Blog dedicated to reporting on Mexican drug cartels
on the border line between the US and Mexico
.

Saturday, December 31, 2022

"I Think We're Going To Do Very Well In 2023," AMLO Says In New Year's Message

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador shared a video recorded from the archaeological site of Palenque, in Chiapas, with a message for the New Year, through which he stressed that he is optimistic about what will happen in 2023, highlighting Mexico's cultural greatness.

"What better place to wish a good year in 2023, to wish personally that we enjoy good health and be very happy and publicly, to tell you that I am optimistic and I want to transmit this optimism to all Mexicans," said the president.

"And what I base my optimism on, fundamentally on this, on what we Mexicans are, on this cultural greatness. We are heirs of great cultures, splendid civilizations," he expressed in the video, which lasts 5 minutes and 49 seconds, published on his various social network accounts.

In addition, the head of the Federal Executive Power assured that the people of Mexico were built before the arrival of the Spaniards and ironized saying that "there are still those who maintain that they brought us civilization, because 'we were barbarians'".

Likewise, López Obrador said that the country's greatest wealth is that it has an honest people, a reason that causes his optimism. He also added that, despite adversities, such as floods, earthquakes, bad governments and pandemics, Mexico has known how to move forward thanks to its strength.

"We are heirs of all those traditions, customs and what have they left us? Extraordinary virtues, such as, for example, that the people of Mexico are honest. The greatest wealth of Mexico today is honesty, that is why I speak of optimism and I believe that we will do very well in 2023", he insisted.

"Mexico is very strong, because of its cultures, traditions, because it has a good, honest and hardworking people. I convey my optimism to them and send them a hug. It is going to be a good year in 2023", concluded the President of the Republic, in the video, in which the politician from Tabasco can be seen standing in front of the Temple of the Inscriptions.

Zeta Tijuana

Crush My Soul

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat



A young man suffers unimaginable pain at the hands of misanthropes intent on dehumanizing him before his death. 

One steel tool in the hands of a cruel enforcer is used to remove toes from the captives feet without hesitation. Agonizing screams and sobbing pierce the small room where the captured male is being held against his will. 

On the last day of the year assassins from the Jalisco New Generation Cartel have openly reminded society why law enforcement must dismantle every drug trafficking organization. 


Warning: Graphic Video




Tabera cjng

Friday, December 30, 2022

Missing Butler County Man, Fiancé Last Seen Dining At Restaurant Christmas Day

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat



Rarely will you see Jose Gutierrez without a smile.

After all, his family said the 36-year-old from Hamilton, Ohio, has everything going for him. He earned a master's degree from Miami University, is currently working as a project coordinator at Champlin Architecture in Cincinnati and recently asked his girlfriend to marry him.

"He stated to my mother, to my mom and dad, 'I think I'm ready to get married,'" said Brandie Gutierrez, Jose Gutierrez's sister.

The love of his life, Daniela Pichardo, said yes.

Pichardo lives in Guadalajara, Mexico, and the two have been dating long-distance.

On Dec. 22, Jose Gutierrez flew down there to be with her for Christmas.

"I just know that they were there having dinner, enjoying their time together," Brandie Gutierrez said.

Thanks to social media posts, family members knew the couple had been dining at a restaurant in Zacatecas, a state in North Central Mexico that is about 30 minutes from Pichardo's home.

Daniela Pichardo's sister, Viviana Pichardo, and cousin, Irma Montoya, were also with them.

The restaurant, Solana Resto Bar, told WLWT managers looked at footage from their security cameras, and they could tell the group spent about two hours before leaving at 6:08 p.m.

Brandie Gutierrez said a few hours later, Daniela Pichardo's mother received an odd text from her daughter. It was her location.

"The mother did state, and her specific words were, 'I know something was not right. She sent this because they felt that they were in danger,'" Brandie Gutierrez said.

The location was in Zacatecas.

"They attempted to go on a search of that location, but they were stopped by two officers, two or three officers, and they were not allowed to enter that zone because it was too dangerous," Brandie Gutierrez said.

The Zacatecas government has since issued a missing person alert for all four of them.

Meanwhile, back in Hamilton, Jose Gutierrez's six siblings and parents hope and pray they get answers soon.

"We just want him back home. We want to know something," Brandie Gutierrez said. "We are all worried."

The Department of State said in a written statement:

"The Department of State has no higher priority than the welfare and safety of U.S. citizens abroad. We stand ready to provide appropriate assistance to U.S. citizens in need and to their families. We are aware of reports of a U.S. citizen missing in Mexico. When a U.S. citizen is missing, we work closely with local authorities as they carry out their search efforts, and we share information with families however we can."

