Authorities brought four vehicles with mounted guns and a troop transport truck to a small town in rural Sinaloa. After soldiers were attacked and chased, they managed to find five vehicles, some which were worth more than $100k, which were all abandoned and left with their doors open.
Let's look at the suspicious circumstances and how they may relate to the rumors of Mayito Flaco’s involvement.
There's a rumor on the streets of Culiacan this week that Sinaloa Cartel’s Mayito Flaco was almost caught by soldiers in Lo de Clemente, a small town in Sinaloa.
Now, cartel-related rumors are usually untrue and it's no mystery as to why. Cartel groups will sometimes seed rumors in order to muddy the waters and cast doubt on their rivals. Cartel fanboys are quick to spread misinformation and propaganda on social media if it makes a rival group look bad.
In many ways, there are more bad-faith actors than legitimate truth-seekers involved in the cartel rumor mill.
But here's something that's undoubtedly true: In Mexico, soldiers and law enforcement officers are regularly paid off by cartel groups.
This is not the talk of conspiracy theorists, it is more a fact of life.
When an important cartel figure is caught, he might offer the arresting police officers (or soldiers) a large sum of money in exchange for quietly releasing them and reporting that the capo got away.
It's worth considering, if something like that happened, what kind of explanation would authorities give if the media questioned them about the incident?
And what type of illicit assets would a capo hand over to authorities so they seized it and walk away claiming to have "struck a blow against organized crime"?
On June 20, 2023, something happened in Lo de Clemente.
The rural community is located in the municipality of Culiacan, in the state of Sinaloa. The town is so remote that there are no images of it on Google Images nor on Google Street View. Aerial images taken from Google Earth offer our only glimpse of it.
According to the official government version of events, a group of soldiers went out on a routine surveillance patrol in Lo de Clemente. At some point, they were attacked by a group of cartel hitmen.
The soldiers pursued after the hitmen and they reportedly requested back up from other law enforcement and military entities at 10:30 am.
The pursuit moved south, past El Salado, ending up near the towns of Tabalá and Bebelama. But somehow all the cartel members involved in the attack managed to evade capture.
Members of law enforcement arrived near Tabalá to help reinforce the soldiers but at that point the chase had already ended and the perpetrators had fled the area.
Eventually a number of photographers and journalists arrived. By that point the soldiers and police were making arrangements to tow a number of vehicles they had seized.
One reporter from Los Noticieristas, a local Sinaloa-based news publication, spotted the Undersecretary of State Security, Carlos Alberto Hernández Leyva, on scene and they asked him for an interview.
The following is a transcript of that interview:
Policeman: Look, there was an attack against the Army soldiers who were patrolling this sector. They were doing surveillance in Lo de Clemente, near the town of El Salado. When we were notified about the attack, we immediately mobilized to reinforce the soldiers and when we arrived here, which is near Tabalá, we found several vehicles. There are approximately five or six abandoned vehicles and we are trying to move through-
Journalist: Was there any reported theft?
Policeman: Eh no, not as of this moment. We have not seized any firearms. There are not any detainees either. The pickups were found abandoned. There are two vehicles which were carrying about 3.5 tons of chemical precursors.
Journalist: Are they [the vehicles] armored?
Journalist: Was there a pursuit?
Policeman: Yes, there was a pursuit. Unfortunately, it was not possible to capture anyone. There is a helicopter currently making surveillance flights overhead. They are the ones who made it possible for us to spot the vehicles.
Journalist: And were there shots fired?
Policeman: Eh, no, we don’t know of any shots fired by Army soldiers. I think there may have been shots fired but we haven’t been in contact with the commander in charge [of the soldiers] yet.
Journalist: When did this happen? The reporting of the incident…
Policeman: The report came at around 10:30 am.
Journalist: And you seized five or six vehicles, one of them armored?
Policeman: That is right, one of them was armored.
Journalist: Are all the vehicles on this dirt road?
Policeman: In this area, not exactly on this dirt road, but in this area, around here.
