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XTON, Va. — On a
near-freezing February morning, a man known as “Lalo” steered his Chevy
Avalanche quietly through south-central Virginia’s forested hills and farms.
He had an 8 a.m.
appointment in Axton, tucked in a rural area of roughly 6,500 people near the
North Carolina border where roads are dotted with trailer parks, tiny churches,
rusting pickups and abandoned barns.
It’s a place where
property is cheap, cornfields and cow pastures separate many neighbors, and
people tend not to pry into one another’s business.
All of which made it an
ideal if unlikely waystation for the Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, known as
CJNG, Mexico’s fastest-rising drug cartel, whose U.S. footprint has grown
exponentially in recent years.
A scene near the rural
community of Axton, Virginia, where authorities say the Mexican drug cartel
known as CJNG maintained properties to store and distribute drugs in the
region.
Led by "El
Mencho," the nickname for Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, CJNG in less than a
decade has become one of the largest and most powerful drug organizations in
the world, known for sophisticated operations and extreme violence in Mexico,
from beheadings to killing police.
It's playing an
increasing role in filling U.S. demand for super-pure meth, cocaine, heroin,
fentanyl and other drugs, appearing in at least 35 states, a Courier Journal
investigation found, including the Virginia countryside.
There, at a residence
in Axton, authorities say Lalo met a man called "Tramposo," the
trickster. He loaded 6 kilos of cocaine, worth roughly $180,000, into his
truck.
Lalo was soon headed
northeast. He could have wound through remote backroads or returned to state
Highway 58, a route dotted with businesses that included a strip-mall tortilla
shop where authorities said drug profits were wired to Mexico.
Amid the flow of
commuters, he began what he thought would be a four-hour drive that passed
through Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley to Winchester, Virginia, just 75 miles
from Washington, D.C.
But Lalo had no idea he
was being watched.
The CJNG cartel and its
backroads drug pipeline had caught the attention of federal authorities, who,
in March 2019, announced they had uncovered a hidden hub of Axton-area cartel
stash houses that over four years funneled a river of drugs worth tens of
millions of dollars through Axton to Winchester and other mid-Atlantic states.
In a case that
highlights CJNG's deep reach into unexpected corners of small-town America,
authorities said the Jalisco-based cartel had sent people to live in Axton,
while CJNG shipped in at least 20 kilos of cocaine each month since 2015, along
with other drugs such as marijuana it sent through the U.S. mail.
The story of how at
least eight federal, state and local agencies from at least two states,
including the Drug Enforcement Administration and a Virginia drug task force,
conducted a more than two-year investigation to unravel strands of a
CJNG-fueled trafficking web extended more than 230 miles northeast to the
small-town streets of Winchester.
There, three local
sisters and others were caught up with a cartel-connected associate in a scheme
that authorities say involved cross-country drug runs, purchases of
high-powered guns and money transfers.
"Right under your
nose," said Josiah Schiavone, who formerly ran a northwest Virginia drug
task force, cartels were "operating in multi-kilo loads." Their
presence "caught our community off guard," he said.
The Virginia case
offered a glimpse into cartel operations that experts say often funnel drugs
through less-scrutinized rural areas and small towns, distributing them through
supply chains that can spread like rivulets.
While estimates of
cartel drug flows are notoriously unreliable, federal officials have said CJNG
smuggles at least 120 tons of high-purity meth and cocaine into the U.S. a
year, making it a top target.
But stemming the flow
of drugs from any cartel through Middle America, as the Virginia investigation
showed, is like a game of whack-a-mole for federal and local authorities.
"I can assure you
that within 120 hours of that investigation, the cartel in Mexico had all new
houses rented and new leadership from Mexico en route," said Jaeson Jones,
a former Texas Department of Public Safety captain who spent years following
the activities of drug cartels.
Law enforcement
officials believe cartel associates are still around Axton and Winchester.
Federal investigators will only say that the case is ongoing.
But the cartel's
presence still looms. Some residents, including some members of Axton’s small
Hispanic population, speak in whispers of their suspicions over flashes of
wealth, rumors of suspected fronts and a drug-related shooting of two Mexican.
When it comes to
questions about the cartel in Axton or Winchester, some doors open a crack and
then quickly shut. Some people are too scared to talk.
