In October, 2014 The
ATF agency along with Mexico’s PGR agency dismantled two shops, both in
Jalisco, one in Guadalajara, that was producing AR-15 rifles. The factories were part of an network that
sold its product to organized crime groups.
This was the first of its kind to be discovered in Mexico.
The shops manufactured
the weapons for organized crime groups in Michoacán and the local cartel,
Cartel Jalisco New Generation (CJNG). It is estimated the shops were only
operating for a few months. The material was imported from the United States.
Below is an extract from
an in-depth article of the same subject from Motherboard titled “The Cartel
Gunsmiths”, use the link to read full article.
Written by Brian
Anderson
It was usually evening
when the three men arrived at the shop. They would roll up in a Volkswagen
Beetle, and come to a halt at a nondescript, garage-sized warehouse in a strip
of shops in a residential neighborhood in Guadalajara, in Southwestern Mexico’s
Jalisco state. They would park the Bug, and proceed to drink on the curb.
Eventually the men would go inside, entering through a street door. They always
locked the door behind them.
This went on for at
least two months in 2014, according to a neighbor of the shop, where the men
seemed to work odd hours. They never drew much attention to themselves, so
there was little reason to believe their shop, located at calle Isla Trapani
2691, was in fact a sophisticated illegal gun manufacturing plant, and that the
three of them were using the space to quietly produce homemade, untraceable
firearms for one of Mexico’s fastest-growing and violent crime syndicates.
lower receivers |
Inside the shop, the
men mostly made AR-15s. These air-cooled, magazine-fed rifles have become
ubiquitous among Mexican narcos; they’re relatively lightweight, and can take a
beating. At their secret lab in Guadalajara, the three men fashioned the AR-15s
from an assemblage of firearms components purchased in borderland gun shops in
the US, and then smuggled into Mexico in small batches, according to officials
from both countries who were interviewed for this story.
But as Mexican
authorities discovered when they raided the shop, with support from American
officials, on October 7, the men also milled functioning AR-15 lower receivers
from unfinished blocks of aluminum. The lower receiver houses an AR-15's main
firing mechanism, and by Mexican and American law is the only part of the rifle
that's legally defined and controlled as the "firearm."* The men made
these lowers in-house with the same sort of milling technology now embraced by
a worldwide maker movement. In Mexico and the US, legal lower receivers bear
serial numbers designed to make the firearms traceable. The homemade Jalisco
cartel guns, being unserialized, are nearly impossible to track with a level of
certainty.
Organized crime groups
in Mexico have long trafficked in illegal firearms, but cartels need firepower
now more than ever as they diversify their portfolios, adding oil theft,
extortion, kidnapping, and human trafficking to the mix, along with drug
running. Here, for the first time, was evidence of a cartel making its own
firearms too. Was it just a one-off novelty, or an omen?
***
They hid in plain
sight, the homebrew gun club for a powerful new gang, the Jalisco New
Generation Cartel. The Jalisco cartel has undergone such a meteoric, savage
rise to power in the last few months that the head of criminal investigations
for Mexico’s attorney general labeled the gang a “red flag.” The group is
terrorizing the region with coordinated attacks on government installations. In
May, Jalisco cartel members downed a Mexican military helicopter with a
rocket-propelled grenade. Six soldiers were killed. The Jalisco cartel is also
behind a rash of fiery roadblocks, in which cartel operatives set large
vehicles and gas stations ablaze as a show of strength and to incite chaos. The
cartel has been behind 39 of these roadblocks as of today; one of them, just
blocks away from the site of the gang's boutique gun lab, involved a public
transit bus.
finished lower receiver |
The lower receiver is
the crux of an AR-15. It plays host to the rifle's trigger mechanism, and
conjoins the stock, grip, and magazine, as well as the upper receiver, to which
the barrel mounts. For a rifle like an AR-15 that has both upper and lower
receivers, only the lower receiver is considered the firearm, making the rest
of the gun's parts far easier to acquire and harder to trace.
The DIY gun machining
process often begins with a "blank," an unfinished piece of material
that, with the right tooling, can be augmented to house the actual firing
mechanism. The US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF)
doesn’t consider a blank to be in a “stage of manufacture," which is when
the firearm must be classified per the US Gun Control Act, if it's 80 percent or
less complete. In other words, the blanks widely known as "80 percent
lowers"—meaning they have a solid fire control cavity not yet machined
with holes or divots for a fire selector, firing pins, or a trigger—are not
legally considered guns by the ATF, and can be purchased off the shelf in the
US but not in Mexico.
