was accompanied by two others and 2 million dollars
The men with 40 were; Abdon Federico Rodríguez, 29 and  Ernesto Reyes García, 38

Screeenshot Siskiyou_kid and 777 

Full  report fromauthorities breaking all the
new rules of reporting established by EPN
Navy of Mexico captured in the State of Tamaulipas  the premier leader of the Zetas, Miguel Angel Trevino, 'Z40' during an operation of precisionThey incident was without a single shot being fired.
Malthus The Spokesman of the national security cabinet confirmed  the detention of Trevino, thanks to the Efforts of intelligence of Mexico.
In press conference, It was  mentioned That  'Z40' is suspect of ordering the abduction of 275 migrants, Whose bodies were found in clandestine grave in the municipality of San Fernando in 2010.
I Said That the operation Began at 3 in the morning on a dirt road in the southwest of Nuevo Laredo, 45 minutes later, the navy was able to locate the pick up truck and  ordered a Navy helicopter. They were then able to intercept  the vehicle, and after some  maneuvering, succeeded  in stopping the vehicle..
In the vehicle were Abdon Federico Garcia Rodriguez, Ernesto Reyes Garcia, who accompanied the leader of the Zetas.
The Spokesman said that the operation was conducted without shots being fired,  and  added that in the vehicle were $ 2 million in cash, eight long arms, in Aadition to 500  cartridges.
There are seven arrest warrants against Treviño Morales and  12 preliminary Investigations on “alleged” charges of Organized Crime, homicide, torture, money laundering, possession of firearms exclusive of the armed forces and health Offences
Along with Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, were arrested Abdon ( see lower left) Reyes Federico Garcia and Ernesto Garcia, who were also transferred is to the Seido.
With respect to the companions of the 'Z40', is presumed to be one escort and  the other an accountant  of the criminal organization.
The original post began here and the remainder is in sequence
 
Elements of the Secretary of the Navy captured Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, alias 'Z-40', on a surprise operation in the city of Nuevo Laredo. naval Information revealed that the arrest was carried out by action through intelligence that ended with the capture of the capo, a founder and past senior within the organization of the criminal group Los Zetas. In the coming hours, the Secretary of the Navy has planned to provide more information on capture.

NOTHING confirmed as yet by authorities.  Proceso just published the story with information from Dallas Morning News.  In that article it states the capture was on Monday.  Rumors however began yesterday. 

BB will update as necessary, but this post will give you a forum to comment and add information....continues next page


Update:  The Milenio news agency has just published a small report stating that federal and local sources have confirmed to them the capture of Z40, the capture was reported to them as being today.

Update 4:50

Valley News Action 4 News spoke to Mexico's Attorney General's Office, Army and Navy.
All three federal agencies told Action 4 News that they did not have any information about such an incident but the Dallas Morning News reports it confirmed Morales-Treviño's arrest.
The Dallas- based newspaper reports it confirmed the feared Zeta leader's arrest through from American and Mexican officials.

Update:

Strategic Monitoring Alert: Los Zetas Leader Captured

Stratfor sources have confirmed that senior Los Zetas leader Miguel "Z-40" Trevino Morales was captured in Nuevo Laredo and is being transferred to Mexico City. His capture reportedly took place late July 14, though that has not been confirmed. This follows rumors posted on blogs earlier July 15 that Trevino had been either captured or killed. Stratfor sources are warning of the potential for an uptick of violence in Nuevo Laredo, a stronghold of Los Zetas, in response to Trevino's capture. Stratfor will continue to monitor the situation for additional information.

Update:
Translation:
The Z-40 will be presented to the media at about 20 hours on the premises of the SEIDO, where the official announcement of his capture will be issued.
 

Update: Joaquín López-Dóriga has backtracked says now that 40 will not be at a presentation, but an announcement will be made at 20:45 at the office of the ministry of the interior.



Update:Milenio reports Z40 transferred to SEIDO was captured in Anahuac, Nuevo Leon

Z40 Video After Capture-Before and After Photos

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat Thank you readers!

A few other reasons for not becoming a premier leader of a cartel
Before and After Photos



The Treviño Morales Clan

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Borderland Beat:  by Vato- a timely repost
 

Once the governments of Mexico and United States declared Heriberto Lazcano dead, the Zeta leadership passed to Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, "El Z-40", "La Mona", or "El Muerto". He is part of an extensive Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas,  family, made up of 13 brothers, of whom at least six have been involved in drug trafficking in the last 15 years. In intelligence files from both countries and court files from the United States, Proceso found  revealing facts on the life, criminal activities and the tragedy that surrounds the Trevino clan.
  Anabel Hernandez (proceso.com.mx) -- El Z-40 was born June 28, 1973, in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, a Zeta bastion for more than a

decade. His parents are Rodolfo Trevino, who was already 49 years old when Miguel Angel was born, and Maria Arcelia Morales, then 34. 
 
Boyhood home in Dallas Texas

The Trevino Morales couple procreated an extensive family: Juan Francisco, aka Kiko Ozuna (1955), Arcelia, Chelo (1957), Irma (1959), Alicia (1961), Rodolfo (1963), Maria Guadalupe (1964), Jose (1966), Ana Isabel (1968), Jesus (1970), Miguel Angel (1973), Oscar Omar, "Alejandro" or "El 42" (1976), Cristina (1978) and Adolfo (1980).


According to information from government intelligence agencies, Mexican as well as U.S.,  Maria Arcelia Morales was alive up to 2007; today she would be 74 years old.  She lived in Nuevo Laredo, had a passport to visit some of her children and grandchildren who live in the United States and had a Lincoln Navigator wagon registered in her name.



The Trevino criminal history began 19 years ago, with Juan Francisco, aka "Kiko Ozuna", the oldest son of the Trevino Morales couple.  On December 29, 1993, in a random inspection by the U.S. customs service, Juan Francisco's vehicle was stopped and he twice denied he was carrying more than $10,000 in cash. When they searched the car, they found $47,984.00, which was confiscated.
That year, the DEA and the Border Patrol had begun an investigation into the trafficking of tons of marihuana from Nuevo Laredo into Texas, but they only had a few pieces of the puzzle. According to criminal case file No. 3:95-CR--189-R, in the Northern District Court in Texas, of which there is a copy, in October 1994, the United States government charged Juan Francisco Trevino, another Trevino by the name of Armando
 -- it's not known if they are related--, Abraham Padilla (Benny), Abel Lopez, Fernando Quiroz (Vanna), Hipolito Ortiz (Polo), Oscar de Leon (Pelon), and Edel Isaac with criminal enterprise for possession of more than 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lbs) with the intent to distribute. At that time, Miguel Angel Trevino Morales was only 21 years old.

 On October 18, 1994, Juan Francisco Trevino, Armando Trevino and Pedro Sanchez appeared before a magistrate and, based on the law then in effect, asked for a speedy trial which should have been held within 70 days after they voluntarily appeared in court.

On May 26, 1995, Juan Francisco filed a motion to dismiss the charges against him for violating his right to a speedy trial. On June 15, 1995, a court of original jurisdiction held a hearing and dismissed the charges that had been filed in October, 1994.

Kiko Ozuna believed he would be freed from prison immediately. He didn't know that some days prior, on June 7, the prosecution had filed new charges against him for another conspiracy to distribute more than a ton of marihuana in the United States. While he was waiting for a speedy trial, the DEA obtained sufficient evidence to convict him. As in the majority of these cases, the agency accomplished this through accomplices that went into the informants and protected witness program. Those statements completely sunk Juan Francisco.
Everardo Ramirez, introduced as a government witness by the prosecution, testified in court that an individual with the surnames Tovar Ozuna introduced him to Juan Francisco Trevino, who offered him employment. The work consisted of transporting marihuana from Nuevo Laredo to Dallas. Ramirez's first duty was to store the weed in his house for several days then take it to the house of Pablo de Luna.

"The following month, at the request of Tovar Ozuna, Ramirez agreed to store and deliver marihuana that was to be transported to Dallas. Tovar's job was to bring the marihuana across the (Rio Grande) river for Juan Trevino and (take it) to Ramirez. For his part, Ramirez would take it to Pablo de Luna's house, where it was stored and then transported using a business on the border," states the court file.

Ramirez testified that he had participated in trafficking marihuana from Nuevo Laredo to Dallas about three times a month for a year and a half. He added that the largest load he stored was 600 lbs (272 kilograms) and that on U.S. territory they transported the drug on Suburban station wagons, using private roads on a large ranch to avoid police checkpoints. Frank Staggs, owner of the ranch, testified that the ranch caretaker was Armando Trevino. 
Miguel Treviño Morales aka Z40 after his arrest yesterday

  Continued on next page

Everardo Ramirez also testified that he would go to a hotel in Dallas to meet with Jose Trevino Morales, the brother of Juan Francisco, who was in charge of paying him for his services. It took the United States government years to detect and stop Jose's criminal activities, who, 17 years later, turned out to be the head of the Zeta money laundering network in the United States through the quarter horse racing business.

Another key prosecution witness was Joe Chavez, who worked for Kiko Ozuna. In  December of 1993, he approached DEA Special Agent Armando Ramirez and offered to become an informant. "He had a feeling this thing (the criminal network) was going to collapse," the court file points out. On January 24, 1994, Joe tipped off the DEA special agent about a marihuana shipment that was going to be delivered to Dallas on January 26. Agent Ramirez, working undercover, helped Joe Chavez load more than 463 kilograms (about 1,019 lbs) of marihuana on a Suburban (parked) next to a mobile home in Laredo.

