Women
of Organized Crime
When people think of organized crime they usually
perceive it as a world dominated by men. However, there have been several women
who have made a name for themselves in the world of organized crime. If that
does not surprise you, then the increasing number of women who have chosen a
life of crime in recent years will. If that's still not enough, then the
audacious crimes and the types of women who commit these crimes is sure to
leave you in shock.
In Mexico’s horrific cycle of cartel-spurred
violence, it's becoming more and more common to see women playing important
roles and even taking powerful positions in organized crime. In a culture known
for its machismo, women command a startling degree of authority over the
Mexican drug cartels. Some women run their finances, major smuggling
operations, and even run entire cartels.
There are women in the lower levels of the Mexican
drug cartels as well. From female assassins to low-level currency changers and
everything in between. Most women start off laundering money for the cartels.
Some come from powerful families of the narco-trade and have gained experience
and connections by growing up around the narco-trade since the day they were
born. Others have learned the business and gained important connections by dating
powerful men in the narco-trade.
However, Mexico is not the only country that has
produced powerful female gangsters. There's well known female crime bosses from
all over the world, especially countries like Columbia and Bolivia, where most
of the world’s cocaine is produced. Other countries include Guatemala and the
United States. Guatemala because it's a key corridor from South America to
Mexico, and the United States because of it's the worlds #1 consumer of illegal
narcotics.
a closer look at some of the most well know women of organized crime.
La
Jefa
Enedina Arellano Felix is known as “La Jefa” (The
Boss), “La Madrina” (The Godmother), and “La Narcomami” (The Naro-Mother). She
leads the criminal organization known as the AFO (Arellano Felix Organization
AKA Tijuana Cartel) along with her son Luis Fernando Sánchez Arellano.
Enedina was born into a family of drug traffickers.
In 1977, when she was seventeen, Enedina harbored her dream of becoming the
queen of a carnival in Mazatlán, but she abandoned it after her two brothers,
Ramón and Benjamín, were wanted by the United States and the Mexican
government. During that time, her older brothers were working for Miguel Ángel
Félix Gallardo, who would eventually give them the drug corridor in Tijuana,
Baja California.
Throughout most of the 1980s and 1990s, the Arellano
Felix Organization was headed by her six brothers, while Enedina advised and
helped them in money laundering and financial administration. Enedina graduated
with a Bachelor's degree in accounting from a private university in
Guadalajara, Jalisco.
After the fall of a financial mastermind of the
cartel Jesús Labra Avilés, alias “El Chuy” in the year 2000, Enedina took up
the position and began to directly manage the money laundering activities of
the criminal organization.
Eventually she emerged as the leader of the AFO
after her brother Eduardo Arellano Félix was arrested in 2008. This move took
authorities by surprise because Enedina was never considered to be a leader of
the organization. Her historical contacts with drug suppliers in Colombia
managed to keep the organization afloat.
Enedina has reportedly helped contribute a more
"business-like vision" instead of the old and violent practices of
her brothers, who previously led the Tijuana Cartel before they were arrested
or killed. She forged alliances with other criminal organizations, as opposed
to her brothers, who often resorted to violence. The Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) and the Mexican media identify Enedina as the first and
only woman to lead a criminal organization in the world, activities
historically reserved for men.
La Reina del Pacífico
Family connections have played a major role in her
criminal career. She is the niece of the man known as the original “Godfather”
of Mexico’s drug business, Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo. On her mother's side,
the Beltrán-Leyva family has been involved in drug trafficking for three
generations. The Beltrán-Leyva family began smuggling heroin in the 1970s and
later diversified into cocaine.
While family connections introduced her to the narco
trade, it was her beauty, charisma and ambition that got her to the top of the
business. “She used her physical attributes to do business and gain allies”,
says noted journalist Ricardo Ravelo. “Her character is violent and
manipulative; she has a very active social life, loves parties, jewels and
pleasures.”
By using her beauty and sex appeal, she attracted
powerful Colombian and Mexican narco traffickers and was able to connect the
Mexican Sinaloa and Colombian Norte del Valle cartels. She seduced the drug
trafficking business’ most powerful men.
