La Rancherita
Criminal Investigation
Agents completed an arrest warrant against a person who is reported to have
participated in the massacre that occurred in the municipality of Allende and
other crimes in the region, in the years of 2010 to 2012.
The detainee was
identified as Juan Manuel "N". He had an arrest warrant from the year
2012, accused of having participated in several kidnappings and homicides. In
collaboration with other individuals, several people disappeared in the
northern region of Coahuila.
The State Prosecutor's
Office in coordination with Chiapas authorities, thanks to the coordination
they have, managed to capture the person who was transferred to Piedras Negras
to answer for the crimes in which he is involved.
Víctor Gerardo
Rodríguez Lozano, delegate of the Prosecutor's Office in the North One area,
announced that he had completed the arrest warrant and that in the next few
hours he would be presented before a judge in charge of the accusatory criminal
system to carry out the initial hearing of the process.
At the time the accused
was mentioned for participating in kidnappings and murders under the command of
the Zetas criminal group. Criminal Investigation Agents completed an arrest
warrant against a person who is reported to have participated in the massacre
that occurred in the municipality of Allende and other crimes in the region, in
the years of 2010 to 2012.
.--end--
Allende
Massacre [Chivis]
In 2010 Tamaulipas
became a black out narco news state.
Coahuila was a black out state even prior to 2010. In 2010 the SDR
tuitero movement began with #ReynosaFollow leading the way. This movement
filled the vacuum created by the conventional blackout media. By using social media, these warriors were
able to send out warnings and reports of situations at risk in Tamaulipas, and
joining states such as Coahuila, of narco roadblocks, shoot-outs, and other
dangerous situations. This is a very
perilous endeavor that cost the lives of Tamaulipas bloggers, some decapitated,
hanged, and one, a doctor, abducted, made to “confess” on her twitter account
and killed.
[read this BB article from the time of the massacre-much of the info was from resident witnesses sent to Borderland Beat, use this link]
Sarah Angelita Lira, pharmacist and wife of victim Rodolfo Garza, Jr.: My husband, Rodolfo, arrived. He told me, “My head is killing me. I’m going to take a shower.” He was completely covered in soot because he was opening a new coal mine. After a while his phone started ringing. I thought he had gone to lie down, but he came out of the bedroom, fully dressed, and he looked me in the eye in a way I had never seen before. “Don’t leave the house,” he told me. “There’s something going on. I don’t know what it is. But don’t leave the house. I’ll be back.”
The fires and violence
continued for days. 300 to 500 people
were abducted, killed and incinerated. It was on a Friday when hell came to
Allende. Witnesses reported seeing dozens
upon dozens upon dozens of vehicles in the Zetas convoys.
One could see the smoke
from afar, yet the news was void of reports, I along with everyone else in the
area could see with our eyes, yet nothing reported. Residents were left to word on the street in
this narco news blackout state.
On March 18, 2011 we
were driving from, Monterrey Nuevo Leon on Hwy 57, when we saw the smoke
ahead. We saw a narco convoy and first
responders but as in many other incidents of violence, the fire department were
warned not to intervene.[see what the fire chief had to say below] Residents flooded the emergency center with
pleas for help, but help never arrived.
We decided to turn
around and go through Tamaulipas and up through Texas and across to Del Rio and
into Mexico that way.
We began hearing word
passed from person to person with respect to what was happening in
Allende. The never ending smoke was
never addressed specifically, we heard Zetas were torching and destroying homes
and killing people. Later we learned the
horrific truth. The smoke was from the
incineration of hundreds of people. It
is unknown to all but the executioners if they were burned alive.
I was scared far more
than I ever had been while in Mexico, yet strangely residents didn’t share the
same level of fear as I. For example on
the second day we had a function at a school in Piedras Negras, yet traveling
there was dangerous. I didn’t want us to
go. My staff said in the day time it
would be ok. They went--- I didn’t. They teased me for my fear; I scolded them
for their lack of fear.
La Nena was butchered for her blog reports-her head was posed atop her laptop. 5 narco bloggers were murdered. |
Blackout
Narco News State
Nena was a blogger and an editor of a mainstream newspaper |
These brave citizen
reporters have saved countless lives. One of our reporters at BB joined the
group in Tamaulipas who created a manifesto that was published to the world.
The word and warnings on the street became reports on social media.