There is a travel advisory in effect for that region of Mexico. The United States has warned people not to travel to Zacatecas because of the number of kidnappings and violent crimes.

WLWT has been in contact with a journalist in Mexico who said that the region is now one of the most violent states in Mexico, especially along the highways, because of clashes between two cartels.



Ciudad Obregón, Sonora: La Plaza Interrogates Karla Janeth Noriega Sepúlbeda

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat


The following video has been deemed safe for all to see. Within this broadcast a captured female, alleged to be an operative, from the La Chapiza mob narrates before the camera her illicit actions inside the Mexican underworld. 

Who she specifically worked for and the names of neighborhoods on the western side of Ciudad Obregón where they conducted their business are all revealed. 

Online sources have claimed that she was dropped off dead in front of the church where she was initially abducted. A narco message with threatening words was left stabbed into her corpse. 

Video translation is as follows:

Sicario: Whats your name?

Captive: My name is Karla Janeth Noriega Sepúlbeda. 

Sicario: Who do you work for?

Captive: I work for El 80. 

Sicario: What exactly do you do?

Captive: My job was to transport drugs and to collect money from the drug distributors positioned in the Libertad, Torres de Paris, Las Fuentes, and Posadas neighborhoods. 

Sicario: Where are you originally from?

Captive: Ciudad Obregon.

Sicario: Which cartel were you working for?

Captive: I worked for the La Chapiza cartel.  

Sicario: How much were you being paid?

Captive: Three thousand pesos a week. 

Sicario: Why did they have you working for them?

Captive: My husband was working for them selling white crystal meth. After he was killed I was told that he had a debt that needed to be paid off. So, there I was working away and if I didn’t want to work they would obligate or threaten me with my family. 

Sicario: Which government forces would you pay off for the distributors to reign freely?

Captive: The Municipal and State police. 

Sicario: What specific message would you like to send out to all the daydreaming dealers?

Captive: Don’t fall for whats on the surface. The La Chapiza gang ain’t worth a fuck. Everyone can see for themselves where I’m currently at now. And they haven’t bothered to do anything for my rescue.

Sicario: Here stands this dumb ass female guilty of her actions. Unlike those innocent individuals that have been abducted by the La Chapiza - Salazar mob. You’ve resorted to kidnapping family members involved in the trade in order for them to turn against us. And your actions have been done on account of the fact that you’re failing within this conflict.

That sort of shit isn’t going to help you faggots here. We’re all faithful to our flag here. Our actions have already proven this as well. If you continue with that narrative you will eventually be crying like that dumb ass Luis Encina was. We know that you have many innocent family members who roam freely throughout this country. In addition they’re also in Mazatlán and Culiacán. 

Killing women or innocent elderly gentlemen isn’t hard to do. If you want to start playing dirty then it’s up to you dumb asses how this will play out here. This will be the last warning for all guilty parties out of Guaymas and Obregón. An innocent man was abducted from Obregón last night. It’ll be up to you guys if this has to turn into an eye for an eye or tooth for a tooth matter. 

You gang of sobbing faggots will eventually cry foul wanting to make a truce afterwards asking that innocents not be messed with. Specifically not family members. Subsequently you’ll be online crying like fags claiming that the La Plaza mob kills innocents. You fucking cowards need to just come on out to face that armed confrontation against this mob. Instead of abducting innocent civilians in your efforts to locate your intended targets. 

Those tactics are not going to work here for you fucks. And for all Municipal and State governments, don’t bother involving yourselves within these affairs. This is a matter amongst gangsters. Our actions have been demonstrated before. And the next individual that I have sitting here before me will be one of you guys. 







Thursday, December 29, 2022

Rifle Disassembly Video Offers Look Into CJNG Sicario Training

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat

A video posted by a CJNG-affiliated Twitter account shows CJNG members kneeling on a tile floor, performing a timed assembly of AR-15 platform rifles, a common military training drill. 


Money Laundering Case Against Pablo Escobar's Son & Widow is Suspended in Argentina

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat

After six years of investigation, the Justice decided to suspend the trial against the widow and son of Pablo Escobar Garivia.

According to a ruling by the judges that make up the Federal Oral Court No. 2, the same one that sentenced Cristina Fernández de Kirchner three weeks ago, the case must go back to the investigation stage because "the guarantee of defense of the accused" was affected.

Pablo Escobar's son, who changed his name to Sebastián Marroquín following his father's death. The money laundering case involves a former member of their rival Cali Cartel.