Journalist: And were any of the vehicles [which were seized] reported as stolen?
Policeman: We haven't yet been able to establish if they were reported as stolen. We are trying to speed up-
Journalist: We saw black smoke coming from over there, but that has nothing to do with the operation, right?
Policeman: No, I don't think so, we were over there and we didn't see anything strange.
Journalist: Thank you.
Policeman: I'm at your service.
Authorities would later release details on the five vehicles which they seized. They were:
- White Nissan NP300 pickup truck, "tipo estacas" or with a fenced in truck bed
- White Ford F350 pickup truck, "tipo redilla" or with wooden stakes lining the back
- White Ford 350 XLT Super Duty pickup truck, "tipo redilla" or with wooden stakes lining the back
- White Nissan Frontier Platinum pickup truck
- Jeep Grand Cherokee, customized and heavily armored
3.5 tons of chemical precursors, along with drug lab equipment like drums and condensers were found inside the vehicles and seized.
No firearms or ammo were reportedly found. No soldiers or police officers were reportedly injured.
It is important to note that there were 3 military and 1 State Police vehicles with mounted guns photographed on scene. Additionally, a troop transport truck was also observed amongst the military vehicles.
Whether all these vehicles were a part of the initial “surveillance patrol” or if they arrived as reinforcements is unclear.
An article by Los Noticieristas added that –incredibly– all five of the vehicles which were seized by police were found not only unlocked but the vehicles were all “found with the doors left open.” This includes the white, armored Jeep Grand Cherokee SUV.
If you’re wondering how much the armored SUV is worth, there are a few cost estimates online that we can go off.
In Mexico, the company Jeep itself sells a version of their Grand Cherokee that is armored. In 2020, it was reported that their armored vehicle sold for about $86,000 USD - which is about $100,000 USD in 2023 after adjusting for inflation.
Los Noticieristas, however, described the seized Grand Cherokee as having “blindaje artisanal” or custom armor, which implies it was not the manufacturer’s default armored variant. Based on this, we can safely assume the Grand Cherokee was worth more than $100,000.
It might be worth asking, how often do we see news about an undamaged vehicle worth $100,000 USD being found abandoned and with the doors left open right after being chased by authorities?
"The Suspension of Disbelief"
That's the term used to describe our willingness to believe improbable or unusual things happened - it's the subconscious choice to not think critically about the likelihood of a story and instead accept it. The term is usually used when discussing works of fiction. Its rarely brought up with non-fiction, or the official government version of events for a military incident.
But the suspension of disbelief always had its limits. If a story is alleged to take place in "the real world", a reader tends to accept that maybe one or two highly improbable things might happen. Coincidences are a part of life, after all.
But if highly improbable things keep happening and happening within a story, our suspension of disbelief begins to fade.
The official government version of events is asking for us to believe that:
- Army soldiers were attacked by a group of hostile cartel members and, after pursuing them across multiple towns, the soldiers were able to nab five vehicles from the attackers but none of the attackers themselves.
- The cartel members chose to abandon five functional vehicles, some of which were worth over $100,000 USD, leaving their doors open.
- Despite the incident beginning with an alleged shooting, no ammo, firearms, or tactical equipment (like body armor) were found in any of the five vehicles.
- None of the soldiers or police officers were injured in the initial attack or the ensuing pursuit.
- The military utilized three mounted gun vehicles and a troop transport, either as part of a routine surveillance patrol through a rural area, or as reinforcements to support the attacked soldiers. (All of the vehicles being available and in the general area of the incident is just happenstance.)
Any one of these unusual things could happen. A couple of these could happen in one given incident. But the official version of events is asking us to believe that all five of these things happened in the course of one single incident.
Now, even if we have reason to be skeptical of the explanation by authorities, it doesn't mean the rumored version of events is necessarily true either. There are a number of other explanations that don't involve Mayito Flaco.
A lesser capo, such as any of his direct reports or a regional jefe, could have been found and made a deal.
Soldiers might have found an important drug lab but their military commander told them an arrangement was made to only hand over a few truck loads of precursor chemicals.
