Blog dedicated to reporting on Mexican drug cartels
on the border line between the US and Mexico
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Thursday, June 20, 2024

Breaking News: Secretary Yellen Announces Sanctions Against Top Leaders of Mexico’s La Nueva Familia Michoacana Drug Cartel, New Fentanyl Advisory

 "CHAR" for Borderland Beat

This information was reposted from the U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 

PRESS RELEASE


OFAC sanctions target powerful cartel trafficking fentanyl into the United States  

FinCEN Advisory provides crucial information to help financial institutions track illicit fentanyl financial flows 

WASHINGTON — Today, alongside law enforcement leaders in Atlanta, Georgia, Secretary Yellen announced that the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has sanctioned eight Mexico-based targets affiliated with La Nueva Familia Michoacana drug cartel for trafficking fentanyl, cocaine, and methamphetamine into the United States. In addition to narcotics trafficking, La Nueva Familia Michoacana smuggles migrants from Mexico into the United States. La Nueva Familia Michoacana is one of the most powerful and violent cartels in Mexico and has become a priority focus of the Mexican government in recent years. 

Concurrently, Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued a Supplemental Advisory to highlight critical new information to help U.S. banks and other financial institutions guard against activity associated with the illicit fentanyl supply chain. The advisory includes new trends and red flags that can be indicators of activity associated with the procurement of precursor chemicals and manufacturing equipment used for the synthesis of illicit fentanyl and other synthetic opioids. Reporting from financial institutions of suspected financial transactions involving illicit fentanyl and narcotics trafficking plays a key role in law enforcement investigations and Treasury’s sanctions efforts globally.

“The opioid crisis, and especially the rise of synthetic opioids like fentanyl, has devastated communities and claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans. President Biden and I are committed to using every tool we have to target illicit fentanyl and its precursor chemicals so we can disrupt these deadly supply chains,” said Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen. “Treasury has unique capabilities and expertise to target the financial flows of these cartels who are poisoning our communities, and going after them is a top priority for me and the Department.”

Treasury plays a leading role in countering the trafficking of fentanyl and other illicit drugs as part of President Biden’s Unity Agenda, leveraging its expertise to fight illicit financing and financial crimes to disrupt the flows of money that criminal organizations rely on to operate. Over the past two years, Treasury has sanctioned more than 250 targets for involvement in drug trafficking activities at all stages of the supply chain, from major cartel leaders to under-the-radar labs, transportation networks, and chemical suppliers. Last year, Secretary Yellen launched the Counter-Fentanyl Strike Force, which brings together Treasury’s expertise and resources in fighting financial crime, led by the Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence (TFI) and IRS Criminal Investigation (CI). Secretary Yellen has also engaged with international partners to combat fentanyl trafficking, including during her travel to Mexico last year. In April, Secretary Yellen also announced the launch of an exchange with the People’s Republic of China to enhance cooperating in combatting money laundering associated with drug trafficking and other crime.

Additionally, FinCEN and IRS CI recently established a new public-private information-sharing partnership series called “Promoting Regional Outreach to Educate Communities on the Threat of Fentanyl” (or PROTECT). Launched as part of the Counter-Fentanyl Strike Force, the PROTECT series brings law enforcement agencies and financial institutions together to share typologies and approaches on combatting illicit fentanyl trafficking in U.S. cities that are highly impacted by the opioid epidemic.

LA NUEVA FAMILIA MICHOACANA’S INVOLVEMENT IN DRUG TRAFFICKING AND HUMAN SMUGGLING

Historically, La Nueva Familia Michoacana trafficked mostly methamphetamine. However, in recent years, it has expanded into fentanyl trafficking, obtaining the necessary precursor chemicals, purchasing critical pill press machines, and then producing fentanyl in throughout Mexico, including in Mexico City, Pineda, Santa Teresa, Ciudad Altamirano, Tejupilco, Arcelia, Cuernavaca, Culiacan, Guadalajara, and Toluca, Mexico. La Nueva Familia Michoacana sends fentanyl and other drugs to the United States through Nuevo Laredo and Tamaulipas/Reynosa across the southern Texas border via buses, among other modes of transportation. Once the drugs are in the United States, the drugs are then sent to multiple cities across the United States, including Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Tulsa, Chicago, and Charlotte. 