She had romantic relationships narco heavyweights
such as Sinaloa Cartel kingpins Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel and Colombian mobster
Diego “El Tigre” Espinoza. She was married twice; both of her husbands were
ex-police commanders who became drug traffickers, and both of them were later
killed by hired assassins.
The authorities attribute her rise to power in the
drug world primarily to her most recent relationship with Juan Diego Espinoza
Ramírez, alias “The Tiger”, who is said to be an important figure in the
Colombian Norte del Valle cartel. Avila’s “claim to fame” is that she, and Juan
Diego Espinoza Ramirez, alias El Tigre, established ties between the Sinaloa
Cartel and Colombia’s dominant Cartel del Valle.
Despite her high-profile lifestyle, Beltrán long
avoided leaving police any evidence. However, she was eventually arrested,
along with Espinoza Ramírez, on September 28, 2007, in Mexico City. She was
charged and convicted of laundering billions of dollars from drugs smuggled
from Colombia to Mexico.
Estrella Hermila Ramos
When our parents transcend to the next life, it is
customary to mourn their deaths. However, when Estrella’s father Juan
"Johnny" Ramos was gunned downed, she didn't mourn him. Ramos was
saddened by her father’s sudden death, but she was more focused on avenging him
and determined to reclaim his turf. Estrella never doubted that she could make
it in the world of Mexican drug cartels.
Estrella Hermila Ramos realized as a child that her
father Juan "Johnny" Ramos was a player in CDS (Sinaloa Cartel).
After her father’s death she joined forces with her mother, Acela del Carmen
Lizárraga. Acela had experience in the business, and they began pulling in
$10,000 a week by shipping packages from Mexico into Texas. Mom cut, weighed,
and bagged the cocaine; daughter handled customer service.
Like her mother, Estrella started out small, selling
to musicians and executives. But the pair climbed the cartel rungs together,
eventually handling payoffs to politicos and passing along information to cops
on the take. Her mother Acela was eventually arrested as she was delivering a
shipment of coke to Estrella's house.
The arrest should have served as a warning to
Estrella, but the cash proved too compelling. While her mother was in prison,
Estrella continued dealing and doled out cash to cops until there was nothing
left to give. In 2004, a month after her mother's release, Estrella was pulled
over while driving, charged with distribution, and sentenced to 40 months in
prison. She was released in 2008 and now claims to be living an honest life.
Aunt
Dolly Cifuentes and Ana Maria
Both “Aunt Dolly” and Ana Maria belong to the family
of the former President of Colombia, Alvaro Uribe, and were actively involved
in drug trafficking while Uribe was being paid $8 billion by the U.S.’s Plan
Colombia to pursue a war against Columbia’s cocaine traffickers. (continues on
next page)
“Aunt Dolly” is the sister in-law of the former
President of Colombia, Alvaro Uribe. She was either married to Jaime Uribe or
the long-time mistress (accounts vary) of Jaime Uribe, Alvaro Uribe’s brother.
Their daughter, Ana Maria, also a part of the family drug business, is Alvaro
Uribe’s niece. Dolly Cifuentes’ dynastic ties to drug trafficking go far beyond
her marriage to the brother of former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe.
“Aunt Dolly” is the sister of a clan of drug
trafficking brothers known as the Cifuentes Villa organization.The organization
capo was Francisco Cifuentes, known as “Don Pancho”, until he was assassinated
in 2007. “Don Pancho” cut the historic deal with Sandra Avila’s assistance, to
distribute Colombian cocaine into the U.S. through Mexico with Sinaloa Cartel
leader “El Chapo” Guzman.
After “Don Pancho” was assassinated, Jorge Milton
Cifuentes Villa became the premier leader of the Cifuntes Villa organization.
Jorge Milton Cifuentes was captured in Venezuela and extradited to Colombia in
2012.
Upon the arrest of Coronel Barreras (father in law
of “El Chapo” Guzmán) in April of this
year, it was disclosed that Coronel was in charge of the transport of Cifuentes
cocaine into the US from several points of South and Central America. He was
the contact person for “El Chapo.”
“Cifuentes’s organization amassed a great fortune in
money and illicit properties, as one of the main providers of cocaine to the
Sinaloa Cartel”, says the DEA website.