The accused are María Isabel Santos Caballero, widow of Pablo Escobar; Sebastián Marroquín, son of the drug lord; Colombian native financier José Piedrahita Bayron; businessman Mateo Corvo Dolcet and soccer player Mauricio “Chicho” Serna. In a letter delivered to the judge at the beginning of the trial, Escobar's widow and son reportedly said they knew Piedrahita as a cattle rancher and were unaware he was a drug trafficker. The pair has been investigated for money laundering before, but a federal tribunal in Buenos Aires closed the case in 2005.

The five are being investigated for laundering money that came from drug trafficking. The case began based on a report from the DEA in 2016. It is worth mentioning that Piedrahita Bayron is in prison in Colombia after confessing in the United States and in his country that he laundered almost $3 million from drug trafficking in Argentina.

José Piedrahita Bayron, who allied with the Cali Cartel, was convicted of bribing a US Homeland Security agent to get a drug trafficking indictment against him dismissed.

It was determined through the Justice that the widow and son of Pablo Escobar were intermediaries in real estate investments between Piedrahita Bayron and the businessman Mateo Corvo Dolcet. While the family involved in the drug lord assured that they had no knowledge of the past of the financier detained in Colombia, who had been related to drug trafficking. The soccer player is accused of selling properties in Argentina to Piedrahita Bayron, which was also described as a laundering effort according to Justice.

However, the defense lawyers presented numerous requests for annulment and the case reached the Criminal Cassation Chamber in Comodoro Py. After the change of jurisdiction was approved, it fell on the Federal Oral Court No. 2, which finally pushed the judicial process back to an earlier stage for granting a request from one of the defendants.

"The deprivation of the defenses to access the brief presented by Piedrahita Ceballos (the repentant drug trafficker) implied a severe impairment to the exercise of the right of defense in the trial of the accused," the resolution stated. Therefore, the cause was stopped and the investigation will be reviewed again in Comodoro Py.

Sources MitreBusiness InsiderDOJ

Sinaloa Cartel Laundered Over $300 Million Through Billing Companies in Mexico City

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat

The Sinaloa Cartel laundered more than 6 billion pesos in five years with a network of billing companies in Mexico City.

According to court documents, one of those involved, identified as "Santiago," was arrested and linked to a criminal proceeding for the crimes of organized crime with the purpose of committing crimes in terms of operations with resources of illicit origin and operations with resources of illicit origin in the modalities of receiving, transferring and hiding or pretending to hide resources within the national territory.

The money laundering was done through a network of 18 legally constituted companies which were "fronts" and operated between 2013 and 2018. The network was discovered by the Financial Intelligence Unit (UIF) of the Ministry of Finance and reported to the Attorney General's Office.

In the initial investigation, the FIU detected that various companies as a whole would have operated between October 2017 and April 2018 more than 2 billion pesos, without any contractual justification, without reporting it to the authorities, and above all, without having commercial activity. given that they were "EFOS" companies, companies that invoice simulated operations.

According to the FIU, coincidences were identified between various companies in terms of legal representatives and addresses, which also have inexplicable financial ties. The commercial entities investigated, he points out, are part of an operation scheme designed to introduce resources of illicit origin into the financial system, since irregularities were detected in their operation, which highlights that they do not operate with the purpose of fulfilling their purpose.

It is found irregular and incongruous that commercial entities carry out operations for high amounts in favor of individuals through checks and transfers since it is not consistent with a real operation. There are indicators that the companies in the scheme are front companies, controlled by the same group of people since they share shareholders, legal representatives, attorneys, or other members of their corporate structures.

One of the companies in the money laundering network was tied to the financing behind El Chapo's 2015 prison escape.

The UIF indicates that one of the companies is related to the financial scheme implemented to launder money by Manuel Rodolfo Trillo Hernández and accused of financing the escape of Chapo Guzmán, in 2015. Trillo Hernández was arrested in 2015 as a financial operator for "El Chapo" for allegedly using the financial system to distribute 954 million pesos in five years, using three false entities and 16 accounts.

The FGR delved into the investigations of the network that Santiago was a part of and found that the triangulation of resources was more than 6 billion pesos. From 2013 and at least until December 2018, the documents indicate, those involved have permanently deployed behaviors whose purpose is to commit crimes in terms of operations with resources of illicit origin, in the modalities of receiving, transferring, and hiding or pretending to hide resources within the national territory with the knowledge that they come from or represent the product of illegal activity.

The documents detail that “they simulated commercial operations to try to justify the transit of resources in bank accounts and thus give them the appearance of legality. With this, illegal operations were achieved for more than 6,120,000,000; exercised between May 2013 and December 2018”. As part of the investigation, they secured 63 bank accounts contracted in the name of the people involved, from which million-dollar deposits and withdrawals were made.

