"redlogarythm"
for Borderland Beat Use this hyperlink for Part I
Note from redlogarythm: This is the second and final publication of a series about the money laundering network Los Zetas had in
place in the U.S. between 2008 and 2012 when they operated a Quarter horse
breeding business. I would like to thank Borderland Beat contributor
"MX" for supplying some of the info used here.
As
discussed in Part I of this series, Los Zetas ran a successful Quarter horse
business from 2008 till 2012 in the U.S. It was one of the most sophisticated money
laundering schemes done by the cartel to date.
Los Zetas laundered cocaine proceeds
made in the U.S. and sent the money back to Mexico where it was laundered and funneled back into the cartel's network in
creative ways. The network was owned by the siblings Miguel Angel and Oscar
Omar Trevino Morales, and it included an array of strawmen, legitimate
businesses and bank accounts.
In this Part II, we will cover how the horse purchasing
process worked and how Los Zetas managed their assets. In addition, we will
look at the different disguising methods they used to hide the illegal nature
of their assets.
The Scheme Begins
On 24 October
2008, Ramiro Guajardo Villareal (“El Gordo”) bought 11 Quarter horses for
US$96,900, which were paid through wire transfers by Basic Enterprises from Monterrey.
The purchased horses included Memories Formicha and Crescent Moon Dash; both
horses were transferred under 66 Land LLC in January 2012. On 14 December 2008,
Mueller Racing sold a Quarter horse called Tempting Dash through Schvaneveldt
Ranch Auction to El Gordo for US$21,500.
On 24 October 2009, Tempting
Dash won Dash for Cash race held at Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, Texas. As the
legal owner of the horse, El Gordo won US$180,000. The story surrounding
Tempting Dash reflects quite well how the assets were managed by Jose Treviño
Morales. On November 14, the American Quarter Horse Association received legal
documents indicating Tempting Dash’s ownership had been transferred to Jose.
According to the documents the transfer had occurred on September 29 (even
before Tempting Dash had won the Texas race). In the end it was revealed that Miguel
Angel Treviño (“Z-40”) had forced El Gordo to sell the horse to Jose for only US$50,000.
As we will see later, Tempting Dash was profitable asset for the network.
The first large scale
purchase took place on 4 September 2009 at the Heritage Place Yearling Auction.
Colorado Cessa bought 13 horses for US$546,000. From this quantity, US$516,000
were paid through a check written by Colorado Cessa against his own bank
account at the American Express Bank International. In this auction Colorado
Cessa acquired two horses called Morning Cartel and Feature Honor, which would
then be transferred to Tremor Enterprises LLC and 66 Land LLC (two business
entities controlled by Jose).
A similar move was used to
purchase 18 horses in the Quarter Horse Yearling Sale in Oklahoma City between 17
September and 19 September 2009. In this auction, El Gordo bought the horses
for US$430,800. Among them was a stallion called Maverick Perry, whose name was
immediately changed to Mr. Piloto (Carlos Nayen, one of the people involved in
the scheme, was nicknamed Piloto). Basic Enterprises, the money exchange
company in Monterrey, paid for the horse in six different wire transfers that
were structured in the following way:
- 09/25/09: $68,000
- 09/28/09: $100,000
- 10/05/09: $80,000
- 10/07/09: $80,000
- 10/09/09: $60,000
- 10/15/09: $60,000
The ownership of Mr.
Piloto was transferred to Garcia Bloodstock and Racing (a shell company
controlled by a strawman called Fernando Solis Garcia) on 15 January 2010. On 5
September 2010 the American Quarter Horse Association received a request for
transferring Mr. Piloto’s ownership from Garcia Bloodstock and Racing to Tremor
Enterprises, an entity controlled by Jose. According to the documents, the
transfer took place on 10 July (two months before the request to the
association).
Two more large horse
purchases would take place in 2009. The first occurred between 3 – 4 October at
Los Alamitos Equine sale. 18 horses were bought by the network for US$502,970 (Basic
Enterprises paid for the whole lot). Among the horses was Blue Girls Choice,
which was transferred to Tremor Enterprises LLC on 5 October 2009 (24 hours
after the auction). Blue Girls Choice would be sold in Oklahoma City for US$102,000
on 5 November 2011. The last purchase took place at the Heritage Place Fall
Mixed Sale. 9 horses were bought for US$112,900. The payments were done, again,
by Basic Enterprises. Among the horses were Merry for Money and Thanks Jen. Both
were transferred to 66 Land LLC.
