María Antonieta Rodríguez Mata |
The names of
some of Mexico’s most famous drug lords are well known by many: Joaquín
"El Chapo" Guzmán Loera, Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada and
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, "El Mencho". Aside from their profession,
they also have one thing in common – they are all men.
But those
following the evolution of Mexico's drug cartels over the years have noticed demographic changes: women rising to leadership positions along these powerful
men. One of them was María Antonieta Rodríguez Mata ("La Generela"), a former Tamaulipas State
Police officer and convicted Gulf Cartel kingpin.
On the last day of Women's History Month, Borderland Beat will cover the life of Rodríguez Mata, a woman who led a sophisticated drug trafficking network from Reynosa, Tamaulipas, that extended to elsewhere in Mexico and into South and Central America. Roles of women like her are often overlooked in Mexico's criminal landscape, but she surely won't be the last.
Early life and personality
Rodríguez Mata was born in 1969 in
Tampico, Tamaulipas, Mexico, to Antonio Rodriguez Zacarias and Rosalia Mata
Espinoza. When she was one-year old her family moved to Reynosa, where she grew
up. Rodríguez Mata is the youngest of six siblings. She was very close to her
father, a local Pemex laborer, and identified mostly with the paternal figure
in her household. From a very young age her parents noticed her high
intellectual abilities. She stood out from most of her classmates academically
and was recognized for her sharp reasoning.
Socially, Rodríguez Mata preferred
the conventional; she usually takes on the dominant role in group settings. Her
criminal psychologist said that her personality was formed in an environment
where she received a lot of attention and recognition for her appearance and
actions. In later years, she suffered from a degree of grandiosity, need for
admiration, and a worry for being successful.
She studied at the Universidad
Valle de Bravo, Campus Reynosa but suspended her studies when she was 22-years
old to pursue a career in the Tamaulipas State Police. She was admitted into
the agency in 1992. When Rodríguez Mata was in the Tamaulipas State Police,
authorities suspected she also protected the criminal activities of the Gulf
Cartel kingpin Osiel Cárdenas Guillén. Her career in the police was
short-lived; she handed over her badge and left the state police in 1996. But
the reason why she did shocked investigators in later years.
Organized crime
career
According to
investigators, she was hired into the Gulf Cartel by Gregorio Sauceda Gamboa
("El Caramuela"), a senior member of the cartel who had also served
alongside her in the state police. El Caramuela was assigned to protect
Cárdenas Guillén by state police chief Arturo Pedroza Aguirre, and was
responsible for hiring several policemen to work in the cartel.
Rodríguez Mata
rose through the ranks of the Gulf Cartel and became a high-ranking member in
Reynosa. She served as the Gulf Cartel's link to other criminal groups in the
U.S., Mexico, Colombia, Guatemala, and Dominican Republic. According to her
associates, she often met with criminal members out of her house in Las Fuentes
neighborhood in Reynosa or traveled in person to meet business partners; she
preferred to discuss and struck drug deals in person. In her meetings, she was
reportedly accompanied by Mexican law enforcement agents.
Outside of her
organized crime career, she also ran multiple businesses, including auto repair
shops, restaurants, real estate leasing agencies, and a fish farming company.
She posed as a legitimate business person with these money laundering fronts.
She owned a house in Reynosa and in Monterrey, where she usually preferred to
stay.
In the cartel,
she was assigned to manage an international narcotics ring from Colombia,
Guatemala to the U.S.-Mexico border with Texas. The drugs she supervised were
transported via land and guarded by corrupt members of the Tamaulipas State
Police, some whom she had previously worked with. Rodríguez Mata worked closely
with Zetas member Rogelio González Pizaña ("El Kelín"), who served as
her intermediary in Veracruz. Once in Tamaulipas, the drugs were smuggled via
the Reynosa corridor and into McAllen, Texas, before being sent to Dallas and
Houston for further distribution. Then drugs were then redistributed through
different places of the U.S. interior, including to the states of California,
Georgia, North Carolina, Illinois and New York.
U.S.
authorities first noticed her in 1999, shortly after two U.S. federal agents
were threatened at gunpoint in Matamoros by Cárdenas Guillén's henchmen. In 2000,
the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas (S.D. Tex.) in
Brownsville indicted Rodríguez Mata on six counts of drug trafficking,
conspiracy and money laundering. According to the indictment, Rodríguez Mata
was responsible for smuggling more than 100 lb (45 kg) of marijuana and more
than 160 lb (73 kg) of cocaine between March and December of that year. The
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) determined she made around
US$200,000 in drug proceeds for these shipments.
Arrest, extradition and
conviction
Rodríguez Mata lived comfortably in Mexico knowing she did not face
criminal charges. But on February 2004, the Federal Investigative Agency (AFI)
arrested her in Monterrey. The arrest was conducted as a result of a U.S.
extradition request despite her not having outstanding charges in Mexico.
Rodríguez Mata was transferred from Monterrey to Mexico City and imprisoned at
the Reclusorio Preventivo Femenil Norte, a women's prison, and placed under the
jurisdiction of a penal judge.