"You don’t play
with the cartel," said Ruth Houghton Mann, a relative of three Winchester
sisters entangled in the cartel’s drug ring.
The sisters would soon
learn just how deep CJNG’s influence goes.
“Hey, do you want to go
to California?” Judith Wright’s half-sister, Vicky Houghton, asked her in a
conversation recounted in court documents.
It was the summer of
2017, and the 38-year-old blonde single mother of three said she was struggling
with a truant son, on-and-off work and a car transmission that had just gone
out.
Vicky asked Judith if
she could drive her to visit her boyfriend known as "Kiko" and
"Flaco," Spanish for “skinny.” His real name was Blas
Rodríguez-Ávila, according to court documents.
"I can't go to
California. I don't have any money,” Judith told her.
"Don't worry about
it,” Vicky told her. “I need someone to drive me that has a driver's license,
and he's (Kiko) willing to pay for the trip.”
Judith didn’t know that
authorities had been watching her two younger half-sisters, Vicky and Effie
Houghton, and how close they were to men associated with a drug cartel whose
name she’d never heard — CJNG.
All three sisters had
grown up in Winchester, a town of 28,000, known for housing George Washington’s
headquarters in the French and Indian War and for apple orchards and horse
farms that have long drawn migrants looking for work.
But less than two hours
from Baltimore and Washington, D.C., the town has also struggled with drugs,
shifting from crack and coke-bottle home meth labs to opioid painkillers,
heroin, fentanyl, and more recently, a resurgence of cocaine and "Mexican
Ice" meth.
Vicky’s boyfriend,
Rodríguez-Ávila, spoke little English. The two lived together in a split-level
home rented by the room.
He walked with a limp
from what he said was a childhood accident. Leaving a large family in Veracruz,
he had crossed into the U.S. in 2014, working in Seattle before coming to
Virginia. He worked as a contractor and told the sisters he also worked for a
California fencing company.
In the spring of 2017,
veteran DEA Special Agent Thomas Hickey became part of a drug task force that
used informants to buy cocaine from people, often in small amounts, which
included Vicky and Effie.
But investigators
wanted to know where the drugs were coming from as they searched for larger
sources of supply.
Rodríguez-Ávila,
authorities alleged, was connected to the CJNG cartel. While authorities
tracked calls to Mexico as part of a larger investigation, they would not say
how they concluded that Rodríguez-Ávila was connected, or how closely, with
CJNG.
The two men weren't the
only ones in Winchester linked to CJNG drugs.
While links to drugs
from various cartels weren't unknown in such cases, the name CJNG "was new
for us when we heard it,” said Joshua Price, head of the Northwest Virginia
Regional Drug and Gang Task Force.
Authorities alleged
that Rodríguez-Ávila traveled to California and Texas to direct the transport
of large quantities of cocaine, as much as $150,000 worth at a time, into
Winchester and the region for distribution to sellers. He recruited locals to
ferry drugs, purchase weapons and move cash, they said.
Effie bought a $900
AK-47 at Bear’s Pawn Shop for him. Another woman, Lisa Vasquez-Ahumada, also
purchased guns and used her bank account to transfer drug-connected money.
That summer, when Vicky
asked Judith if she could drive her and Vasquez-Ahumada to visit
Rodríguez-Ávila in Southern California, Judith decided to go, although she said
she was in the dark about any drugs. Authorities said organizers believed the
women would be less vulnerable to a traffic stop.
They drove for 38
straight hours, stopping only for gas, food and once at a California truck stop
to shower.
After checking into the
Holiday Inn Express in Colton, California, which had a pool edged by palm
trees, they went to see Rodríguez-Ávila at the fence company.
“He was laid back,”
Judith said. “Nobody was talking of trafficking.”
But prosecutors say it
was the first of several attempted cross-country trips Judith took for which
she was paid or offered at least $2,000 to drive the car back loaded with
several kilos of cocaine in hidden compartments.
Judith claims she
didn’t know the real reason for the trips; others disputed that.
Still, she said she had
no idea that investigators were pulling at the strands that connected her
sister’s boyfriend to a network of distributors, buyers and couriers connected
to other states such as Maryland and West Virginia.
For Judith, “It was too
late. I was already in, hook, line and sinker.”
Henry County Sheriff
Lane Perry had seen signs that something bigger was going down on his turf.