La Nueva Familia Michoacana is also involved in human smuggling. For instance, La Nueva Familia Michoacana members stage photos and videos in which individuals appear under interrogation or at risk of being murdered. With these photos or videos in hand, the individuals will then falsely claim to United States immigration officials their purported need to seek asylum in the United States. In return for this service, the individuals pay La Nueva Familia Michoacana money. Separately, La Nueva Familia Michoacana is also known for forcing individuals to enter the United States illegally with drugs for the purpose of selling narcotics in the United States. If the individuals do not comply with the order to sell the drugs provided by La Nueva Familia Michoacana, they are informed that they and their families will be killed. La Nueva Familia Michoacana also uses workers in the tobacco industry to smuggle narcotics into the United States. 

TOP LEADERS OF LA NUEVA FAMILIA MICHOACANA

Rodolfo Maldonado Bustos is a powerful and trusted member of La Nueva Familia Michoacana cartel and is next-in-line to Johnny Hurtado Olascoaga and Jose Alfredo Hurtado Olascoaga, the two co-leaders of La Nueva Familia Michoacana, both of whom OFAC designated in November 2022. Rodolfo Maldonado Bustos controls the drug routes that pass from Ciudad Altamirano, Guerrero, Mexico to the Zihuatanejo-Lazaro Cardenas, Guerrero, Mexico area. On April 23, 2017, a federal grand jury in the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia returned an indictment against Rodolfo Maldonado Bustos on two counts of heroin conspiracy charges.

Josue Ramirez Carrera is a financial leader and third-in-line in the leadership of La Nueva Familia Michoacana. Josue Ramirez Carrera is in control of laundering drug money for the La Nueva Familia Michoacana cartel through used clothing business. He is also involved in arms trafficking where he directs people along the Rio Grande Valley to conceal weapons within packs of used clothing destined for Mexico City.

Josue Lopez Hernandez is a key lieutenant for La Nueva Familia Michoacana and has significant regional connections with other cartels such as CJNG.

David Duran Alvarez is a key lieutenant for La Nueva Familia Michoacana and is known to send various drugs to Houston, Texas.

Uriel Tabares Martinez is a sicario, or assassin, that works directly for Johnny Hurtado Olascoaga and Jose Alfredo Hurtado Olascoaga. He is known to have a La Nueva Familia Michoacana leadership role in the Guerrero/Ciudad Altamirano region of Mexico. He is known as “El Medico” for the violent and surgical manner in which he tortures and murders those that cross the high-ranking members of the La Nueva Familia Michoacana cartel.

Kevin Arzate Gomez is a key lieutenant for La Nueva Familia Michoacana and has contacts and associates along the Mexico/United States border. Kevin Arzate Gomez negotiates on behalf of the cartel to have drugs enter the United States and assists in getting the money from those drugs sales back to Mexico.

Euclides Camacho Goicochea works closely with Rodolfo Maldonado Bustos and Uriel Tabares Martinez. He moves a significant amount of drugs, particularly methamphetamine, to Houston, Texas, and Atlanta, Georgia, among other areas. On August 23, 2017, a federal grand jury in the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia returned an indictment against Euclides Camacho Goicochea on two counts of heroin conspiracy charges and one charge of money laundering.

Lucio Ochoa Lagunes is a key lieutenant for La Nueva Familia Michoacana and works directly for Jose Hurtado Olascoaga. He is also a leader of a sub-plaza in Tlapehuala, Guerrero, Mexico. 