And this was how we
were able to receive any reports of what was happening in Allende.
The reason for the
attack was a massive betrayal by Zeta members
Millions of dollars
were stolen from the cartel by Mario Alfonso "Poncho" Cuéllar, Héctor
Moreno Villanueva and José Luis Garza Gaytán, alleged members of the Zetas, who
betrayed the Zetas and fled from Coahuila to the United States. In their hands between
5 and 10 million dollars of profits for the transfer of drugs and the ledger.
They left Coahuila for good, but left many relatives behind---in Allende.
Cuellar, Moreno and
Garza fled to the United States where they began rethinking their actions. Realizing they were between a rock and a hard
spot, Cuellar and Moreno approached the DEA and offered their serves as
cooperative witnesses in exchange for entry into the protected witness program.
Cuellar claims before
he left Coahuila, Cuellar warned those who worked for him and relatives to
escape.
Most of the family
members lived in the region of [5] Cinco
Mamtiales [Five Springs] area near Piedras Negras and Allende had the most of
the family as residents. Allende straddles
Federal Highway 57.
Some U.S. reports
fixated on the cooperation with DEA as the reason for the revenge, but in reality,
that was insult to injury and they were already tagged because of the money.
Family and whomever happened to be in the homes at the time, paid the price for the betrayal.
[read this BB article from the time of the massacre-much of the info was from resident witnesses sent to Borderland Beat, use this link]
Below are personal
accounts from a National Geographic report.
Guadalupe García,
retired government worker: We were eating at Los Compadres, and two guys came
in. We could tell they weren’t from here. They looked different. They were
kids—18 to 20 years old. They ordered 50 hamburgers to go. That’s when we
figured something was going on, and we decided we’d better get home.
Martín Márquez, hot dog
vendor: Things began happening in the evening. Armed men began arriving. They
were going house to house, looking for the people who had done them wrong. At
11 at night there was no traffic on the streets. There was no movement of any
kind.
Etelvina Rodríguez,
middle school teacher and wife of victim Everardo Elizondo: My husband,
Everardo, usually came home between 7 and 7:30 at night. I was waiting for him.
Time passed—7, 7:30, 8, 9. I began calling him. The phone was not in service. I
thought maybe he was at his mother’s house and his battery had died. I called
his mother. She told me that she hadn’t seen him and that maybe he was out with
friends. But that didn’t make sense to me. He would have called. So I went out
looking for him.
The atmosphere felt
tense. It was nine at night, which was not very late, not on a Friday. The town
was completely deserted.
A few miles outside of
town, the gunmen descended on several neighboring ranches along a dimly lit
two-lane highway. The properties belonged to one of Allende’s oldest clans, the
Garzas. The family mostly raised livestock and did odd contracting jobs,
including coal mining. But according to family members, some of them also
worked for the cartel.;Now those connections
were proving deadly. Among those the Zetas suspected of being a snitch—wrongly
it turns out—was José Luis Garza, Jr., a relatively low-level cartel operative,
whose father, Luis, owned one of the ranches. It was payday, and several
workers had gone to the ranch to pick up their money. When the gunmen showed
up, they rounded up everyone up they could find and took them hostage. After
nightfall, flames began rising from one of the ranch’s large cinder-block
storage sheds. The Zetas had begun burning the bodies of some of those they’d
killed.
click to enlarge |
Sarah Angelita Lira, pharmacist and wife of victim Rodolfo Garza, Jr.: My husband, Rodolfo, arrived. He told me, “My head is killing me. I’m going to take a shower.” He was completely covered in soot because he was opening a new coal mine. After a while his phone started ringing. I thought he had gone to lie down, but he came out of the bedroom, fully dressed, and he looked me in the eye in a way I had never seen before. “Don’t leave the house,” he told me. “There’s something going on. I don’t know what it is. But don’t leave the house. I’ll be back.”
After a while, Rodolfo
called me. “Get out of the house,” he said. “And don’t go in our truck.” He
told me to ask my cousin to take our daughter, Sofía, and me to my mother’s
house.
His uncle Luis’s ranch
was on fire. And there were a lot of armed men standing outside the gate. His
sister wasn’t answering her phone. His father wasn’t answering either. He sent
one of his workers, Pilo, to the gate to see what was going on. Pilo had been
in the military. The gunmen opened the gate. Pilo went in. But he never came
out.
