"stevectpa" and MX" for Borderland Beat; USDOJ
A Mexican
cartel boss and 27 coconspirators have been charged with laundering more than
$10 million in drug proceeds through a local clothing retailer, announced U.S.
Attorney for the Northern District of Texas Erin Nealy Cox.
In a 38-count superseding indictment unsealed today, a federal grand
jury charged 28 individuals connected to Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion – one
of Mexico’s most violent and powerful drug cartels – with conspiracy to launder
monetary instruments and other financial, drug, and gun crimes, including
conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine, conspiracy to distribute heroin, and
possession of a firearm by an undocumented alien.
“Drug cartels like CJNG wreak havoc across the globe, driving the spread
of deadly drugs like meth and heroin,” said U.S. Attorney Nealy Cox. “We’re
committed to tracking the money and disrupting these organizations by attacking
their bottom line. By striking both the money and the drugs, we can more
effectively impact the organization.”
“Addiction to drugs has many different faces. In this instance,
the addiction to money and greed has met its consequence”, said Eduardo A.
Chávez, Special Agent in Charge of the DEA Dallas Field Division.
“Despite CJNG’s efforts to disguise their illegal activities into our North
Texas communities, the DEA will seek to starve it of every last drug dollar and
achieve justice for all those involved.”
According to court documents, Jose Valdovinos Jimenez, a plaza boss who
goes by “La Roca” or “The Rock,” allegedly conspired with his codefendants to
smuggle hundreds of kilograms of methamphetamine and heroin across the Mexican
border, distribute the drugs within the United States, launder the proceeds,
and then transfer the money back to CJNG leaders.
In order to insulate himself from law enforcement activity and limit
losses from law enforcement raids, Mr. Jimenez and other leaders of CJNG
implemented a compartmentalized infrastructure, relying on couriers to smuggle
the drugs across the border, recrystallization laboratories to purify drugs for
sale, fortified stash houses to store the drugs before distribution, and a
multi-level dealer network to handle the cash.
At Mr. Jimenez’s direction, mid- and upper-level dealers transported
drug proceeds to Yoli’s Western Wear, a clothing retailer located on Buckner
Boulevard in Dallas. The 23-year-old manager of Yoli’s, Ivan Noe Valerio, and
his family members then counted the money and separated it into thousands of
transactions, sending it through a money remitter back to CJNG in Mexico.
An indictment is merely an allegation of criminal conduct, not evidence.
Defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in a court of
law.
If convicted, Mr. Jimenez and Mr. Valero face life in federal prison.
Other defendants charged in the scheme include:
·
Teodoro Valerio Perez (Valerio’s father)
·
Yolanda Mercado Valerio (Valerio’s mother)
· Iris Yaneli Valerio (Valerio’s sister)
· Laurentino DelaCruz, aka “Tino,” (alleged meth dealer)
· Carlo LNU, aka “Gordo,” (alleged wire transactions
handler)
·
Jesus Manuel Juarez Aguilar, aka “Chucho” (alleged wire
transactions handler)
·
Cuauhtemoc Gonzalez Del Rio (alleged wire transactions
handler)
· Jonathan Rene Jacobo Mata Oscar Mario Flores Daza Antonio Pena,
Jr.
· Eduardo Galdean Gress (alleged stash house
distributor)
· Lorenzo Piedra Chavez (alleged heroin dealer)
· Blanca Flor Hernandez
· Aniano Chavez Avila (alleged stash house distributor
· Raul Ceja Barajas (alleged laboratory operator)
· Alejandro Garcia Lopez (alleged laboratory operator)
· Joel Guillermo Torres (alleged drug courier)
· Roberto Macias (alleged stash house distributor)
· Alexander Alvarez (alleged stash house
distributor)
· Edgar Eduardo Vicente Miranda (alleged meth
dealer)
· Manuel Garcia Gomez (alleged laboratory operator)
· Jorge Humberto Larios Velazco (alleged laboratory
operator)
· Arthur Ernest Rubalcaba (alleged stash house
distributor)
· Jose Alfredo Penalozo Perdomo Carlos Michael Hernandez (alleged
meth dealer)
· Hobedt Moreno (alleged meth dealer).
During the course of this investigation, agents seized approximately 700 kilograms of methamphetamine, approximately 80 kilograms of heroin, and approximately $500,000 in drug proceeds. Dozens of the charged defendants have already been arrested. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s Dallas Field Division, the Texas Department of Public Security, the U.S. Marshals Service, and ICE Enforcement & Removal Operations conducted the investigation with the assistance of the Midlothian Police Department and Ellis County Sheriff’s Office. Assistant U.S. Attorneys PJ Meitl and Travis Elder are prosecuting the case.
CJNG Indictment - August 2020 by MX on Scribd
Excellent 👍 work do the crime pay the time in the pokey. Mexican Marina's only confiscate the drugs and don't arrest the criminals. In US arrest, confiscate and names get published.
ReplyDeleteThat store wasn't even that busy lol especially with this whole covid19 stuff. Too much traffic perhaps is what got them caught?
ReplyDeleteGallinas Unidas still bruised after what CJNG did to them in El Guayabo. 😂
ReplyDelete🐓🐓
La mencha is a coward who likes to hide like a lil girls under her mothers skirt crying for help
DeleteThat is how you know they are working in those Texas/East Texas plazas, when the indictments reflect that.
ReplyDeleteJalisco has always been at least in Veracruz. Not so sure about Tamaulipas. But Jalisco hates the Zetas given what they did to the Milenio / Valencia cartel many years ago. So a CJNG and CDG alliance makes sense. BB has talked about the rumors of the CJNG involvement in La Frontera Chica.
DeleteDamn we can’t even feed our own kids because government quick to say its money laundering. Set these 28 people free.
ReplyDeleteSet free after some time in the slammer.
DeleteGente del Mencho
ReplyDeleteAny idea where Jose “Roca/Colima” Valdovinos Jimenez is a jefe de plaza? Never heard of him before.
ReplyDeleteDamn the government has been hitting mencho
ReplyDeleteDon't worry? CJNG got a brand new Store to take its place
ReplyDeleteSoy Valdovinos - Jhonny Velazquez
ReplyDeleteMake sure yall using tor to access these sites, feds do pay attention
🐓🐓
surely we will find that "company s" is also ran by connected criminals eventually
ReplyDeleteseñor mencho ocupa gente más lista no unos pendejos
ReplyDeletecjng thinks americans dont mess around, they forget the bigger stronger cartel is the CIA
ReplyDeleteCJNG is getting HIT hard WHILE CDS is getting strong
ReplyDelete