Most-wanted criminals in the El Paso-Juarez border area (Border Report, Nov. 2019) |
Other police officers’ homes have been
shot at. Chihuahua Attorney General Cesar Augusto Peniche this week told a
newspaper that authorities are now after the new leader of La Empresa, the
group he believes ordered 14 attacks on police in Juarez. The attacks were carried out by the Aztecas, one of the street gangs it
controls. Peniche only identified the suspect as “El Nomo,” or “The Gnome.”
Reliable sources in Juarez say the man is Omar Alejandro Garza Santana or Omar Alejandro Chávez Santana, the brother of
jailed former La Empresa and Aztecas leader Gerardo Santana Garza, or Gerardo
Garza Santana, a.k.a. “300.”
Mike Tapia, a sociologist and author of
“Gangs in the El Paso-Juarez Borderland,” said six or seven gangs are mostly to
blame for the current violence in Juarez. Some of the gangs, like Barrio Azteca
and Mexicles, actually originated in the U.S. prison system. As they were
deported they found a place in Mexican drug cartels and later developed a new
generation of much more violent followers.
“Things had calmed down in 2016 and 2017,
but they started to pick up in 2018. Last year was very, very violent, and 2020
is shaping up the same,” Tapia said. The warring gangs are either affiliated
with the Sinaloa cartel or the local La Linea drug trafficking organization. The
bloodshed stems from efforts to control drug-staging areas into the United
States, Juarez’s growing consumer market or results from internal strife.
“A lot of the violence is because of the
splintering. Things are decentralized. Groups are reforming. Allies aren’t
allies anymore and enemies are working together on occasion,” Tapia said.
That’s the case with La Empresa, a fairly recent construct made up of a faction
of the Aztecas, defectors from Sinaloa’s Mexicles and possibly funded by La
Linea.
Gerardo Santana Garza, a.k.a.. 300, a jailed leader of The Aztecas and La Empresa drug gang. |
Peniche told El Diario de Juarez the violent realignment of the past couple of
years has left La Linea and Aztecas in control of 70 percent of the drug trade
in Juarez today. La Linea is also winning the war against Sinaloa in the
Chihuahua countryside. “La Linea is more management. They’re higher up in the
chain. Other groups operate on a street level,” Tapia said.
La Linea includes
well-armed, highly trained police officers originally recruited by the Carrillo
Fuentes family, he said. It may also include “legitimate” business people and
corrupt cops, Peniche said. “I have no doubt that, at the basic levels,
traitors exist. People who sell information, that tips off regarding
operations, who disclose investigations,” Peniche told El Diario. He added that
some officers who “took money” and didn’t deliver have been targeted or
threatened by the gangs.
I could never understand why sicarios go after law enforcement, knowing that the cops will always have (should have) more resources, more backing (feds, state and local) and all the time in the world to find you.
ReplyDeleteBut that is not the case is this country....
DeleteIn Mexico the cartels have more money, weapons, and soldiers than the cops, and as we've seen several times, the Mexican Military. Also, the cartels have many employees in LE and military as well.
ReplyDeleteIn Mexico the police are very poorly paid. Like $80 or $100 a week. It's pretty easy for the narcos to take over control of the police.
ReplyDelete