Rodolfo was
inconsolable. He couldn’t find his parents. He couldn’t find his sister. And
now his best worker was gone. He told me he was going to try to sneak onto the
ranch through the back.
A few minutes later, he
called again. He was speaking so softly I could barely hear him. He told me to
get out of Allende. “Tell your cousin to take you to Eagle Pass. Don’t pack.
Just go.”
Evaristo Treviño (no
relation to Zetas leaders), former fire chief: Officers under my command
responded to reports of a fire at one of the Garza ranches. We’re talking about
less than three kilometers away from Allende. It appeared that the Garza family
was having some kind of gathering. Among the first responders was a group of
firefighters with a backup engine. They noticed there were certain people
connected to criminal organizations, who told them, in vulgar terms and at
gunpoint, to withdraw. They said there were going to be numerous incidents. We
were going to get numerous emergency calls about gunshots, fires, and things
like that. They told us we were not authorized to respond.
In my capacity as fire
chief, what I did was to advise my boss, who in this case was the mayor. I told
him that we were facing an impossible situation and that the only thing we
could do was to stand down, out of fear of the threats we faced. There were too
many armed men. We were afraid for our lives. We couldn’t fight bullets with
water.
RIP Miut3, and all other valiant people. Dr K
ReplyDelete💔💔💔💔💔 She and 4 other bloggers were murdered for their blogging--who can get the image of La Nena's decapitated body and her head on display atop her laptop? DEP-RIP brave souls
Deletehttp://www.borderlandbeat.com/2011/09/woman-decapitated-in-mexico-for-web.html
This is one of those saddest stories I’ve read yet, I don’t ever remember this ever reaching the news in the US...what a disgusting thing to have happened, no words can fully describe it...those poor people killed just for reporting things to keep others safe. The world is a sick place
DeleteThis is for the 2nd Allende massacre?
Delete"Stand down"... cowards.
ReplyDeleteThey are the Fire brigade, not a infantry brigade
DeleteAnd what would you of done huh big boy... Put your rings together and summoned captain planet???
DeleteGreat job, Chivisssssss !
ReplyDelete❤Thank you Sista!!!
DeleteOnly in Mexico...
Delete11:47 one Massacre at a time, this one is from Allende Coahuila, and the governor Bertie Boy Moreira made millions from the zeta compadres and from the news blackout, he owns radio TV and print news, the black out helped him get about 30 000 million pesos loans in dollars from international banksters that nkww ant to collect from the citizens of cuaguila who now own the debt by law commissioned by brother El Pelon Ruben Moreira from the state congress. Some of the money ended in EPN pockets.
DeleteSad scary events, but great insight Chivis. I can feel the fear in the residents by reading this article. Waiting for part 2
ReplyDeleteDamn imagine calling 911 for help and the fire department just hanging around unable to help you since they are being told not to intervene.. smh so fucked up in many ways
ReplyDeleteImagine using the same name to post as the people that committed these atrocities. What a dumbass smh
DeleteC,mon man,its a term used by many not just cartels,CJNG use la mera verga,stop bein a bellend and shurrup.C
DeletePoncho Cuelar left all these people defenceless and unknowing that a storm of violence was coming their way.
Cuelar,what a dog
One of the most sad things, I've ever read about. I hope those guys never sleep again. How could you, when you know your greed caused that much loss of life, and then you don't even get the money. WITSEC isn't that luxurious. If I were an LE officer, I'd drop dime on these worthless pigs. Over 300 dead....for 5 or 6 million??? Split 3 ways? These guys may be the biggest idiots in the history of criminals, and that's a broad statement.
ReplyDeleteHa.
DeleteE42
6:28 the principle of obedience due saves the the troops, the oath of silence saves the brass, it did not work too good for the nazis in their trials at Nuremberg, but modern fascists have learned to work around the ethics and the morals of getting away with murder. Lately I have seen new videos where Mexicans and Argentinian and others root for the Chilean army "singing" Adios al 7o de Linea, like somebody is promoting the Nazi look of a "real army". With their little concentration camps, genocides, disappearances, mass graves, to be ready for the real thing ASAP.
