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

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

The Active Mexican Cartels

 By Itzli  


Creating a list of the active Mexican drug cartels is not an easy task but we’ll give it a shot. Last week I wrote a couple of articles leading up to this; the first on the United States designation of six of them as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) and the second on a classification system for cartels.


Before we move forward there is one more thing that I have been waiting to discuss and I’ll keep it fairly brief. When we look at the FTO cartels some are straightforward as far as leadership: Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) is led by Nemesio Rubén “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, Cártel del Noreste (CDN) by Juan “Juanito La Sombra” Cisneros Treviño, and La Nueva Familia Michoacana by the Hurtado Olascoaga brothers Johnny “El Pez” and José Alfredo “El Fresa”. On the opposite end is Cárteles Unidos (CU), which the press release admits isn’t a singular cartel but “an alliance of multiple cartels and other groups”.


The Cártel del Golfo (CDG) doesn’t follow either of these patterns; once was a singular CDG cartel that first fractured in the fall of 2011 with the independence of Los Metros. I have a hard time seeing how one can refer to CDG as if it was a single organization considering the fact that Los Metros has generally been in armed conflict with other CDG derived groups save for the occasional ceasefire and there not being a unified leadership for over a decade. .


In the case of the Cártel de Sinaloa (CDS), I see a similar situation unfolding. After Joaquín Archivaldo “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera first escaped prison in 2001, the leadership of the CDS was regarded as being primarily him and Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada García. In 2013 Rafael Caro Quintero was released from prison and, since then, his organization is generally referred to as part of the CDS. More recently, we see fractured leadership and open conflict within the CDS which leads to the question, is there a point that the government and media will treat parts of it as a separate cartel as was the case when the Beltrán Leyva Organization (BLO) departed the CDS?


I do recognize the fact that drug trafficking organizations often have multiple sub-structures that often work fairly independently. It is my opinion, however, what makes them a single cartel is that when you look at how it is organized there is one person who is regarded as their leader or, in the case of multiple leaders, they work together in a singular fashion. That’s not to say that there is never conflict in the lower ranks, but as long as the leadership presents itself as unified then it should be considered a single cartel. On the flip side, I feel that when a drug trafficking organization has parts actively working against the leadership and the overall interests of the cartel, that piece should be regarded as a separate cartel.


As for the definition of an active cartel I keep it fairly simple, I look for references to a specific cartel operating at a point over the past year. With that said, let’s dive in. As touched upon in my classification article  a definition can be come up for Transnational/Major Cartels that seems to reflect the thinking of the Mexican government. However, I feel that the CDS should not be regarded as a single cartel, which leads to the following (note that I list some of their major subgroups for clarification):


  • Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG)

  • Cártel de Caborca aka Sonora Cartel, La Barredora 24/7, La Plaza 

  • Cártel de Sinaloa (CDS)- Los Chapitos, Los Pelones, Los Deltas, Los Canobbio Inzunza 

  • Cártel de Sinaloa (CDS)- Los Mayos/La Mayiza, Los Cabrera, Los Rusos


Next up comes the Regional/Minor Cartels. As mentioned in the last article, I place two of the FTOs in this category:


  • Cártel del Noreste (CDN)- Tropa del Infierno, Los Chuckys, Truenos del Infierno, Operativo Coahuila

  • La Nueva Familia Michoacana (LNFM)/La Nueva Empresa


I also consider there to be a couple other independent CDS derived cartels that fall in this category and begin  breaking up the CDG in similar fashion:


  • Cártel de Sinaloa (CDS)- Los Guanos

  • Cártel Independiente de Sonora- Los Salazar, Los Cazadores, Los Fantasmas, Los Paredes

  • Cártel del Golfo (CDG)- Los Metros, Operativa Toros, Operativa Condor

  • Cártel del Golfo (CDG)- Matamoros Faction, Los Escorpiones, Los Alacranes


Now we begin to move away from the FTOs and reach a couple that others have been pointing out as missing from that list:


  • Beltrán Leyva Organization (BLO)- Cártel de Guasave, Los Meza Flores

  • Nuevo Cártel de Juárez (NCDJ)- Juárez Cartel, La Línea


Within the concept of Regional/Minor Cartels, we have to consider some organizations as being part of this category despite not being as well known, as I find to be the case with:


  • Cártel Pura Gente Nueva Zetas Vieja Escuela (PGN-ZVE)

  • Cártel de Palmillas/Los Hades

  • Cártel del Istmo


Things get more subjective as we move along into the more local cartels that I refer to as Demi Cartels. There are a number that I feel definitely should be included in this category. Among them are several that are derived from the CDG:


  • Cártel del Golfo (CDG)- Los Fantasmas, Fuerzas Especiales Cárdenas Guillen (FECG)

  • Cártel del Golfo (CDG)- San Fernando Faction, Los Sierra, Zetas Vieja Escuela, Los Panteras