On February 13 of this year, the Office of Foreign
Assets Control (OFAC) of the Department of Treasury of the United States
designated Cifuentes Villa – who also has Mexican nationality- “most
significant drug trafficker”. OFAC
maintains that Cifuentes is owner of 15 companies that operate in Colombia,
Mexico and Ecuador.
Jorge’s sister Dolly Cifuentes Villa was extradited
to the United States in August of 2012.
Dolly’s daughter, Ana Maria Uribe Cifuentes was also arrested. The arrest of Ana Maria caused uproar in
Colombia as it was exposed that she was in fact the niece of Álvaro Uribe,
former president of Colombia. The controversy was such that the former
president was forced into a statement where the president claimed he had no
knowledge of any relationship between his brother Jaime and Ana Maria.
"My brother Jaime died in 2001, he was married
to Astrid Velez, they had two children ... Any other romantic relationship that
my brother may have had was part of his personal life and is unknown to
me," Álvaro Uribe tweeted. Addressing the other elephant in the room, he
denied Jaime was ever linked to the drug lord Pablo Escobar.
Alvaro Uribe has been directly linked to drug
traffickers himself as well. In 2007, he allegedly approved the loading of 3.6
tons of cocaine at an airport he controlled in Rio Negro Colombia onto a
“former” CIA Gulfstream (N987SA) jet from St. Petersburg Florida that crashed
in the Yucatan. The fact that two successive U.S. Administrations provided
billions of dollars to stop drug trafficking to a Colombian President who was
involved in the drug trade himself also raised suspicions and conspiracy
theories.
There is no proof that there was a legal marriage
between Jamie and Ana Maria, a few counterfeit marriage certificates abound on
the internet, and if they were married there is the problem of his other and
public wife. But there is no denying the
parentage birth certificate confirms the rumor.
Subsequent to the statement of the president, his
spokesman issued a statement that Dolly and Jaime had a brief affair. That notion was dispelled when it was
discovered 10 years after Ana Maria a second child was born, Daniel Alberto
Uribe Cifuentes. Dolly was 32 when
Daniel was born. There is a document showing a joint deed on a property owned
by the couple giving credence they were together for at least 15 years.
Angela
Valencia Sanclemente
Angela Sanclemente is a former Colombian beauty
queen and lingerie model believed to be the ringleader of one of the world's
largest drug syndicates.
Valencia's operation is believed to be a "rival
empire" to that of her former boyfriend, a Mexican drug baron known as
"The Monster”.
She formed her own cartel after splitting with him.
She is alleged to have recruited other models, whom she is quoted referring to
as her "unsuspicious, beautiful angels" as drug traffickers, paying
them up to around $5,000 (£3,200) per trip to transport cocaine from Argentina
to England by way of Cancún.
Valencia's alleged syndicate was believed to have
been exposed on 13 December 2009, when a 21-year-old woman, "Ariel
L", was arrested with a suitcase containing 55 kg (121 pounds) of cocaine
at Ezeiza International Airport, Buenos
Aires, Argentina. "L" made no attempt to
hide the drugs inside her bags, leading authorities to suspect the ring had
help from employees.
She is reported to have been told that no one at the
airport would try to stop her, and an investigation was launched to find
employees of the airport with possible links to the syndicate. After
questioning "L", three additional arrests were made and a warrant was
issued for Valencia's arrest.
Valencia was finally arrested in Buenos Aires,
Argentina, on May 26, 2010, while staying in a local hostel. Police reported
that she had registered under a false name and had tried to alter her
appearance by dyeing her hair blonde. She is currently serving a six year
sentence that began on May 2012.
Marllory leads a drug trafficking and money
laundering organization based out of Guatemala with operations in Honduras and
Panama that supplies the Mexican drug cartels.
Chacon Rossell is believed to be one of the most prolific narcotics traffickers
in Central America.
She is responsible for transshipping thousands of
kilograms of cocaine per month through Guatemala, into Mexico, and on to the
United States. Chacon Rossell is also
believed to launder tens of millions of U.S. dollars in narcotics proceeds each
month, making her the most active money launderer in Guatemala.