DeleteRojo
DeleteExacly dude,the blame is with the 3 of them,Cuelar was high up in the Z and knew no doubt what the Z would do,he left family members,innocent people,visitors to house's, to the Zetas wrath for his greed,what a fuckin rat.Many of these people didn't even know why they had been picked up ?
For those who dont believe in the devil or hell well heres living proof right here that they are all too real! I cant imagine having to live like that but these demons time is short and there will be NO escaping or bribing their way out of hell!
ReplyDeleteHell is too good for anyone who commits horrors like this.... especially Innocents who have nothing to do with it. I cannot even think of a punishment severe enough for these absolute bottom feeding cowardly subhumans.
DeleteThis is real life not devil or hell fantasies.
Delete5:24 the go rrnme t does not have the whole list of the military in the nearby army bases that refused to help, they have nominas, soldiers in the area got paid, police too, and they know who the zetas were there;arresting one guy for the whole horror does nothing to punish this zeta crime of state.
DeleteYeah man you cant blame the Devil for this . This is stupid Human Bullshit .
DeleteSince when did BB become a religious outpost of the reality of hell and satan himself?
DeleteMay as well hand out pamphlets.
4:12 what reality of "hell and satan himself?"
DeleteYou don't miss a chance to profess either.
Hands down, this is the most informative eye witness account of the massacre. Bravo!
ReplyDeleteNow allende coahuila has an army base. Not just in that town but all over that state. Tamaulipas also constructed army and navy bases.
ReplyDeleteThey had them at the time. those in Acuna and PN were minutes away.
Deletethe one in PN is a "mega military force" [105] which as all else in coahuila is corrupted.
they have supposed to have a naval base in acuna built, which they have said for 5 years.
other added security, the installation of one thousand surveillance cameras in the municipalities of Acuña, Monclova, Piedras Negras, Sabinas, Saltillo and Torreón.
Very true, Chivis. The bases and checkpoints are useless, either the military is in bed with them or the guys use the backroads to go around the checkpoints. I can't count how many times we have driven thru checkpoints and they just wave us thru without a single question. We go to Allende and the 5 Manantiales often and i always think about the accounts you have written about....some of the places i have seen up close and personal and didnt realize h
DeleteWhere i was until after the fact. We had a few peaceful years but now its getting hot again. I have been gone for awhile, but am trying to read BB more often and hopefully can help you again soon.
My girl and partner Lacey!
DeleteYes, sadly the military is the easiest to corrupt. IF and WHEN the navy base is up and running in acuna that is the best scenario. I think they should have made in in 5 springs, much more central in north coa. the navy is the most difficult to corrupt.
BTW Nava in 5 springs in a certain coffee shop is where one could see the trevinos regularly. Back in Mar 2011 we were on our way to stop at my fave place to buy the best tortillas of anywhere, in Zaragoza, and then to Acuna, but we couldn't really get very close because of all the activity.
Ironically, my assistant had just told me on the way how safe 5 springs was. Not the assistant you met, it was the "the embezzler"--jaja he is from Zaragoza.
take care
BB FOLLOWERS:
DeleteLacey was BB follower who became my friend. One of only two I allowed into my private life. She has lived in North Coahuila for as long as I have been working there.
She and her husband helped me in numerous ways, even helped saving a teen that had been deported. With the foto I sent Lacey, and the info I was able to get from GEO, she waited on the Mex side of the bridge for the terrified teen. She found him and took him to the casa migrante where I had arranged his safety until his bus ride home could take him back to SLP safely. without zetas interference.
BTW the family of the teen contacted me for help, saying the kid was lost after crossing and GEO nor BP would give them info. At first I thought he was dead as they found a kid dead in the rio grande near PN/eagle pass. I spoke to the EP police and sent a foto but it was not him.
The kid's father lived in Oklahoma for many years. But the young teen said he "was ever going to try to cross again"
Without the action of lacey and me [I am Cagney] the kid was prime meat for the Zetas recruiters who also wait at the bridge for new recruits. Deportees from all over Mexico and central america are dumped there with no resources and far from home. Like this kid, my foundation in conjunction with casa migrantes fund transportation back to their homes in mexico and central america.
Thank you Lacey!
The Marine Infantry of the Mexican army are a bunch of maricones, buy not exactly navy sailors, and they are also corrupt, proven inmant instances where they have been murdering innocent people and refusing to answer any questions later, the propaganda about any government forces right now is just propaganda, marinas replaced army around some bases and the areas became high crime areas, including corrupted minors and murders of women, which "proves they are more effective CRIMINALS who do not have to answer to anything or anybody. Like the gestapo and the KGB.