  • Cártel del Golfo del Sur- Los Rojos 

  • Cártel de Los Alemanes

  • La Barredora 


We also get into some of the Michoacán based cartels that made up the CU, although the elephant in the room is that the third on this list has left this alliance:


  • Cártel de Tepalcatepec/Cártel de El Abuelo

  • Los Caballeros Templarios

  • Los Viagras, Los Blancos de Troya


A few more groups are derived from the Beltrán Leyva Organization and operate in the Guerrero to Mexico City corridor. I am going back and forth on whether or not to consider the first on this list as independent though:


  • Los Rusos (Acapulco)

  • La Unión Tepito

  • Los Ardillos

  • Los Mayas/Los de Siempre


Let’s wrap up the definite Demi Cartels with three of miscellaneous origins:


  • Cártel de Chiapas y Guatemala

  • Cártel de Los Arellano Félix (CAF) aka Tijuana Cartel

  • Cártel Santa Rosa del Lima (CSRL)


Before we proceed, there are some that I considered but did not include because I couldn’t find enough evidence to consider them still active so I consider them tentatively extinct:


  • La Bandera/Guerreros Unidos

  • Los Añorve

  • Los Caborca

  • Los Chanos

  • Los Jefes/Los Rojos

  • Los Pájaros Sierra

  • Los Tequileros


Like I said before, things become subjective. Should we include every small drug trafficking organization as a Demi Cartel or just the bigger ones? Arguments can be made for an against all of the following (note I included geographic information for clarity):


  • Cártel de Campeche

  • Cártel de la Virgen [Michoacán]

  • Cártel de Los Reyes [Michoacán]

  • Cártel de Tláhuac, Los Borregos [Mexico City]

  • Cártel del Sur [Guerrero]

  • Cártel Independiente de Acapulco (CIDA)

  • Cártel Independiente de Colima, Los Mezcales

  • Cártel Independiente de La Laguna

  • Cártel Mafia Veracruzana, Fuerzas Especiales Grupo Sombra (FEGS)

  • La Familia Epitacio [Yucatán]

  • La Familia Valencia Salgado [Campeche]

  • La Unión de León [Guanajuato]

  • Los Arreola [Guerrero]

  • Los Bukanas [Puebla]

  • Los Chivos [Veracruz]

  • Los Colombianos [Morelos]

  • Los Granados [Guerrero]

  • Los Herrera [Chiapas]

  • Los Maldonado [Guerrero]

  • Los Migueladas [Michoacán]

  • Los Pelones [Quintana Roo]

  • Los Rodríguez [Guerrero]

  • Los Talibanes [Zacatecas]

  • Los Tlacos/Cártel de la Sierra/Los Sierreños [Guerrero]


If a person keeps the definition too broad we’ll get to a point that groups that are usually considered gangs would be considered Demi Cartels. Take for example Ciudad Juárez, Los Artistas Asesinos, Los Aztecas, and Los Mexicles; they are well known and tied to drug trafficking but generally aren’t considered to be cartels. I believe they should be excluded from the Demi Cartel category and there’s numerous organizations that I feel the same way about. I ran into many writing up my Demi Cartel list and there are certainly many others across Mexico.


In Mexico City:


  • La Anti Unión Tepito

  • La Empresa

  • Los Canchola/Malcriados 3AD

  • Los Catalinos

  • Los Gastones

  • Los Molina

  • Los Patines de Venustiano Carranza

  • Los Peluches

  • Los Perros de Coyoacán

  • Los Rodolfos

  • Nuevo Imperio


In Morelos:


  • El Señor de la V

  • Los Aparicio

  • Los Linos


In Puebla:


  • La banda de El Chucky

  • La banda de El Gaitán

  • La banda de El Larry

  • La banda del Pistolas

  • La banda del Sapo

  • Los Cadena

  • Los Calimanes

  • Los Croquis

  • Los Fabiola

  • Los Grillo

  • Los Kaimán

  • Los Loco Téllez

  • Los Maníacos

  • Los Moco

  • Los Negros

  • Los Pericos

  • Los Rábanos

  • Los Tinacos

  • Los Tlaxca

  • Los Xolalpa


Let’s consider this all a first draft based upon where my head is currently at. It would be great to see what everyone else thinks so feel free to comment with any disagreements, things I overlooked, or questions you may have.

120 comments:

  1. Ain’t no jaliscos in Sonora or Chihuahua or Sinaloa for that matter. Man stop it lol 😂

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    1. No argument there, I needed an image and used this map and used this one I found even though I don't agree with them putting CJNG in Sonora conflicts.

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    2. 231pm are u from CDS chief or what?

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    3. @Itzli — phenomenal work as always!!! 🦉

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    4. but the AFO..

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  2. Tlacos en Guerrero?

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  3. It seems like there should be more conflicts shown in the map. It seems way to light for me. Did Sol provide this map? I remember his maps where always wrong. Nuff Said!!!