It’s only once that
cavity is properly machined to house a firing mechanism that the unfinished 80
percent lower receiver becomes a finished lower receiver, at which point it
meets the legal definition of a “firearm” in both Mexico and the United States.
It is then subject to government regulation, and must be issued and stamped
with a serial number.
Amateur machinists and
gunsmiths have been tooling functional lower receivers from 80 percent blanks
for decades. Today, there are a few ways to do this for an untraceable AR-15:
with a good, old-fashioned drill press, similar to the hand drill used in this
ATF demo; with a 3D printer; and with a computer-numerical control (CNC) mill
that can automatically machine an untraceable gun out of metal.
But the men weren’t
merely finishing the job on receiver blanks at the lab in Guadalajara. They
were creating new lowers altogether.
A finished lower
receiver might be what makes a gun “a gun” in the eyes of the law on both sides
of the Mexico-US border. But even a firearms novice knows there’s a lot more to
a gun than that. Where did all the other gun parts—the stocks, grips,
magazines, barrels, ammo, and so on—that funneled to the Jalisco cartel’s
illegal arms factory come from?
Special Agent Keith
Heinzerling, of the US ATF, said we don’t know because gun parts cannot be
traced as they are recovered within Mexico. A serial number is required to
conduct a trace via the ATF’s e-Trace system for tracking recovered firearms,
and gun parts, with the exception of the receiver or frame, do not bear serial
numbers per the GCA. They therefore cannot be traced.
“You could surmise that
[the parts] are coming from the US, since most of the weapons that come down
here illegally are from the US,” Heinzerling, the ATF country attaché to the US
Embassy in Mexico City, told me over the phone. “But we don’t have our finger
on that. There’s no way to trace them back.”
Cartels don't need these shops they have the ATF.
ReplyDeleteCartels need to finish their own weapons in their own shops because it would be "illegal" for any government agency or private "lords of war" to sell finnished weapons to any criminal drug trafficking outlaw cartels...
Delete--much less now that the mexican governing narco-mierdocracia is buying weapons by the Billions of Dollars with the imaginary oil profits they got from "selling" pemex for peanuts, because they are chimps, and chimps like peanuts, and belong to the harvard U mafia...or Yale U...
Ahha ha aha ha that's so funny,,
DeleteDo you want any 'whine' with your cheesy,,comment? Cry us a river ?
ATF makes laws to help the cartels. Big business.
DeleteAy ill tell you this, out here in the States them vatos, the gun smiths, they would have there own reality show :)
ReplyDeleteI'm sure there's more people here in the states and in Mexico building these lowers. A CNC machine is easily purchased on Craigslist and the re are brokers who can ship them to you anywhere in North or South America.
ReplyDeleteLooks like they are more than ready for cds, they allready took tijuas from them. Cds does not stand a chance unless they snitch on them like allways lol
ReplyDeleteSnitching is better than murdering the opposition, and their partners, their wives, their children, their brothers and sisters, their parents and stealing their chicken for dark purposes...
DeleteSNITCH Y'ALL!!!
9:29 you must be from sinaloa lol
DeleteOnce u mill the reciver to completion it does not have to be stamped with a serial number at least in the U.S
ReplyDeleteWhat happens when Mexico has no other countries to blame for the guns and violence in Mexico but themselves. Will the government and the people stand up and take the responsibility for the internal cleansing that will be needed? Be ready for that day to come because it's getting closer and closer as we speak.
ReplyDeleteIt will be a while until mexico has no other cuntries to blame, they may never get a chance, there are soo many greedy bastards, they will never run out of business, but one thing is for sure, it is not working, BRICKS BANKING has the new world order by the tail, the austerity that vulture capitalism imposed on their target countries is backfiring, the juice is running out...AND the chinese are giving it their all, time to cook the paper tiger?
Delete--The chinese are doing their Great Leap Forward, while the US and co keep jumping up and down, and often backwards...
Never happen,because underlying all the recrimination there is a fundamental,altogether nastier and somewhat unsophisticated view of people's outside Mexico..We all know what that is,politically incorrect maybe,but nevertheless true...
DeleteThe skewed political climate doesn't allow us to point to unwholesome truths dude..Consequently blatant lies and half truths are routinely levelled at the hated' gringo '
DeleteA fall guy for everyone in this time?
8:42 yep, like the Donald is gettin' a lesson on how to be a biiig mouth, and the situation complicates your little life, getting birthed ass backwards first...
Delete--wuuu, don't badmouth the mexican, no mo'...he he heee!!!
Given the only options the citizens of Mexico have for legal weapons...this market is wide-open for business. This will not be the last time we read, or hear about some guns being pieced together in Mexico.
ReplyDelete