When the load got to Dallas, (law enforcement) agents were waiting and they arrested Riky Trevino and Abel Lopez. "Chavez testified that the marihuana that was seized was destined for, or belonged to, Francisco Trevino Morales," states the court file. That was enough for the oldest of the Trevino brothers to lose all hope of getting out of prison.

 On December 1, 1995, Kiko Ozuna was sentenced to 22 years in prison, which will be completed in 2017, when he is 62 years old.  He was sent to a prison close to Laredo, and, according to the terms of the sentence, when he is released he will be on supervised probation for five years "with normal conditions and with four additional conditions."

Juan Francisco Trevino Morales is still in prison. His younger brother, Miguel Angel, followed in his footsteps and surpassed him, becoming the leader of one of the most powerful criminal organizations in the continent, the Zetas, which last year the Barack Obama administration classified as a "global menace" comparable to the Camorra in Italy, the Yakuza in Japan and the Circle of the Brothers in Russia.    
Proceso updated the original post adding the following..thank you Zac for the translation:


Z-40"


The first traces of Miguel Treviño Morales criminal career date from the year 2000. At that time he was in charge of retail drug selling at colonia Hidalgo in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, "as well as carrying out kidnappings, disappearances and executions of people who didn´t pay their rescue", noted intelligence reports.



He first worked with Arturo Sauceda Gamboa (El Karis), Omar Lorméndez Pitalúa (Commander Pita), Iván Velázquez Caballero (el Talibán) and Mateo Díaz López (Commander Mateo). Pitalúa was arrested in 2005, Diaz López in 2006 and Velázquez Caballero in September 2012, while Sauceda Gamboa is fugitive.



His rise in the criminal world was fast. According to a FBI document from 2005 under the title “Los Zetas, a new threat to the United States”, Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales was already one of the "key players" of the Gulf Cartel in Nuevo Laredo at that time. The document specifies that he worked with Los Zetas, then the cartel's armed wing.



After Arturo Guzmán Decena, killed in 2002, and Heriberto Lazcano, killed by the Navy of Mexico last October, Miguel Ángel became the first capo of Los Zetas who did not come from a military background, but directly from the criminal world, which does not mean that he lacks training or ignores military tactics.

According to the study conducted by the FBI, the members of the Special Forces who left the army to join organized crime, trained the others of the criminal organization (who did not), in addition to allying with 30 former militars of the Kaibiles, anti-guerrilla special force of Guatemala, internationally known for their bloody and inhumane practices.



According to the same document, Los Zetas established training camps in a ranch located "between Villa Hermosa and Rio Bravo, Tamaulipas", and Z 40 debuted in the criminal world in Nuevo Laredo, where the criminal group first applied surveillance system with video cameras and lookouts.



According to the aforementioned report of the FBI, at least since 2005 the U.S. Government had information about the Zetas operating in Coahuila, specifically in Piedras Negras. The report mentions that in 2005 the leader of Los Zetas in Piedras Negras was a drug trafficker called Fernando Villarreal, identified as Z-40, alias used by Miguel Treviño Morales.



"According to the McAllen Intelligence Center, Los Zetas operate in the area with the approval of Rafael Macedo de la Concha, Attorney general of Mexico," says the document.



The first preliminary inquiry against Z-40 dates from 2001, one more in 2003, and five others were opened in 2005. In one of these,176/DGDCSPI/05, Miguel  Treviño Morales is identified by a woman as the man who forced her husband to drive a trailer loaded with cocaine.



Information provided by Mexican intelligence agencies states that on April 28 2005, during a meeting between officials from the FBI and the Mexican Government, the name of Miguel Treviño, Z-40, was revealed for the first time as an important member of Los Zetas.



The US Government currently has several criminal charges against him, one of them in the South Texas District Court (08-cr-00244), in which there are 47 charges against him that could mean more than 200 years’ incarceration. The most recent one was opened in May 2012 by the Prosecutor of the West Texas district for conspiring to launder money for Los Zetas through the purchase, training and breeding of racehorses in the United States.


Z 40 is the leader of the criminal organization considered as the most bloodthirsty one in Mexico



"Big Daddy Cartel" (above)

Not only Juan Francisco and Miguel Angel have linked their lives to organized crime. According to information obtained from criminal records and intelligence agencies, his brothers José, Oscar Omar (Alejandro), Jesús and Adolfo are or have been involved with drug trafficking.



José was born on October 23, 1966, and has been living legally in the United States for years. He was a prosperous horse breeder and trainer until he was arrested with his wife Zulema on his ranch in Lexington, Oklahoma on June 12, 2012. In the criminal lawsuit 12-cr-00210, opened in the West Texas District Court, he was accused of laundering money for Los Zetas through the companies Tremor Enterprises, Tremor Enterprises LLC, Zule Farms and 66 Land LLC, all engaged in the business of horses.



This case, uncovered in June 2012, was a feast for the international press, since horses acquired with money from los Zetas won important races in that country, Z 40 was shareholder of the companies and co-owner of the horses.




José gave his horses names related to drug trafficking: Corona Cartel, Coronita Cartel, Morning Cartel, Number One Cartel, A Snowy poster and Big Daddy Cartel, the latter was the most valuable of all, according to the case records. If years of buoyant business did not catch the attention of the authorities, the names should have done it.



In the criminal case on money laundering it was established that Miguel Angel Treviño gave dirty money to his brother José and his sister-in-law Zulema so they would take care of purchasing, training and feeding the horses, as well as enrolling them in races.



The prosecution claims that Z 40 is directly responsible for the trafficking of cocaine from South America to the United States. Back then Lazcano was still alive so Miguel Angel Treviño was considered one of the two leaders of Los Zetas.



"Z 42", Jesús and Adolfo

The name of another Member of the Treviño clan involved with drug trafficking came up in the same money laundering case: Oscar Omar, alias Alejandro or Z 42, who was supposedly killed by the Mexican Navy in Zacatecas on October 23, 2012,, but the rumor was never confirmed.. (He will most likely inherit the role of premier leader)



Oscar Omar Treviño was born on June 6, 1976 and, according to the criminal file in which he appears as a co-defendant, is a high rank Zeta accused of trafficking  drugs and illicit money in the United States. He is also involved in the dealings with horses and transferring funds for that business.



This was not the first criminal record of Z 40´s brother in the US. In 2008, a criminal file opened against him at the South Texas District Court, 08-cr-00244, accused Omar of being part of the Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas at least since 2001. (Juan is incarcerated in US Federal Prison and has a release date of March 2014)  The prosecution says that Z 42 introduced marijuana and cocaine from Nuevo Laredo into United States and he has rented homes in Laredo, Texas, to be used as safe houses by hit men.
(See the video I posted of Reta (below) and Cordona)



Regarding Jesús Treviño Morales, reports state that he was born on October 4, 1970, and that he used to pose as an engineer or contractor to hide his illegal activities.





In 2004 he was riddled with more than 50 shots from AK-47 in Nuevo Laredo. His body was found in a lot in Paseo Colón and Tamazunchale Street, according to reports from the local press.



Intelligence reports say that Jesús had been put in control of a cell of Los Zetas "but he didn´t follow the new rules for the cartel" so he was killed by the members of the same criminal organization.



The youngest of the Treviño Morales brothers, Adolfo, was killed on January 18, 2006, when he was 26 years old. His body was abandoned next to a swing in a park in Nuevo Laredo.



Z 40 has a brother named Rodolfo, 10 years older than him, who works in cargo transports. He has no criminal records. In family photographs he appears next to Miguel Ángel and José.








Video: "I Was a Hitman for Z40"

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Chivis Martinez for Borderland Beat

I posted an article about these two teens, who became hit-men at the age of 13.  They  operated out of a Zetas safe house in Laredo Texas.  Though Reta's story could be true, keep aware who is telling the story, this is no angel, he and 40 were a match made in hell.  The video below was sent in by a reader, (BB has the best readers anywhere) it is a very short version of older interview videos I have posted previously.  What I like about this one it has pulled out the portion that depicts his meeting with Miguel Trevino.  To read greater detail about these two link here to the post titled The Black Kiss
 
Also be sure to revisit the Proceso post on the Trevino Clan below.  It is updated with information of each Trevino brother as Proceso added the information.

Z40: The aftermath of Miguel Treviño's Arrest and Looking at the Contenders

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By Chivis Martínez for Borderland Beat
During the early hours of Monday, the leader Miguel Treviño Morales, known as “Cuarenta” or “40”, was captured by the Mexican Marines in a municipality about 27 km south west of Nuevo Laredo.....

Setting  aside the unproven, sensationalistic accounts, relayed by captured narcos, and perpetuated by the media,  legends such as Miguel Treviño boiling babies, one only has to view the photos of 72 migrants slaughtered by Zetas to establish how brutal Zetas are. ..
Zetas
It was Zetas that crafted a drug business diversification, by expanding into the business of human trafficking.  It is big business for Zetas, who charge thousands of dollars to transport economic migrants into the US.  But the process is not so precise. 

Speaking directly with economic migrants through my work with the Casa Migrantes, I have learned that the journey is prepped by assuming two things will happen.  They will be kidnapped, and females will be raped.  All migrants   prepare for the eventuality of being kidnapped, at the minimum of one time during their 2000 mile journey.  Family members prepare and await the call from narcos demanding "ransom" money. 

Zetas draw from  these huge migrant pools to select recruits they deem best for narco work, or the sex industry.  The outcome for those refusing to work for the Zetas,  is depicted in the photos of the  72 slaughtered migrants whose bodies were discovered in an abandon ranch in Tamaulipas. (Above)
Decapitations
So yes they are brutal.  Yes they kill innocents. 