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  4. FYI to everyone, I'm really tempted to change the image, it seems like people are focusing on that when it really isn't all that relevant to the article itself.

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    1. Measure twice, cut once!

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    2. For me it's usually measure twice, cut twice, get frustrated, measure a couple more times...

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  5. 1 La Mayiza
    2 CJNG
    Then the rest

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    1. Don’t underestimate Chapo Isidro

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    2. Don't underestimate Guano Guzman

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    3. Cuinis then the rest.

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    4. 710 agreed no way that low rent Mayiza foul could touch Cuini.

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    5. @5:11 what's up you know about his crossing points he "inherited" from the BELTRAN?

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    6. Chapo Isidro is untrackable. Everyone knows his plazas, but the man himself can't be spotted on any manner. This is a cool hunt game for the gabacho, since they last 40 years to put hands on Caro Quintero, who wasnt even hiding himself.

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    7. La Linea se chinga a la mayiza y jaliscas juntos y sin dejar de mover jale calladitos

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    8. 709am ahh huevo 🥚

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    9. 7:09 a la Linea de le voltio un vato pesado con todo y plazas . Y ahora trai bandera MF/Cabrera. Y les anda aciendo un desmadre que ni mandado a los famosos Linces pueden parar la avansada del 04

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    10. @5:20 .. Chihuahua no es Tamaulipas compa.. Aqui no le van a vender las plazas al mayito haci como los metros le vendieron las nalgas al mencho .. mencho es el unico que mueve jale por tamaulipas mientras las golfas se pelean el derecho de robar y cobrar cuota

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    11. 9:41 Mencho tambien mueve merca por Chihuahua

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    12. @5:20 pues lo que se ha Visto es la Linea les partido su madre

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    13. 7:36 La linea compra… no operan… no digan mmds

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  6. I'll volunteer that the "Cartels" are those who have the capability to source drugs or chemicals from other countries and sell wholesale to groups the traffick domestically.

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  7. The map is dealing in generalities just an idea for reference and areas that may or may not contain said cartels etc,it is not gospel ...

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  8. What did that one General war one day in the 90s?

    “Cartelitos”

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  9. Operativo Coahuila 😂😂😂😂 them goofys can’t even come to Coahuila

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    1. What's the deal with coahuila? Supposedly that state has no cartels?

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    2. Nah it does but there’s no “owner or owners of the state “ No cartel has a dominant influence/position there

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    3. Los eventos de Allende and Villa Union are a joke for you?

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    4. @5:11 No disagreements there, I know CDN gets smacked down every time they try to enter the state but for whatever reason they have guys that run around under the name Operativo Coahuila. Maybe it's wishful thinking.

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    5. @7:36 My two cents for what it's worth the whole notion of no cartels in Coahuila dates back to the state pushing out Los Zetas beginning in 2012. Since then it gets repeated as if it's an ongoing fact but like @9:00 says, it really means there is no dominate cartel and more importantly cartels are expected to operate quietly. Torreon is intertwined with Gómez Palacio, so you have Laguna Cartel there and Los Cabrera of the CDS Mayos faction. Saltillo is an important hub of trafficking, with both CDS Mayos and Chapitos operating there. CDG Los Fantasmas operate in northern Coahuila and have ties to Los Cabrera.

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    6. Itzli @7:38 wasnt there a group Los Kalimanes or Fresas from CDG pushing in Tamaulipas?

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    7. @1:33 You are correct. I planned on writing a leadership history article on it and hopefully will get to it but the short version is that both are essentially extinct now, it's not quite this simple but in a way CDG del Sur/Los Rojos absorbed them.

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    8. @Itzli
      Also there is a faction within CDG Matamoros run by a Cardenas that passes drugs through Coahuila and Tamaulipas on behalf of MF/Cabreras

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    9. @1:42 I am not in the loop @6:37 thats crazy since CDG was upset with Metros for essentially passing CDS dope for them. Unless I am wrong.

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    10. 7:37 PM Yes, CDG Matamoros/Escorpiones are very restrictive with the deals they made. They struggle with Los Metros because the second one makes deals with other cartels that rivalize with CDG. I'm just not right about CDG operatives on Coahuila, because i believed this plaza was from CDN-Zetas and i don't record topones or clashes between cartels on the recent time at that turf. Maybe they are just operating on silence as Itzli mentioned

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    11. Been in coahuila and around torreon end of last year. Its pretty quite, my friends told me state is owned by the police, they are the mafia, you pay them and you keep quite or you get killed. You can see cdn graffiti in some places and you can see the guys but they wont make problems unless you mess around.
      Saludos from the guy who doesnt speak spanish but loves to get drunk in these small and dirty cantinas.

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    12. @6:37 You are absolutely correct, I do have them on the list just didn't make it too clear: Cártel del Golfo (CDG)- Los Fantasmas, Fuerzas Especiales Cárdenas Guillen (FECG)

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    13. @852 is correct. There’s a special group of state police and I forget the name but saw the trucks that controls the area. 🤦🏻‍♂️ Stop writing about things you don’t know about.