By the end of 2009 the
network was completely established. The cocaine money was flowing from the U.S.
to Mexico where it was handed over to Trevino’s money launderers. They would
purchase the horses using their own clean funds directly or using strawmen (although
the use of strawmen would become widespread during the final stages, as we will
cover later). After the purchase, the horses were transferred to companies
controlled by Jose, sometimes after an amount of time during which the horse
had been trained and obtained fame at national races, thus raising its value.
In the following section
we will cover the banking structure of Los Zetas in this scheme. We were been
able to identify 4 different bank accounts owned by Jose at Bank of America and
three more used by two different strawman (two in the name of Felipe Quintero
and another one owned by Adan Farias, all of them at Bank of America).
Disguising Methods
According to Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) reports from 2009, José was a bricklayer and his wife Zulema
worked as an office clerk. The year before, José earned approximately US$44,500
working for Dee Bron Inc. and Zulema made US$25,500 at Lakeshore Staffing. In
2009, José earned (according to his legal records) US$29,000 at Texas Storey
Tile LLC and Dee Brown Inc. and Zulema did $29,000 at Lakeshore Staffing. During
this time the Jose and Zulema owned a bank account at Bank of America (number
#4881 1761 5000) were their family earnings were deposited and cashed. Between 1
January and 25 November 2009, neither José nor Zulema made withdrawals over US$1,000.
During 2009 the account
never exceeded US$53,000 and the final balance of their account totaled US$2,000
by the end of the year. However, during this time, Jose purchased Tempting Dash.
In trial, the IRS presented evidence demonstrating that Jose’s personal account
#4881 1761 5000 did not present any significant withdrawal in an amount enough
to buy any Quarter horse. This mistake of using funds without being able to
allege a legitimate source would be the end for the Trevino’s.
Paper trail created by Jose Trevino to create a fake personal income flow |
Jose operated
his personal account by mixing money from two different accounts he owned at
Bank of America to create a paper trail that helped him disguise the ownership
of the funds. Jose founded Termor Enterprises LLC on 1 December 2009. Just 24
hours later, he opened a corporate account at Bank of America at the name of
Tremor (#4880 2680 1054). Tempting Cash won the Texas Classic Futurity Race on
28 November. Jose, as the legal owner of Tempting Dash, deposited the profits
of the victory in the Bank of America account.
By November 28, this
account totaled US$461,901.66. On 11 December, this account issued a check to
Jose for US$441,855.23. Jose deposited the sum in his other Bank of America
account (#4881 1761 5000). On 21 December, Jose transferred US$435,000 from his
personal account #4881 1761 5000 to Tremor’s account #4880 2680 1054. On 22
December, José wrote two checks totaling US$157,793 from Tremor’s account #4880
2680 1054 (one for US$100,000 and the other for US$57,793) and deposited them
into his personal account #4881 1761 5000. On December 29 (a week later), he wrote
another two checks from his personal account #4881 1761 5000 totaling exactly US$157,793
and deposited them into Tremor’s account (#4880 2680 1054), thus creating the
false appearance of a legitimate profit.
The Treviño network
made money when horses such as Tempting Dash or Mr. Piloto won races, but these
profits were an incentive, not a main goal. Miguel Angel’s goal was to invest
vast quantities of money into the Quarter horse to create a large portfolio of
assets (at least 500 Quarter horses) whose value would increase over time. The
pool of cash could be incremented by two ways: through maintenance payments and
through over-invoicing. The first method is simple. A lot of the strawmen who used
by the network were nominal owners of companies in charge of breeding and
training the horses. For example, imagine a company that owns 5 horses spends US$50,000
per month in fodder, stables and training. If someone in Mexico is trying to
launder their money, they can wire them US$70,000 instead of US$50,000, thus disguising
the whole amount as maintenance payments. Once in the U.S., the company will
expense the US$50,000. The remaining US$20,000 can be kept in the bank accounts,
or even better, they can be cash out as physical money. Legally, these $20,000
have been spent but in fact they are being kept by the network.
"Layering"
This mechanism of moving the money around between
accounts owned by the same person is called Layering. It is usually done
through a series of deposits, withdrawals and movements of cash with the
objective of creating a paper trail long enough to confuse the institutions
moving the money and the regulatory. This makes it very difficult to track the
initial deposit. In the end, launders create several “layers” by moving the
money around.