Some drug arrests
seemed too large for a typical meth or heroin user, like one time when multiple
kilos were found in a single car.
And there were rumors
of cartels' presence and connections to certain crimes, including the
drug-related killings of two Mexican brothers in 2014, one of whom was found
shot in the head in a Ford F-150 in Axton.
"We knew there was
a large amount of cocaine and other drugs moving through the area,” he said,
but the source often remained difficult to trace.
"Even though we
tried, people wouldn't cooperate."
But why would major
traffickers choose Axton, an unincorporated area that was little more than a
smattering of gas stations and backcountry trailer parks, with a school and
churches, much of it sitting in the eastern part of Henry County?
The nearest city is
13,000-resident Martinsville, known for its NASCAR speedway and a nearby
collection of once-booming furniture factories. The interstate heading north is
an hour’s drive.
Jones and other experts
said CJNG and other cartels often use unlikely rural areas near cities for
storing and distributing drugs, away from heavy policing and nosy neighbors.
Houses are cheap.
Backroads, plentiful.
Cartels often maintain
several houses in such areas: One for the local boss and his family, and
another where the drugs come in and get cut up and distributed, there's another
to deal with the money, and another where cartel associates live, he said.
The Axton area did have
an occasionally checkered past.
In 1996, a U.S. News
& World Report article profiled a hamlet near Axton called Sandy Level as a
hotbed of cocaine dealing and violence. A decade later, the former sheriff and
other officers were indicted in a case that included selling drugs and stealing
guns.
More recently, the
county seat of Martinsville notched one of the nation’s highest opioid
prescription rates, with one local doctor jailed for prescribing half a million
doses of opioid pills in two years as patients flocked in from neighboring
states.
Federal authorities in
2017 were already investigating in Axton, gathering mounting evidence.
A federal indictment
filed in April 2019 accused Jose Alfredo Santacruz-Godinez and others of
maintaining residences around Axton for "receiving, storing, packaging and
distributing controlled substances."
According to a separate
FBI affidavit, properties connected to the case included isolated and
nondescript ranch houses, single-wide mobile homes, garages and outbuildings.
Some were surrounded by pine trees well away from main roads.
One document accused
Santacruz-Godinez and another of using trafficking profits to purchase four
properties, including a three-bedroom yellow house tucked far back on a country
road that turns off Highway 58. Court records don't detail exactly what
occurred at that home.
Neighbors near one home
said they never met the former residents but sometimes heard music. Realtor
Angie Ancheta, who was listed as selling one of the houses for $33,000 in cash
in 2017, said nothing suggested it would be named in a drug cartel
investigation.
“Oh my God,” she
recalled thinking when she read about the case in the local paper. “I was
shocked.”
At Taylor’s Grocery
& Grill along Highway 58 near several of the properties cited in the
investigation, the 67-year-old owner said she wanted nothing to do with the
cartel.
“I don’t want to know
where they are at,” she said.
In fact, one of the
properties was a three-minute walk away. An FBI affidavit shows those involved
at various homes exchanged calls to set up pickups, often from Winchester,
using code words for drugs, such as "little hand" for cocaine and
"tooth" for money.
But the answer to
"Why Axton?" isn't clear, said Henry County Commonwealth's Attorney
Andrew Nester. "It’s very rural, it’s very remote. Maybe that’s the draw.
Once you’re established, no one talks," he said.
Surveillance is
difficult. And cartel associates had “early warning systems,” which other
officials declined to detail. Getting an informant trusted by a drug ring is
especially difficult.
"Most anybody can
buy a $20 rock of crack cocaine. But you can’t just send Joe Schmoe to go buy a
kilo," Nester said. "To get the big dealers, you have to get someone
in there that these upper-level dealers trust."
But that finally
changed, Perry said, when a drug task force got an informant inside in the
Axton area.
Eventually,
investigators saw links stretching to Winchester, one strand of a much larger
web.
On the morning of Feb.
1, 2018, DEA agent Hickey gathered with other law enforcement agencies in
Winchester’s Millwood fire station.
After nearly a year of
Hickey's involvement in the investigation, which included ariel surveillance,
GPS trackers on cars and wiretaps, they planned to raid at least a dozen
locations including in Axton and Winchester, and the split-level house on a
quiet street where Rodríguez-Ávila lived.