But brutality was a part of drug war apart and long before the formation of the Zetas, and contrary to popular belief they did not initiate   the method of decapitation for the purposes of terror, it was La Familia Michoacán who shocked Mexico, in October 2006, when they tossed  5 decapitated heads on to the floor of a Michoacán disco. 

The heads were accompanied by a “cartulina” (poster board with narco message) that read;
“La Familia does not kill for pay; it does not kill women or innocents. Only those who deserve to die will die. Everybody understand: this is divine justice.”

In 2006, such acts were very rare, today decapitations are so common they are not shocking to those that follow the Mexican Drug War.  Although previously rare, decapitations were a part of the cartel arsenal of terror and revenge prior to the lobbing of 5 decapitated heads in the Uruapan disco. It was the act of using multiple decapitated heads thrown into a public environment to send a message that was new.

Prior to this horrific occurrence, LFM had used decapitation to settle scores and revenge, but not to send a message.  The victims were props, either low level narco or innocents, it was never made clear.

The “Hearts and Minds of Citizens”
A defining difference between Zetas and other cartels  is that Zetas have never cultivated the hearts and minds of the people.  They simply, at the most basic level, are uninterested and uncaring what people think of them or their actions. Most cartels have the opposite agenda, with PR machines intact they espouse their work as good, in the sense they are helpers of the poor, and infirm and never would harm innocents.   This is a tactical maneuver called "pyops", that influences the value system of people, in which reality becomes shrouded.  Whereas Zetas use fear and terror as a means of control.
When I arrived in Coahuila a decade ago, Zetas were a presence but working as enforcers for the Golfo Cartel (CDG).  Zetas were much less overt as enforcers, taking orders from CDG’s premier leader Osiel Cardenas Guillen.
Osiel was one of those leaders who thought it important to capture the hearts and minds of the people, to gain their support.  He was fulfilling requests for medical and emergency assistance, throwing lavish parties for citizens with expensive giveaways, and celebrations at Christmas and Children’s Day (photo above). 
However, behind the scenes he was ordering brutal murders, extortion and kidnappings. LFM worked for CDG as enforcers in the south.  Osiel was captured after a shootout in 2003 and imprisoned in Mexico, although he continued  commanding the cartel from behind bars.

The violence,  including decapitations by enforcers were conducted on orders given by Osiel and the other CDG leaders.  Osiel earned the  nickname of  “friend killer”,  stemming from ordering the execution of his his good friend Salvador Gómez Herrera, aka "el Chava", then the co-leader of the Golfo Cartel along with Osiel.   Osiel wanted to command solo.
Gómez, was selected by Osiel (at left) and given the honor of being his daughters godfather.  It was shortly after driving away from the baptism party celebration, with Osiel in the vehicle, when a sicario sitting  in the backseat, fired a gunshot into the head of Gomez, blowing his brains out. 

To this day many citizens think of Osiel and a kind and generous leader that would never harm innocents, or extort or kidnap.  The PR machine could not have done a better job.

His command stopped in 2007 when he was extradited to the US.  He pled guilty in a US Federal courtroom where upon the brutal fearless leader broke down and wept.  He received a 25 year sentence.

The Treviño Morales Family
Clearly, it has been a horrible year  for the Treviño Morales family.Then again 2012 wasn’t so great either.
Arcelia Morales, is the 74 year old matriarch, the woman that gave birth to all of the 13 Treviño children.  

Juan, Arcelia, Irma, Alicia, Rodolfo, María, José, Ana Isabel, Jesús, Miguel, Ángel Óscar Omar, Cristina and Adolfo, born between the years of 1955 to 1980.
Arcelia and Rodolfo, father of the Treviño siblings, migrated to Texas from the Mexican border town of Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas.  The family settled in a modest Pleasant Grove neighborhood of Dallas Texas. 
Where Miguel appears chronologically  in the family tree is in dispute, even by the US and Mexican Governments, his year of birth is either 1973 or 1980, although it is certain he was  born in Nuveo Laredo where the family has always maintained a home. 
 
Arcelia continues to live in the Dallas area and Nuevo Laredo.

Miguel grew up idolizing his older brother and  the first born Treviño child, Juan Francisco.  Juan had a landscaping business in Laredo Texas.  40 worked for his brother in the business, which included servicing the properties of well-placed narcos having homes in Laredo. He was recruited by “Los Tejas” of Nuevo Laredo. 

Though he began as a go-fer which included tasks such as getting lunches, and running errands  he was a fast learner, bilingual and had the ability to move between the US and Mexico freely.  With his skills he was able to rise quickly in the ranks fortified by helping his brother Juan, who had by this time gone from pulling weeds to smuggling weed.

In 1995 Juan, he was convicted of conspiracy to smuggle hundreds of pounds of marijuana into Texas through Nuevo Laredo.  Both Miguel and José were implicated in the investigation leading to the arrest of Juan; it fell short of enough to overcome the standard of reasonable doubt, so they were not charged in the case.

Juan was sentenced to 20 years in prison; he is in the Florence Federal Prison in Colorado.  His original release date was July 2013 but has been delayed for an undisclosed reason to March 2014.

Treviño Clan’s “Años Horribles” 2012-2013
In the year of 2012 and the 7 months of 2013 the Treviño family crisis list includes:
Miguel Angel Treviño Morales, 40, leader of the Zetas, was captured
José Treviño Morales, 46 (a naturalized U.S. citizen) was convicted in a Zetas related money laundering/horseracing scheme.  He is awaiting sentencing. (with wife and daughter in the photo above)
Zulema Treviño, 39, wife of José also a naturalized U.S. citizen, pleaded guilty to money laundering conspiracy in March, she is awaiting sentencing, her whereabouts unknown.
Alexandra García Treviño, daughter of José and Zulema, pleaded guilty to having knowledge of a felony. She’s believed to be living in California with her military husband.
Omar Treviño Morales, indicted in the U.S., has not been arrested.
Alejandro Treviño Chávez nephew of Miguel was shot by forces in Piedras Negras Coahuila in October 2012 sparking a “Nephew for a Nephew” retaliation resulting in the death of Eduardo Lalo Moreira, nephew of the governor of Coahuila.
Juan Francisco Treviño Chavez  “El Quico” (above though it may be mislabeled) son of Juan senior, arrested in Monterrey in June 2012. Quico escaped from a Nuevo Laredo prison in 2010.
The future of Los Zetas
The feared leader went down without a shot.  That does not surprise this reporter. He is a calculating criminal and leader.  Surrender equates to; opportunity. 

Powerful cartels are big business.  Sinaloa at the top and Zetas are in scores of countries around the globe. They plan for every eventuality, so it is way too soon to write the Zetas epitaph.  That said, even the best laid plans fall apart by the unplanned circumstances, or rogue players.

Perhaps a serendipitous advantage, just before and directly after the death of premier leader of the Zetas Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano in October 2012, infighting had resulted in two known splits within the group, those staying with the cartel were deemed as being faithful to 40.  Another fracture is possible, but more so if 40’s brother Omar (Z42) is not named the heir to leadership.  Or an unknown factor such as a power play by one or more of the members to overthrow the Treviño hold on the cartel. 

Splits within groups are deadly to the organization, case in point is CDG.  When I moved to Mexico, CDG was arguably the most powerful cartel, and the oldest, having begun as smuggling alcohol to the US during the prohibition.  Although they are experiencing a strengthening, they had been weaken through several events; Osiels arrest, death of key players such as Tony Tormenta, inept leadership, the split with Zetas, and a division within the organization.  Had they not been so powerful before those events, they would not exist today. 

Another factor in their survival can be attributed  to the alliance with CDS (Sinaloa), teaming against the Zetas.  CDS made the alliance to attain a path in the northeast.  It is no secret Chapo has wanted the NE border plazas and none more than the lucrative Nuevo Laredo Plaza, if CDS acquires the Nuevo Laredo plaza, they will control every major plaza along the frontera. .  Many felt if the  Zetas were eliminated in the NE region,  at that time CDS would break ties with CDG and control the NE.

If Omar (42) gains premier leadership, it is likely that 40 will govern the organization from behind bars.  As far as franchising plazas or “leasing” for a price the use of routes, similar to CAF in Tijuana, that is also a possibility, it would be smart of Zetas to concede their position of black and white and attempt agreements. 

As Osiel did, until extradited to the US,  it will be probable that 40 would continue in control Zetas behind bars .

It was disturbing to see that he was taken into custody sans handcuffs.  It could be the style of Mexico’s new president Enrique Peña, or it could be an indication of a lax treatment that lies ahead for the capo once he is incarcerated.  Capos have a comparative luxurious life behind bars.  Two room cells with kitchens, electronics, liquor, and just about any amenity they want.
The other “opportunity” for the fallen leader  is escape.  Though the days of Chapo’s laundry basket escape are said to be a thing of the past, Zetas are known for daring escapes, involving scores of inmates, and in Piedras Negras an escape of over 100 inmates were facilitated by a tunnel.  However, how feasible that would be in the more secure federal prison system remains to be seen.  Money has been known to buy freedom, not a likely scenario, but not impossibility.

When Osiel was apprehended, Zeta enforcer “Mamito”, the former GAFE member, headed an extravagant, but failed attempt to free the incarcerated leader. The ambitious  plan used air support of three helicopters and over 60 Zetas as the group moved in on maximum security prison 'El Altiplano'.

The best course would be if Mexico would allow 40 to be extradited to the United States.  Given the strained US relationship with the new administration of EPN, that is unlikely.  EPN has detached his administration from US agencies and cutoff the previous privileges enjoyed by US agencies under the Calderon administration, such as open access to information and data.