The defendant, in two of his accounts, between March 1, 2015, and April 30, 2018, received 907 deposits for 406,638,446 pesos and made 670 withdrawals for 406,028,997 pesos. In other accounts in his name, from August 14, 2015, to October 31, 2018, 2,138 deposits were received for 1,004,326,606 pesos and 1,969 withdrawals were made for 1,1,480,804 pesos.

In the investigations, the FGR identified Santiago as one of those responsible and obtained an arrest warrant that was executed on June 10, 2022, and was made available to the District Judge Specialized in the Accusatory Criminal System of the Federal Criminal Justice Center in the State of Mexico with headquarters in Almoloya de Juárez. The judge ordered preventive detention that he will serve at his home due to the state of health he suffers.

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Sedena Warned: 3D-Printed Weapon$

“Mica/DrivingMSSQL” for Borderlandbeat.com


Sedena is warned about the sale of 3D-printed weapons in Europe
The leaked document maintains that in addition to drug trafficking in Belgium and the Netherlands, there has been traffic in 3D-printed weapons, made of plastic.

The Ministry of National Defense (Sedena) was alerted after receiving a cable from the Mexican embassy in Belgium in order for the agency to prepare to face new challenges such as the manufacture of weapons with 3D printers, whose development and sale has been very fast in Europe.

According to Milenio, the message warns that there is a diversity of materials that are constantly developed and sold that allow the printing of weapons quickly and at low cost, in addition to being complicated to track them because they are made of plastic and do not have a serial number.


"Weapons manufactured by 3D printers are expected to reach a new target group, people who are not properly in the criminal circuit, but want to have a firearm, such as people with extremist ideas, potential terrorists," says the message dated July 30, 2022.

In this sense, J.O. Vázquez Uscanga, a colonel of the General Staff cavalry revealed the information and added that the number of alleged Mexicans detained in different synthetic drug laboratories in the Netherlands makes the conjecture that cartels are maneuvering in Europe strong.

Likewise, the document leaked by the Guacamaya Leaks maintains that in addition to drug trafficking in Belgium and the Netherlands, there has been trafficking in 3D-printed weapons, made of plastic.

Meanwhile, Vázquez Uscanga proposed to his superiors that experiences in Belgium and the Netherlands be capitalized, who have privileged the principle of shared responsibility through closer international cooperation to address conflicts related to traffic and public security.

"The cooperation mechanisms maintained by our Armed Forces with their counterparts from friendly countries are strengthened, in order to expand the exchange of information and joint actions, to dismantle criminal organizations," he said.


In addition to this, he reiterated that greater interest should be placed in meetings attended by the Senate, as well as optimal collaboration between national agencies to be able to adequately pay attention to these conflicts.

The report details that the trafficking of weapons and narcotics generates serious problems in Belgium and it was identified that the drugs introduced enter through the Antwerp Seaport and to a lesser extent through Zaventem International Airport in Brussels. He added that cocaine is the main drug that comes from Latin America.

"It has been observed that mostly narcotics come from Latin America, mainly from Colombia and Brazil, with cocaine being the main illicit drug."

Chapitos Culiacán Dispensaries LLC

“Mica/DrivingMSSQL” for Borderlandbeat.com. Some details in this post are not new to this audience, but it was new to me.  Enjoy and leave a comment, because I know some readers have first-hand knowledge.


The Sinaloa Cartel's 'narco juniors' have big plans for marijuana, and they're borrowing ideas from California's dispensaries.

The effort is led by sons of "El Chapo" Guzmán, and the key is marketing, operatives said.
"What we are trying to do is very simple: to produce the best weed in the world," one grower said.

Culiacán, SINALOA — Someone walking around the Mexican city of Culiacán, the capital of Sinaloa state and home turf of the cartel of the same name, could be forgiven for thinking marijuana had been legalized.

Ten years ago, weed was still being sold in dark alleys or delivered by shady dealers in old cars, but Culiacán now has almost as many marijuana dispensaries as Los Angeles, even though an ounce of weed could still land you in jail in Mexico.

Since US states started legalizing marijuana — prompting a decline in Mexican weed being smuggled north — members of the Sinaloa Cartel have been looking for ways to adapt and take back the business that helped their predecessors build globe-spanning operations.



The key to their new business, according to Sinaloa Cartel operatives who spoke with Insider, is marketing.

"We don't want to be associated with the shady drug dealer selling weed in the streets or out of a window. Look at the gringos, they are selling this same product in their beautiful stores. That's what we want for the organization," a Sinaloa Cartel member described by many as a "godfather" and who is in charge of funding the new weed industry told Insider. Marijuana cigarettes inside a manufacturing house in Culiacán.