Rodolfo Maldonado Bustos, Kevin Arzate Gomez, and Euclides Camacho Goicochea are being designated for having engaged in, or attempted to engage in, activities or transactions that have materially contributed to, or pose a significant risk of materially contributing to, the international proliferation of illicit drugs or their means of production. Josue Ramirez Carrera, Josue Lopez Hernandez, David Duran Alvarez, Uriel Tabares Martinez, and Lucio Ochoa Lagunes are being designated for being owned, controlled, or directed by, or having acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly, La Nueva Familia Michoacana. 

These designations would not have been possible without the cooperation, support, and ongoing collaboration between the Drug Enforcement Administration and the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia. This action was also coordinated closely with the Government of Mexico, including La Unidad de Inteligencia Financiera (UIF), Mexico’s financial intelligence unit. In addition, today’s action furthers efforts by Treasury’s Counter-Fentanyl Strike Force, which leverages Treasury’s unique expertise and capabilities to interdict and disrupt the illicit financial networks upon which the cartels rely. These collective partnerships highlight the importance of broader U.S. government collaboration in targeting illicit fentanyl supply chains. 

FINCEN SUPPLEMENTAL ADVISORY

Today’s Supplemental Advisory builds off FinCEN’s 2019 Advisory with new typologies and red flags to assist financial institutions in identifying and reporting suspicious transactions potentially related to Mexico-based transnational criminal organizations (TCOs) and their illicit procurement of fentanyl precursor chemicals and manufacturing equipment from People’s Republic of China (PRC)-based suppliers. This financial reporting is a critical tool for FinCEN and partner law enforcement agencies to use in following the money behind the illicit fentanyl supply chain, identifying and prosecuting the illicit actors perpetrating these crimes, and combatting the opioid epidemic.

Mexico-based TCOs have become the predominant suppliers of illicit fentanyl and other synthetic opioids into the United States since 2019. These TCOs purchase precursor chemicals and manufacturing equipment from PRC-based suppliers and through chemical brokers to synthesize illicit fentanyl and other synthetic opioids in clandestine labs in Mexico. These TCOs then traffic these highly addictive and deadly drugs across the U.S. southwest border and into American communities. 

The devastating impact of illicit fentanyl and other synthetic opioids on American communities is sobering and far-reaching as generations of Americans are destroyed in this epidemic. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, over 107,000 Americans died from drug overdoses in the 12-month period ending in December 2023, with over 74,000 of those deaths involving synthetic opioids, principally illicitly manufactured fentanyl. 

This Supplemental Advisory furthers FinCEN’s focus on combating the financing behind drug trafficking organization activity and transnational criminal organization activity—two of FinCEN’s Anti-Money Laundering/Countering the Financing of Terrorism National Priorities—and is being issued pursuant to Section 3202 of the recently enacted FEND Off Fentanyl Act.

It also advances efforts of the North American Drug Dialogue Illicit Finance Working Group, which is comprised of the financial intelligence units (FIUs) of Canada, Mexico, and the United States; among other goals, the three FIUs have spent the last year, since the working group was formed, exploring possible indicators related to illicit fentanyl.  

SANCTIONS IMPLICATIONS

As a result of today’s action, all property and interests in property of the designated persons described above that are in the United States or in the possession or control of U.S. persons are blocked and must be reported to OFAC. In addition, any entities that are owned, directly or indirectly, individually or in the aggregate, 50 percent or more by one or more blocked persons are also blocked. Unless authorized by a general or specific license issued by OFAC, or exempt, OFAC’s regulations generally prohibit all transactions by U.S. persons or within (or transiting) the United States that involve any property or interests in property of designated or otherwise blocked persons. U.S. persons may face civil or criminal penalties for violations of E.O. 14059. 

Today’s action is part of a whole-of-government effort to counter the global threat posed by the trafficking of illicit drugs into the United States that is causing the deaths of tens of thousands of Americans annually, as well as countless more non-fatal overdoses. OFAC, in coordination with its U.S. government partners and foreign counterparts, and in support of President Biden’s Unity Agenda, will continue to hold accountable those individuals and businesses involved in the manufacturing and sale of illicit drugs. 