It would not be surprising to learn the US provided the information to the Mexican Navy to execute the capture of 40.  The Mexican Navy is the sole hold out in the sea of Mexican agencies having cut off open relationships with the US.  The Mexican Navy is the most respected Mexican agency, highly regarded by US agencies. 

The US recently was instrumental in the capture of the father in law of Chapo Guzman.  The capture was called a “gift” from the DEA to EPN.  Some think the capture of Z40 was another gift from the US.  Mexican officials ignored the direct question when proposed in the press conference conducted to announce the capture.

Others are in the belief that the capture was perhaps a gift from the EPN administration to Chapo Guzman.
Top contenders as the new leader of Zetas
Appointing 42 as the Zetas new leader would likely be the most desirable scenario for the fallen leader.  The bond of trust between the brothers is paramount to the organization continuing, at least for now, under the direction of Miguel Treviño behind bars.
However the list of possible replacement can be shortened to four standouts.
Omar Treviño Morales  " Z-42 ", brother and strongman" Z-40 ", who is identifies by Mexican agencies by being responsible for the same degree of violence as his brother Miguel.  People on the ground in Coahuila,  where Omar resides, consider him a person with potential of even greater violence and brutality.
Maxiley Barahona Nadales,“El Contador” or “El Maxiley”, if it’s a leader with the potential for high brutality that gets the nod, this is the Zeta.  The Mexican agency PGR Labels him as “Extremely Dangerous”.  He is the second in line in the Zeta hierarchy, if Omar is not the leader, it will be this man.
 
He is in charge of the plazas of Veracruz, Tabasco and Chiapas.  Under his direction a mass of murders, and kidnappings have been conducted in the regions that he is responsible for. He is also suspected of detonating grenades at the offices of the Attorney General Justice of the state of Chiapas .
 
Román Ricardo Palomo Rincones, “El Coyote”,  This Zeta is one of the leaders in charge of the kidnappings and massacres of Central American migrants, including those in the municipality of San Fernando, Tamaulipas.
The PGR identifies him as being  involved in the murder of 145 people who were abducted when" traveling on 'Omnibus de Mexico' and 'Commercial Orient' bus lines, travelling north from various states to Tamaulipas, through the city of  San Fernando, to  Reynosa, from there hoping to  cross into the US.

Sergio Ricardo Basurto Peña “el Grande“, The Trusted and close friend of Miguel Treviño is in control of the narcotiendas, in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas.

There are other contenders, but these are known to be at the top, trusted and respected by Miguel Treviño, making it likely one or more will be appointed to fill the position vacated by the arrest of 40.

Zetas: San Fernando Plaza Chief Captured with el Tiburon and el Choforo

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Chivis Martínez and "Lacy" for Borderland Beat
 
It has been reported,  that (alias) Goyo Villafranca  has been captured.  Villafranca is the plaza chief for the Los Zetas Cartel.

San Fernando is the Tamaulipas municipality used by the Zetas as ground zero for their human trafficking operation. San Fernando is the site where 265 migrants were kidnapped and murdered.  The number of 265 is the death toll from two incidents, one is the 193 bodies discovered in mass narco fosa (graves). 

Also counted in the 265 tally are the 72 migrants slaughtered and left at an abandoned San Fernando ranch.  Most all of the migrants were economic migrants from Central America travelling through Tamaulipas on passage to the US.  Most were kidnapped from buses originating from various states and passing through several Tamaulipas cities.

Villafranca has worked under the direction of Sergio Ricardo Basurto Peña “el Grande“, who is thought to be one of the newly appointed lieutenants, working under the new leadership of Omar Treviño Morales, aka Z42.  Omar is the brother of the Zetas premier leader Miguel Treviño aka Z40,  captured at 3:45AM on Monday.

The capture was executed in a cooperative and united effort ofthe state SSP, the Mexican Army, Navy, and  PGR

Two others were with Villafranca, and also arrested, they are thought to be el Tiburon and el Choforo (above left), who were also heavily involved in the kidnapping and killing of migrants in the region.

With this planned, organized capture, it would seem apparent that either someone is singing or as I suggested previously the US is wooing EPN with additional "gifts".
Carnage at a San Fernando Ranch 

Z40: The U.S. Assisted in the Capture of Miguel Treviño

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Borderland Beat posted
To capture Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, El Z-40, leader of Los Zetas, the elements of the Navy (Semar) had support from a avión no tripulado (better known as a drone), owned by U.S. agencies operating these flying objects since 2004 on the border with Mexico.

During his mission, the sailors had precise details of the narco boss using wiretapping equipment and tracking software, called Finfisher/Finspy, and Hunter Punta Tracking/Locksys, revealed officials involved in national security cabinet.


The sources pointed out that the DEA (U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency) provided information to the Mexican government that could establish the areas of Treviño Morales operations and learn about their group in areas such as Nuevo Leon, Coahuila and Tamaulipas, while the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE, for its acronym in English) lent one of their drones, which monitors and collects data which is then processed in databases in California, Arizona and Texas.

Intelligence work made it possible to define the mobility of the marina, the routes by which he was traveling, schedules and the number of escorts that Treviño Morales was transported from one area to another, said respondents.


The drone has infrared cameras that allow filming in the dark, and two motors generate no noise detectable at levels of thousand feet, plus they have the capacity to conduct over flights for several hours and remote transmission equipment, allowing them to follow without being discovered.
A similar plane was used by ICE in Mexico in February 2011, to locate the murderers of his agent Jaime Zapata, who was attacked along with one of his companions by members of Los Zetas on the Mexico-Queretaro highway.

The sources said that the capture device was set in a few hours and had covered the route of transit for Z-40, which is why they could encircle him and capture him without resistance.
 

The sailors were aided by the FinFisher/Finspy software, allowing them to locate moving targets using GPS systems, which enabled the use of encrypted communications, which can be transmitted from any computer.

The developer of FinFisher/Finspy is the British company Gamma International Ltd., is a spy program allowing computers to intercept communications, emails and all communication.


 The Hunter Punta Tracking/Locksys is a satellite tracking system for vehicles based on GPS technology, cell phones and the Internet, which enables a vehicle to be followed.

Treviño Morales is still detained in facilities of the Deputy Attorney Specialized Investigation of Organized Crime (Seido), in hopes that they this Friday will define his status and be consigned to a federal judge. 
Source: Jornada

Z40: Files 4 Writs Requesting Protection Against Torture

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Borderland Beat: also Posted on Forum by Administrator "DD"
 
DD wrote: This is a new one for me.  Miquel Trevino, better known as Z-40 apparently believes in the Mexican judicial system. I have seen politicians use amparos (in effect an injunction) to try to keep from being arrested or to try to buy time to escape from being prosecuted, but have never seen an outlaw use an injunction to  protect themselves from the government by being held incommunicado, tortured, or subjected to any kind of mistreatment.  His detention and captivity has certainly not made him any less audacious.
 
Chivis: 40 sure was prepared with a plan of action.  I wonder how many hours he and his attorney team spent in  prep of the day he would be captured.  He should have stayed in Guatemala, I always thought it was a stupid move to leave.

Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, Z-40, filed on July 17 four writs of amparo to protect himself from being held in solitary confinement, tortured, or subjected to any kind of mistreatment by authorities of the Attorney General of the Republic and the Attorney Specialized in Investigation of Organized Crime (SEIDO). 
The Zeta leader´s lawyer filed at the First Court District of Amparo in Criminal Matters of the Federal District, the writs of amparo against any illegal order of arrest, solitary confinement, retention, torture and abuse.
The demands for protection of constitutional rights were promoted against the Attorney General of the Republic, Jesús Murillo Karam; the head of the SEIDO, Rodrigo Archundia, and the Attorney General of the SEIDO. 
However, according to the Federal Judicial Council (CJF), the writ of amparo against the Office of the Attorney-General was rejected since it wasn´t ratified, while those filed against officials of the SEIDO were admitted. 
Legal protection of the personal data of the leader of Los Zetas was also  requested, requesting the his personal data not be made public. He also denounced as illegal, his arrest by the Secretariat of the Navy (Semar). 
 
On Monday night, Eduardo Sánchez Hernández, spokesman of the Security Cabinet, informed that Treviño Morales had been arrested by members of the Secretariat of the Navy (Semar), in Tamaulipas. 
SinBargo

Diego Fernández: Authority Must Act Fair With Miguel Treviño

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Borderland Beat
 
“The authority must act legally and fair”, said the former PAN senator"
 Photo taken while held captive
MONCLOVA, Coahuila. - The government must act legally with the detention of Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales, aka “Z-40”,  said former president candidate Diego Fernández de Cevallos.The PAN member served as special guest to the inauguration of Proyecto Fénix in the enterprise Altos Hornos de México in Monclova and there he used the event  to invite Mexicans to take as an example the achievements that the enterprise has achieved.
According to the publication of the website Milenio,  Diego said that Alonso Ancira Elizondo, president of the Administrative Council of AMHSA, was who invited him and said that it is an example that when there is will, the results benefit Mexico.
“There are millions of human beings that don’t have to wait any longer, we have to make things right so that the country will be out of poverty and ignorance”, he said.
He commented as well, that change (in Mexico) will be achieved if each one of the citizens becomes an obligor of Mexico to achieve greatness,  and not become as a creditor (as if the country owes the citizen).
Changing the subject, he indicated that the last electoral process (referring to PAN party) they did well, in Monclova for example, but bad in other regions, “we need to make things better”.
Regarding the arrest of Miguel Ángel Treviño Morales, Z-40, he said he beliefs in the penal justice system. “It is said that he was a bloodthirsty man, but the State, government and authorities should not be bloodthirsty with him, it must be fair”.
 