There are endless possibilities as to what might have happened.
But here is what we can be certain about: this story isn’t getting traction in the Mexican press for a reason and on June 20, 2023, something happened in Lo de Clemente.
Twitter account Kira 141 posted about the El Salado attack and alleged that Mayito Flaco was responsible. The account then posted an alleged image of Mayito Flaco.
Based on a side by side comparison (shown below) Kira’s image is likely an AI generated “enhancement” of an older, low resolution image of Flaco.
The low resolution image was first seen in an intelligence document which was leaked by Guacamaya and published by Contralinea in January 2023. These documents were covered in more detail in The Unseen Faces of CDS: Part 1 and Part 2.
Now, it is always possible that Kira141 has access to the original photo of Mayito Flaco which was used in the intelligence document. However, there are several strange sections of the photo which may indicate it was AI generated.
For example, take note of the unusual placement of the blue shirt which seemingly crawls above his shoulder, onto his face. Also note the blurring of the lower section of the photo.
It's important to make clear when these AI tools have been used because the details the AI fills in may not be accurate to the real person’s appearance. It is best practice to include a disclaimer about their use when publishing such images.
Sources: Milenio, Extra Oficial, Debate, Cafe Negro Portal, Kira141, Eco_1_LMV, Noroeste, Los Noticieristas Article 1, Article 2, Luz Noticias, Debate , TV Pacifico
Todos en Sinaloa saben que el mayito flaco varias veces a sido ubicado por las fuerzas castrense en una ocasión fue donde falleció el sargento Phoenix que valiente mente y sin pensar dos veces de frente contra el ejército para que mi compa mayito pudiera escapar el viejo en esta ocasión de nuevo fue repelido el gobierno por el anillo de seguridad del mayito pistoleros adiestrados en la selva de Colombia ahora en la sierra sinaloese desempeñan su trabajo cuidando a un JEFE de alto rango
ReplyDelete5:56 en que corrido "real" 🤣 escuchaste esa mamada? 🐁
Delete5:56 🤣😂🤣😂🤣
DeleteCartel fanboys.....
ReplyDeleteBlowing loads
DeleteThat dude doesn’t look nothing as the picture shown that’s for sure.
ReplyDeleteIf mayos fall it would be for long, they just gotta negotiate something with the Gov y salen. For example será , Ismael jr ect ect
ReplyDeleteMayo fell
DeleteAs always, excellent article Ms HEARST.
ReplyDeleteAm I the only one who doesn’t find the official government version of events that strange ? I mean it’s no secret that the military’s favorite vehicle is the Cheyenne truck technical. There are thousands of photos and videos of Mexican soldiers patrolling both urban and rural areas in these vehicles. The military loves that vehicle. And it makes sense to me that the sicarios abandoned their vehicles and ran on foot. A vehicle is way easier to spot, especially if you have air surveillance. Plus, there’s only so many places you can go in a vehicle. On foot you can jump over a fence, run into a wooded area, or climb upwards and downwards a mountainside. If the sicarios lose a vehicle, they’ll just steal another one. Also, if you’re running from law enforcement, you’re not going to take the time to shut the car door. Especially, if you’re abandoning your vehicle because law enforcement is going confiscate it whether the door is locked or not. The only thing I do find strange is that no soldiers were injured and that no ammo, armor or guns were confiscated. Sicarios aren’t exactly known for being expert marksman, so it’s possible that no soldiers were injured. But I do find it really strange that no guns or ammo was found in the vehicles.
ReplyDeleteAll gov versions are “strange” to say the least… by design 🦉
DeleteMayo was so closed to being caught , a couple years back in Mazatlán to be exact. Same hotel chapo was captured ( Miramar hotel…… so closed he had a gun to his head , ready to commit suicide.