The power and integrity of OFAC sanctions derive not only from OFAC’s ability to designate and add persons to the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List (SDN List), but also from its willingness to remove persons from the SDN List consistent with the law. The ultimate goal of sanctions is not to punish, but to bring about a positive change in behavior. For information concerning the process for seeking removal from an OFAC list, including the SDN List, please refer to OFAC’s Frequently Asked Question 897 here. For detailed information on the process to submit a request for removal from an OFAC sanctions list, please click here.

Click here for the FinCEN Supplemental Advisory. 

For more information on the individuals designated today, click here.

View a chart on the individuals designated today.

###

78 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. What does cap have to do with this, yank

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  2. Treasury has unique capabilities and expertise to target the financial flows of these cartels who are poisoning our communities, and going after them is a top priority for me and the Department.”
    But never touching the banksters. As long as banks like Wachovia and their CEOs get away easy not much will change. Chrage them 10bn+ fines and put the board of directors behind bars for a few years. The next bankster will think twice about the know your customer rules.

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  3. Sadly we (US) still don't get this whole war on drugs thing. Until we figure out which came first, the chicken or the egg, we just swim in circles.

    The DEMAND for drugs in the US is staggering. That's ground zero. Until we get that this whole thing is one big circle jerk. Mexico has the most successful drug outfits but there are many,many, many more fighting it out for #2. My guess is number two, number 9, number 67, hell all of em, are eating steak!

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    1. 11:51 today I woke up with a wart on my forehead I hope I did not get but by a spider top ass have you been bit too

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    2. @11:51 let me break it down the way an informant for the fbi and des breaks it down till this day. The dea fbi cia what ever you wanna call it knows where mayo mencho and all these other dudes are at, they have in some way contact with them. I guess it just takes the fun out of this whole watered down business if they were to capture these guys.

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    3. @835 Maybe they do maybe they don't. It's much easier for us to point the finger at MX no matter who is in charge down there. You know we will never say "Well ya know we have more drug addicts than anyplace on the planet and until we solve OUR problem going after these guys is stupid. It's a game of whack a mole we cannot win."

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    4. The US loves the drug addict epidemic. Some cities pay addicts to get high.

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  4. Are THESE the guys THAT are thinking they are knights with swords in armor? Like with those cross things ?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No. The ones you’re thinking about are Los Caballeros Templarios (Knights Templar Cartel)

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  5. Arbol de limon chachon

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  6. Lol not one of them is born in Michoacán 😂

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    Replies
    1. La Familia Guerrerense

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    2. Beat me to it 😂😂😂

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    3. The reason for the name is that the actual leaders use to work for the past leaders of the familia michoacana cartel. So they are basically successors to the familia michoacana cartel.

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  7. They been going after everybody and there structures but the Jaliscos

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  8. >If the individuals do not comply with the order to sell the drugs provided by La Nueva Familia Michoacana, they are informed that they and their families will be raped and killed.<
    Worse than pedophiles! Waiting to hear from the indignanr Chapo worshipers!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nut head that's lame

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    2. Yeah peanuts bro or deez nuttz

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    3. Does it always gotta boil down to pedophiles?
      How will I know if I cross paths with one on the street?
      A little help here, please!
      😸

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    4. LOL! You can see by the comments Nuts has nailed it!

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  9. "Momma I cant breave" were the last words of a convicted armed robber who had a Fentanyl overdose.
    He is considered a hero by many. A group of individuals took advantage of the situation for monetary gains ,they extorted government and businesses ,then stole the donations in order to Buy Large Mansions.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @739
      Did they fake the autopsy, Einstein?

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    2. 😂😂😂
      Not really related, but pretty accurate.