Fernández de Cevallos, who was victim of organized crime, since he was kidnapped  gave this opinion: “Men and women, rich or poor, from one side or the other, we all have a right to born, live and die in peace”. (photo above was upon his release)


Video Narrative:

The state should not be bloodthirsty with Z-40: Fernández de Cevallos.
"The important thing, first of all, is that law and justice need to be applied. Of course, I believe that even though it is said that he was a bloodthirsty man, the state, the government, the authority should not be bloodthirsty with him. It needs to be legal and fair."

"Secondly, he cannot and should not be left unpunished,  so much pain, so many deaths and so many crimes that have occurred in this country; hopefully, once and for all, we find the paths to understand each other, between Mexicans”.

Obama says Capture of Z-40 Shows Mexico is Serious About Drug Fight

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Borderland Beat

Have we heard enough o fthe capture of the Zeta capo Z-40, Miguel Angel Trevino? BB has been busy (Chivis) providing extensive information on all angles on Z40 and the Zeta blow. Here is more on the US take.

Source: Reuters
President Barack Obama said on Tuesday that Mexico's capture of the leader of a notorious drug cartel provided reassurance that President Enrique Pena Nieto's commitment to fighting drug trafficking was solid.

"What it shows is that the new administration of President Pena Nieto is serious about continuing the efforts to break up these transnational drug operations," Obama said in an interview with Univision's Los Angeles affiliate. "And there had been some question about that, I think early on during his campaign, and immediately after his election."

Pena Nieto caused some concern in the United States by dialing back the aggressive campaign against drug trafficking pursued by his predecessor, Felipe Calderon, in favor of a policy emphasizing reducing violence.

Under the new approach, Pena Nieto reined in the wide latitude Calderon gave the U.S. government in working with Mexican officials, replacing it with a single point of contact, Mexico's Ministry of Interior.

Obama endorsed the policy in May during a visit to Mexico, saying it was up to the Mexican people to determine their own security structures.

But he said on Tuesday that Monday's arrest of Miguel Angel Trevino, also called Z-40, the leader of the Zetas drug cartel, offered proof that Pena Nieto's approach could be effective.

"He indicated to me that he recognizes the need to deal with these transnational drug cartels in a serious way," Obama said. "And I think this is evidence of it."

Obama said that clamping down on the international drug trade in Mexico was in the U.S. interest, and that Washington supported Mexican efforts. The United States recognizes for its part that it has a role to play in curtailing the market for drugs at home and the flow of guns to Mexico.

"We want to make sure that they know that we're a partner," Obama said. "It also means though we have to continue doing our part here in the United States to reduce demand, and reduce the flow of guns and cash down south."






Analysis: Drug kingpin's capture spurs hope Mexico can subdue violent cartels

The dramatic capture of the boss of the Zetas drug cartel provides fresh evidence that Mexican authorities are starting to win their protracted fight against a gang that has done more than any other to stain the country's name with its brutality.

But even with Miguel Angel Trevino now in custody, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto still has the difficult task of taming other cartels even as he creates a new militarized police force to take over the fight waged for years by the military.

The Mexican government said late on Monday it had arrested Trevino - also known by the alias Z-40 - in a raid near his hometown of Nuevo Laredo on the U.S. border.

In the past 10 months, three of the Zetas four most-wanted leaders have been killed or captured by Mexico's armed forces, including the 40-year-old Trevino, whose younger brother Omar is now the only top-level member of the cartel still at large.

In the past three years, atrocities blamed on the Zetas have pushed Mexico's conflict with drug gangs to new depths of savagery, making them the prime target of Pena Nieto's efforts to restore order and end negative headlines about the drug war.

Even with a potentially crippling blow to a powerful cartel, Pena Nieto faces major challenges in his quest to pacify Mexico, where gang violence prompted some areas of the country to take the law into their own hands in the past year.

Sickening acts of violence like the beheading of 49 people near Monterrey last year and the mass slaughter of migrant workers in northeastern Mexico in 2011 and 2010 have earned the nation attention for all the wrong reasons, and contributed to the impression that authorities could not control the Zetas.

More than 70,000 Mexicans have been killed in drug-related violence since the start of 2007, when the government launched a military offensive to subdue cartels that make vast amounts of money funneling drugs including cocaine and marijuana into the lucrative U.S. market to the north.

'A MAJOR BLOW'
"This is a major blow," Alberto Islas, head of Mexico City-based consultancy firm Risk Evaluation, said of Trevino's capture. "But as the Zetas are split into regions, they can still continue to function."
The extent to which the Zetas can regroup will depend greatly on whether a new leader emerges from their ranks, with Omar Trevino a prime candidate, Islas said.

Trevino's arrest - taken alive carrying $2 million in cash - pointed to an improvement in intelligence-gathering by Mexican authorities since Pena Nieto took over last December from his predecessor Felipe Calderon, Islas said.

Pena Nieto vowed to improve the use of intelligence in the fight. Trevino was captured without a single shot fired after his pick-up truck was intercepted by a navy helicopter.

Conscious of the damage the Zetas were doing to Mexico's reputation, Calderon stepped up efforts to catch leaders of the gang, founded in the late 1990s by 14 former soldiers who were hired initially as enforcers for the then-powerful Gulf Cartel.

Over the years, the Zeta cartel became big enough to threaten the Sinaloa Cartel of Joaquin Guzman, aka "El Chapo," Mexico's most wanted man. By 2012, the Zetas and the Sinaloa cartel were considered the most powerful drug gangs in Mexico. Other smaller cartels maintained strongholds in certain areas.

Calderon's military-led offensive proved costly. Killings from turf wars between the gangs and their clashes with authorities escalated after he took office in December 2006, rising above 60,000 by the end of his six-year term.

After the Zetas went through a violent break-up with the Gulf Cartel - displacing it as the dominant gang in northeastern Mexico - they commanded more than 10,000 gunmen from Central America to the Rio Grande River marking the U.S.-Mexican border.

INTERNAL DISPUTE
Signs began to emerge last year that all was not well within the Zetas. Talk of an internal dispute surfaced, gathering pace with intelligence reports that some Zetas had massacred other members of the gang in the city of San Luis Potosi.

In the summer, banners accusing Trevino of being a "Judas" to then-Zetas leader Heriberto Lazcano began appearing in parts of Mexico. By early October, Lazcano was dead - shot by Mexican Marines - and Trevino's internal rival in the gang, Ivan Velazquez, alias "El Taliban," had been captured by the navy.

Since the start of this year, some towns ravaged by the Zetas have had increasing success in beating back the gang.

Improvement was noteworthy in places like the northern city of Torreon. Once cited as an example of Mexico's progress from a poor agrarian society to a rising industrial power, it suffered a 16-fold increase in homicides after the Zetas arrived in 2007, turning it into one of the most murderous cities in the world.

"Investment went down, bars and restaurants closed, and the night life came to an end," said Mayor Eduardo Olmos, a member of Pena Nieto's Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI.

Thanks to better investigative work and coordination, the Zetas are in retreat in Torreon, the mayor added. Olmos noted that murders in the city had fallen from around 115 in June 2012 to about 15 in June 2013.

Yet for all the optimism surrounding Trevino's capture, about a thousand murders linked to organized crime have been registered across Mexico every month since Pena Nieto took over.

That is a bit lower than during Calderon's presidency. But the run-up to local elections on July 7 was marred by the murders of several politicians, prompting one opposition lawmaker to call the campaign Mexico's most violent ever.

Pena Nieto has announced plans to shift the responsibility for battling the cartels away from the military and into a new, militarized police force - known as the national gendarmerie.

But there is also uncertainty about how Pena Nieto plans to realize his vision of making the gendarmerie the new spearhead.

Few details of the plan have been made public. All that is clear is that the force will initially number only 5,000, way below the figure of 40,000 Pena Nieto had proposed last year.

With the gendarmerie still in an "embryonic state," Guillermo Anaya, an opposition lawmaker who heads the committee for public security in the lower house of Congress, noted: "For now, the idea of taking the army and the navy back off the streets is unthinkable."

Mexico may have to contend with renewed violence on the Zetas turf as Trevino's lieutenants compete to succeed him after his capture in Nuevo Laredo.

On the sidelines, Mexico's most powerful capo, Joaquin Guzman, will be looking to profit, said George Grayson, a Mexico expert at the College of William & Mary in Virginia.

"'El Chapo' is greatly strengthened because he will now have access to the crown jewel of narco-trafficking, Nuevo Laredo," Grayson said.



US Knew the Movements of Z40 for 3 Years

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Chivis Martínez for Borderland Beat


Surmounts emotion injustice -Translation by "Friendly Girl"
For at least three years, United States agencies knew the movements of Miguel Angel Trevino Morales and other members of the Los Zetas, but elected not to report it to Mexico, until just a few weeks ago.
At least since 2011, the DEA knew of the operations and movements of Miguel Angel Trevino Morales.  DEA even got their agents to acquire information about Treviño's enemies and rivals in other cartels and within the Zetas, but this information was not handed over to Mexican authorities, federal government sources revealed.

Top-level officials consulted by 24 Horas, admitted to being annoyed because the U.S. drug enforcement agency maintains its own agenda, and that because of operations that they were allowed to perform during the last administration they obtained much information that was not shared with Mexico.  This resulted in allowing a drug trafficker such as Z-40 to operate without being detained, “because he was useful to them".
"This relationship with the United States must change, now the information must be shared and not administered by them, that is what we are working on,” said one of the sources.

