"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat
The cartels that control drug trafficking in just over half of the US territory are local and not Mexican. The present work presented by Proceso reveals how many Mexican criminal organizations have formed alliances with drug traffickers in the U.S., the names of these local groups and the states in which they operate. This publication also presents Marcelo Ebrard's reflections on the bilateral fight against drug trafficking, an interview made days before he ran for the presidential candidacy.
In the U.S.-Mexico bilateral relationship, our government has been asking the U.S. for years for assistance in stopping the flow of arms from north to south. Conversely, Washington complains that Mexico continues to be the major gateway for all types of drugs into the United States. In recent years, synthetic drugs made with fentanyl cost Americans 288 lives every day. I am talking about every 24 hours.
And those are the official figures from the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention. The government of Joe Biden has maintained a more or less stable relationship with the government of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in terms of security cooperation and combating drug trafficking. However, Mexico has been asking Washington for years for assistance in stopping arms trafficking. The response from U.S. agencies such as the DEA, the FBI, and even the Pentagon is to point the finger at Mexico for the lack of strategies to root out the drug cartels.
We, Mexicans, have been asking ourselves for many years, and on the other side of the Rio Bravo to the north, who sells them, who transports them, who distributes them in the 50 states of the American Union. The answer is very simple and can be found in Proceso with its many years of investigative works. This is not the first report in which we point out that there are cartels in the United States. Not cartels as we know them in Mexico and Colombia. But they are organized crime groups very well orchestrated for all the logistics required to move drugs.
Officially, Proceso was the first media to publish in Mexico that after so many decades the DEA accepted that there are cartels in the United States. Gringo cartels. Domestic cartels as they call them. Attorney General Merrick Garland also agreed at a press conference recently with the Mexican government in a security meeting at the State Department that they have a strategy to combat the U.S. cartels. And where are the names, who are they, how many are there? That is the information that the Americans don't want to release because it would be like spitting to high heaven.
In this Proceso report you can find the names of these groups, which are not cartels like the Jalisco New Generation Cartel or the sophisticated Sinaloa Cartel. They are very practical but just as dangerous and lethal as the Mexican and Colombian ones. Why? Because they are gang members, they are motorcycle clubs with franchises in the 50 states of the United States. In towns and cities that coordinate to receive drugs from Mexican cartels on the border between the two nations.
The job of distributing and selling them belongs to the gringo cartels. We have done a thorough investigation pointing out not only the names but the territories where they are located, how they move, and what their associations are and with which Mexican groups. Proceso's investigations have put the failures of bilateral cooperation back on the table. Because it’s not just a matter of federal legislators on Capitol Hill in Washington who are unaware of the minutiae of drug trafficking. They’re starting to point the finger at our country as the only responsible party.
In the United States, for years they have not defined a public health and education strategy to stop what seems unstoppable. The great demand and consumption of narcotics. Again they have talked in Washington of believing that they will even invade Mexico to arrest and dismantle the members of the drug cartels. But what has happened to those they arrest every day?
In Mexico people do not know that in the United States thousands of drug traffickers are arrested every day. There are 50 states. We are talking about more than 30 million inhabitants. In this report from Proceso you will find all these details. This is the new face that we offer you in this work. And more to come for Proceso magazine.
I am Jesús Esquivel. Your correspondent in Washington for Proceso.
Fue fuerte el vergazo entonces
ReplyDeleteTCB $$$$
ReplyDelete• Look what happened at Calif State Prison last week. Mexican Mafia boss killed. I suppose he was a US Citizen, ni modo, he was in the US, a violent offender, but well networked among California criminals & who knows which Mexican cartel.
• Black Gangster Disciples, BGD, boss from Chicago, “Shorty” who ran the US gang from prison.
Well connected up & down the Mississippi Valley for decades dealing the cocaine smuggled.
• Paredes family @ Sonora / AZ border. Lots of help from Tucson & Phoenix from US Citizen criminals.
Taking Care of Business $$$
Thank you for posting this.
Correct, in Arizona, the Curtis Allen Olson crime family, is in control of this drug trafficking.
Delete10:41 your smoking crack Phoenix is ran by a chapitos cell they have a they’re guy in Phoenix El E 1 el Lalo he controls the tri state area of California Az Nevada
DeleteWhat is E1s real name?
DeleteJunior Paredes controls Phoenix. BLO used to be big there. Its true that there are a lot of white american drug traffickers there as well as the black, biker gangs, mexican street and prison gangs.
DeleteLike the song, Edgar-Edgar-Edgar
DeleteGringo cartels made me lol
ReplyDeleteUS cartels. mexicsns.