DeleteAMLO has installed giniral Luis Crescencio Sandoval as his Secretary of Defense, a giniral that was military zone commander in charge of Piedras Negras prison when prisoners were cooking people in 55gal drums or just killing them in the prison, even planting some outside and inside as the Colombian army in La Macarena, right by the military base, Alvaro Uribe Velez still claims they are "all enemies fallen in combat"
@6:09AM
DeleteThere is a Mexican Naval Marine Infantry but not, as you wrote, "Marine Infantry of the Mexican army".
Marinas have their own barracks, sometimes they come and replace the army, and sometimes they operate together with polesias Federales and Estatales, specially now with the Guarida Nacional, they are trying to split the public security pie among themselves and to work together to avoid confusions and rivalries. But pinchis marinas are corrupt like the best of them.
DeleteThe Marinas were nowhere to be seen until FECAL decided to promise them better if they joined the wars ON drugs, in 2006.
DeleteThey operate on land like the Mexican army, but have more claims on the budget and benefits, and on the corruption.
Horrible accounts to what transpired chivis. Simply appalling to see citizens butchered and set ablaze with no assistance from local authorities whatsoever. A harrowing tale of how these cartels dictate rules of justice wherever they reside. From municipal officials to politicians in every sector of government.
ReplyDeleteAnother fine example for those who believe that this war against such criminals was uncalled for. Judging from past & present evidence in Mexico. These atrocities imposing civil unrest would have continued if not for political powers (US, Mexico).
Resulting with what's transpiring today because of government intervention to clean house. Rather, eradicating those tentacles of criminal organizations reach.
Good article BB
E42
Hard to burn 300 to 500 people, even with all the coal in Coahuila, specially if they had just been murdered without special crematory.
DeleteThe EPN government had a hard time making believable that they (or somebody else) burned 43 Ayotzinapos they kidnapped, in a hole garbage dump, while it was raining...
--Time to ask giniral Sandoval what the fack happened under his watch, or before or after he was there.
7:41 the US government created the Kaibiles who created the GAFES WHO BECAME ZETAS, and people eaters like the Kaibiles, graduated from School of the Americas to do "counter-insurgency work".
DeleteLt Arturo Guzman Decena, Z1 was made into a federal judicial police officer to come and do what he did, get with the golfas and steal their turf since presidente Carlos Salinas de Gortari left the army without budget when he stole the Mexican military budget.
That led quicker to zetas, one more gift of the US foreign relations committee and intelligence services.
Pos a guebo, cuando no?
Blame others than oneself is getting old.
DeleteI am quite sure that foreign intrusion and policies have ramifications in many countries. Nevertheless, countries reap what they sow.
And yet the cowardly Mexican government will and won’t charge anyone still in Mexico who protected the zetas from these atrocities. Yet they’ll extradite them or the USA capture them when they flee to other countries. People state that the USA has no business prosecuting for crimes outside of the USA but this is a perfect example of why they do. That’s also the reason I strongly believe our tax dollars should not be spent south of the border or any other country that won’t hold their citizens accountable!
ReplyDeleteShit. If my money was going somewhere; I expect a return in whatever form (Apprehensions, Extradition).
DeleteThat's the problem with many nowadays. Hands out ready to take with no initiative or efforts to pay it back.
A charity for those who just don't have ambitions or goals other than to take.
E42
7:43 your tax dollars paid for the military training of the original zetas as GAFES, to murder Indians in the Kaibil style.
DeleteYour tax dollars have paid plenty commissions to the US middlemen merchants of war, and some to some little plutocratas Mexicanos,
Of course, the persecution of capos has fractured the cartelitos a d frame Ted them into other little ones that keep up with the business in the same old style of "the same old shit, freshly stirred", a very famous quote from The US
7:13 well, you took my words from my maff,
Deleteit proves we can't be wrong, we pay and we collect.