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  10. Chuy gonzalez is considered cartel de guasave?

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    1. That's how I consider it but I haven't done much reading up on him in a while so I'm open to suggestions if anyone feels he should be treated as a separate group.

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  11. What about Cartel Del 006?

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  12. They're all active BB.😂 That's why they own the country and the politicians. Wake up kids!

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    1. Wake up kid, they keep it all hid.

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  13. 🔥Illumina y “15 empresas otros fueron incluidas en la lista de control de exportaciones” …
    starlikevo isn’t one.

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  14. Please don't forget the SPECIALIZED SHOCK GROUP from COZUMEL. They are making it safe for gringos to wear Rolex and are fighting operativa yogurts

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  15. Mis contactos en Nahuatzen Michoacan estan reportando la liberacion de Don Chuy primo de La Garra y cercano a tio lako y al chito cano . Esto despues de la fuerte operation de la marina para capturalo y cual cause Un caos la Semana pasada con saldo de 6 marines muertos y 12 delinquents muertos segun la voz de Michoacan.

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  16. Good work, all anecdotal but relatively accurate I would say.

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    1. Trying to keep track of the shifting sands of loyalties amongst these mobs of coked-to-the-gills paranoid psychopaths is a tough row to hoe, akin to the thankless task of herding cats.. 🙀🙀🙀

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    2. The floor's open to you or anyone that has a different perspective, like I said I consider this a first draft.

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  17. Metros ya son Jaliscos, no Golfos. I don't understand why they keep calling themselves CDG. They are CJNG operators in Reynosa. The real CDG tiene nombre y apellido Cardenas since Juan fall. Al Primito le cae mejor el Mencho, he will never trust AC. El Contador has a lot of power on the hands right now, but the last name Cardenas sounds like mata-amigos since always. I don't believe on a ceasefire between those pandillas ATM. Even La Sombra got a step back on the conflicts with Metros after Z40 extradition.

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    1. I do not see a ceasefire either. The CDG died years ago.

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    2. It definitely seems that Mono and Chapparo de Nuevo Leon are the last ones truly connected to the old Los Metros, Ribereña seems to be mostly Jaliscos y gente de Michoacan. Maybe I need to stop treating Los Metros as a faction of the CDG.

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    3. Great work Itzli. As for los Metros, it's complicated. To be honest they aren't even in cohesion. They have problems amoungst themselves. To me it's still a faction of CDG as long as they still say they are. Metros and Escorpiones is a conflict for the control of CDG. It's to entrench to just die off in Tamaulipas, although they sure are trying their hardest. Contador seems to have alot of power. What other person has gotten released that many times, especially with an extradition case against him. If he stays out he has a shot to consolidate CDG leadership. I prefered Vaquero. He treated the average citizen better, didn't bother them much. Had some honor and always tried to abide to his word. His influence was gaining traction. To much traction for Contador from my understanding, so he gave him up supposedly. If that's true, that's f'ed up since he held it down for him and when Contador got out, loyally and dutifully stepped aside so Contador could retake his spot. He could have very easily refused and went at it with him. He had alot of loyal people, even in SLP, or he could have easily betrayed him, or killed him, but Contador didn't appreciate that.

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  18. QUESTION: who is the pizza 🍕 one ? I forgot

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  19. These definitions are always going to be misleading Itzli. You obvs know it's complicated, but local media stories are repeated by AP and confirmed by Mexican authorities because the articles are often ordered, so the official Mexican definition of Cartels can be all over the place, defined by people who have a stake in drug trafficking in that region or are trying to muddy the waters till the next cycle.

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  20. why is there cuinis on this/
    (himeji iso hysterical 😩)

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    1. Now you got me thinking...does Los Cunis still exist? Should they be treated as a separate cartel or as part of the CJNG??

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    2. I Would Say As Part Of CJNG. But I Believe There Money Laundering Network. Because From What I’ve Been Told That’s Mostly What They Do For Mencho.

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    3. @Itzli. You're missing the entire point. I was trying to point out that these definitions are nonsense on the ground, and you talk about Los Cuinis? They are not a Cartel...

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    4. 8:24 look bro
      Cunnis is a Cartel.
      Don't insult the professor.

