All posts in Zetas

Testimony Suggests Cartels Setting Up Training Camps on Both Sides of Border

Via: KRGV

LAREDO – Testimony taken from open court suggests Mexican drug cartels are setting up training camps on both sides of our border.

Five days of testimony in the trial of alleged hitman Gerardo Castillo Chavez offered a rare glimpse into cartel operations. Sworn witnesses admitted to knowing of Zeta training camps in Mexico and the United States.

“On both sides of the border, you have these large ranches; we’ve known for years the criminal organizations will buy these ranches so they can pass contraband or use them as staging training places,” says Scott Stewart, vice president of tactical intelligence for geo-political intelligence-based agency STRATFOR. “I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s some training here,” says Stewart.

He’s seen videos shot by the Mexican military. A remote ranch just a 90-minute drive from the Valley served as staging and training grounds for the cartel. “Some of them are quite large. Often they locate them in ranches that they’ll purchase or squat on and drive off the legitimate owners,” says Stewart. Stewart admits it isn’t as easy to get away with operating a training camp on this side of the border. “They have to be more careful operating in the U.S. because of law enforcement,” says Stewart. He says the possibility exists. Testimony also suggests the cartel uses paintball guns for training. It’s very similar to what law enforcement uses on this side of the border.

DEA: Wannabe Cartel Hit Squad Included Former U.S. Soldiers

1st Lt. Kevin Corley, left, and Sgt. Samuel Walker, right, following their arrest in Laredo, Texas, where they planned to work as assassins for the Zetas cartel. Photo: Police handout

A DEA sting operation targeting a cell of would-be cartel assassins ended in a violent warehouse showdown over the weekend. Among their ranks: one active-duty Army soldier, and one former G.I. According to a criminal complaint released yesterday in federal court (.pdf), the showdown occured around 12:30 p.m. Saturday as armed federal agents closed in on the group, who had just arrived at a warehouse in the border city of Laredo, Texas; traveling from Colorado Springs and the nearby Fort Carson military base. They believed they were meeting with members of the Zetas — in reality,undercover DEA agents. The assumed plan: Receive instructions before raiding a ranch holding 20 kilos of stolen cartel cocaine, and then killing the (phony) cocaine thief. During the bust, Jerome Corley of South Carolina was killed by the agents, and three others, including Corley’s 29-year-old cousin, a former Army officer, were arrested. The dramatic end concluded a larger plot dating back more than a year. According to the complaint, the group planned to help smuggle cocaine from Mexico, and then funnel guns back to the “cartel.” The former Army officer and Afghanistan veteran, 1st Lt. Kevin Corley, Jerome Corley’s cousin, also offered to assist the undercover agents in carrying out contract killings. Joining Corley for the operation was an active-duty soldier, 28-year-old Sgt. Samuel Walker, also of Colorado Springs. Not only that, but the former lieutenant planned to capitalize on his military service by providing “tactical training for cartel members, including approaches, room clearing, security, and convoy security,” according to the complaint. Now, it’s not known exactly what happened leading up to the shooting, or if the group was armed or resisted arrest. But according to the complaint, inside the group’s vehicle were two scoped semi-automatic rifles, a scoped bolt-action rifle with a bipod, ammunition and a hatchet which authorities say was intended to “dismember the body” of a victim at the ranch. The weapons, according to the complaint, were intended to “prove to the undercover agent they were serious about performing the contract kill.” Before making the trip from Colorado, authorities say Corley also told an undercover agent that he bought the hatchet to dismember his victim, and had acquired a “new Ka-Bar knife to carve a ‘Z’ into the victim’s chest” — Z for Zetas. Corley had also built up something of a working relationship with the agents. The complaint says he had already delivered, for $10,000, two scoped AR-15 rifles, an airsoft rifle — for training purposes — and five stolen ballistic vests. In December, he sent a copy of an Army tactical guide to agents, and considered stealing other weapons from military posts and then selling them. Another accused conspirator, Calvin Epps of South Carolina, told authorites he had access to grenades through a willing accomplice in the military. “Kevin Corley thoroughly explained military tactics and told undercover agents he could train 40 cartel members in two weeks,” the complaint alleges. Authorities added that Corley “had already discussed this opportunity with several experienced soldiers in his platoon who expressed interest in working with the cartel.” The complaint also says Corley claimed to have two teams prepared: one to help train cartel gunmen and another to carry out “wet work” — assassinations. Corley was discharged from the military at Fort Carson, Colorado, on March 13. Less than two weeks later, the first “wet work” operation was set to begin. Accompanying Corley was 28-year-old Army Sgt. Samuel Walker, also of Colorado Springs, Jerome Corley and 29-year-old Shavar Davis of Denver. Epps, along with two other South Carolina-based conspirators, had already been arrested during a similar sting outside Laredo. Corley’s would-be hit squad, meanwhile, kept up contact. However, it would end with one of their members killed.

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Guardian to host exhibition about Mexican journalists’ murders

Via: US Open Borders

Readers of this blog will be aware how often I write about the killing and intimidation of journalists in Mexico.

In the overwhelming majority of murders there has been no worthwhile investigation let alone any arrest. Most of them have died at the hands of drugs cartels.

The figures show that, since the start of this century, Mexico has been one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists to operate.

To highlight that fact, and to raise awareness of the problem of impunity, an exhibition is to be staged at The Guardian‘s headquarters from 3 May, world press freedom day.

