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Friday, November 15, 2019

Barrio Azteca gang member extradited, linked to killings of US Consulate worker and husband

Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat TY Gus from DEA Presser

Image result for Jose Guadalupe Diaz Diaz
Alleged Barrio Azteca Shooter Extradited From Mexico to United States to Face Charges Related to the U.S. Consulate Murders in Juarez, Mexico.
An alleged shooter and member of the Barrio Azteca (BA), a transnational border gang allied with the Juarez Cartel, was extradited from Mexico to the United States to face charges related to the March 2010 U.S. Consulate murders in Juarez, Mexico.

Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney John F. Bash for the Western District of Texas, Special Agent in Charge Luis Quesada of the FBI’s El Paso Field Office and Acting Administrator Uttam Dhillon of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) made the announcement.



 FOTO: Diarios.mx
Jose Guadalupe Diaz Diaz, aka “Zorro,” arrived in the United States yesterday and made his initial appearance today before U.S. Magistrate Judge Anne T. Berton in El Paso, Texas.  Diaz is charged in a 12-count third superseding indictment unsealed in March 2011.  According to court documents and previous trial testimony, Diaz allegedly participated in BA activities, including narcotics trafficking and acts of violence by BA members in Mexico. On March 13, 2010, Diaz allegedly shot and killed U.S. Consulate employee Leslie Ann Enriquez Catton and her husband, Arthur Redelfs.  

A total of 35 BA members and associates based in the U.S. and Mexico were charged in the third superseding indictment for allegedly committing various criminal acts, including racketeering, narcotics distribution and importation, extortion, money laundering, obstruction of justice and murder.  Of the 35 defendants, 10 Mexican nationals, including Diaz, were charged in connection with the murders of Enriquez Catton and Redelfs, as well as Jorge Alberto Salcido Ceniceros, the husband of a U.S. Consulate employee.  If convicted, Diaz faces a maximum penalty of life in prison.

Of the 35 defendants charged, 34 have been apprehended. U.S. and Mexican law enforcement are actively seeking to apprehend the lone fugitive in this case, Luis Mendez.

Twenty-eight of those defendants have pleaded guilty, one was convicted by a jury, one is currently pending trial, one defendant committed suicide while imprisoned during his trial and three others are pending extradition from Mexico.
 Image result for Imágen del asesinato de tres funcionarios consulares en Juárez.
According to court documents and information presented in court throughout this case, the Barrio Azteca is a violent street and prison gang that began in the late 1980s and expanded into a transnational criminal organization.  In the 2000s, the BA formed an alliance in Mexico with “La Linea,” which is part of the Juarez Drug Cartel (also known as the Vincente Carrillo Fuentes Drug Cartel or “VCF”).  The purpose of the BA-La Linea alliance was to battle the Chapo Guzman Cartel and its allies for control of the drug trafficking routes through Juarez and Chihuahua.  The drug routes through Juarez, known as the Juarez Plaza, are important to drug trafficking organizations because they are a principal illicit drug trafficking conduit into the United States.

The gang has a militaristic command structure and includes captains, lieutenants, sergeants and soldiers – all with the purpose of maintaining power and enriching its members and associates through drug trafficking, money laundering, extortion, intimidation, violence, threats of violence and murder.
Related image
Leslie Enriquez and her husband were killed, their baby was not. 
She was also newly pregnant--photo was taken a month before the murders
Diaz’s extradition is the result of close coordination between U.S. law enforcement and the government of Mexico in the investigation and prosecution of this case.  The cooperation and assistance of the government of Mexico was essential to achieving the successful extradition.  

12 comments:

  1. More stories on gang ties in US to Mexican cartels please and thank you!!


    I am looking for Macarter Park Gangs to be exact. That places stinks of cartel influence of all sorts.

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  2. Wow nine years ago, what happened he ran out of bribe money, and now is given to the US. Better late than never.

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  3. Not with this President. Lol

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  4. I don't opposed extraditing but USA government you who kill around the world and who have kill mexicans from USA soil extradited those cowards to Mexico let them face the mexican prisión Just like you like Mexicans to face the USA system until thri no extradition Señor López Obrador My message is loud and clear
    Pistolero Profesional
    Sinaloense

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No mijo the Mexican system is a joke, lots of bribes going on, glad he is coming to usa to face prison time yippee.

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    2. November 16, 2019 at 6:36 AM
      USA ASK FOR CRIMINAL TO BE EXTRADITED THEY SHOULD DO THE SAME WAY WHEN A US CITIZENS KILLS A MEXICAN HE SHOULD BE TAKEN TO MEXICO TO FACE JUSTICE.... FOR EXAMPLE WHEN THE BORDER PATROL KILLED THE TEEN ON THE RIO GRANDE THEY SHOULD OF APPROVED THE EXTRADITION TO FACE MEXICAN JUSTICE

      Delete
  5. Uttham Dillon, DEA architect of the Culiacan fiasco?
    Woah, please...get me the head of Alfredo Martinez instead...

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  6. Kill an American and the DEA and CIA will find you

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Not for North Americans murdered in Guerrero.

      Delete
  7. So what was the REAL reason as to why they were killed?

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  8. 9c25 ...And US ambassador Christopher Landau architect of the Le Baron family murders in Chihuahua/Sonora fiasco while US born chihuahueño governor javier corral played "golf".
    Both corral and cabeza de cagadas de vacas from tamaulipas are trying to sell out and secede from Mexico along with the BC peninsula "to join the US".

    ReplyDelete

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