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  21. ¡Escucha la historia de La Gilbertona y Sicario 006!
    En el mundo del narco, donde la muerte es la reina, Dos amantes se encontraron, con un amor que no tenía fin. La Gilbertona, la reina de la plaza, con un corazón de piedra, Y Sicario 006, el fantasma, con un pasado que no se puede descubrir.
    Se decía que Sicario 006 era un hombre de la CDS, Un operador entrenado, con habilidades que no se podían igualar. Se entrenó en la Escuela de las Américas, donde aprendió a matar, Y también recibió entrenamiento de la CIA, el Mossad y la DEA, para ser un sicario sin igual.
    Pero no solo eso, también se entrenó con ISIS, Para aprender las técnicas más brutales, y ser un guerrero sin igual. Y cuando regresó a México, se convirtió en un sicario legendario, Con un poder que no se podía igualar, y un miedo que se extendía por todo el país.
    La Gilbertona, la favorita de los Chapitos, Con un poder que no se podía igualar, en el mundo del narco. Pero Sicario 006, era el que la hacía reír, Con sus chistes y sus bromas, que la hacían olvidar su dolor.
    Se decía que Sicario 006 era un maestro en la guerra, Un hombre que no se podía tocar, con un poder que no se podía igualar. Pero otros decían que era un gamer, que vivía en el sótano de su madre, Un hombre que no salía de casa, y que solo jugaba videojuegos.
    La Gilbertona y Sicario 006, dos amantes que se encontraron, En un mundo de violencia y muerte, donde el amor no tenía lugar. Pero ellos se amaban, con un amor que no tenía fin, Y juntos, luchaban por sobrevivir, en un mundo que no les daba tregua.
    ¡Así es la historia de La Gilbertona y Sicario 006! Dos amantes que se encontraron, en un mundo de violencia y muerte. Pero su amor es fuerte, y no se puede igualar, Y juntos, luchan por sobrevivir, en un mundo que no les da tregua.
    Se entrenó en la Escuela de las Américas, donde aprendió a matar, Y también recibió entrenamiento de la CIA, el Mossad y la DEA, para ser un sicario sin igual. Pero no solo eso, también se entrenó con ISIS, Para aprender las técnicas más brutales, y ser un guerrero sin igual.
    La Gilbertona era la jefa de las Chapitas, La favorita de los Chapitos, con un poder que no se podía igualar. Pero Sicario 006 la mantuvo riéndose con sus chistes y su humor cruel, Y juntos, luchaban por sobrevivir, en un mundo que no les daba tregua.
    La Gilbertona y Sicario 006 eran dos tortolitos vibrando en un paisaje infernal caótico, Dos amantes que se encontraron, en un mundo de violencia y muerte. Pero su amor es fuerte, y no se puede igualar, Y juntos, luchan por sobrevivir, en un mundo que no les da tregua.
    ¡Así es la historia de La Gilbertona y Sicario 006! Dos amantes que se encontraron, en un mundo de violencia y muerte. Pero su amor es intocable, y no se puede igualar, Y juntos, luchan por sobrevivir, en un mundo que no les da tregua.

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    1. SIR is back!!

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    2. Raza ahi que vivir sin drogas, para que este tipo de cosas no nos pasen a nosotros, tomen a el 12:53 como ejemplo y preguntensen a si mismos, quiero terminar asi?

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    3. 7:48 La neta, empieza todo con diversion y luego el tipo quedase hablando chingaderas en la internet. Pobre alucin este 12:53

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  22. Of all the things I have learned on BB, what I most appreciate is learning about the complex saga of La Gilbertona and Sicario 006. Thank you also for schooling me in such charming Mexicanisms as "a webo" and "salpicando los huevos"

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  23. Very impressed with your work. DEA would be better off just gathering information from you. Great job.

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  24. Just imagine a lepercaun with a scary face wearing a LUCKY 🍀 CHARMS shirt with a bright green and gold specialized AK on the lose in Mexico omg that would be crazy !