With the rest of the money in Tremor’s account
#4880 2680 1054, Jose arranged several payments for several nodes of the
network. He paid US$1,000 to a relative called Rodolfo Treviño. US$52,318.20
went to Huitron Homes Inc., a construction company controlled by Eusevio
Maldonado Huitron, a Mexican-American who was the trainer for most of the
network’s best horses. Another US$100,405.90 went to Fred Stanley Equine Ins.
for Tempting Dash maintenance. US$15,000 went to Ramiro Villareal and US$15,000
to Carmina LLC, a firm owning several horses being controlled by Nayen.
2010 was a year full of
purchases. In January 2010, the network was fully operative. Two more accounts
were opened at Bank of America, one for Tremor Enterprises LLC (#4880 3073 7266)
and one for 66 Land LLC (#4880 2998 4143). On 14 January in the Heritage Mixed
Place Winter Sale, Jose instructed a strawman to buy Dashin Follies for US$875,000
and Corona Coronita Cartel for US$250,000. Another strawperson called Luis
Gerardo Aguirre payed part of the price (US$100,000); the rest of the amount
was paid by Grupo Aduanero Integral, Agencia ADU (the business controlled by
Alejandro Barradas) through wire transfers from Mexico. By the end of 2010 the
ownership of Dashin Follies and CC. Cartel was transferred to Luis Gerardo
Aguirre. The expenses were paid by Nayen and Victor Lopez, another strawperson.
On 29 January 2012, after the two horses had been trained and its value
appreciated, they were transferred to 66 Land LLC.
Over-invoicing stages, or an endless chain of fake purchases |
In early September 2012, Jose, Nayen, Sergio
Rincon, Raul Ramirez and several more individuals attended the Ruidoso Horse
Sales Company Yearling Sales in New Mexico. Ramirez bid for several horses from
Nayen and Jose. For three days the network purchased 23 horses for US$2,240,700.
After the auction Colorado Cessa (who was not there in the sales event) was
registered as the owner of the whole lot and paid for the horses with a
US$2,240,700 check. It is worth mentioning that by this time Nayen had US$25
million deposited in several UBS (Union Bank of Switzerland) accounts in Miami.
We were not able to establish if the checks written by Colorado Cessa were
cashed out at UBS or against the ADT accounts in Mexico.
Between 16 – 18
September, the network acquired 31 horses for US$758,000 by paying through
Grupo Aduanero Integral, Agencia ADU. The three most expensive horses were Big
Daddy Cartel (US$113,000), Ima Perry (US$50,000) and Jess Sass Dash
(US$150,000). All of them were transferred to Jose. Between 2 – 3 October at
Los Alamitos Equine Sale in California, the network purchased 5 horses for
US$442,000. Grupo Aduanero Integral, Agencia ADU paid for these horses through
wire transfers.
The Network's Peak And Downfall
In the end, the massive
investment in Quarter horses proved immensely successful when in September 2010
Mr. Piloto won the All-American Futurity race, the most famous competition for
Quarter Horses in the U.S. Jose’s horseman received US$968,440. An additional
US$100,000 was paid to the jockey as a winning bonus. US$899,549.70 were
withdrawn and deposited in Tremor’s account #4880 2680 1054. It was later
revealed that Mr. Piloto would not have won if Miguel Angel had not given US$10,000
to each of the race gatekeepers to give his horse some advantage.
The network was able to control the competition by bribing its organizers. By this time the network had diversified and specialized in such a way that some of the front men started opening bank accounts to receive the money directly from Mexico. For example, Felipe Quintero was acting as a horse trainer and strawman. On 12 February 2010, he opened two bank accounts at the Bank of America (#08900-76710 and #08906-75022). On 22 September, Quintero’s accounts received US$90,000 from ADT Petroservicios (Colorado Cessa’s company). Victor Manuel Lopez, a strawman in charge of making payments for horse maintenance did the following cash deposits: $5,000 (10/5/2010); $4,000 (10/6/2010); $3,000 (10/7/2010); $9,900 (10/18/2010). Each of the
deposits were strategically under US$10,000, which is the quantity for which
the financial institutions are obliged to file a Currency Transaction Report
(CTR).