They believed
Rodríguez-Ávila was orchestrating drug runs to Texas and California. They also
had identified others in Winchester and over the state line in West Virginia
who were picking up drugs in Axton.
That included one man
who had made the trip to Axton to pick up kilos of cocaine, once hauling it in
a 5-gallon bucket and then handing it off in Walmart bags.
About 9:30 a.m. on Feb.
1, Eduardo "Lalo" Hernandez-Sanchez, the courier who had just made
the pickup from Axton, was pulled over in Boone’s Mill by police. Officers
found the cocaine hidden in detergent containers.
At the house, Judith
and Vasquez-Ahumada together took $12,000 in cash and loaded a suitcase into
the trunk of a Jeep outside. Fearing they might flee, Hickey and the drug task
force had a local police officer stop the Jeep at 10:36 a.m. in an Arby’s
parking lot, near the on-ramp to Interstate 81.
Effie arrived and
rushed to comfort Vicky, who was crying. Rodríguez-Ávila acted innocent, saying
he was simply helping the women reach the airport to visit their boyfriends.
Meanwhile, raids hit a
range of sites: an unassuming home in Stephens City, south of Winchester, and
properties in and around Axton. Authorities seized drugs, weapons, cash and a
transaction ledger.
"There were a lot
of drugs, there was money, and weapons,” Perry told local media, though it was
a drop in the bucket of what had flowed through the area.
Rodríguez-Ávila was
later indicted, and Judith and her half-sisters, among others, were charged,
too.
After more
investigation, Virginia prosecutors earlier this year indicted 12 more people
in Axton and Winchester it named as members or associates of the CJNG cartel,
though some denied that connection.
Other cases remain
pending, and several of those indicted are believed to have fled, including
Santacruz-Godinez.
Some connected to the
network had jobs at local employers, including an auto dealership. One woman,
who worked at an Axton tortilla and meat shop, was charged with helping wire
drug profits via money transfers. Others were charged in West Virginia.
More arrests have been
connected to the case, but authorities won’t identify them as they seek cooperation
and follow leads into other locations or states, likely including California.
Rodríguez-Ávila declined to comment from prison.
Some suspects’ lawyers
argued their clients played insignificant roles and were not connected to the
cartel as prosecutors alleged.
For example,
Naal-Huchin's lawyer claimed in court filings that his client was anything but
a drug kingpin, and instead lived in a low-rent apartment, drove a 2010 Chevy,
and had no idea who "El Mencho" was.
"The government
attempts to bolster the severity of his conduct by asserting the cocaine was
'supplied by CJNG,'" his attorney, David Downes wrote in a court filing,
calling him a low-level dealer.
Despite the arrests,
experts said it’s unlikely the busts and lengthy investigation did much to slow
the flow of drugs for long. And not before the communities paid a steep cost.
"Imagine the
damage (the drugs) did to Virginia and the East Coast" in that time, Jones
said.
The fallout from the
flow of drugs has hung over Winchester.
On a day in September,
a handful of women battling drug addiction sat inside a church in a strip mall
listening to a woman who had been addicted to drugs and who lost her husband to
an overdose.
Looking on was the Rev.
Brad Hill, whose cocaine addiction led him to start Grace Downtown Church in
the back room of a local bar. In his new space, he ministers to hundreds of
recovering drug users in a town where he said the toll of addiction has been
devastating.
“The Houghton sisters
are just a microcosm,” he said, noting that drugs in Winchester have led to
jail terms, separated families, overdoses, a flood of children in foster care,
emergency responders strained by drug calls and packed treatment centers.
All three sisters were
sentenced on drug-related charges. Effie and Vicky pleaded guilty, while Judith
was convicted at trial.
Effie got time served.
Vicky received two years in prison, and Judith was sentenced to seven years.
Judith is appealing. Effie could not be reached for comment, but both Vicky and
Judith suggested they had no previous knowledge of any cartel connections.
Judith was distraught
that her three children were placed among foster parents and relatives. She
worries about whether the cartel could try and find her.
“How far do their arms
reach? Do they have pictures of my kids?” Judith said on a prison phone.
Back in Axton, one
Latino resident worried that publicity over cartel activity was fueling attitudes
that unfairly conflate drug trafficking and immigration.