The organization — a term that members prefer over "cartel" — restructured its weed business and began a trial-and-error phase in Culiacán at the direction of Iván Archivaldo Guzmán Salazar, one of Guzmán's sons with his first wife, according to the "godfather."

Ivan and his brothers — known as "Los Chapitos" and members of a larger group of young cartel scions known as "narcojuniors"— have made Culiacán their stronghold and focal point of their efforts to expand into the marijuana business.

"The juniors put a lot of money into this, but more than money they were extremely cautious of the people they relied on," the godfather said.

After El Chapo's extradition to the US in 2017, Iván Archivaldo put together a group of five to six men who had "all of his trust" to serve as "godfathers" for a new marijuana business model.

Their role is to channel funds to a larger group of independent marijuana producers to experiment with strains, seeds, methods, and brands "until the organization finds a brand to compete or even overshadows the weed produced in the US," one of the "godfathers" said.

The Sinaloa Cartel began recruiting young producers who do not identify as members of the organization and have three main characteristics: "their passion for weed, their knowledge of the weed production process, and that have lived in a US state where weed is legal," according to the "godfather."Marijuana cigarettes are assembled inside a manufacturing house in Culiacán.

"My godfather asked me very straight up if I really knew what I was doing. I confessed that I had already started a small greenhouse for my own consumption but that if he were to trust me enough to fund me for a bigger one I could make the best weed in Sinaloa," one of the local producers, who had lived in California, told Insider.

The producer, a 31-year-old man originally from Culiacán, allowed Insider to enter one of his greenhouses, a state-of-the-art indoor operation with over 200 small marijuana plants. The plants were cared for by heat and lights, with security cameras and music running 24/7.

"What we are trying to do is very simple: to produce the best weed in the world. We buy seeds from the US, from Europe and from Canada and then we mix them and experiment with them until we get new strains original to Sinaloa," he said.

After the plants are fully grown, the weed produced in the greenhouse is taken into a different location managed by different people, where they make pre-rolled joints, wax, edibles, and a dozen other products.



The manufacturing place is a large house in a middle-class neighborhood in Culiacán where some five men oversee the operations. Each room has a different process: one for stashing the bags of weed coming from the greenhouses, another to fill the pre-rolls, another to press the weed with heat to produce the wax, and one to package and brand everything.

"The best sellers are the pre-rolled [cigarettes], and we make those by hand. We hired three people to roll joints and we are manufacturing around 1,200 to 1,500 a week," a man in charge of the manufacturing process said.

This manufacturer alone sells over 1,200 pre-rolled weed cigarettes, each for 140 Mexican pesos, or about $7, making around $400,000 a year. The "godfather" said that the organization has at least 20 different manufacturing houses under different brands.Wrappers for marijuana cigarettes inside a manufacturing house in Culiacán.

Insider conducted interviews in a house producing "Star Kush," which is probably Culiacán's most well-known brand.

Its logo has an astronaut eating a slice of pizza — the pizza is used by the Sinaloa Cartel to reference "La Chapisa," the people working for "El Chapo" and his sons. The astronaut sits on top of a huge tomato, a reference to Culiacán, which is Mexico's biggest tomato exporter.

The products are sold at about 20 dispensaries scattered around the city and owned by the same "godfathers" funding the operations. Iván Archivaldo Guzmán receives more than 30% of the revenue, according to the sources interviewed by Insider.

"We only have the permit to produce. The organization is giving us their money, their trust, and the green light to make the best product. But we can only sell to one client: the organization. We get a good pay for our job, not in the millions, but enough to live off well, but more than that, the opportunity to develop top-notch weed," one of the producers said.

Mexican lawmakers have yet to fully legalize marijuana, including its production and sale, at the federal level, but El Chapo's sons are looking to get the jump on what could soon be a legal and lucrative business.

"Los Chapitos" ultimately want to build a weed business in Culiacán as big and as flashy as the one in Los Angeles, and like their father, they aren't waiting for when the law says they can do it.

Former Tucson Border Patrol Agent Sentenced to 12 Years for Drug Trafficking & Gun Buying

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat

A former Border Patrol agent in Tucson was sentenced to more than 12 years in prison for drug trafficking, accepting bribes, and buying guns for convicted felons.

Ramon Antonio Monreal-Rodriguez, 36, of Vail was sentenced on Dec. 14, by U.S. District Judge James A. Soto, to 152 months in prison and was also ordered to pay $151,000 in restitution to the U.S. Border Patrol for salary drawn while engaged in criminal activity.

Monreal-Rodriguez previously pleaded guilty to bribery, conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine and marijuana, conspiracy to make false statements in connection with the acquisition of firearms, and conspiracy to provide firearms to a convicted felon, for his role in three separate conspiracies in two federal criminal cases, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney's Office in Arizona.