Atentamente: Bladdermir Putin
Corrupt governor Moreira and PRI let them roam free and these are the consequences. . La sangre no se quita de las manos con agua y jabón
ReplyDeleteYea man,Moreira should be included alongside Lazcano,40,42,Mamito,Lucky,he is so important in helping Los Zetas to grow and flourish in a plaza where they were totally unaposed and comfortable,they were able to make money and plan their moves in an important plaza,he was completely in bed with Z,them bastards(Moreiras)should be held accountable and dealt with severely,but ?
DeleteClick the link for the Nat Geo article.
ReplyDelete-Black Stone
I listened to this story on audible. I don’t remember if i got the link from here but I remember the story related to Allende and the Zetas.
ReplyDeleteWe have had the best ongoing coverage anywhere. During the massacre, residents from allende and PN wrote to BB jgiving their accounts.
DeleteOur trial of the Zetas trial in Texas also has reporting from the trial about this especially when cueller took the stand.
For me it was difficult to know when to stop writing this post. there is an astronomical amount more, maybe i should have made it a two or three parter.
such as; there was much more happening in the surrounding cities, incl military clashes, killings, destruction. It was not only Allende.
Very well written and informative Chivis. Great job! I for one would be very interested to read more about what happened in the surrounding cities like you mentioned. It would probably be the only chance many of us would have to hear about these events. Thanks for all you do.
Delete-Solothurn la Arma
you should write the two or three parter, can't think of anyone better to help speak for these people
DeleteIn part two you could post all the names of all zetas, golfas, municipal police, state and federal police in the area, military commanders and soldiers that helped the zeta genocide by not getting involved, all of them are laughing their asses off because nobody ever paid one peiso for their dirty deeds.
DeleteOf all the numerous stories of human tragedy in the drug war on Borderland Beat this 1 strikes the most chords with me!I think it's the numbers of dead in a small town and the absolute gall of the criminals actually getting away with this.Shows the power of these guys that SHOULDN'T have this kind of power in a million years.Using 100's of innocent people as pawns.Very well written with a insider's point of view from Chivis.It's a story I'm sure she will NEVER forget!
ReplyDeleteWhat became of Mario Cuellar? Plea deal? Jail? Just curious. Looking at his picture looks like just an average guy.
ReplyDeletePlea deal
Deletehe was a major witness in the zetas horse racing money laundering trial. he spoke of allende, a hit on his head and fixing horse races among other things.
Thank you for info.. Always odd to see photos of these guys in domestic, everyday situations. If you did not know better, you just think it is a regular guy out to eat dinner with his wife. Little do you know he is likely a sociopath.
DeleteIf they had have held the relatives for ransom the $$$$ most likely would've been returned.
ReplyDeleteI guess it wasn't about the $$$ but setting a brutal and bloody example!
No pos WoW. When I first read an article of the masacre back in those days they said it was like 42, 48 or may be 60 people killed. Now is 300 or 500. That’s something. In a few more years it would be 700 to 1000.
ReplyDeleteThen you did not know where to access facts. In the article it states Coa is a black out state. It was clear within that week that 35 to 40 homes were destroyed and the residents taken, and 7 ranches with everyone including ranch hands were taken.
Deletedo the math smart ass
That’s public policy in mx, governments just admits to facts they can’t hide anymore.
DeleteYou must be new here, welcome, otherwise you were aware of this.
5:03 government always trying to minimize number of victims...its always been said that number of victims are well over 200 n dont b surprised number goes up cause nobody knows how many more people were killed n authorities always trying to save their ass
DeleteRuben Moreira was governor when investigators found thousands and thousands of bone fragments from disintegrated cadavers, just thrown away, but his government claimed Allende had cost their lives to only about 20 people.
DeleteDo the Garza still live on the ranch?
ReplyDeleteGreat article Chivis and excellent response to “smart ass”
ReplyDeleteBB was the first to report on this and a couple of years ago Pro Publica and Nat Geo investigated the story and it’s a great read though it contains much of the same info as your story...it also has additional info as well
Link
ReplyDeletehttps://www.propublica.org/article/allende-zetas-cartel-massacre-and-the-us-dea
whereas the overall content was 'ok' it is written by someone who obviously is not up close and personal and relies on second and third hand inaccuracies. this information is thereby picked up by american media.
Deleteexamples is her claim it was DEA and the cooperation of cuellar that caused the rampage.
think about how absurd that is. If a cartel thinks...not even reasonably sure there is a dea connection sure they are out for blood---OF THE INFORMANT---not the entire family. in fact take the Zetas trial where there were many cooperatives testifying and giving info....their families are live and well.