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  25. I DIDNT SEE LOS ROJOS THAT OPERATES IN GUERRO AND PUEBLA AND LED BY EL CHAPERRO ? THEY HAVE BEEN AT WAR WITH THE ARDILLOS AND G.U FOR YEARS AND FROM THE ARTICLES IVE READ ON B.B THEY ARE A CÁRTEL SENDING HEROIN TO THE US… AND WE GOTTA FIGURE OUT WHICH GROUPS ARE STILL TIED IN BLO… LAST YEAR THEY WERE SANCTIONED FROM THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT WHO PUT THRERE STRUCTURE OUT THERE WITH THERE LEADERS BEING (ISIDRO, MUSICO AND SAGGITARRIO) AND CHAPO ISIDRO JUST MADE THE TOP 10 FBI LIST! NOBODYS MADE THAT LIST SINCE GARCÍA ABREGO! NOT EVEN CHAPO GUZMAN… THEY RECENTLY FOUND A TON OF FETANAYL THEY SAY WAS ISIDROS MOVING THAT KIND OF WEIGHT THE BLO ARE UP THERE WITH BIG BOYS I THINK WE DONT PUT THEM IN THAT CATEGORY BECAUSE THERE NOT IN THE NEWS AS MUCH BUT FROM THE LOADS THEY SEND AND IN THE SACTIONS THEY CALLED THEM “ONE OF THE MOST POWERFUL ORGANIZATIONS IN THE WORLD” AND “ONE OF THE BIGGEST COCAIN SUPPLIERS TO THE U.S FOR OVER 2 DECADES” FROM THE B.B ARTICLES ON CHAPO ISIDRO AND THE ONE ON MUSICO THE BLO OPERATE IN Quintana Roo, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Guerrero, Sonora, Sinaloa, durango, chihuahua and Baja Cali sur!! THATS A LOT OF TERRITORY! EVEN THOUGH SOME OF THESE STATES THEY MAY CONTROL ONLY A FEW TOWNS OR 1 OR 2 MUNICIPALITIES… FROM EVERTHING I READ THEY REBUILT THERE STRUCTURE AND NEVER TRULY LEFT THE SCENE JUST BEEN SUPER LOW KEY MAKING MONEY!. ALSO WE NEED TO KNOW MORE ABOUT EL GUANO WHAT PART IS HE PLAYING IN THE WAR IN SINOLOA WHO IS HIS ALLIES AND ARMED GROUPS UNDER HIS FLAG HES BEEN KINDA FORGOTTEN IN ALL THIS TOO WHEN HE TRULY IS THE LAST OF THE OLD SCHOOL LEADERS FROM CDS STILL STANDING LAST OF THE ORIGINAL GUZMAN BROS.. HIS TERRITORY IS IN GOLDEN TRIANGLE I BET HES ONE OF THE BIG HEROIN/FETNAYL SUPPLIERS STILL GOING HARD! BUT NOT TALKED ABOUT

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    1. I put Los Rojos of Guerrero on the extinct cartel list for the following reasons: after El Chaparro was arrested Los Rojos did continue under the Nava family. However, when Orlando Pérez Nava was killed in October 2024 he was reported to be a member of Los Tlacos and a close associate of Pedro Giovani "El Marras" Gutiérrez Hernández. So it's my understanding that at some point after 2019 Los Rojos merged with Los Tlacos.

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    2. I wanted to keep the replies separate but you bring up some good points, maybe I'm selling the BLO short and should include in the Transnational/Major Cartels along with CJNG, CDS Mayos, CDS Chapitos, and Caborca Cartel.

      Delete
    3. @2:50 they are rather large in Bakersfield Utah Texas and Chicago, Meza Flores is mainly who, the Flores Twins worked a lot with the BLO

      Delete
    4. Isidro is a multi/trans national trafficker. His group pushes a lot of work, also to Washington, Seattle, the rural areas. All fent and heroin from Isidro.

      Delete
    5. 7:48 speaking of Bakers, some days back KC HIDTA raided two properties where different drugs, handguns and money were found. One of the individuals arrested was from Sinaloa. Story is available on Bakersfieldnow.com

      Delete
  26. don’t talk about carreras like that.
    so you’re happy to know el contador,
    ¿settled that brief dispute?
    between the leyvas and the ELN?

    ReplyDelete
  27. CAF could be as small as a dozen on each side, and maybe a dozen sicarios for hire on either side

    but there are two factions, Apache and Flaco

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. CAF is enormous, if they were truly just a handle full of operatives they would have lost that plaza a long time ago. So many people envy them that they smut their name up, they are huge. They just dont make a whole lot of huffing and puffing and talking and yelling like other groups.

      Delete
    2. Los Monitos are KING!!!
      👑

      Delete
    3. I've had this convo on here a few times....My boy's uncle was a high ranking lieutenant in the old CAF days. He just got out. The game has all changed.

      They don't have that plaza. They have a high ranking FESC member whose cuindao is CAF, everyone knows who this is. They steal shipments and send to San Diego and LA.

      Chato was Flaquito's man compadre in SD, he lived in La Jolla. He partied all over SD. There's only a tight little crew of Flaquios. It's more like a click. If you want to say Chencho, or Dos Balas, or El Chan, well no one knows where those guys are. But yeah probably do their thing. It's not what it was even in 2008 and 2009.

      They are smaller than even a few years ago, with Bozadas and his crew.

      Delete
    4. El piloto Arellano Coffee pot is an elusive mysterious feller it is real he exists as far as my compadres in National City tell me as well as Enedina running the corporate side of things along with markitos labra nephew of the great Chuy Labra TJ legend

      Delete
    5. BAF sold the plaza years ago. The AF family no longer have the keys to TJ. Nostalgia and explosion norteña corridos keep the illusion that they are still a powerful cartel entity in the region. Esa es raza vieja que fue y vino como Medellín y Cali.