Between July and August 2018, Monreal-Rodriguez was involved in two firearm-related conspiracies where he unlawfully purchased firearms from federally licensed firearms dealers on behalf of other individuals and provided firearms to felons who are prohibited from possessing firearms, according to federal prosecutors.

While the investigations into the firearms conspiracies were ongoing, Monreal-Rodriguez also conspired to import narcotics into the United States from Mexico from Jan. 8, 2018, until his arrest on Sept. 25, 2018.

During this time, a drug trafficking organization he worked with smuggled narcotics across the border. Monreal-Rodriguez would retrieve the narcotics and take them past the checkpoint several miles from the border — often in his Border Patrol vehicle and while on duty — and then transport the drugs to the Tucson area. He admitted to distributing 250 pounds of cocaine and 235 pounds of marijuana as part of the conspiracy, the office said in the release.

Additionally, Monreal-Rodriguez admitted to receiving cash from drug sales totaling at least $1.2 million, which he transported to the border and then handed off to other individuals so it could be smuggled into Mexico. In exchange for this, Monreal-Rodriguez received cash payments.

Source Tucson Arizona Daily Star, DOJ, 12 News

Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua: Barrio Azteca Members Sentenced To 23 Years

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat


Video translation is as follows:

Female Reporter: One of the masterminds of the Villas de Salvarcar massacre and the murder of three people linked to the U.S. consulate in 2010 were sentenced this weekend by the federal judiciary for organized crime, drug trafficking and carrying firearms. Santiago Duran Salas aka El Chogui or El Chago, Antonio Chavez Ortega aka El Sogo, Ricardo de la Torre Barrios aka El Guero, Dario Saenz aka El Ceros, and Francisco Puga de la Torre aka El Paco or Pancho were sentenced to 23 years in prison. These subjects were arrested in July 2010. Look, they were arrested in 2010 and they were sentenced just now, almost in 2023.

Male Reporter: They're practically out of prison at this point.

Female Reporter: That's so true.

Male Reporter: I'm seeing something else that's just as hard to comprehend. The culprits who attacked the consulate employees behind the municipal president's office were given life in the US.

Female Reporter: Yes. But here they were given 23 years of imprisonment. Like I had previously mentioned they were detained in the month of June in 2010. Along with one of the leaders from the Los Aztecas gang nicknamed El Cameo who was taking refuge at a residence in the Tres Torres neighborhood at the time of their arrest.


Canal 44

Two Dead After Gunmen Attack Taco Stand In Oaxaca City, Oaxaca

 By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat

Two men were killed and another was injured after gunmen opened fire on a taco stand early this morning in Oaxaca City, Oaxaca this morning. The owner of the stand and a customer were the victims.

Do We Really Come From God, Were We Really Created In His Image?

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

A video has appeared online from an unknown point in time within a heavily wooded area somewhere inside the Mexican republic. 

The deranged acts of two men, short in stature, quickly comes into view. On the right side of the screen a man in blue jeans is adding the final slices with a machete in the removal of a dead man’s head. 

A heavy loss of vital fluids from the beheading has spilled and splattered onto the rocky terrain around the victims corpse. 

Unfortunately for the victim it’s not enough that his body has been desecrated. His assailants also kick his head around a few times as if it were a ball in a demented game of soccer. 

Warning: Graphic Video


Video translation is as follows:

Here lies your fucking trash you pieces of shit. Take that you sons of fucking bitches. Get the fuck out of here you dog.


* Anonymous source


Tuesday, December 27, 2022

‘El Mencho’: Chasing The Most Powerful Drug Lord In Mexico

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes is the leader of the brutal Jalisco New Generation Cartel. Despite being the most wanted criminal in North America, with millions of dollars in rewards hanging over his head, both the Mexican and US governments have failed to track him down

A police officer stands near a vehicle set on fire by members of Jalisco New Generation Cartel.

The last time a relative of “El Mencho” was arrested, two Mexican marines were kidnapped in an act of revenge. Subsequently, a military siege was unleashed, with tanks and helicopters turning one of Guadalajara’s most exclusive neighborhoods into a war zone.

On Tuesday, December 20, after the arrest of the kingpin’s brother, Antonio Oseguera aka Tony Montana, the authorities in Jalisco, Colima and Michoacán were on high alert, with soldiers and police assigned to guard almost every corner across the states. In the end, the only retaliatory act of violence committed by members of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel was a car being torched. But the extreme show of force by the security services was proof of how much the conflict between the government and Mexico’s most powerful mafia has escalated.