ReplyDeleteOf course they're are American cartels but they are dominated by Mexican cartels. Canada has its own cartel like groups independent of Mexican cartels
ReplyDeleteCanada has Hells Angels, independent soldiers, red scorpions, etc.
Delete10:43 you forgot the biggest players the montreal mafia and sam gor. Get out of here with that wolfpac garbage
DeleteCollaboration is not domination.
DeleteSo Americans are innocent
Delete10:43 The Hells Angels originated on March 17, 1948, in Fontana, California
DeleteIt is obvious they have US cartels operating there. Millions of US citizens are working on the distribution of drugs. It was US citizens the ones who started the drug trade and they are still involved all the way to the core. They also control the illegal prescription drug distribution but USA likes to point fingers to the world and say the people from that country are the bad ones. Lol.
ReplyDeleteI am a US citizen and I don't sell drugs and don't use them. Thanks for saying all US citizens are selling and doing drugs🤣😂🤪.
Deletethey never said all. maybe you should read the comment again.
Delete10:20 i read the comment and 7:02 never said "all USA citizens" as a matter of fact he never used the word (All) at all 🤣😂🤪
DeleteOf course USA have drug traffickers. All US citizens in all colors and shapes. They don’t talk about it because they like to blame Mexico and tell the world Mexicans are the only criminals who run drug distribution. People in USA are just victims. Prescription drugs are also sold in the USA. I wonder who is responsible for those deaths. ?
ReplyDeleteThe VA does anything in their power to not prescribe opiates and highly addictive drugs like barbiturates. But I have civilian friends that their family practice doctors just had them out like candy. That’s what ends up on the street. People trading pills for favors or other drugs. Sad but true. Our own trusted people don’t care about anything….but the bottom line 💰
DeleteThis report is bullshit and full of inconsistencies… “thousands of traffickers are arrested daily ???” “30 million inhabitants” that’s just the population of Texas alone.. come on Sol
ReplyDeleteI'm just a linguist who's telling everyone what Proceso is claiming. It doesn't surprise me at all that they're going with the poor me narrative.
DeleteI agree. The sycophants may swallow this shit do not have the reputation to lose. The best part of this report is its awful title, and then snowballs downhill. It was a struggle to resd in its entirety.
DeleteThe article claims 288 people die every day in the US from fentanyl. x 365 = 105,120 per year.
DeleteIs that correct?
1:38 about
DeleteAnd thus is the critical choke point riddle the alphabet soup orgs can’t solve or won’t solve. Thanks to king racist Biden and the 94’ crime bill it is very easy to hammer somebody with many years in prison. So one of the tools is there but has always been used wrongly. Although it did target the pop that kkk eulogy giving biden was intending on targeting…the black males. And probably rightfully so. Doesn’t make biden any less diabolically racist! Mexico needs to secure their border from our God given constitutionally granted USA guns. And the USA needs to choke that vital point between the cartel and the many many top distributors throughout the country. In my opinion, many many of these aren’t driving lambos and living in mansions. They most likely are illegal or dual, work everyday, have pounds and pounds in some illegals closet who is too scared to say no or who owes and are the crucial point between the cartels and the USA street cliques. Cause USA vertical gangs are over except maybe west coast. It’s all small cliques pushing dope banging it out with stolen guns in the city streets. That days of the good ol Gangster Disciples with Larry Hoover calling the shots from an Illinois prison cell are over.
ReplyDeleteWhite cartel is what you called US government. Lol jk
ReplyDeleteWhere do I see the whole article ?? I would like to see the names and territories of these drug traffickers.
ReplyDeleteMaldas
Sounds like a bunch of sympathizers pointing the finger at the US now lol😂😂😂😂😂the irony of what y’all are saying would kill you if you’d look at it objectively instead of subjectively 😂😂😂😂😂
ReplyDeleteFinally the truth. Everyone cares about fent and want to blame Mexico. Let's look at the other side for once. Thank you for an article. Need real truth sometimes. Stop blaming Mexico we are half to blame for everything. Fent included! GUNS suck DRUGS are better regulate guns, and regulate drugs take away the cartels power buy selling us safe better drugs so we don't have to use the cartels for our needs.
ReplyDeleteCrips, bloods, all outlaw motorcycle gangs, norteños, sureños, mexican mafia, nazi groups, AB, gángster disciples, independent white groups.
ReplyDeleteAnd most (if not all) of them are gangs with a very limited geographic presence and trafficking logistics like the Ciudad Juarez pandillas. Nothing like the major organizations such as CDS, CJNG, etc.
Delete@11:57AM
DeleteYou are comparing apples to oranges btw those 'major organizations' dont have any plazas in the US for a variety of reasons
In the 6th paragraph the author says sophisticated Sinaloa cartel. What a dickrider! jajaja
ReplyDelete11:43 Truth hurts
Delete2:43 it hurts you guys more when you're being reminded about the constant snitching that you're famous for. Especially when Lieutenant Cobra pointed it out for everyone.