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    3. They have an alliance with MAGA now to combat illegals

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    4. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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    5. I seen someone wearing a shirt of him the other day

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    6. @7.39. Opiates stay in your system for days, you bigoted clown. He had used opiates in the days before he was murdered, in other words. But I'm guessing you knew that.

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  10. This is the People’s Republic of China (Communist China) revenge for the Opium Wars.
    Instead of Opium they weaponized Fentanyl. Tik Tok another weapon of Communist China uses psychological warfare such as Operations of Influence in order to promote its use. Communist China also uses so called activist groups (Buy Large Mansions organization) and their music to glorify Fentanyl users .

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. But did you know that Pentagon has a "Hollywood department"?
      TikTok is just Chinese Hollywood, if we talk about worldwide influence/ the American/ Chinese way.
      And if all of the world population older than 18 could vote on
      Who's the most evil country in the world - the answer would be the USA by a pretty significant margin.
      But you couldn't care less about that, you, as wast majority of US citizens, look only from your perspective, which isn't very smart, and is getting you in trouble.

      Delete
  11. Here is a famous quote from the movie Sicario
    "And until somebody finds a way to convince 20% of the population to stop snorting and smoking that shit, order's the best we can hope for."

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    Replies
    1. Is that the movie where Mossad trained, BB legend Sicario 006, finally comes out of the closet?

      Delete
  12. No big deal. Their replacements are already in place...

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  13. Yellen. Really? Drippy old bag.

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    Replies
    1. When Janet yellin is mad at you, you're super-screwed, these folks are way up the federal food chain. 😽

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    2. @9:24. Comments like this have no relevance at all. Go do something worthwhile with Your ignorant self.

      Delete
  14. La Nueva Familia Michoacana but all these takuaches are from Guerrero

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    1. The founder from the state of Guerrero Carlos Rosales aka El Tísico was a founder of the Original Familia Michoacán that he and people from Michoacán decided to form and start the wa against Zetas

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    2. There is still La Nueva Familia inside Michoacán that are against CJNG AND THE Familia Michoacana in Guerrero are at at a cease fire with CJNG. But ORIGINAL FOUNDERS WERE BOTH FROM Michoacan/ Guerrero

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    3. First, takuaches are Mexican American. Second, the South has more indigenous culture without shame. Those fucking chuntaros in Northern Mexico think they are of higher blood. What is with this ethnic discrimination in Mexico? Most of Mexico's culture is influenced by European traditions. Your beers, your Banda, your corridos. Guess what? All that came from the Germans. Your Grupo Modelo beer are all a creation of the Germans. Chivas team? That came from Belgium and the French. Toreros and horses? That is from Spain. The old narco arquitectura houses?They are Turkish like. Most Mexicans in major cities used to have a more European sense of fashion. Until this ugly street American gangster fashion hit in the mid 2010s. You can thank California for that and its tacky brand of new artists

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    4. I thought LNFM was Viagras/Blancos de Troya??

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    5. Cartel de Tijuana, Cartel de Juarez, Cartel de Guadalajara la mayoria eran Chinolas

      CJNG la mayoria Michos

      Quema el nombre

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    6. 1252 Mexicans are about as German as Canadians dont be a fool.

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    7. 7:25 You don't know anything about foreign immigration to Mexico in it's history. A big wave of German/Austrians occured when Maximilian I ruled as as monarch in 3 years. That's a start. Scratch it more. You're either Chicano with no actual historical knowledge of Mexico while you proudly declare yourself "Mexican." Or you are the definition of an ignorant gringo. Pancho villa style " Green Go."

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    8. As if Mex in general is Sooo refined 🤣. The whole lot is much closer to the bottom of the totem, from any evolutionary angle one cares to approach from, compared to Europe and North America.

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    9. We don't care about foreign immigration to Mexico we care about immigration to the US and we can handle Mexicans coming to work But keep the Venezuelans out they look and act like the Cubans from Mariel in 1980.