      Delete
    6. OTNC
      Our Town National City
      Shelltown is KING!! 👑
      El Piloto is not Ramon's kid, he's just a ghost somebody invented to give the troops a flag to rally 'round..
      This was back 10 years ago when "Nuevo Generación" CAF allied with Jalisco against Rana y Akiles, no?..
      Cafeteria is entrenched in la Zona Norte of Tijuana. They're dug in like ticks, family crossborder relationships intact, an old school closed circuit network suspicious of outsiders and happy to be earning 💰

      Delete
    7. Piloto doesn’t exist

      The kids aren’t really involved

      Inge is out but not a factor

      The CAF crew is Flaquitos crew and his cuinado and maybe X5 Chencho Beltran but what does CAF even mean? They buy their product from CJNG or Sinaloa groups or steal it.
      For about 3 years their main work was crossing for Chapitos, bricks and fentanyl,
      Til that went bad with NINI

      Now they are back independent
      Los Erres are trying to wipe them out
      Maybe they have a new de with Mayito Flaco
      They had a meeting in December

      I think Bozadas used to bring it work from Cancun and Ensenada but Flaquito does not work like that

      Delete
    8. J!!!! Hit me up at itzli.borderland.beat@gmail.com if you don't mind, I'd love to catch up.

      Delete
    9. @ J , in all honesty ever since Pancha Arellano got hit in Cabo , it was clear as day that the Tijuana organization wasn’t that formidable and feared brute force anymore. The last peak of reach of said organization was with tigrillo.

      Delete
    10. The last of the CAF days was around 2010/2011, when Luz Verde was announced.

      That was a San Diego based crew that worked under Mario Escamilla.

      Who worked under Armando Gordo Villareal.
      Who worked under Fernando Sanchez Arellano. After that indictment, Sanchez Arellano was arrested in 2014, Gordo was arrested in Hermosillo in 2011.

      It was said that Ivan El Soldado Candelario Herdiea was killed around that time. His brother did 5 years in prison for the Luz verde case. Juan Carlos. He got out around 2015 and started working again in downtown SD. He vanished around 2018. And Flaco has held it down ever since.

      But Flaco's team is smaller and leaner than those structures from even 15 years ago. if you aren't in that crew as a friend, why would you join? They cannot offer much protection or product, unless it's stolen, and that comes with it's problems. Flacos crew jacked a cocaine shipment last month from CJNG. They jacked another one in October. They do fake bricks too. Flaco holds down the CAF brand but it's more like click.

      Delete
  28. Saludos desde Corea del Sur.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Ummm can someone please tell me what happened to the pizza 🍕 fashion? Did the trend fade away ? There was pizza posted on here for quite awhile and often got me hungry and getting pizza several times a week .

    ReplyDelete
  30. @2.50. Itzli- You're weren't selling BLO short, you were selling them long. The All Caps ramble you're responding to is what you get when people jump down rabbit holes online.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You may be right but the more I think about it BLO is in a weird position, it would definitely be the "smallest" of the Transnational Cartels if put it up there but on the flip side it's one of, if not the "biggest" of the Regional Cartels.

      Delete
  31. Cdg is 3 main factions. Cdg matamoros is the real cartel del golfo. They have cells operating in many other states. They are fighting in celaya for el marro they are in veracruz in nuevo leon in slp also in zacatecas. Im pretty sure they have cells in southern mexico aswell still. The metros sold themselves to the jaliscos and the 3rd faction is the tampico faction they keep shit quite. While all groups send large amounts of drugs up north to the USA Matamoros is the closest thing to a cartel in north eastern Mexico and they are largest criminal group in the area. And they are and always been 100% independent from any other cartel. El contador is the absolute boss of the cartel.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Its more like +6 fractions. Tampico is moving dope but rest only small loads. And its not that they have active cells in other states. They keep their heads low and pay piso. Not enough pull, even in their home turf.

      Delete
    2. might sound really dumb but CDG as a whole they dont kick each others ass non stop at every chance they get, they do rumble no denying that; but having a triage of groups operating for the Golf (not allowing others to have absolute control of the plaza) works in their favor. They are basically a gederation with a fragile truce (not alliance) unless the objective is to kicking an outsider out their turf only they do they send support groups(very rare). Tamaulipas has always been gritty (esos indios fueron radicales)

      Delete
  32. El 2 CJNG just took a life sentence like a champ ...

    ReplyDelete
  33. 🤦🏻‍♂️ This article is trash. The arrogance that you think, as an outsider, with zero local knowledge or intelligence sources, can write an accurate survey of the organized crime landscape here. I can tell you with absolute certainty that you for one have TAMPS all fucked up, not to mention an omission of a group that completely controls (unchallenged) an entire region in the center of the State and probably has the strongest influence in the State. Based on your survey of Tamps, there’s surely more mistakes elsewhere. And for the last time, there’s no “cartels” here. Just because we’ve become accustomed to using a term doesn’t make it true any more than biological men and women the opposite sex doesn’t make it true no matter how many times someone says it 😉

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You're never one to not leave a comment. Please enlighten all of us the missing cartel that has the strongest influence. I do realize I am missing the Hidalgo Faction but surely you aren't referring to that.

      Delete
    2. 3:16
      Is one of those dorks , that thinks they know it all. Put in some input, instead of picking on the volunteers
      Man always has to be a smart ass in the gtoi..