After analyzing the information provided in the past three years by the DEA to the Federal Police, Navy and Army about Los Zetas, the researchers found a pattern and details by which they were able to establish that the DEA has informants within the structure of this paramilitary group.

But the details that caught the attention of Mexican officials the most is the information shows that for several years they had known about Z-40’s movements; some his safe houses in Tamaulipas, Veracruz and Coahuila, as well as his contacts in Mexico and the United States, and about some of the shootings of which he was responsible in Tamaulipas, for example.

In 2012, within the structure of Los Zetas, accusations against Heriberto Lazcano, "El Lazca", then group leader, and also Treviño Morales began. They were suspected of being whistleblowers against their own colleagues, the heads of plazas and Sicario cells.  After the death of Lazcano,  the accusations turned onto Z-40.
"We know for a fact that ' Z-40′ provided information on some of his rivals within his organization so that they were arrested and that the DEA gathered this information", said one of the officials.
That apparently happened in the cases of Raúl Lucio Hernández, Z-16, and Enrique Rejón Aguilar,"El Mamito", who were arrested in 2011.  The first one in December in Veracruz,  and Rejon Aguilar in July in the city of Mexico.
Other cases in which the Mexican authorities suspect that Z-40 also betrayed them are: Luis Reyes Enriquez, Z-12, Jamie González Durán, "El Hummer", and Daniel Pérez, "El Chachetes", captured between 2008 and 2009.
By the end of last year, Trevino Morales had to retract.  His power diminished within the cartel.  According to the updated information that the Mexican authorities have, this occurred since there were strong accusations of betrayals that he had committed to ascend within Los Zetas.  He was also pointed as being one of the responsible that "El Lazca" was killed by the Navy last year.
However, Treviño Morales, did not abandon the area of Tamaulipas and Coahuila, where he felt more protected and could have control of some of the drug operations, fuel theft and smuggling of migrants.  These activities provided him with fresh cash which he used to move around. 
He was also looking for new contacts with gangs in the United States. Apparently, information that he was providing was not so useful anymore, "so perhaps he was not so useful to the US agency anymore, and that is why they (DEA), a few weeks ago, gave information about his hideout, which they had known for a long time," said the official.
Source for the above article: 24Hours
Below by Chivis Martínez
Information and details about the capture has been flooding the internet.  Most of the information one can discount out of hand.  An example is that 40, “fled into the woods” interesting because the site of the capture is a  wide open dry desert with scrub vegetation.
The facial scratches and abrasions are likely while apprehending him during a throw down, onto  the unforgiving dessert floor.  Supposedly Treviño always travelled with bribe money in the millions. 
 
A BB reader stated that Treviño had a child.  This turns out to be true, an infant son who lives right outside Nuevo Laredo.  It is possible he was in route for one of his frequent visits, or returning from a visit.  On the map are three cities circled, circle on left is allegedly where he was living, middle circle where he was apprehended and the right circled city is where his son lives.
 
In an attempt to confuse authorities, typically he would change vehicles at least once, while travelling, depending on the distance. 
The entire operation lasted on seven minutes.
Treviño’s truck was not travelling on a paved road, but on a annex dirt road.
It was a black hawk helicopter donated by the U.S. through the Mérida Treaty.
He was travelling in a Ford F250, 2013 model, silver in color.
He was initially identified by his two known tattoos, a cobra on the inside forearm, and on his back one that read, “Made in Mexico” (Hecho en Mexico).  He freely identified himself as Miguel Treviño aka Z40.  DNA was taken.
He was taken to federal maximum prison Altiplano No1 in Almoloya de Juarez, in the state of Mexico.  It is the prison that “Jose Balderas aka “el JJ”( at left) is incarcerated in, serving a 3 year sentence for his complicity in the attempted murder of soccer player Salvador Cabañas.  Cabañas survived a gun shot to the head.
It was the same prison the five generals were held before being released.  The guards. at the maximum prisons have received American maximum prison training.  This program was operational under the Calderon administration
Other notorious inmates that were sent to No.1 and remain, escaped, extradited or released:

           Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo (known as "El Padrino" ("The Godfather")

           Édgar Valdez Villarreal "La Barbie" BLO
           Gerardo Álvarez Vásquez, alias "El Indio" BLO
           Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera, alias "El Chapo" Guzmán Sinaloa
           Ismael Ledesma Campos, "El May" "El Maycito":Leader of Los Ledesma kidnapping gang

           Eduardo Arellano Félix, "El Doctor" CAF
           Teodoro García Simental "El Teo", "K-1" or "El Tres Letras" Brutal former CAF lieutenant

           Jesús Zambada García "El Rey Zambada" Sinaloa
           Daniel Arizmendi López "El Mochaorejas" 

           Osiel Cárdenas Guillén alias "El Loco", "El Patrón", "Madrina" or "Mata Amigos" CDG
           Mario Aburto Martínez assassin of presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio.

           Francisco Rafael Arellano Félix - former leader of Tijuana Cartel
           Mario Villanueva - Former Governor of Quintana Roo

           Iván Guzmán Salazar (known as "El Chapito") CDS
           Jaime González Durán (known as "El Hummer" Zetas

           Vicente Zambada Niebla (Vicentillo) - son of Ismael Zambada CDS
           Marco Antonio Garcia Simental (known as "El Cris" or "El 8-9") - CAF  Brother of Teo

American Teen Sicario Describes Working with Zetas

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Borderland Beat
this story is making the rounds, below is a BB repost of the Black Kiss. Caution: consider the source

Gabriel Cardona and Rosalio ‘Bart’ (as in Bart Simpson) Reta are American citizens of the border town of Laredo, Texas. They were raised in poverty and with the many problems inherent to poverty.  When developing  to the teenage years, they had dropped out of school and had become friends with bad influences. Seduced by the promises of easy money, faster cars and an abundance of girls, the two childhood friends soon joined the despicable cartel of Los Zetas.

This group of mercenaries and narcos trained them to kill, and the two young boys started to work as hit men. They were paid ahead of time; they lived in safe houses in upper class neighborhoods of  Laredo Texas, where those hard working successful citizens were clueless that the new family in the neighborhood were teen sicarios.  The teens worked a five day work week, on call, ready for the order for them  to kill on both sides of the border. They were paid up to $10,000 dollars and 2 kilos of cocaine for each job, and  bonuses like a 70 thousand dollar Mercedes for a well-executed job

“You know, it’s the money, the cars, the houses, the girls,” Rosalio Reta said, after a pause, “And you know that it will not last forever, that it will end.” He said

In April of 2006, Cardona was arrested in Texas during an operation coordinated by Roberto Garcia, a detective from Laredo. The 19 year old teenager confessed to have participated in seven murders and involved Reta, among others.  Reta fled to Mexico.

Cardona also confessed to have kidnapped two American teenagers, members of a rival cartel. Erupting in laugher, his mocking description of their pleas was heard  by the detective as he monitored the conversation. 
Despite the captives plea, he tortured them and stabbed them then  killing them with a broken bottle. In  the hacked phone conversation between Cardona and Reta, Cardona describes how he collected the blood of the dying bodies in a glass and toasted to the Santa Muerte (Holy Death), the female deity of death. He placed the bodies in a barrel with 55 gallons of diesel, to preparing to cook them and set them on fire
A month later, Reta was arrested in Mexico for being involved in a vain assassination attempt in a bar in Monterrey. Alleged to have killed four and injured twenty five when he opened fire and threw a grenade inside the popular bar. Even then, he didn’t  kill his victim and the Zetas wanted him dead . Reta contacted Roberto Garcia from jail and asked to be extradited to the United States. There, in a recorded interview he confessed to have committed 30 murders.

Gabriel Cardona currently is serving a sentence of 80 years for five homicides, in which afterwards- if he is still alive- will serve a sentence of life for the kidnappings. While awaiting his trial, Cardona, asked a convicted companion to tattooed open eyes in his eyelids. In 2008 Reta was sentenced to 70 years for two murders in Laredo. He also asked a prisoner to tattooed flames and horns on the face.

CBC released a video with the backstory information and interview with the young killer "Bart" Reta. 
 
Part of the wiretap click to- enlarge (sorry about the quality):
 

Mexican 42nd Military Zone gets new commander

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By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

The new commander of the Mexican 42nd Military Zone said last week that the Mexican Army will permanently be deployed to the sierras to fight drug trafficking and cultivation, according to Mexican news accounts.

According to a news account which appeared last week in Norte Digital news website, General de Brigada Ricardo Diaz Palacio attended a drug incinerating ceremony in Cuauhtemoc municipality, attended also by Chihuahua state governor Cesar Duarte Jaquez.

According to reports, General Diaz Palacio took over command of the Mexican 42nd Military Zone July 1st, which is a normal date for command shuffling in the Mexican Army, after having been commander of the 29th Military Zone in Minatitlan, Veracruz in 2011 just before he received his second star, thru 2012.  He had been intelligence chief in the Matamoros army garrison in Tamaulipas before being assigned to the 29th Military Zone  As a Brigadier General he was also chief of operations for the Mexican Army general staff in 2008.

General Diaz Palacio takes over command of the 42nd Military from General General Miguel Andrade Cisneros, who was appointed as commander last December.

The July 1st date in this context means that new appointments to military regions and zones are the first under the new Secretaria de Defensa Nacional (SEDENA), so actions taken by the army after this date will could set the tone for the army for the rest of the term of newly inaugurated president Enrique Pena.

General Diaz Palacio's remarks about a permanent army deployment mirror remarks made by other army commanders, including the statement that the Mexican Army "works alone" and in coordination with state and local security forces.  The remarks about permanent army deployments seem to reverse a campaign promise made by President Pena about the military being sent to the barracks as a measure to reduce violence.