“Marllory
Chacon’s drug trafficking activities and her ties to the Mexican drug cartels
make her a critical figure in the narcotics trade,” according to OFAC Director
Adam J. Szubin. Locals describe her as a flashy woman who wears designer
clothing, moves in high society circles and manages huge sums of money in her
bank accounts.
Marllory works for Honduras drug lord Mario Ponce,
who was arrested in 2011 and extradited to the United States.Chacon allegedly
laundered drug profits in Guatemala that Ponce arranged from Honduras. Among
those who helped Chacon is a new Guatemalan impresario, owner of a chain of
stores around the country, to whom Marllory reportedly gave a unit in an
exclusive condominium on the highway to El Salvador. An informant fingered Marllory a couple of
years ago as a possible money launderer, after she began moving large sums of
cash through a bank account.
Her brother, Ferdy Oswaldo Chacon Rossell, is also a
drug trafficker linked to Haroldo Lorenzana. The Lorenzanas are a renowned drug
clan that has been repeatedly in the sights of U.S. drug agents.
Laura
Zuniga
After winning the state pageant title of Nuestra
Belleza Sinaloa, Laura Zúñiga competed against thirty-two other contestants in
the national pageant Nuestra Belleza México 2008, held on September 20, 2008 in
Monterrey, Nuevo León, where she was the
substitute and was automatically
selected to represent the country in the Miss International 2009 pageant.
On October 30, 2008 she participated in Reina
Hispano-Americana (Hispanic-American Queen) representing Mexico in Santa Cruz,
Bolivia bringing the title to Mexico for the first time ever.
On December 22, 2008, Laura Zúñiga was arrested in ,
Jalisco, along with seven men who allegedly carried $53,000 in cash, two AR-15
rifles, three handguns, 633 cartridges of different calibers, and 16
cellphones. The arrest was made by the state police of Zapopan and Mexican Army
officers. She was rumored to be the girlfriend of Luis David García Gutiérrez,
brother of Raúl "El Doctor" García, the financial officer of the Juarez
Cartel.
In her initial statement, Zúñiga declared that she
was on her way to a party in Guadalajara and that she and her boyfriend were
going "shopping in Colombia and Bolivia." The media noted that
Colombia and Bolivia are both, main suppliers of cocaine to the Mexican drug
cartels. During a later interview with Joaquin Lopez Doriga in Radio Formula,
Zúñiga declared that she was kidnapped by her boyfriend Ángel Orlando García
Urquiza, apparently a high-ranking leader of the Juárez Cartel and brother of
an imprisoned drug lord, and that she was unaware of his illicit activities.
The critically acclaimed 2011 film, Miss Bala, or
Miss Bullet, is loosely based on Zúñiga. Several key facts are switched in the
film, for example, replacing the setting from Sinaloa to Baja California.
The basic structure of Zúñiga's story remains,
however, such as the allegations of corruption in the pageant organization,
Zúñiga's presentation to the media at the time of her arrest, and her
allegations that she was not involved in narcotrafficking. Both Zúñiga and the
main character, Laura Guerrero, even wear the same clothing when presented to
the media and when crowned beauty queens.
Maria
Susana Flores Gamez
Maria Susana Flores Gamez was a Mexican model and
beauty queen. She was crowned 2012 Woman of Sinaloa. From early in her life she
had been well off, attending private schools and winning beauty pageants since
kindergarten, but despite her affluence she was still attracted to the fast
life.
Very little is known about Maria during the last
years of her life. She was killed in November 2012 during a shootout against
the Mexican military. The circumstances surrounding her death are controversial
and accounts of the event vary.
The official Mexican military report says that she
went down in a hail of bullets after she emerged from the car with a gun in
hand and opened fire on the soldiers. According to the attorney general’s
office, she was used as a human shield and never fired a shot when she came out
of the car wielding an assault rifle with the other gunmen hiding behind her.
One report states that neighbors heard her trying to
surrender, saying “Don’t shoot,” while the official reports by the Federal
Police say they found an automatic weapon by her side and that forensic tests
showed residues of gunpowder on her skin proving she was shooting at the
soldiers.