      Delete
    10. Belgiums and french hay mucho desendientes in the tierra caliente region look up the history de tierra caliente

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    11. 10:56 caracuaro huetamo y zirandaro 💯 iyk you know

      Delete
  15. Please make me some chitlins ok I'm really stressing over KUSH

    ReplyDelete
  16. Lay off the dope oliver twist

    ReplyDelete
  17. Well guess what folks ! We are all doomed once again , now there's a deadly bacteria that kills in 24 hours in Japan and guess what ? Remember how covid got here from China? Well now just yesterday the first case is in Connecticut a woman got it in her throat ! Mark my words this is on the rise ten times fold

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nah for reals dude I am moving to Mexico Elmo says down there it's same from virus.

      Delete
  18. The ONLY way (and I repeat: the ONLY way) for Mexico to get rid of the cartels without foreign intervention is a ruthless (ruthless against the cartels) dictatorship: a dictatorship that will erase every cartel member from the face of the Earth, alongside those in cahoots with them in the military and in the police.

    And every cartel member should be hanged in the plazas with a tag on him saying “i lived like a subhuman sewer rat and this is what happened to me” with a penalty Prison for anyone who dares bury them. The corpses need to stay exposed until they ROT. In this way we would “deromanticize” everything about these coackroaches and nobody would want to imitate them because nobody would like to live like a filthy sewer rat and end up hanged in a public plaza with your genitals exposed for everyone to see until your entire body rots.

    And obviously this dictatorship would need to crack down on the corridos as well (even though i’m sure that the treatment explained above would go a long way to prevent their glorification).

    They would need to be destroyed not only phyisically but also reputationally with disonorable deaths that wouldn’t be given even to rabid dogs.

    But like i said, only a ruthless dictatorship could do this.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 3.58 chump you dude when I go home me is going to play soldier of fortune man I am going to kick some ass
      Then later on it's pizza time.

      Delete
    2. People in northern Mexico and south.texas are of higher quality we don't fight and hurt riot cops like they do in Mexico city we respect the law that's why you guys from the south when you come to Texas drive around drinking beer

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    3. Now it's the Nueva Familia? What will they think of next? New names same clowns doing damage.

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    4. First it was cjng now it's these guys coming through nuevo laredo and reynosa?

      Delete
    5. I don’t know what you guys are talking about. In my comment above I just explained the only possible way for Mexico to eradicate the scourge of the earth that ravages the country (and I’m talking about EVERY single cartel member of EVERY single cartel). Other than that, only foreign intervention remains.

      I see no other way.

      Even if drugs were completely legalized what do you think? That people that have dozens, and in some cases hundreds, of dead bodies on their conscience (including innocent people and kids and women) would start living a normal life? No pinches mames!

      But if you think that there are other ways be my fucking guest.

      Delete
    6. I'm fixin to run to costa rica for some summer fun and pineapples

      Delete
    7. @831
      Travel agent said it would be a fun summer, did they mention the constant rain and mosquito part? 🦟

      Delete
    8. 12:07 I'm going to Costa Rica too, but have fuken learn English I keep forgetting my periods.

      Delete
    9. @12.07. I think you have a simplistic, cartoonish idea of what the so called cartels are. It isn't like the Hollywood version of Cosa Nostra, where you sign a contract and take an oath and "join" a Cartel. Most people who work for traffickers don't even know who they work for, let alone which "cartel".
      It's like suggesting hanging "BAD PEOPLE" in public in the US, and expecting that to make the US better.

      Delete
    10. @3:55 Pm

      “ It's like suggesting hanging "BAD PEOPLE" in public in the US, and expecting that to make the US better”

      The US aren’t a narco-state. The cartels destroyed literally entire towns and nothing was done to them. In Mexico we have people who have personally killed hundreds of people, and entire segments of the country that are literally run by the cartels.

      What the hell is this comparison with the US?