ReplyDeleteThat seems a better fate then capture
DeleteThat's a negative chief
DeleteWe're you there with sicario 006 😆
DeleteEl mayo has stated himself that he has been close to capture a few times
Delete@8:24 idk who’s “sicario 006” is and I don’t care either lol. But it’s real , idk if it was a “ 4” because he was actually inside of the hotel, it wasn’t an “ maybe “ it was actually real they could’ve had the capture of the century. But thanks to “ Mauricio “ R.I.P. he saved him with intelligence and calm words he settle the militares.
Delete9:36 were you there? Or did you hear it from a Sinaloan? Cause up until now all ive heard from Sinaloas are lies, at least the guys that ive met
Delete@9:36 no lie, I wouldn’t be wasting my time telling this just for fun. Let’s just say I’ve seen the footage of the day , that Mayo almost got captured… pero aun sigue paseando tranquilo en el rancho.
Delete11:47 😂😂😂 “ I seen the footage of the day” “wouldn’t waste my time telling you this” biggest red flags when a lie is about to lie 🤣🤣🤣🤣
DeleteThis story's only footage is a corrido. True or not I cannot confirm but I’ll bet $1 it was written based on some truth.
Delete7:11 thanks, it could very well be factual. There are those of us that have experienced things in Mexico, or at least myself that occurred in Sinaloa (drug traffic related) that I don't even bring up here or discuss,as I know the bullshit police Will be screaming at the top of their lungs.
DeleteI have seen some things, years back outside Culican,first hand that I CAN NOT unsee. There would still be those (perhaps wisely) asking why I can't provide video...lol.
90% of the time I just don't comment anymore in general and won't bother telling others of multitude of experiences. I keep it to one encounter only, the rest was crazy and would sound fabricated unless you were there. 🐙h
Ok connor,got that
Delete2:26 tipical sinaloan story 😂 heard it so many times, its like a copy and paste comment, but ive heard it in real life, was up with you guys always trying to sound taugh and relevent?
DeleteFoo that shit with Mauricio didnt even happen at Miramar. That foo had a few condos at Peninsula. Thats where that went down. i know mauricios son H real good. Thats my boy. U trippin foo.
Delete9:15 lol yeah typical Sinaloa rat
Delete@7.11 That sounds like a cocktail of a few different stories. That rumour that Mayo was with Chapo when he got caught (it was Cholo Ivan), the time Mayos brother put a gun to his head when he got captured and his son talked him down, and the stories of Mayos escape in the mountains. Mix em all together, and what have u got? A muddle...
DeleteThis is a real question, why do they call Ismael el Mayo Zambada (Mayo zambada)? The Mayo part to be exact, is his middle name Mario?
ReplyDeleteMayo is short for his first name Ismael. El Mayo rolls off the tongue better than El Ismael.
DeleteHis name is Mario Ismael Zambada García
DeleteMayo is his nickname.
Delete8:22 nop, every true mexican know Mayo is slang for Mario just like moncho is slang for ramon, 8:30's answear sounds more like it, BB guys can anyone of you corfirm Mayo Zambada is indeed called Mario? First or middle name? Im actually asking you Hearts beibi 😘
Delete8:22 "Mayel" is probably short for Ismael since Ismael Higuera Guerrero of Los Aretes was known as "El Mayel". His son as "El Mayelito".
DeleteUsually small children can't properly pronounce their siblings name correctly and the apodó sticks. Mayo=Mario
Mayo is a nickname for his real name ismael. I never heard or any mario ever nicknamed mayo. May be were you from. Lets not forget mexico is a big country with many states all have accents and their own slang.
DeleteRamon is monchis, and Ismael es nacido en Mayo babosa. Mario? como estas pendeja mi vale
Delete12:36, 12:34 oviamente ustedes son (no savo kids) a los Ramones le monchos lla de ahi, monchis, monchin, monchito, son derivados y 100% a los Marios le dicen Mayos, a lo mejor un pendejo se le ocurrio decirle al Ismael Mayo y se le quedo, pero nomas a los Mario se les dice Mayos, eduquense niños y preguntenle a varios mexicon de adeveras, preguntenles como se les dice a los Ramones y como se les dice a los Marios y ahi van a aprender un poco de su raices, peneques!