Deletehttps://www.borderlandbeat.com/2023/05/lieutenant-cobra-ivan-guzman-and.html
11:43 he said sophisticated like the CDS and CJNG, one thing is for sure, ive heard a lot of Jesus Esquivel's news and he mentions CDS is the snitchiest cartel, not so straight forward but mentions all of their backstabing and snitching a lot, so i dont think he is a dickrider
Delete11:43 as a matter of fact he mentioned CJNG before Sinaloa 👍
Delete@4:59 he sure did … ladies first
Delete7:13 followed by Snitches 😂😂 they both the same shit, but CDS snitches way more
DeleteI personally would pay more money for my drugs if they were regulated. Just knowing they are what they say they are is worth it. And America could control the drug as they see fit. Since it's such a problem. Making it illegal seems to not matter at all. Jail or prison is not enough to care obviously. Death is not enough to care for addicts why would jail matter. Regulate drugs and guns! We littetly arm every cartel daily.
ReplyDeleteAbsolute nonsense. First, the term "cartel" is being misused these days. In fact, some of the fractured cells of former cartels certainly do not qualify as "cartels" and the US government doesn't even refer to them as such in favor of the more accurate term "Drug Trafficking Organization" and sometimes adding the "transnational" label. Cartels are cooperative in nature, and have separate leadership structures, and cooperate for a common goal such as controlling price. This is exactly what the Medellin and Cali cartels were even if Medellin had a strong apparent figurehead - he still had partners. Next, this claim - "They are... just as dangerous and lethal as the Mexican and Colombian ones" is patently and blatantly false. Although there are indeed "deadly and dangerous" organized and even loosely organized criminal gangs in the US, they do not operate with impunity and they certainly do not operate with the level of government (and law enforcement) cooperation as in MX. Wake me the fuck up the next time a US based criminal gang puts up a road block that goes undisturbed for hours at a time, when they assassinate a politician or reporter, when their criminal cohorts take them back from police custody, when a town or municipality pays them a tax, when together with the government they tap gas/oil lines, when 1000's of US residents are displaced because of open warfare between criminal elements, or when there is evidence that a US governor or higher has direct ties to organized criminal gangs (like the last 2 in TAMPS, and the current governor of TAMPS most certainly has). That level of corruption and complicity Does. Not. Happen. in the US. Full stop. So, to compare the two is nonsense. When a Mexican organized crime figure(s) kidnaps someone in MX they do so not under the cloak of darkness or disguise - they do it openly and do not even try to hide their identity. This should tell you all you need to know about the difference between the nature of the violence in MX and in the US. Criminal gangs in the US do not parade around in trucks and SUVs openly carrying long rifles and tactical gear without being disturbed. To attempt any comparison without due consideration to the impunity and complicity in MX is intellectually disingenuous and uninformed (you'll get a lot of that on these forums by the way), and at the end of the day, makes MX MUCH more dangerous in dynamics.
ReplyDelete11:55
DeleteYou laid out your case rather succinctly, doubt if anybody will challenge your assertions here..
You might have added that U.S. presidents are seldom seen chatting up the mothers of bloodthirsty killers..
🦎
of course not. it would be political suicide. people don't seem to understand the bad guys run shit here, and in the US, the bad guys are trying their best to get away with doing shit. Yeah, both endeavors results in violence and murder, but the dynamics are VERY different. In the US, I can avoid the bad people because they don't control large portions of the State. Here I cannot avoid the bad guys with any practicality if I want to leave my house and drive anywhere.
Delete@11:55 no, they're called Mafia in the USA instead of Cartel. What you described is literally the corruption in America from Italian and Irish Mafias
Delete@656 you obviously have NO idea what you're talking about. the "mafia," thanks to RICO, is a shadow of what is was at its peak. Let me list the things the "mafia" did not accomplish: zero evidence of collusion with governors; they did not control vast areas of the country; they operated in the shadows; they did not parade thru the streets in suv's and trucks with long rifles and tactical gear; the police were not complicit in their crimes (corrupting an officer or two does not count); they did not corrupt the federal law enforcement; they did not corrupt the military; they did not kidnap ordinary citizens and otherwise terrorize vast swaths of the country; they did not hold roadblocks and commit other atrocities with impunity. Do I need to continue? Thanks to the efforts of the US government and law enforcement at all levels, the "mafia" isn't even a junior varsity team on the criminal landscape anymore; they are now relegated to scraping by by committing financial crimes and other fraud. Like a lot of folks here, You. Do. Not. Know. What. You. Are. Talking. About. If Mexico was serious about combating the "cartels," they'd enact a RICO type law and decimate them. But they won't, because here, there's really no difference between a "cartel" and the politicians and law enforcement who decide who will and who will not operate with impunity. Comments like yours are shockingly uninformed.