What is known is that Ms. Flores was at safe-house
with a group of henchmen associated with Orso Ivan Gastelum “El Cholo Ivan” of
the Sinaloa Cartel. She was shot in the neck and killed by Mexican marines
while trying to escape. One of the gunmen in the shootout was rumored to have
been Maria's boyfriend, but those rumors have never been confirmed.
Another interesting detail of this story is the fact
that the gun she died with was traced back to “Operation Fast & Furious”,
the extremely controversial ATF policy that “let guns walk” into the hands of
Mexican drug cartel members.
...continues on next page...
Maria's father, Mario Flores, was also shot dead on
June 4, 1998 in their hometown of Guamuchil, Sinaloa. Alinstante Noticias says
Mario Flores was a man respected by members of the criminal underworld, and
that people in the town claimed he had been involved in narco trafficking.
For her Quinceañera, Ms. Flores arranged for
Valentin Elizalde “El Gallo de Oro,” a Mexican Banda singer, to be her padrino,
but he was gunned down and killed by members of the Zetas a month before the
celebration. Valentin’s brother, Jesus “El Flaco” Elizalde, stepped in to
replace him.
La
Emperatriz
Blanca Cázares Salazar is known as “La Emperatriz”
(“The Empress”). Blanca is famous for her proficiency with numbers and her
diverse business empire. She allegedly used an network of 23 individuals and 19
companies throughout Mexico and California to launder money for the Sinaloa
Cartel on behalf of “El Mayo” Zambada. These businesses include a toy factory,
a real state agency and a restaurant.
Blanca is also known for her stunning beauty and
charming personality. Locals describe “The Empress” as “a pretty little blond
ranch girl who wore tight clothes and white jeans.” Her keen business sense,
beauty and charm are all qualities that attracted “El Mayo” in the early
1990's. The two started dating and “El Mayo” eventually employed her services
as a a low-level currency changer while they were dating and she eventually
became the chief financial operator of the Sinaloa Cartel after years of
experience in the business.
In 2007, she was designated a key money launderer
the Sinaloa Cartel by the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control. Her
assets were frozen and her business was seized. Several of her businesses were
based in Los Angeles and San Diego. Now in her late 50's, Blanca has been on
the run ever since and her whereabouts are unknown.
In 2008 her son was murdered along with “El Chapo”
Guzmán’s son in an attack that was apparently carried out by the Beltran Leva
Organization.
Ivonne Soto Vega and Eduardo Arellano Felix |
La
Pantera
U.S. authorities have identified Ivonne Soto Vega,
known as “La Pantera” (The Panther) as a leader of the cell that used nine of
the money exchange businesses named to launder more than $120 million over
three years. For over 15 years she collaborated with brothers Ramon and
Benjamín Arellano Félix to launder money in Mexico and the United States, Specifically
in Tijuana and San Diego. “La Pantera” operated through several money exchange
transfers of money from drug trafficking to accounts in Mexican and America.
She was 50 years old when she was captured in Tijuana in 2001.
The Arellano Felix cartel used to be the predominant
group controlling the flow of drugs into California, but the cartel has
encountered serious setbacks over the years from a series of arrests and
attacks from the Sinaloa Cartel in the war for Tijuana. However, they have
reportedly been making a comeback recently in the fight to control extremely
lucrative Tijuana corridor
La
Tosca
María Guadalupe Jiménez López, alias “La Tosca” (The
Tuff One) is affiliated with Los Zetas. She's considered to be Mexico's most
prolific female assassin. “La Tosca” was responsible for robberies,
kidnappings, killing rival gang members and managing 14 drug hotspots in
Monterey. For her efforts, "La Tosca" was paid 10,000 pesos every two
weeks, or about $1,500 per month.
When Maria was captured in 2012 she confessed to
killing 20 people, including rival cartel members and police officers. She is
accused of leading a Zetas cell that's allegedly responsible for a slew of
crimes, most notably, the murder of detective Antonio Montiel Álvarez. Jiménez
claimed to have blocked off Álvarez' car with an SUV, and she and a squad
opened fire with 9 mm rounds according to Proceso.
Other murders "La Tosca" allegedly headed
up include the torture and killing of two youths whose bodies were left in a
white Ranger on April 20 and three others killed in February in connection with
an attempted car theft.