DeleteI find it interesting there are an indigenous peoples of Sinaloa named Los Mayos
DeleteJamás en la vida e escuchado que digan Mayo a un Mario 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Delete6:41 most people from Sinaloa are indigenous
DeleteMy dads name is Mario, so was my grandpa, I have a few friends named Mario. Never have I heard them be called Mayo. Mayos are not indigenous to Sinaloa, they are from Sonora, the Navojoa region to be more exact. A lot if people from certain parts of Sinaloa, primarily from the Central to North (Mocorito, Badiraguato, Sinaloa DL, etc) have Tarahumara blood line because they migranted “down” from the Chihuahua Sierra into other sierras, towns and cities from Sinaloa.
Delete7:42 🤔 Made a comment, yet he himself answers himself on 12 comments. Very interesting.
Delete11:10 esntonces preguntale y luego vienes y me dices que te dijo
Delete@641 — you mean come from their descent; sadly, the indigenous are not the majority in ANY state… and continue to dwindle down
Delete1151
DeleteSeen it done a few times on here,i personally think its very strange
11:51 i made the comment and i did not answear my self in any of the comments, none the less ive seen it happen fo sho
Delete7:42 the US State Department wanted poster has his name as Ismael Mario Zambada García. I think this would be the most current poster as it has a 15million reward. The older DEA poster has his name as Ismael Zambada García with a 5million reward.
DeleteI might be misremembering but I think the Mexican government has him as Mario Ismael Zambada García.
Mayo is short for Mario not no damn Ismael.
12:38 i had only come across old wanted posters which say Izmael Zambada-Garcia, but you are right in his last wanted picture it says Izmael Mario Zambada Garcia 👍 ahora si denme las Gracias ustedes No Savo Kids, ahora lla saven porque le dicen Mayo, porque se llama Mario!! Y a los Marios les dicen Mayos! Claro que no a todos, porque ese apodo esta bien culero 🤣 y si vieron el chavo del 8 a Don Ramon la bruja del 71 le decia (Monchito) de cariño porque a los Romones les dicen Moncho, monchis, monchito, monchin y asta monchh nomas es un devirado pendejos!
DeleteLa linea en zacatecas. Ya tienen presencia en 3 estados esos weyes
ReplyDeletePorque le sicen mayito flako? Ese guey se ve mas cacheton que pirrurris
ReplyDeleteSimón ya está igual si no más que el M Gordo
DeleteDe joven estaba flako comparado al M gordo
DeleteEl mayito gordo name has been taken
Delete1:41 now they can call him el mayito mas gordo 🤣
Deletela diabetis y la tiroides 😂 people in los ranchos eat a lot of pork
Delete3:19 son unos pinches canibales 😂
DeleteEl cholesterol
DeleteMaybe they’ll do the whole “El Gori” thing and start going by “Mayo Gordo I” and “Mayo Gordo II” so on
DeleteI don't know Lo de Clemente, but I've stayed in Cosala just east of there and that town is a trip. We stay in an old motel in Cosala before fishing Comedero and I can tell you 1) don't go there unless your with someone they recognize (like my Mexican fishing buddy from Mazatlan) and 2) that town is more lawless than any of the small towns I've been to in Mexico. I've seen convoys of armored civilian trucks and several times young men on quads going around the city square shooting up in the air throughout the night, and they are still partying when we leave the hotel around 6am to leave to Comedero. This is by the way the best bass fishing lake I've ever fished! There is no pressure from tourist and the only boats I've seen are local fishermen netting for Tilapia. Truly one of the prettiest emerald green lakes I've seen and if it wasn't so lawless b/t Cosala and Culiacan I could happily live there.
ReplyDelete8:30 im jelous now! The fishing part not the lawlessness part, im telling you those Sinaloas are as bad as the CDN or any other Cartel, they all the same trashy people! Cds that is! Not the hard working sinaloas, which im sure there is a few
DeleteIf you were to move out there ans just mind your business you’re good. I would rather live there than in Culiacan tbh. My family is from Cosala. Ive taken friends over the summer and we always had a good time. I take my family ever vacation. The actually have an observatory close by thats cool. They have like a biological center. The grutas de Mexico en Cosala are dope af too.