On 25 June,
Adan Farias, another strawman and horse trainer, opened bank account
#07349-69234 at Bank of America. This account accepted checks only (like a sBusiness
Checking Account). The account was under the name of LA Horses Inc. During
October, November and December 2010 the account had 12 structured deposits totaling
$95,150 (all of them below $10,000) from money exchanges in Laredo, Texas.
- 10/21: $8,000
- 10/22: $5,500
- 10/22: $8,000
- 10/29: $9,900
- 11/01: $6,300
- 11/01: $8,000
- 11/02: $1,650
- 11/17: $6,000
- 11/17: $9,000
- 11/18: $9,000
- 12/20: $5,900
- 12/20: $9,900
The legal
documents show how these payments were arranged in such a way that the money
was almost impossible to track. For example, Nayen, who also acted as strawman
for the network, distributed cocaine in Dallas for Miguel Angel. The drug
proceeds were sent to Piedras Negras before Nayen took the money to money
exchange businesses in Nuevo Laredo. He would then exchange the pesos for
dollars and send them to the U.S. as maintenance payments. Sometimes Zulema would
arrange some maintenance payments through the corporate structure she co-owned.
For example, during June 2010, Zulema made several payments through Tremor’s
accounts. On another occasion on November 2011, Zulema paid the expenses of
several horses being trained at Lexington, Oklahoma, through 66 Land LLC.
2011 was
another successful year for the network. The strawmen sold two large deals. One
occurred in January (12 horses for sold for US$546,200 at Oklahoma City;
Agencia ADU received the amount) and another one in November (8 horses for US$211,500
at Oklahoma City). In this last one Jose sold Blue Girl Choice for US$102,000
(he had bought it for $70,000), Number One Cartel for US$280,000, Devil Ridge
for US$100,000 and Forty Force for US$40,000.
2012 saw a
large purchase when between 19 – 21 January the network purchased at the
Heritage Place Winter Mixed Sale at Oklahoma City 5 horses and 2 in-utero foals
for US$280,400. ADT Petroservicios transferred $228,700 as partial payment on
15 February. The remaining US$52,700 were paid on 28 – 29 February 28 and 1
March. Someone made 8 cash deposits through the Bank of America office in
Laredo to the Heritage Place’s account. 4 of the deposits were under $9,900.
Since 2010 the FBI had spotted the network and started investigating it. As the
legal documents show, the whole scheme was torn apart on June 2012 when the U.S.
federal agents stormed the properties and ranches owned by the network and
started capturing most of the members, including Jose. The trial was covered
extensively by Borderland Beat.
Key
Considerations: How The Network Made Money
Until this
point, we have discussed how this network channeled drug profits from the U.S.
to Mexico where it was laundered through legitimate business and then wired to
the US to buy horses or to pay for the horses’ maintenance. We have described
how the purchases were made. In the end the network spent literally millions of
dollars buying horses and sold only a few of them.
One can ask
himself: how did these people made money? When answering this question, we must
consider that the money laundering business is not about obtaining profits but
about disguising the illicit origins of the funds being laundered. If the
laundering network can obtain profits managing the dirty money, the better for
the owners of the money. Nevertheless, in fact most of laundering networks
do not obtain profits but lose a certain amount of the money being laundered
(sometimes even a 20% can be lost because of transaction/operating costs).
The only thing that matters is to disguise the dirty money.
FBI agents at horse property owned by Los Zetas (credit: AP) |
The
over-invoicing method is even easier. A real example will clarify it. El Gordo
bought Blue Girls Choice for US$15,000 in cash. At some point in time he sold
the horse to one of his strawmen for US$135,000 (this means he re-purchased it for
US$135,000). He re-purchased it again for US$30,000 and a fourth time for US$135,000,
always acting through strawmen who paid with the network’s money. In the end,
it was a matter of raising the price to pay more. In this way the network can
fuel more and more cash into the system since the strawmen selling the horse transfer
the funds to entities controlled by the Treviño brothers.
Conclusion
In conclusion,
the network was established to create a diverse asset portfolio for Miguel
Angel and his brother Oscar Omar. They would send dirty money laundered in
Mexico to the network, which bought Quarter horses with it. At the same time
the network would be maintained and filled with dirty cash disguising it as
maintenance expenses and funneling it through several classical money
laundering techniques.