La
Flaca
Veronica Mireya Moreno Carreon, alias "La
Flaca," (Skinny) is widely regarded to be the first female to ever rise to
a position of leadership in the notorious Zetas drug cartel. Mireya Moreno
Carreon managed all of the drug traffic in the Monterrey town of San Nicolas de
los Garza. Carreon is reported to have taken over the territory when previous
capo Raul Garcia Rodriguez got taken down by a military operation in 2010.
Before becoming a Plaza Boss for Los Zetas, Moreno
was a decorated cop. She worked in San Nicolas de los Garza, one of the
districts of greater Monterrey, where on April 22, 2009, she and a partner
confronted kidnappers trying to snatch a car salesman from a lot. She was
wounded in a shootout, and after recovering was given an award for her service
to the community. But some time later, she failed tests to determine weather of
not she was taking bribes, according to press reports, presumably a lie
detector.
Monterrey has been a brutal battlefield for drug
cartels, with the Zetas facing off against competing groups for dominance.
Known as “La Flaca," Carreon only had a year on top before an undercover
investigation busted her. She was in a stolen car and in possession of 100
individual bags of cocaine, 50 of crack, and two of marijuana as well as a .38
Special revolver.
La
Guera Loca
Her real name is unknown, but “La Guera Loca” (The
Crazy Blond) is a CDG (Gulf Cartel) sicaria (female assassin) known for her appearance in a brutal cartel
execution video that was posted on the internet. In the video, “La Guera Loca”
administers a gruesome beheading of an alleged Zetas member with a large
machete.
Once the head is completely chopped off, she picks the
head up by the hair and shows it to the camera up close. When she puts the head
down, an other member of the group proceeds to peel his face off of his skull
using a small pocket knife before the rest of his body is mutilated and
dismembered.
She herself was killed and decapitated - see below she is at far right directly before her decapitation.
She herself was killed and decapitated - see below she is at far right directly before her decapitation.
The
Cocaine Godmother (Above)
Griselda Blanco is probably the most well-known
female gangster of all time. She is regarded as a former “queenpin” of the
Median cartel and a pioneer in the Miami-based cocaine business of the 70's and
80's.
Blanco was involved in much of the drug-related
violence known as the Cocaine Cowboy Wars that plagued Miami in the late 1970s
and early 1980s, when cocaine replaced marijuana as the drug of choice for drug
dealers on the streets. The media and the Cocaine Cowboys documentary has made
her a celebrity of the drug trade, but her reputation is more fiction than
reality according to most experts and people who were there.
Her distribution network spanned the United States.
Street allegedly brought in $80 million per month. Her violent business style
brought government scrutiny to South Florida, leading to the demise of her
organization and the free-wheeling, high profile Miami drug scene of those
times. She was suspected of masterminding over two hundred murders.
In the mid-1970s, Blanco and her second husband,
Alberto Bravo, emigrated to the United States, settling in Queens, New York.
They established a sizable cocaine business there, and in April 1975, Blanco
was indicted on federal drug conspiracy charges along with 30 of her
subordinates, at that time the biggest cocaine case in history. She fled to
Colombia before she could be arrested, but in the late 1970s she returned to
Miami.
Street lore describes Blanco as the most ruthless
killer of her era, but there was an even bigger killer in Miami at the time. A
Venezuelan man named Amilcar Rodriquez. Many of the people that Griselda Blanco
claimed she killed were actually killed by Amilcar Rodriquez, and Rodriquez was
more than happy to let Blanco take the credit for the murders because it
enabled him to keep a low profile and attract less attention.
By 1984, Blanco's willingness to kill her rivals and
take credit for murders she never ordered earned several enemies, so she moved
to California in order to avoid assassination attempts on her own life. On February
20th, 1985, she was arrested by DEA agents in her home. Held without bail,
Blanco was sentenced to more than a decade in jail. She continued to run her
cocaine business while in jail.
By pressuring one of her lieutenants, the Miami-Dade
State Attorney's Office obtained sufficient evidence to indict her for three
murders. However, the case collapsed, largely due to technicalities, and Blanco
was released from prison and deported to Colombia in 2004.