In September 2006, the Mexican government
authorized Rodríguez Mata's extradition to the U.S. However, her defense issued
several writs of amparo to prevent her transfer. In August 2007, she was
extradited to the U.S. to face drug trafficking and money laundering charges in
S.D. Tex. The Secretariat of Public
Security (SSP) confirmed that she was flown in a non-commercial plane from the
Toluca International Airport to the McAllen-Miller International Airport. U.S.
officials were on-board; once in the U.S., she was taken into custody by the
U.S. Marshals Service. Former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Tony Garza stated that
Rodríguez Mata's extradition was a sign of collaboration between justice
officials in the U.S. and Mexico. U.S. officials asked the presiding judge to
hold Rodríguez Mata without bond. If convicted, she faced up to life
imprisonment.
Federal Bureau of Prisons data showing her release date |
In early 2008, Rodríguez Mata pleaded guilty to two counts of
drug trafficking related to shipments from northern Mexico to New York. On 3
October 2008, Rodríguez Mata was sentenced to 102 months (8.5 years) in a U.S.
federal prison for her leadership role in an international drug trafficking and
money laundering organization. Her conviction included three years of mandatory
supervision upon her release. Since Rodríguez Mata had already served several
years in prison both in Mexican and U.S. custody, she was expected to be
released in about four years.
If one searches in the Federal Bureau of Prisons,
you'll find a lady that matches her name and age in the search list. We can
only assume at this point, but it seems like Rodríguez Mata was released from
prison on 31 May 2013, after a little over four and a half years in custody.
There are no public records of her deportation to Mexico, and it is uncertain
if she held U.S. citizenship/residency. She faces no criminal charges in Mexico.
Note:
This post includes excerpts from the Wikipedia page of María Antonieta Rodríguez Mata, which was published by Borderland Beat reporter "Morogris" in December 2019. Over 30 sources were used for this report.
You know why? She is a snitch for the Feds and has a new identity.
ReplyDeleteYou couldn’t be more right.
DeleteWinner winner chicken dinner!!
DeleteGreat post, keep up the good work MX !
ReplyDeleteThank you! Glad you enjoyed it.
DeleteThis shit is going on now and will continue
ReplyDeleteBecause narcos and Leo’s work together
Damn mex gov don’t pay decent
Witness protection
ReplyDeleteInteresting post MX.
ReplyDeleteWomen today despite the male machismo attitude have proven to be equivalent or better in many professions. Along with the ruthlessness.
Thank you, glad you enjoyed it!
DeleteSonia Atala from Bolivia and former mexican Federal Police officer Marcela Rosaura Bodenstedt Perlick never did time.
ReplyDeleteThank you MX for your articles on the gulf cartel. Alot of people may not know but it's alot of history that people may find interesting.
ReplyDeleteYou're very welcome! I specialize in Gulf Cartel research topics. I got some interesting posts in the upcoming months about Gulf capos from the 80s (with exclusive pics).
DeleteAnything on M3 or Juan Perros?
DeleteIs el R1 from Gulf Cartel rojos still alive?
DeleteRaised here on the frontera I grew up with this history and new a lot of the players.
DeleteM3 and Juan Perros would be good bios to look into. Juan Perros was sentenced to 33 years in 2018. I published Eleno Salazar Flores (Pantera 6)'s article on Wikipedia in January 2020. He worked for Juan Perros.
Deletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleno_Salazar_Flores
And no concrete info on R1. He's still wanted by U.S. authorities. Rumors say he left to work for Sinaloa after M3 death / CDG's internal war. I invite you to comment in the Gulf Cartel's forum thread. We've talked about R-1 several times before and bounced ideas.
Same here MX, your awesome work get's noticed by everyone even though we might not comment. Especially since I always travel through matamoros all along 101 all my life, even through the old 101 hwy en cd Victoria cuando era pura carretera peligrosa.
ReplyDelete.Always a good read, gracias compa y saludos pa la raza desde Houston TX
Thank you. I'm glad you enjoy the reports! Be safe out there, saludos.
DeleteMX
DeleteDo a story of the real reason why Mario Pelon betrayed Mike El Gringo. I’ve heard different reasons and also different ways that it went down. Would like to hear the truth
Please visit the forum and post a reply in the Gulf Cartel thread so other users can comment too. There are many people who have a lot of notes on these guys as well.
Deleteis it me or does ever xdg story revert to the 1 time osiel and his goons pointed guns at 2 us agents?
ReplyDeleteobviouslt the highlight and demise of osiels career
You guys should start a narco trading card game, all these cartel cheerleaders would definitely buy them,lmao
ReplyDelete"In September 2007, the Mexican government authorized Rodríguez Mata's extradition to the U.S. However, her defense issued several writs of amparo to prevent her transfer. In August 2007, she was extradited to the U.S. to face drug trafficking and money laundering charges"
ReplyDeleteThis doesn't make sense, August is BEFORE September...
Good catch. Tiny but serious typo on my part. I meant to say September 2006. I've amended this publication and her Wikipedia page.
Deletehttps://archivo.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/442243.html