Delete@1215 — nobody messes with you because they likely know who your family is…
DeleteOkay let’s. Sum up the dumb fucks that don’t know why they are here typing after we can talk about how the United States government still hasant posted an image of Mayito flaco since they have been following him since 2009 do you really think they are basing their operations on those images lol
ReplyDeleteWhat vehicle is worth 100k? If you guys think that jeep is worth 100k I’ll sell you one exactly the same for 90k lol all bs aside that jeep year model is from 05-09 that being said you can go on mercadolibre and find them for around 300k pesos to 500k pesos. So no where near 100k dollars.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you about the prices. Those cars combined 100k but not a single one is even close to 100k.
DeleteRead the article again tonto! Jeep is armored!!! Was probably worth that new 15 years ago
DeleteThe Grand Wagoneer is $100,000 msrp guise 🦉
DeleteThe Cherokee is armored. I explained exactly how I came to that $100k cost estimate in the article. You just need to actually read my story before commenting.
DeleteI did, but the armoring jobs in mex are cheaper and its most probably not even B5. Thats why. The Fxxx trucks models are cheap scrap ( i know that many dont like this as you love them but they are not that good for riding offroad and put lots of weight onto. I would agree with you if they seized an armored Mercedes G model.
DeleteBut nevertheless thank you for your work. It’s really appreciated!
Wagoneer is over $100k, but a new Cherokee is about $45k, so even armored and an older model like that one wouldn’t be $100k
DeleteHearst honestly those Jeep’s are not expensive go on mercadolibre and look up 2005 bulletproof jeep and you will see that they go for no more than 500k pesos
DeleteThe story the Mexican government is saying sounds like some bullshit CIA story they feed us in America when they fuck up. Lol
ReplyDeleteHEARST the lower resolution picture from the Guacamaya leaks also had the odd placement of the shirt collar. Was the lower resolution picture released on purpose? By SEDENA or Guacamaya is the question.
ReplyDeleteI wonder what made them all grow beards?
ReplyDeleteNacho?
Read "Facial Hair And The Mexican Male"..
DeleteSigmund Freud's unpublished thesis..
It's thought-provoking stuff..
And if you've ever wondered why girls don't have whiskers, maybe it's simply that you've got the wrong girl, jaja..
🦎
@822 — ehh, I’m more of a Jungian myself lol.. but thank you, my lizard friend! 🦉
DeleteJung and his wacky Sinaloan archetypes🐙😂h
Delete“But somehow all the cartel members involved in the attack managed to evade capture.”
ReplyDeleteFENTANYL, in the truck. He is not stoping making the product. Im sure the Mex Government told Mayo, Chapitos to stop and Mayito did not stop, so the Military already knew his location.
ReplyDeleteI don’t think they make fentanyl like this. I think you could cook glass out in the Forrest but not that fentanyl shit. I think fentanyl fucked up the Chrystal biniz because all them rudimentary backwoods cookouts was being insinuated as fenta
DeleteThese coppers are hard wouldnt fuck with some of them
ReplyDeleteEn elota there’s chapos as well. Mazatlán and the sur of Sinaloa are all chapos
ReplyDelete😂😂😂 eso no es mayito flaco... pendejos
ReplyDelete10:18 es su doble, pero de cuerpo🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 guey su papa no es muy atleta, tiene cuerpo de puerco parado, aguebo este guey se iva a poner igual o casi igual si tiene los mismos genes, yo he conosido muchos gueyes flacos y en cuestion de 2 o 3 años se ponen bien marranos que casi ni los reconoses, eso le paso a este vato, agarro el puerco de su papa! Digo cuerpo, agarro el cuerpo del puerco de su papa 🤣
Deletecon seguro iva a andar ahi el flaco entre los quimicos y todo como si no tienen trabajadores para eso ..
ReplyDelete