Griselda Blanco was 69 years old when she was gunned
down in Medellin, Colombia on September 3, 2012. The hit was committed by a man
who calmly hopped off the back of a motorcycle, methodically put a gun up to
Blanco's head and proceeded to pump two bullets into her brain. The same method
of carrying out a hit that Blanco was credited with inventing.
While her reputation has been greatly exaggerated,
she was sill a major player in Miami's cocaine business in the 70's and 80's.
However, she was not the biggest female drug lord of her era. The biggest female
drug lord of the 80's was a Bolivian woman named Sonia Sanjinez De Atala.
Sonia
Sanjinez De Atala
The beautiful and deadly Bolivian named Sonia Atala.
who, by any measure, was the real “Cocaine Queen” of the 1980s. Sonia's story
is fascinating and complex. According to Michael Levine, author of “The Big
White Lie,” Sonia Atala played a leading roll in the The Cocaine Coup.
Levine says, “Of all the drug barons in Bolivia,
Sonia’s connections in Colombia and the United States were the best. Bolivian
Minister of the Interior Col. Luis Arce Gomez quickly recognized her value to
the government and put her in charge of selling the government’s cocaine, then
piling it up in bank vaults and letting it rot.”
Levine explains that in 1979 and 1980, the
center-left Bolivian government of Lidia Gueiler Tejada had agreed to work with
DEA in targeting that nation’s major narco-barons, individuals such as Roberto
Suarez, Jose Gasser and Alfredo Guitierrez.
That led these narco-traffickers, cloaked in the
garbs of legitimate businessman, along with elements of the Bolivian military,
who were literally assisted by former Nazis (chief among them, Klaus Barbie AKA
“The Butcher of Lyon”), to organize a successful coup d'etat against Gueiler’s
government. Levine adds that the CIA backed this “Cocaine Coup” and that many
of its chief architects and key players, the top narco-traffickers in Bolivia,
were, in fact, CIA assets.
Levine writes in his book the Big White Lie. “The
Cocaine Coup had turned Sonia Atala into the chief international sales
representative of Bolivia, then producing (in the early 1980's) approximately
80% of the world’s cocaine. Beyond doubt the biggest female drug dealer of all
time.
Levine is not alone in his assessment of the forces
behind the Cocaine Coup, which resulted in making Bolivia a South American
narco-state in the early 1980s and a major supplier of cocaine to the US during
the period in which Griselda Blanco and Papo Mejia were fighting over the
streets of Miami.
Robert Parry, a former Associated Press reporter who
played a key role in exposing the Iran/Contra scandal in the mid-1980s, in a
story written in 1998, also insists that the CIA backed The Cocaine Coup.
Eventually Bolivia’s Queen of Cocaine fell victim to
the treachery that comes with greed and power. She had grown too powerful in
the eyes of some powerful Bolivian narcos running the country in 1980 and 1981,
so they double-crossed her on a coke deal she had made with Colombian
Mejiathen. She had no place to run and decided to become an informant in
exchange for a lighter sentence. She remains in the witness protection program
to this day.
Stay tuned for Women of Organized Crime (Part 2),
where we take a closer look at famous woman who have dated narcos, daughters of
organized crime bosses, and women who were victims organized crime
violence.
This is an ARCHIVE article as it indicates on the first time at top. Please send in updates to any vignette in this post. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks Chivis and BB for the highly focused article by Jay Dub, on women drug trafficking.
DeleteMexico-Watcher
La Pantera from the old CAF was a powerhouse money maker. She had money exchange houses scattered throughout the border back in those days. She was a golden asset for the tijuana cartel
ReplyDeleteIs she still in jail?
DeleteLa Reina Pacifico is a gorgeous chunk of estrogen.
ReplyDeleteHave you seen what she looks like now? It isn't a pretty sight.
DeleteBlog Del Narco just did an article on Nancy from Los Palillos.
ReplyDeleteThis is great content! Thanks Chivis!
ReplyDeletethe picture of "la flacka" is not her. that was a wannabe sicaria who was later found chopped up in a cooler. i remember. she has a tattoo on her arm that says niña or niño.I remember someone commented for her to sell the gun and buy a better tv then thee one in thee backround.