      Obviously in the Us you don’t need such extreme measures, but in Mexico I don’t see other ways other than a ruthless dictatorship or a massive foreign intervention, expecially because even if you legalized drugs the people who work in the cartels now certainly wouldn’t start living a normal life, they simply would start to differentiate their criminal activities which most cartels already do (even do the drug trafficking is by far their most lucrative asset).

      In Mexico we have literally hundreds of thousands (175.000 according to a research made in 2023) of psychopaths who would have no qualms about dismembering a 7 years old kid and urinating on his dead bodies on video, if they were ordered to, tell me how to deal with these “people”, I’m willing to hear you. And we are talking about 175.000 people (which are probably even more).

      Delete
    11. “ Most people who work for traffickers don't even know who they work for, let alone which "cartel"”

      It doesn’t matter, they still would be willing to do everything that’s ordered to them. And like I said, even if drug trafficking became non profitable in and of itself, they would simply resort to other means for making money (human trafficking, organ trafficking, extortions, robberies etc, all things that most cartels, no, ALL cartels already do, if drugs were completely legalized they would simply devote themselves completely to this kind of activities which would affect the common population even more).

      Or do you think that they would start doing normal jobs for 154.646 pesos per year? ROTFL

      Delete
    12. Most people who work for cartels are crash dummies and go work in the US those are the real tough guys or if you break the law and don't contribute to your new country you will be in jail and deported as a Criminal alien then you'll walk around border town homeless trying to get back the check point

      Delete
    13. I talk to a lot of deported guys in Mexico.
      They always admit they got deported from el bote.
      I tell them they should have hustled, worked two jobs and got to live the dream legally, without so much as wracking up a jaywalking ticket.
      90% of 'em admit I'm right, and would love a do-over.
      😸

      Delete
  19. Aloha! The DNC opened the US border. Instead of closing it they now have to spend billions more for more FinCEN and law enforcement.

    I propose the USCANMEX CASA Trade Bloc. What is worse than Mexican cartels? The CCP and NoKo and Russia. Ask any production manager and they will tell you sourcing inputs from the shortest supply chain is always best. The longer the supply chain the more cost and the more instability, especially with the CCP.

    Cut Asia out of US CAN MEX trade. Focus on mining inside the USCANMEX and then add in CASA, short for Central America and South America. Instead of trillions to the mafia CCP do trillions of investing in countries throughout the "Americas". With new leadership Argentina is begging for USCAN investments. Also El Salvador is as well after cleaning out their MS13 problem. Nobody would join a cartel gang if they had a good paying job with benefits. Shift the focus out of Asia and Africa and the Middle East and the EU where all the warfare is. The numero uno rule would be "no investment $$$ until no cartels". If El Salvador can do it Mexico and and all Latin countries can. Just go Simon Bolivar on the cartels! First though Biden and the DNC need to go and not just for four years, forever. If I could post graphics here I could show you 60 years of DNC Apartheid against blacks and latinos. Where are all the US ghetto barrios? In Blue cities labeled "sanctuary" where in fact the other "s" word is more accurate "slavery"! Harsh economic despair naturally creates more drug users. I should know I worked for four years as a volunteer at food banks and homeless shelters in Oakland, CA. California is in despair under its DNC regime political monopoly. That needs to end since the only people getting rich are DNC politicians and their UN NGOs. California now has a HIC, a Homeless Industrial Complex.

    MAKE ALL THE AMERICAS ONE BIG TRADE BLOC! Let the Asians and Africans and Euros make their own blocs. The vast wealth in resources and people translates to a big consumer bloc and that translates to wealth and improved lives for all the Americas and all the people not just the US and CAN.

    Mahalo nui loa. Vamos a hacer un mejor Unidos Americas! US CAN MEX CASA

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That 🧊 gotta be ⛽️ over there in Hawaii

      Delete
  20. That claim that LFM receive money from migrants to fake interrogation videos for them is so misleading in so many ways.

    ReplyDelete
  21. What? Go back to dancing the hula.for tourists.

    ReplyDelete

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