El Mencho – the alias of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes – is the head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. He is the number one target for both the American and Mexican authorities. The US Justice Department is offering up to $10 million for leads that could result in the capture of the most-wanted criminal in North America. Yet despite all the effort devoted to catching one man, the hunt for El Mencho has turned into a vengeful game of chess – an endless succession of attacks and counter-attacks.

In practically all corners of the country, the mafia has a presence – even in Aguascalientes, one of the smallest of Mexico’s 32 states.

Back in 2015 – when he was beginning to establish himself as the heir to El Chapo in the realm of organized crime – one of El Mencho’s men was killed by the Mexican Army. In response, a military convoy was ambushed, with 15 agents being murdered. Then, the arrest of several of the hitmen who were involved was followed by blockades throughout Jalisco and a military helicopter being shot down by a bazooka.

Three years later, when El Mencho’s wife was arrested for the first time – charged with leading the cartel’s financial apparatus – this was read as a governmental response to the attempted assassination of a former prosecutor. Her second arrest in 2021 resulted in the infamous case of two marines being abducted.

The recent arrest of El Mencho’s brother, meanwhile, has been interpreted by several analysts as retaliation for the abduction of a colonel at the hands of the cartel. However, security expert Alejandro Hope does not believe that the arrest of Antonio Oseguera is necessarily related to the kidnapping of Colonel José Isidro Grimaldo, who was “disappeared” by cartel members on December 10. He thinks that the security forces were preparing for the operation to capture El Mencho’s brother long before the abduction.

“This may be a coincidence… perhaps the kidnapping of the soldier may have injected some urgency into the matter.”

Hope also rules out the possibility that the arrest of the drug lord’s brother may be a means of getting New Generation to negotiate for the release of the colonel. It’s still unclear what exact role Tony Montana had in the structure of the criminal organization. “This won’t change the [cartel’s] calculations,” he notes.

The recent leak of millions of emails from the Mexican military leadership – known as the Guacamaya Leaks – demonstrated the intense intelligence work of the Ministry of National Defense in monitoring Jalisco New Generation’s tentacles. In practically all corners of the country, the mafia has a presence – even in Aguascalientes, one of the smallest of Mexico’s 32 states. But most of the secret operations have not resulted in great success. For instance, when the Army conducted a failed raid (based on faulty intelligence) in an attempt to arrest a major kingpin, violent retaliation swept across the states of Jalisco and Guanajuato.

“How much intelligence does the Army have?” asks Guillermo Valdés, who led Mexico’s National Intelligence Center during the presidential administration of Felipe Calderón (2006-2012).

“From what we saw in the documents from the Guacamaya Leaks, they have a lot of intelligence… but they don’t use it. Sporadic arrests won’t amount to much.”

Despite the consolidation of the militarized strategy imposed by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador – with the creation of the National Guard and the massive deployment of soldiers in the streets – the government appears to be more focused on containment. There isn’t much interest in attacking organized crime. Nevertheless, violence in Mexico has hardly declined during the past four years of the López Obrador administration.

Carlos Flores – a researcher and security specialist who has studied the Jalisco New Generation Cartel in depth – points out that the government’s strategy “lacks adequate synergy” with other bodies. There is little cooperation with institutions such as the Financial Intelligence Unit or the Prosecutor’s Office, in order to convict gangs for organized crime.

“They should focus on networks and not individuals,” he explains. The difference that Flores detects between López Obrador’s attitude towards drug trafficking in relation to previous administrations is mainly rhetorical… perhaps a little less offensive. The approach hasn’t changed, he insists, because “there remains a tendency to give continuity to the ‘kingpin’ strategy,” he sighs, referring to the practice of devoting enormous resources to pursuing criminal leaders.

The strategy of beheading the cartels by arresting their bosses was especially relevant during the government of Enrique Peña Nieto (2012-2018). This paved the way for the emergence of El Mencho and his cartel, given the displacement of other top dogs. For Guillermo Valdés – who led the intelligence service during the militarized escalation of the war on drugs, before Peña Nieto took office – “there is no general strategy to dismantle criminal organizations... only the [search for] big bosses.”

Now an analyst, Valdés references the time he spent helping to dismantle “The Zs” – one of Mexico’s largest and most violent criminal syndicates, now significantly diminished.

“First, we focused on the operative cells… the hitmen, the regional bosses, the accountants, the financial operators. We were undermining the organization from below to weaken it. After that, we were able to catch the leaders.”

Valdés does recognize, however, that times have changed. “It’s true that [Jalisco New Generation] is more aggressive against the state.”