ReplyDeleteYour right she was killed by scorpions in Rio bravo I think
DeleteCIA = Cocaine Import Agency
ReplyDeleteThey hustle real hard. I suppose the FIA (fentanyl import agency) is a thriving upstart arm of the OG’s of the cocaine trade.
DeleteSpeaking of Sandra Beltran, does anyone know what happened to her Colombian narco boyfriend, Juan Diego Espinosa Ramirez, who was arrested with her and extradited to the U.S.? My guess is that he disappeared into the WITSEC but I can't seem to find any information.
ReplyDeleteMachisimo is not limited to men
ReplyDeleteIn the execution video which one is the Guera Loca??
ReplyDeleteThe one in pink on the far right she gets hacked to pieces on video
DeleteAunt Dolly hottest aunt ever.
ReplyDeleteChivas, thank you for bringing this back up. Just today, Costa Rica paper is prefacing a book based on la Reina del Pacifica. I'll put the article on the forum for those interested.
ReplyDeleteLa China?
ReplyDeleteYeah, why isn't she on here... wasn't she pretty brutal
DeleteFinally someone gets it right about La Emperatriz being Blanca Cazares and not Claudia Ochoa
ReplyDeleteWell 5:10 you can thank Chivis for digging out the archives, she gets into the nitty gritty information. Furthermore Sol, likes to find gory articles with video.
Deleteel moreno was killed on accident by Macho Prietos men...not sure why the media keeps the lie afloat that BLO killed him?
ReplyDeleteChapós son was killed by el MP Mario Pineda villa who worked for Arturo Beltran Leyva
DeleteNice informitive article, what stood out for me is, when Johnny was killed, the daughter Estrella took over drug operations, along with the mother.What I am surprised is today they call it bribes, that back then they had to payoff the politicos and the cops to look the other way, but when no money was coming in that dried out... Estrella the daughter got arrested, and nowadays it continues in Mexico, bribes keep the government happy.
ReplyDeleteLuna Apagtha
One of these lady's was decapitated, but no mention of it hear.
ReplyDeleteLa Guera Loca go back and read slowly
Deleteno proof for some of these claims, eg. CIA, and especially Alvaro Uribe who was a clean dude, check his record on drugs.
ReplyDeleteGreat read Chivis.
ReplyDeleteI thought the beauty queen was choo ivan's girlfriend
ReplyDeleteExcellent compilation of info on ‘queenpins’. Great read.. De Atala is by far the most intriguing to me, as is the nazi connection to the Government run/backed Bolivian cocaine industry., featuring Klaus Barbie as an organizer of paramilitary (then military) wing of this enterprise.
ReplyDeleteHow fucked up is it that the three letters knew the whereabouts of these fucking monsters and actually worked WITH NAZI WAR CRIMINALS that they were allegedly hunting, to bring poison into their own country?!?!
These are dark forces that have been pulling strings, carrying out assassinations, and sowing the seeds of warfare, famine and drug fuelled misery on a global scale since before the JFK assassination. This article is a prime example of the complicity and active engagement of world powers in the drug trade. God, if you’re there, take out the trash please
Frank
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ciU2tZKJVcQ
ReplyDeleteLa Güera Loca ??? Her name is mentioned there but its somehow connected to BdN.
What happend to la pantera
ReplyDeleteDead
DeleteGuera Loca....Jesenia Pacheco Rodriguez. I’ve never really been convinced that the one who was executed was really her.
ReplyDeleteThat Laura Zuniga chick is so beautiful she should have many suitors hopefully sne learned her lesson and stay away from narcos
ReplyDeleteThe Guera Loca decapitation video was one if not the first cartel decapitation video i ever saw, a very disturbing "WTF did i just watch" moment
ReplyDeleteBefore I moved to the states and live in Puerto Rico, there was this young beautiful woman who ran the biggest puntos in La Perla. Her name was La Brujah. Word was that her husband was top dog and got killed by rivals. Well long story short, she like tripled his business after she took over and was more ruthless than he ever was. She went out to NYC for vacation I believe and got turned on to crack. Needless to say she brought that to PR and blew TF up. Unfortunately, her rivals caught up with her in 1992 but that woman was a true hustler and gave any man I’ve met a serious run for their money.
ReplyDelete