Indeed in remarks he made while he was in Mexico City on SEDENA's general staff in 2008, he discounted the charge long made by the Mexican left that the presence of the army in a region increases violence in the region

Violence in southern Chihuahua state, part of Mexico's Triangulo Dorada or Golden Triangle has seen a sharp increase since the end of spring.  One of the worst problems in Guadalupe y Calvo municipality has been that of criminal groups forming road blocks, especially between Guadalupe y Calvo municipal seat and Parral de Hidalgo.  At least two ambushes involving armed criminals against civilians have taken place in just the last 45 days along that stretch of road.

According to a news account which appeared last week in El Diario de Juarez, at least four roadblocks have been reported by armed groups on the road between the two municipalities, specifically near Mesa de San Rafael, despite an increase in the numbers of federal security forces in the region.  Criminal groups at those blocks are allowing only the elderly, women and children through, which indicates those groups may be using the roadblock for recruiting purposes for men.

The fear of roadblocks in the area is so acute, according to a separate news account which appeared in El Diario de Juarez, an air service had been established between the two points for passengers only.  Also bus drivers are refusing to take on any male passengers because of recruiting efforts in the region.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com and BorderlandBeat.com He can be reached at grurkka@gmail.com

Insider gave up "El Teo" to help "clean up my country".

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Borderland Beat Posted by "Siskiyou_Kid" on BB Forum


Teodoro Garcia Simental aka "El Teo".
Capture of Mexican mob boss began with a fed-up informant

By Richard Marosi 

TIJUANA — The informant paid his own way to Mexico City and strode into a hotel room in an upscale neighborhood, willing to end the reign of one of Mexico's most brutal crime bosses. 

He wanted money, he told four Drug Enforcement Administration agents, but that wasn't his primary motivation. The Tijuana drug cartel insider said he had grown disgusted by the savagery of Teodoro "El Teo" Garcia Simental — the pudgy kingpin whose criminal mayhem was generating headlines around the world. 

Baja California, once a popular destination for day-tripping Americans, had become one of Mexico's most violent regions. Army soldiers patrolled in convoys and manned bunkers flanking highways. Torture victims' bodies hung from overpasses, and once-crowded beaches became playgrounds for mob bosses and their entourages. 

Sitting across from the agents in a double-locked hotel room that day in late 2009, the informant handed over his cellphone. It listed a number he said was Garcia's. An agent wrote it down. 

"This is something I can do to clean up my country," the informant said, according to an agent, who added: "He wanted to do his obligation as a citizen." 

That meeting, not previously disclosed, set off an investigation that quickly culminated with Garcia's arrest during a predawn raid on his hideout in La Paz, in southeastern Baja. In a drug war plagued by setbacks and mistrust between U.S. and Mexican law enforcement, the capture was an example of binational cooperation that brought instant, lasting results. 

The hunt for cartel chieftains yielded another major success Monday, when Mexican marines seized Miguel Angel Treviño Morales, the notorious commander of the Zeta organization. Like Garcia, he was known for extreme brutality. 

When Garcia was captured three years ago, the beheadings, massacres, high-speed chases and daytime shootings stopped in Baja. Restaurant tables in Tijuana started filling up again, cops were no longer targeted, and some of the thousands of people who had relocated to San Diego started moving back into the city. 


In the years immediately before the raid, such a scenario was hard to imagine. 

Garcia was a "Batman"-esque villain whose lieutenants included a man sporting skull tattoos for every murder he committed and a former bricklayer whose sole job was to dissolve enemies in barrels of lye. 

The Tijuana organized crime group that spawned Garcia, better known as the Arellano Felix drug cartel, had long operated in Tijuana, largely tolerated under an unwritten code: Criminals were free to move their drugs to the U.S. as long as they kept their bloodletting among rivals. 

Garcia broke all the rules. 

A onetime enforcer, he assembled his own crew and started targeting the citizenry, kidnapping hundreds and holding them for ransom. Garcia extorted shoeshine vendors and human smugglers alike and roamed his east Tijuana stronghold in a convoy of 10 vehicles. 

In April 2008, Garcia's clash with a cartel rival left 14 dead on a highway, triggering a drug war that introduced a style of terror that would become commonplace across Mexico. Garcia's rivals weren't just killed; they were mutilated and had their tongues cut out. They were rolled in carpet and set aflame. Many were beheaded and tossed onto busy streets. 

U.S. authorities in San Diego watched the carnage with growing concern. They had demolished the cartel's upper ranks through arrests and prosecutions, only to watch the once-obscure Garcia ascend. In a 2008 intelligence report, the FBI expressed concern that drug war violence would spill over the border, noting that senior members of Garcia's gang lived in downtown San Diego. 

Some federal agents and prosecutors wanted to indict Garcia and have him extradited to the U.S.; others said the situation was too urgent to wait for a case to be put together. 

"We always wanted to press charges on Teo, but when you're listening to death and destruction every day and the kidnapping of people, you just can't allow it" to go on, said one high-ranking U.S. law enforcement official who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity because of security concerns. 

Garcia expertly eluded capture. He constantly switched phones and rarely called twice from the same location. Police informants alerted him at the first sign of trouble, most memorably in 2009, when Garcia and his cronies escaped a raid at his rented oceanfront cottage by running down the beach. 

U.S. authorities did have a tenacious ally: Tijuana's then-secretary of public safety, Julian Leyzaola. His 2,000-officer police force had once functioned as little more than an arm of organized crime, but Leyzaola had purged hundreds. 

The remaining cops were caught between the professional demands of Leyzaola and the death threats and bribes of the shadowy crime boss. Forty-five officers eventually died at the hands of Garcia's gunmen. 

Leyzaola came close to capturing Garcia in August 2008. After seeing Garcia's convoy of Tahoes and Suburbans filling up at a gas station, his team gave chase at speeds up to 150 mph. Leyzaola's heavily armored vehicle bottomed out in the dirt in a hilly area, and Garcia got away. But the constant pressure forced Garcia to move out of the city, still in charge but vulnerable. 

The informant decided to act. 

Though the DEA has an office at the U.S. Consulate in Tijuana, the informant chose to make contact with U.S. authorites far away from Baja California. He called the DEA at its regional headquarters at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City. 

The DEA was accustomed to receiving blustering types who exaggerated their claims in search of a quick payday. This source wasn't like that. He had paid for his flight to Mexico City, for one thing. And his working knowledge of the organization matched the DEA's information. 

He also had no criminal record, was well-dressed and sported a professional attitude. "He was a cool, collected person," said one agent who was in the hotel room. "That's what triggered our interest. This source wasn't fishing for how much he was going to get paid." 

Agents analyzed call records and determined that the telephone number he gave them was indeed Garcia's. Within weeks, they had tracked Garcia to an upscale development near Cabo San Lucas. 

The agents contacted a Mexico City-based federal police commander whose highly trained unit had partnered with the agency on other kingpin arrests. "When you have a good lead, you need to act fast," said Gary Hill, assistant special agent in charge at the DEA's San Diego office. 

The target information remained secret. No local police in La Paz were notified, and only three members of the squad were told whom they were pursuing. 

Early on Jan. 12, 2010, 100 federal police flew into La Paz and boarded two tour buses. When the drivers saw the masked lawmen filling the aisles, they refused to drive until they were given a bonus. 

The buses parked on either end of Garcia's street. As a Blackhawk helicopter circled overhead, the team rammed open the palm-flanked front door and swarmed in. Balloons from Garcia's daughter's birthday party the day before floated in the living room. Rousted from bed, Garcia scrambled onto a balcony and was caught trying to get on the roof. 


Teodoro Garcia Simental´s home at the moment of his arrest.

No weapons were found. Garcia had been caught by surprise, in his "tighty whities," as one U.S. agent described it. 

"There were 100 guys preparing for the worst and, turns out, it was just a guy in his underwear," one agent said. 

Even with Garcia's arrest, organized crime in Baja California is far from eliminated. Authorities believe that the Sinaloa drug cartel has taken over and that given the region's proximity to U.S. drug markets, it will remain a heavily contested trafficking corridor. 

But a semblance of order has been restored. 

These days, Baja California is better known for its funky nightlife in downtown Tijuana, the beloved Mexican soccer league champion, Xolos de Tijuana, and the seafood-infused Baja-Med cuisine that draws celebrity chefs and foodies from around the world. 

"Instead of being dominated by fear, now civic life revolves around hope, and that leads to much better things in the future," then-President Felipe Calderon said in a 2010 interview with The Times. 

Three years later, Garcia remains locked up in a high-security prison outside Mexico City. 

And the informant from Baja California who made it all happen? Said one agent: "He's still alive, living happily, in that general area." 

32 musicians from Iztapalapa disappear after a trip to Tlaxcala

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Borderland Beat


One Updated Version-Returning Iztapalapa Musicians Were in Puebla
Mexico City - The 32 musicians of Iztapalapa, whose relatives had reported them as missing in Tlaxcala were returned unharmed to their homes.

According to testimony, it was a misunderstanding and that they could not communicate with their families due to lack of cell phone signal in the community where they were. The state of Puebla and Tlaxcala has reported details or who had attended .

The musicians of La Devastadora Banda Imperial, and la Tremenda del Pueblo noted that while the locals were not allowed to leave the village, they wanted them to play longer.

Original story
Nothing is known of the 32 musicians of La Devastadora Banda Imperial, and La Tremenda del Pueblo. Their families are desperate. They're investigating whether the kidnapping may be narco related.