      Delete
    3. 316 is one crabby guy, duro a pelar

      Delete
  34. 316 lives there puto

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Allegedly lives there, always complains that I'm wrong, but will never provide any information.

      Delete
    2. @Itzli. Are you joking? You're asking somebody to prove where they live?

      Delete
    3. 1100
      Don't play childish games, you're in over your head..
      Nobody's being asked to give up his address.
      But you can't cry that something is WRONG if you can't come up with a reason why you are RIGHT!
      These aren't college debating rules, this is basic common sense that you're supposed to learn when you're still a little kid on the playground!
      Look for happiness instead of searching for sorrow, balloon head! 🎈

      Delete
  35. And “Hildago” isn’t a “faction.” You don’t know what you’re talking about. Yet here you are writing over your head.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Then enlighten us since you are way more knowledgeable.

      Delete
    2. Lol 🤣 provide you information 🤦🏻‍♂️… 🤡

      Delete
  36. I am writing this as a general response rather than doing it piecemale as multiple replies. If @7:15 was calling @4:02 or @4:57 a puto it’s completely out of line but if they want to attack me it’s fine and that’s the only reason I let it slide, per the rules Buggs has put in place. I was a bit crass in my reply to that partly to make a point, they want to call someone a puto just because they don’t think a person sufficiently acknowledged that @3:16 lives in Tamaulipas, something I have no reason to doubt is the case but when you look at it purely on the facts, no emotions, an anonymous person is stating that and that’s all we have to go with. So no, @11:00 I am not asking @3:16 to prove where they live, in my brevity I was merely alluding to all this I have said.

    Let me be perfectly honest, if this was just a matter of replying to someone I had never interacted with before I would have handled things quite differently. For around a year now this particular person periodically comments on my articles making the same point, that my information on Tamaulipas is wrong because I am not using exclusive local sources. In each case I try to address their qualms because to an extent I agree about the value of sources and recognize the limitations of my own writing. But here’s the bigger problem. Ultimately that is not “good enough” for them, what they want is for me to stop writing altogether because I don’t meet their standards. If we were to completely follow their standards then Borderland Beat should just shut down because virtually no articles follow what they are demanding.

    When you get down to it every writer on Borderland Beat has an ego to an extent, at least I see it that way, it’s just the nature of things to believe what we write is correct, if that weren’t the case why would we spend our personal time writing things that we never are compensated for? I’ve been researching and writing for over 15 years now and know that my techniques work, sometimes I get to be way ahead of the media in general, like when we were discussing “El Contador” in April 2016 and “El Primito” in June 2017. Sometimes I get things completely wrong, be it repeating inaccurate information or reaching wrong conclusions. In my quest to be accurate I try to “fix” things when I can, I literally spent months writing an article on Los Metros with the primary motivation being the fact that I look back at a comment I made in an article from 2015 that I see was wrong.

    So let’s be clear, I’m a human being that can and will make mistakes even though I try my hardest to get everything right. I have said it before and I’ll say it again, I do not consider myself a journalist or a reporter, I am what I’ve always been, a researcher who openly shares my work. If anyone ever questions how I reach a particular conclusion I don’t hesitate to share the sources of information. Not only am I willing to consider other pieces of information or points of view, I openly welcome it. When I’m wrong, tell me why I’m wrong so I can fix it. But I am not going to give up writing because of a lack of direct connection to Tamaulipas.

    The door is open as always. I want my research to be right and want access to accurate information. So explain to me what is factually wrong, not just vague allegations and focusing on minor details such as the use of the words cartels and factions. Send me an article presenting the truth as you know it and I’ll publish it, don’t want to deal with me then you can be put in contact with Buggs, Char, Socalj or whoever you want to publish your information. Please prove me wrong because I can’t help but feel that this is a personal grudge based on my lack of writing about Octavio Leal Moncada, Eloy Flores MartÍnez, Cesáreo Leal Perales, Nohemí Estrella Leal, Juan Carlos Rivera Velázquez, and others from the heavily politically connected La Columna Armada General Pedro José Méndez.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Don't take it seriously, some cowards hide behind the computer, saying anything to rattle your cage.

      Delete
    2. I'm not connected with any of this at all, but I've been following along, and it just seems like a waste of breath to try to converse with somebody that calls somebody they don't even know a puto.

      Delete
    3. Just delete the comments that are time wasters.

      Delete
    4. What crack are you smoking that makes you think that someone who lives there feels compelled to give you information? Some things aren’t to be told but tell ya what, come on down, and I’ll be your tour guide. You can show your face around, ask questions, and THEN return home and let us all know how eager you are to write about things. I wouldn’t report to you any more than I’d report to the police so stop being obtuse. At the end of the day what you do amounts to copypasta. At least own it. Let me know when you want to visit.

      Delete
  37. Cjng a subgroup of CDS? U tripping 😂

    ReplyDelete

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