It is all about the money and drugs. Cuellar took millions and he also abounded with drugs. Zetas went ballistic. when cuellar saw that zetas were going to pull out all stops, t was then he contacted DEA.
another example is when Thompson says Lazca was a gentle leader and not bloodthirsty, but when he died the trevino narco machine became the killing machine.
This is an example of not knowing history and fact.
Zetas Inc was set up in a different manner than other cartels.
They had a three tier organization. leaders, middle men [operators] and soldiers. IMO the gob was in error going for the catch the capo method of offense. it has never worked. and warring with the nini based soldiers is a bottomless pit.
I think strongle going after the middle tier would have greatly crippled the zzetas.
secondly---product was divided into two sections--fifty percent drugs and fifty percent diversification-knock offs, sex trade, kidnappings, extortion, oil theft etc etc
thirdly duties were divided in two----Lazca would lead enforcement and warring. Trevino oversaw drugs and diversification.
The squirel who was Laca's best friend even said in testimony it was lazca's call to kill Lalo Moreira the governor's nephew in a nephew for newphew scenario. think about that, Trevino did not ask for the retribution--it was Lazca.
when Lazca was killed in the shootout with marina, trevinos put pressure on the cartel to reduce the killings. the mass showy killings, video executions etc---almost stopped. until kiko came into power after his uncles were arrested. They but the brakes on his madness, but once they were gone he up the violence.
There were 5 key points i thought were flawed, although I am not saying it was purposeful.
Paz
Chivis
Lazca a gentle leader ? Lazca was the cold killer who ordered all the most brutal killings,it wasnt 40 it was lazcano
DeleteZ40 was enough of a sanababich that he impressed Lazcano, plus he spoke Mexican landscaper English, a plus when it came to telling cbp "America Chile" to cross border.
DeleteA Raqueteer Influenced Criminal Organization, makes all its partners and members responsible for a their crimes, Forgetabout who ordered or carried out the crimes.
DeleteGoogle Images Paula Elena Barragan, she looks like she still has a few miles left in the muffler, lives in Eagle Pass, Tejas.
Another fine example that this cartel killed a lot of innocent people, the government let it happen and the Z cartel had continued to grow. Fast forward, now it's the baby killer cartel that has grown and killed countless Innocents and once again, the government is doing minimal work. Just last week BB reported, there was a caravan of 50 cars, in Michoacan yes from the baby killer cartel. That would have been, a perfect time to, fire at them from Blackhawks. But not a single military person was dispatched.
ReplyDeleteMexico-Observer
All baby killers. The impact alone has affected communities and societies worldwide. If one looks close enough to see all the ramifications of such.
DeleteCollaborators of these killings are what transformed Mexico to what it has become.
E42
Mexico is a failed country.
Delete6:43 the lines of refugees on the border points of entry and the caravans from Central America are not full of "Failed Mexicans".
DeleteI hope that proves your point WRONG.
Chivis always deliver!!!
ReplyDeleteCowards I hate cartels.
ReplyDeleteChivis, would you be able to go back and post some stories about Allende when it occurred just to see for some of us. The comments would be interesting to see from people who were there.
ReplyDeleteMaybe---it is difficult for me, one one hand I want everyone to know what was seen and other pieces to the story, for example there was a clash between military and zetas and 6 killed at the same time this went down, just a few miles away. there were pockets of violence that lasted for days. it was a terrible, terrible time.
Deletein acuna years before there was a week when CDS came to town to "cleanse" there were mantas and warnings to all residents, not to wear black, not to go out in the dark etc. there were businesses torched people kidnapped and gone forever, a regional police commander killed and dead body left in the parking lot of the candy warehouse where I bought candy for my parties. the owner always looked shady to me but he had a nice wife and kids. the daughter was taken...the fire dept was held at bay with threats. dozens of vehicles stolen, some right off the international bridge. it was a rough week but pales greatly in comparison to allende
barely a blip on the new about acuna.
La Nena de Laredo, her name was: Maria Elizabeth Macias castro
Deletethe more people investigates the less chances of ever clearing her murder, but who locates tuiteros in Tamaulipas?
Army/ Navy, Communications Specialists from the SEDENA School of Communications, the setas used all the best.