This scenario feels reminiscent of the disappearance of the 12 youths from the Zona Rosa bar Heaven in Mexico City and of course the tragic kidnapping/murder of Kombo Kolombia.
The missing 32 members of the two bands are between the ages of 15 and 40 years old.  They departed from the capital on Sunday, heading to a town in the state of Tlaxcala, near the capital. Members of La Devastadora Banda Imperial were from the neighborhood Paraje Zacatepec,  and La Tremenda del Pueblo came from the Santa María Aztahuacán neighborhood, in the Izatapalapa area, of eastern Mexico City. The members were hired by a person who sent a bus to transport them to play a party.

According to the newspaper Excelsior , the bands were hired to play at a celebration in the city of Tlaxcala, about 150 kilometers from the capital. A group of friends went to Tlaxcala, to try to locate the musicians, but until now they were told that there had been no fiesta scheduled in that city.

"What we know is that the contractor explained that one of his conditions was that the two bands ride to the fiesta on the same bus, and they would provide the  round trip transportation, and artists would caravan to the event." said the mother of one of the musicians.

Family members were not concerned about the musicians until last night when one of them sent a text message saying that his bandmates had not been let out and "the people have retained them" without giving further details, but he said that he had escaped . "We tried to communicate with them, but none of our calls and messages were answered," said one of the mothers.

"All I know is that there was no Tlaxcala fiesta, the people arrived a few hours ago and no one knew of the bands. We do not know what to do or where to look," said an anguished  parent by telephone.


Armed Commmando open fire at Protesters in Los Reyes, Mich.

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Borderland Beat

From Various sources
We are getting news from Los Reyes, Michaocan where sources report that at about 1330 hours a convoy of heavily armed commandos opened fire on hundreds of protesters killing at least four or five volunteers who were comprised of the "community Police."  It is reported that a large number of people are said to be injured from the gun fire.
 
Hundreds of members of  the community had gathered around the city hall plaza to protest the presence of the organized crime, Los Reyes is a strong hold of Knights Templar who rule the region with violence. The protesters were going to take over the city hall and were wanting to relive of duty most of the municipal police. 
 
The armed commando was said to be heavily armed with high powered rifles and shot at the protesters, mainly targeting the Community Police (CP) members providing security. The CP was wearing white shirts with a message of "For a free Los Reyes." Numerous victims were tended and the military and federal police arrived within hours to secure the town. 

There is a rumor ciculating among Twitter and Facebook that the commando responsible for the massacre are possibly municipal police of Los Reyes and the mayor of the town had fled the area during the protest. The news from the region is sketchy and the only news coming out is from social networks. 
 
The governor of Michoacán, Jesús Reyna, through his Twitter account said that he spoke with the mayor who assured him that currently the town is in the control of the military and federal police. The military general Alberto Reyes has been assigned to provide security to it's citizens. 
There have been increase violent activity in the region and there have been clashes between the CP and the Knights Templar (Caballeros Templarios or CT) who are resisting any effort from all fronts. The CT is fighting to regain lost territory in the region that has prompted President Pena Nieto to reinforce the region with forces from the military and federal police.
 
People in towns around the region that have no security and can't rely on the municipal police are getting picked out at random and killed. Suspected members of the CT abduct citizens in the middle of the night and execute them before throwing their heads on the street or hanging them on the entrances to the towns.
 

La Barbie’s In-Law Pleads Guilty and Shares Secrets

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Chivis Martínez for Borderland Beat
 
The attention to the apprehension of Miguel Treviño Morales, a.k.a Z40, brings to mind another high profile capture that has faded from the headlines.   Since his 2010 capture the  American born narco boss, Edgar “La Barbie” Valdez, has been sitting in Mexico’s supermax prison; Altiplano No1 in Almoloya de Juarez, in the state of Mexico. 

Altiplano No.1 is the same prison that Treviño now occupies.  It is the only prison in Mexico globally recognized as a true supermax prison, there has never been a successful prison break from No.1. 
It has been three years when the Texas born capo was captured in August 2010, in a rural area outside Mexico City.  AT the time of his capture, Valdez, 39, was with his teenaged wife, daughter of Carlos Montemayor González, 39, a.k.a., El Charro (photo at left).  Valdez' was another capture of a high profile narco, sans gunfire.

The dual citizenship holder, Mexican-American Valdez was born and raised in Laredo, Texas, who became involved with the enforcer group “Los Negros”, the group worked for the Beltrán-Leyva Cartel (BLO)  under the leadership of Arturo Beltrán Leyva.  Valdez rose to the top of Los Negros and its leadership by the time Arturo Beltrán Leyva, leader of BLO was killed in 2009. 
After the death of Arturo Beltrán, Valdez fought a bloody, prolonged war for control of the cartel that resulted in over 150 deaths.  Valdez is accredited with employing methods of terror such as video-taping torture and decapitations.  He is accredited with being the first to video tape decapitations and release the footage to the public.  The videos found their way to narco blogs and other social media outlets.
After the arrest of Valdez, his group collapsed by 2011.
The peculiar behavior of Valdez, subsequent to his arrest, caused for speculation that he turned himself in and had cut a deal with Mexico, the US or both.  The narco-polo wearing capo was exhibiting  an “'I've got a secret” grin,  that at times, even in his perp presentation, would cause him to bow his head from a fit of the  giggles. 

The extradition request from the United States appears to be in limbo, and it is uncertain how the new administration of Enrique Peña Nieto will handle the request.  Since charges are pending in both nations, he could be tried sequentially. Thereby, if convicted in one country, after serving his sentence, being extradited to the other, another trial and another possible prison sentence. 

It was thought his extradition was imminent in fall of 2012, at which time Valdez wrote a rambling letter declaring his detention was the result of "political persecution" by then president Calderon.  Further he claimed that Calderon had called for a meeting with various cartels.
Valdez is being represented by the prominent Houston attorney, Kent Schaffer who has expressed concern for the security of his client,  especially while he is held in Mexico.   He has been held in a one man cell. 

Some information about the interworking’s of the Valdez operation was revealed last week when Juan Montemayor, 47,  pled guilty to U.S. federal charges of cocaine trafficking.  Juan is the brother of Valdez’ father-in-law Carlos.  Juan served as the primary contact person for one of the more significant U.S. customers, Manuel Coronado Espindola, of Atlanta Georgia.

Juan’s plea document traces wiretaps, the operation of Valdez and his transition from a local dealer in Laredo to his move into Mexico where he became a major player in the Mexican drug war.

Simulation Video of Z40 Capture

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Borderland Beat

I saw this simulation of the capture when it was released last week and had wanted to translate the narrative, and then post, but have not had time.  Texcoco posted it today as is, and I thought readers could follow it enough without English narrative...Paz, Chivis

Violence explodes in southern Tamaulipas after Z-40 detention

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At least 10 unidentified individuals have been killed and several more wounded in southern Tamaulipas state, the result of the aftermath of the capture of Los Zetas leader Miguel Angel Treviño Morales, AKA Z-40 according to Mexican news reports.

An APRO wire dispatch which appeared in the online edition of El Diario de Coahuila news daily said that operatives with the Gulf Cartel had been firing indiscriminately over a two day period at residents of ejido Fe del Golfo in Jimenez municipality last Sunday.

According to the report several Gulf Cartel shooters arrived at the ejido and ordered residents to leave, firing on them as they did.

The reason why the ejido was ordered to vacate was not clear.  The Gulf Cartel maintains a logistics and training camp in the region said to house as many as 100 shooters.  The camp is so large, according to the report, Mexican Army and Tamauliupas state security troops refuse to enter the area.  Abasolo municipality is also reportedly another no go zone for federal and state security elements.

Unconfirmed reports have been made of armed confrontations between armed suspects and detachments of Mexican Naval Infantry in Gonzalez and Magiscatzin municipalities.  At least eight armed suspects have been killed in Magiscatzin municipality.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com and Borderlandbeat.com He can be reached at grurkka@gmail.com

6 die in shootout in southern Chihuahua

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By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A total of six individuals have died in ongoing drug and gang related violence in southern Chihuahua state,  according to Mexican news reprots.

Tuesday reports reached the delegate for the Chihuahua state Fiscalia General del Estado (FGE) or attorney general that a shootout between rival gangs had left six dead in Guadalupe y Calvo municipality

According to a report which appeared in the online edition of El Diario de Chihuahua news daily, an anonymous tip was phoned in Sunday about the gunfight, but security forces had not been able to reached the area, said to be near Mesa de la Reforma, which is now a trouble spot for drug gang violence including kidnapping in Guadalupe y Calvo municipality.  Drug gangs are known to put up roadblocks in that region specifically to press into service any captured male victims traveling through the area.

In the location of the shootout, according to a separate news account which appeared in the website of El Diario de Coahuila news daily, some of the dead were found donned in the uniforms of Chihuahua state police agents.  Chihuahua state Policia Estatal Unica and ministerial  agents had been unable to reached the area due to heavy rains and flooding until Tuesday morning.  The shootout was said to have taken place Sunday afternoon.

At the scene of the shootout, police found 389 spent cartridge casings for AK-47 rifles as well as a 1999 GMC pickup truck damaged from gunfire.  Two of the six dead were identified as Cristian Noriel Mendivil Carrillo, 20, of Dolores, and Isaac Gutierrez Gutierre, 19, of La Mesa de Reforma.  Two of the six victims had been beheaded though the report failed to note if the two identified victims were the victims who had been mutilated.

Police also found six building damaged by fire in a nearby abandoned area and they seized seven vehicles.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com and Borderlandbeat.com He can be reached at grurkka@gmail.com
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