"This is a Trump
area right here. Everybody’s talking like, 'This is why we need to build that
wall and deport all the illegal Mexicans.' But really, the majority are just
committed to working hard," said Eli Salgado of Axton.
Sheriff Perry and
others believe the cartel's presence hasn't disappeared in Axton. How many
Axton-like rural drug hubs exist in Virginia isn't known.
"I guess everyone
thinks their own backyard would be immune to this activity, for us it proved it
wasn’t," he said.
For now, in Axton,
reminders of the cartel’s presence have faded.
Behind one house whose
address was cited in court documents, mounds of rain-soaked drywall lay in the
tall grass.
The current resident, a
Spanish-speaking factory worker who said she moved in after police raided Axton
area homes, stood at the back door with her 17-year-old son, who is in high
school. She said they had to rebuild the floors and walls, but didn't know why
they had been torn out.
A nearby trailer,
accessed by her driveway, was apparently being used as a stash house,
authorities said in a search warrant affidavit.
As for the CJNG cartel
itself? Her son translated for her as they stood in the doorway.
She didn't know about
them, she said.
Then they shut the
door.
Note: Use hyperlink at top to be directed to original article, images and video
Investigative reporter
Chris Kenning and photographer Sam Upshaw spent four days in Virginia to dig
into CJNG cartel activity in the communities of Axton and Winchester. Kenning
reviewed hundreds of pages of cartel-related court documents and interviewed
more than 30 people. Kenning has worked for The Courier Journal for more than
15 years; Upshaw for 32 years. Kenning can be reached at ckenning@gannett.com
Apparently the cartels think America is Mexico. They realize after getting slapped with a life sentence for drug trafficking. That it is not.
ReplyDeleteThis is happening in many small towns in the USA, since the 70s.
DeleteUnlike mexico you aren’t intimidating your way out of prison. Threaten a judge or officer in the U.S. and they’ll slap more years on to your sentence.
Delete7:41 since American is the biggest crack head nation cartels decide to set up their shops n distribution center in America haha
DeleteWhen demand for consumption remains high. Expect many small towns like these to be of useful resource.
ReplyDeleteMexican cartel's, do not have a soul!
ReplyDeleteNo they do not, as it is an organization not a person.
DeleteBlack market is the pproble . Black market will manufacture, sell, distribute, and all, and for the money. The only solution is to legalize all black market commodities. Or at least a limited amount of them. Though some of the black market goods are problems for individuals, it is a crime against one self.
ReplyDeleteKilling others is common in black market sales and distribution, if legal, this killing would by others would go away, and only killing of oneself would occur.
The black market makes people that are evil very rich.
If the black market goods were legal the cartels would lose their business. The industry could keep very good track of the manufacture, sales and distribution. The wealth would be spread out to honest working people.
The price we pay for allowing black market is to high.
No one will disagree that people taking cocaine, heroine, and other black market drugs have a serious problem. Yet, if illegal, it would be easier to control, easier to get people medical help and it would stop these evil monsterous people from becoming multi millionaires. It would stop of lot of government corruption, because black market manufacture, sales and distribution of black market products, make a lot of money, and money changes people. The FBI, the CIA, the police, and many other law enforcement people bust a black market group, and it is non un common for these groups of authority to steal the products and sell them, so they make the money.
The present model is not working. It is causing death and filling jails, and there are many others, that just fall in and take over. To much money. It is better to legalize all and then we can address the problem correctly.
We can follow the manufacture, sales and distribution, observe and collect the information and get a good statistical analysis and then we can focus on getting people that are taking these illegal drugs medical help and to develop a solution to get them off these products.
Plus, because it was legal, it would be much easier to talk about.
The present model is only making evil, sick and monsterous indivuduals and making them into millionairs, and these people kill many whom get in their way, as that is how they do business. The price is to high.
CARTELS have presence In every state, U.D is just introducing CJNG to 🇺🇸.. Sounds like cjng will be getting HIT HARD soon..
ReplyDeleteThere has been MANY mencho and cjng articles intended for the U.S.A. to get scared 0f cjng.. Cjng is the NEXT target
CDS will get more POWER
Stop, your making too much sense. Too many in power making too much coin. If history is an indication, the us gov will try everything except legality, until that is the only option left.
ReplyDelete