We would like
to point that the data presented here could be partial and that it is possible
that the Treviño network was much larger. The Treviño’s portfolio is possibly large
and diverse, and this scheme could be only a tiny fraction of it. If they were
able to send money abroad and disguise it for years, it is likely the Treviño’s
have larger reserves of money accessible from other parts of Mexico.
Los Zetas reportedly
have small-time accountants for each of their criminal units, but there are
others who sometimes reach high-ranking positions in the cartel. Among them was
Juan Manuel Muñoz Luevano ("El Mono"), who managed a money laundering network from
cocaine sales Los Zetas made in Spain.
Nowadays, the
Treviño clan still dominates extensive parts of Tamaulipas through the Cartel
del Noreste (founded by another Treviño relative, Juan Francisco "El Kiko Ozuna", and currently directed by his son Juan Gerardo "El Huevo"). According to
several reports they would be laundering money coming from extortion, drug
trafficking, human smuggling, oil theft and contraband through insurance
companies located in Texas.
In the end the Treviño clan has been able to create
several laundering networks through which their money is constantly circulating.
Only time will tell when the next money laundering network (although maybe not
as big as this one) is discovered.
Sources: Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera (2012); Eduardo Salcedo-Albarán & Luis J. Garay-Salamanca (2019); Joe Tone (2012); Reporte Indigo (May 2013 and July 2013); Proceso (2018); U.S. Indictment (2012)
Sources: Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera (2012); Eduardo Salcedo-Albarán & Luis J. Garay-Salamanca (2019); Joe Tone (2012); Reporte Indigo (May 2013 and July 2013); Proceso (2018); U.S. Indictment (2012)
They mentioned Banker, but always get clean, no indictments, so the U.S. Politicos are involved in money laundering also to cover for the bankers. Will say Banker untouchable. They have a lot of power
ReplyDeleteOoohh the bankers have had their fingers slapped alright, so they have been punished as expected. Disgusting it is, but as expected.
DeleteBanker always clean
DeleteLazcano in black suit at mr. pilotos win
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/Y5AKHlymZr0
H”
@1100 how u know that?
DeleteWtf is it him?
DeleteOh Don’t have to believe me I’m not gonna proved anything Just wanted to share it, obviously this is with some minimal face touch up and couple lbs less his before You can see him where he is at ardillas wedding and the reason he alter his image after that, but These guys have fun too and go out. like Ramon Arellano in Las Vegas 1995 all over paper view at Chavez fight sitting on the 3rd row
DeleteAlso in 2013 before la panchas murder in bc chino ántrax walking in with team Chavez jr at the Bc fight.
Oh and the 2008 music video where chino ántrax is in a black Lamborghini in Vegas there’s also a picture where Chavez jr is with chino ántrax in that same Lamborghini in Vegas
H”
https://youtu.be/ljbtlaSR3e0
DeleteH”
The zetas can kiss all their U.S. assets good bye. One slip up and the DEA/CIA take everything. Dont the cartels realize the house always wins in the U.S.
ReplyDeleteThe total spend here was max 20 million over 4 years. The Zetas allegedly(!) made 100's of millions each yeat.
ReplyDeleteHence, either this was a small fry and the question is where is the rest
OR
The Zetas top dogs did not make that money for themselves, but spent most of their revenues on paying (aka bribing) government officials to protect them.
Awesome, thank you for the detailed information MX!
ReplyDeleteIs that really Lazcano?
ReplyDeletedoesn't look like him at any age...IMO I have seen these vids and images before
DeleteWeird to see how brazen they were. 6 or so months later he was dead. You look at him, and he didn't look so tough, but he was a stone cold killer. El Verdugo
ReplyDeleteHe was a scumbag rat. A product of the truly sick and primitive mexican political system.
Deletenah he looks like a villian from a movie with the all black suit and all
Delete10:56 el Cabo de Infanteria Lazcano was a product of the Mexican military allied with the Kaibiles and the School of the Americas trained in "counter insurgency" to murder indians in Chiapas, Guerrero and Oaxaca with Lt. Arturo guzman decena who trusted him a bit too much...
DeleteThe gringos don't like it when a Mexican capo gets too big, got to grind them DOWN..
ReplyDeleteLike tupac said in one of his song "when a nigga getting bigga they come to get yA" "it's like a muthafuken trap" couldn't said it any better... NO FUTURE IN BEING A MEXICAN CAPO. Or black for that matter..
kill all involved silently
ReplyDeleteAdan Farias running around California scared out his mind.
ReplyDelete