Of all the attacks on police, military, politicians and judges perpetrated by El Mencho’s mafia, surely the one with the greatest impact was the assassination attempt two years ago on Mexico City’s police chief, Omar Harfuch. More than 20 hitmen fired 414 bullets at him with assault rifles in the middle of an ambush in one of the most exclusive areas of the capital. Miraculously, he recovered from his injuries and survived. Two of his bodyguards and a female passerby were killed in the attack.

El País

Epazoyucan, Hidalgo: Grenades Were Thrown At A Cockfighting Event

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

A cockfight that was taking place in the palenque known as La Roca, located in the municipal capital of Epazoyucan, almost ended in tragedy after an unknown subject threw two fragmentation grenades, one of which exploded and the other failed to detonate.

According to the local police, a man entered the building and threw the explosive devices at the attendees who were at the event and ran away.

Miraculously, the explosion did not reach anyone, only the nervous crisis that it generated among the cockfighters who ran away.

The municipal police and civil protection arrived at the scene and provided help to the people who were there bewildered and frightened.

The assailant fled in a black Jeep Grand Cherokee, towards an unknown destination.

Mexican Army personnel, the National Guard and state police arrived at the palenque located in front of the Tuzofari facilities, owned by a well-known businessman of the municipality, where they found and secured the grenade that did not explode.

Ministerial agents and experts from the PGJEH, were in charge of the expert reports and lines of investigation to determine if it was an attack by organized crime or an isolated event that could have ended in a tragedy.




News Hidalgo  La Voz del Pueblo

Fentanyl Seizures Double, And Half Comes From Arizona

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

A record number of fentanyl was seized by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in 2022, and about half of the nation's total comes from Arizona. “So we have doubled down on our efforts, and we are coming, and the cartels should be shaking in their boots."

Fox 10 Phoenix

Los Cuinis' Gerardo "Lalo" Gonzalez-Valencia Pleaded Guilty to Cocaine Trafficking in the US

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat

Gonzalez-Valencia pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute 5 kilograms or more of cocaine, knowing and intending that it would be imported into the United States. 

Gerardo Gonzalez-Valencia, also known as "Lalo," has pleaded guilty to cocaine trafficking in the United States. According to court documents, between 2003 and April 2016, Gonzalez-Valencia was one of the leaders of Los Cuinis, an international drug trafficking organization responsible for importing large quantities of cocaine from South America to Mexico, and elsewhere into the United States. 


In April 2016, Uruguayan authorities arrested Gonzalez-Valencia at the request of the United States. He was extradited from Uruguay to the United States in May 2020. Gerardo González Valencia had been sentenced to prison by a court in Uruguay for laundering $10 million before being extradited.

"Lalo" Gonzalez-Valencia is the brother of Los Cuinis leaders Abigael Gonzalez-Valencia and Jose Gonzalez-Valencia, and the brother-in-law of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, "El Mencho," the leader of CJNG. Jose Gonzalez-Valencia pleaded guilty to international cocaine trafficking in the District of Columbia earlier this month after being extradited in 2021.

Los Cuinis is closely aligned with the Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generacion (CJNG), based in the State of Jalisco in Mexico. Together, Los Cuinis and CJNG form one of Mexico's largest, most dangerous, and most prolific drug cartels.

One of the events attributed to Gerardo and Abigael, through a witness who cooperated with the authorities, was the coordination between the two of them to send a submarine full of cocaine from an unknown place to Mexico, and later an attempt was made to send by the same means to the United States. The US Coast Guard seized the ship and the cocaine on board was the basis of the charges against "Lalo"

Gonzalez-Valencia is scheduled to be sentenced on April 6, 2023, and faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years and a statutory maximum sentence of life imprisonment. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

Sources DOJ, Milenio

Dead: El Macrina Head of The La Familia Michoacana Plaza in Zacualpan



"Mica/DrivingMSSQL" for Borderlandbeat.com


Reports indicate that Alberto Romero Pérez, better known as "El Macrina" was killed. 





Preliminarily, three people are estimated to be detained and three more were killed. Among the detainees would be Víctor Manuel "N", alias "El iguano", alleged close collaborator of "El Macrina", who apparently managed to escape the attack.



El Macrina is the alleged head of the La Familia Michoacana plaza in Zacualpan.  The narco along with two of his hitmen died in a shootout with the military in Edomex. Three sicarios, weapons, and vehicles were seized. 




Early Tuesday morning there was a confrontation between members of the Mexican Army and members of a criminal group in the Puente de Los Sabinos area, municipality of Zacualpan, in the south of the State of Mexico.


El Macrina was wanted in which state police elements were ambushed by members of the 'Familia Michoacana' cartel in Coatepec Harinas, EdoMex.