Delete@656 and stop watching too much television. it's like an american watching narcos or reading this forum and then thinking he understands mexico. you need to live somewhere to fully understand it.
DeleteThe US indicts and prosecutes groups like this ALL The time, there are dozens of stories about major drug indictments every month
ReplyDeletebut there are a lot of actual reps from CJNG and Sinaloa in the US, in San Diego, in Los Angeles, NY, all the major hubs, and the small towns.
To frame it as a big reveal is a little misleading by Proceso but I get it
This is contradicted by what USA law enforcement had said: cartels do operate within the states.
ReplyDeleteDuh we know usa gangs distribute the freaking poison. Mexican cartels are whole sellers and Colombians are producers. We also know that tons of Americans are behind bars for drugs and there is a drug addiction crisis that is a public health concern. Now amlo has the same problem in Mexico tons of addicts work for the cartels for peanuts and extort hard working people. In the USA it is the same deal tons of people end up being trafficked or squeezed out of their money for drugs. And your uncle Biden don’t care if it’s not on his agenda. In general all American continent needs give these drug cartels hard and real penalties. I did give up on the snitch contracts and to start remind them who has them by the balls. But yeah another problem is that each other just put the blame on each other. Again that doble standard.
ReplyDeleteTweaker Hunters is stopping the drug trade in arizona.( youtube)
DeleteWhat else is new Mexico has been selling drugs to the US since the 1930s when prohibition ended and before it was whiskey heroin and Maryjane were the main items and Mexico grew their own Not like today where they buy from China and Columbia when there was honor among thieves and nobody stepped on anybody's turf like today's greedy bastards.
ReplyDeleteAll those clowns should be extradited to supermax No cajuamas or big stolen trucks in there to ride on.
ReplyDeleteNeed a link to that map they were showing in the screen with the yellow dots that seems interesting
ReplyDeletefunny reading all the comments from americans that wont accept their part in the problem.
ReplyDelete9:13 Exactly.
Delete@913 stupid comment. Americans damn well know we have drug users, drug dealers, and organized crime. The difference is our government and law enforcement do not turn a blind eye to it and they certainly aren't complicit with it large scale. For all the BS conspiracy theories and corruption that is the exception, not the rule, our state and fed courts are clogged with drug cases of all levels from users to the highest offenders. they don't "break out of jail," they are rarely released on some obscure technicality, and the governors of the border states certainly aren't in bed and complicit with the mx cartels. We know about our problems, but there's a government to the south (I live here so I know and see it every single day) that does not enforce the rule of law and where widespread corruption as a rule, not an exception, exists at every single level of government here and law enforcement - from the municipality to the state, from a rank and file officer to his command and to the military itself. THAT does not exist in the US and THAT is what attracts the criticism of Mx - not a denial that we don't have a problem too.
DeleteWell said 12:14!
DeleteIn terms of organized groups in the USA, don't forget that L.A. is part of the Borderland too. Here's a news article from 7/14/23 which is one of the damnedest things you'll ever read about criminal prosecutions of connected people in L.A.: https://www.dailynews.com/2023/07/14/3-accused-gang-members-involved-in-death-of-off-duty-lapd-officer-plead-guilty/ The context of the odd-ball charging decision is that Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascon's "friends" fixed the signature-checking of a recall petition against him, so that the county employees in Norwalk, CA disqualified an inordinate amount of signatures on the petition and invalidated it. A crime victims group, which had walked the petition for signature turned around and sued L.A. County, saying in essence "Your employees are crooks." This month a second lawsuit was filed to force the recall of D.A. George Gascon onto the ballot in November 2023 based on that dishonesty by County employees. https://signalscv.com/2023/07/recall-gascon-committee-sues-county-claiming-thousands-of-wrongly-rejected/. The law firm suing has as its rainmaker a paisan and longtime Washington D.C. hot shot lawyer, Pasquale "Pat" Cipollone (originally from the Bronx), who is a witness in the Trump criminal case and was Trump's White House consigliere who turned against him. So Cipollone and his client have a fairly good chance at getting rid of the L.A. County D.A. who all the Sheriff's Deputies and LAPD cops hate, as indicated in the Daily News article. Nobody has publicly said D.A. Gascon is hooked up with any American or Mexican "cartel" but that's what some people say on the street throughout L.A. The Counties of L.A., Orange, Riverside & San Bernardino are as much a part of the Borderlands as San Diego County!
ReplyDelete