It is being mounted by the Catholic overseas development agency (CAFOD), a British-based charity.

Organisers expect to show the photographs of the 67 journalists killed in Mexico since 2000 – a wall of silenced voices. This will be accompanied at the launch by the reading of extracts from their articles.

There will also be a panel discussion in The Guardian’s offices on 3 May.

I’ll have more details closer to the event. Meanwhile, a little more detail on the situation in Mexico…

According to the latest press freedom index compiled by Reporters Without Freedom (RSF), Mexico is ranked 136th (out of 178) in the world. The accompanying explanation states:

“Drug cartels and corrupt officials are implicated in most of the crimes of violence against journalists, which almost always go unpunished. As a result, journalists often censor themselves and some have to flee into exile.”

Both RSF and the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists point out that journalistic deaths (and the deaths of thousands of other people) have increased since Mexico’s president, Filipe Calderon, launched an offensive against the cartels in 2006.

The situation has worsened for journalists working near the US border, especially around Chihuahua.

There has been one positive political step. Earlier this month, the Mexican senate approved a constitutional amendment that, if passed by a majority of states, would mean that all anti-press crimes would become a federal offence.

This might lead to proper investigations into murders by the special federal prosecutor. At present, there is a 90% impunity rate for journalists’ murders.

The International Press Institute’s “death watch” shows that 10 journalists were murdered in Mexico last year and 12 the year before, giving it by far the worst record in Latin America.

I’ll provide more information about the exhibition in coming weeks.

Sources: CAFOD/CPJ/RSF/IPI

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Thirteen suspected criminal gangs members were killed in Nuevo Lared

Thursday afternoon heavy gunfire was reported in the city Laredo (Texas, United States), , no casualties reported bygovernment forces

Thirteen suspected criminal gangs members were killed in Nuevo Laredo

Thirteen suspected criminal gangs members were killed in Nuevo Laredo

 

NUEVO LAREDO, March 1. – Thirteen suspects were killed during a shootout with the Mexican Army and police in the border city of Nuevo Laredo, the military said.

This afternoon, heavy gunfire was reported in that city, on the border with Laredo (Texas, United States), on the southern bank of the Rio Grande and where several areas of the town were blocked.

The sources corresponding by telephone said, the military zoned off the area and that thirteen suspected criminal gangs members were killed in the fighting, and added that government forces had no casualties. They did not specify whether anyone was arrested during the operation.

The state of Tamaulipas, Nuevo Laredo has been one of the most affected by the violence generated by drug cartels in the country.

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The Deadliest Place In Mexico

Who’s killing the people of the Juarez Valley?

The Deadliest Place In MexicoPhotos by Julian Cardona

TO REACH THE DEADLIEST PLACE IN MEXICO you take Carretera Federal 2, a well-paved stretch of highway that begins at the outskirts of Juarez, east for 50 miles along the Rio Grande, passing through cotton and alfalfa fields until you reach the rural Juarez Valley, said to have the highest murder rate in the country, if not the world.

The Juarez Valley is a narrow corridor of green farmland carved from the Chihuahuan desert along the Rio Grande. Farmers proudly say it was once known for its cotton, which rivaled Egypt’s. But that was before the booming growth of Juarez’s factories in the 1990s left farmers downstream with nothing but foul-smelling sludge to irrigate their fields. After that, the only industry that thrived was drug smuggling. Because of the valley’s sparse population and location along the Rio Grande’s dried up riverbed, a person can easily drive or walk into Texas loaded down with marijuana and cocaine.

For decades, this lucrative smuggling corridor, or “plaza,” was controlled by the Juarez cartel. In 2008, Mexico’s largest, most powerful syndicate—the Sinaloa cartel, run by Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman—declared war on the Juarez cartel and moved in to take over the territory. The federal government sent in the military to quell the violence. Instead the murder rate in the state of Chihuahua exploded. The bloodshed in the city of Juarez made international news. It was dubbed the “deadliest city in the world.” So much blood was being shed in Juarez that few outside the region noticed the violence spilling into the rural valley to the east, where killings and atrocities began to occur on a daily basis. Police officers, political leaders and community activists were shot down in the streets. By 2009, the valley, with a population of 20,000, had a shocking murder rate of 1,600 per 100,000 inhabitants—six times higher than its neighboring “deadliest city in the world”—according to government estimates. In one particularly gruesome stretch in 2010, several valley residents were stabbed in the face with ice picks, and a local man aligned with the Juarez cartel was skewered with an iron bar, riddled with bullets, then roasted over an open fire. The Juarez newspapers began to call the rural farming region the “Valley of Death.”

Keep reading…

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Drug traffickers executed evangelical pastor and priest

Los Zetas and other criminal groups are killing and harassment of religious leaders. The two latest targets, a pastor and a Catholic priest attacked in January, officials said.

On January 28, Father Genaro Garcia Avina was murdered in his Church of the Immaculate Conception in Atizapan, State of Mexico, the Catholic Center Multimedia, CCM.

“I had three fingers mutilated and a bullet hole in his head,” said police chief of Atizapan, Pedro Gonzalez Mendoza.

Three weeks earlier, on January 9, an evangelical pastor in Guatemala, Naphtali Lewis Alva, was shot dead in the town of Nentón, south of the border with Mexico. The pastor was killed by the Zetas, said in a statement the Church of God.

Keep reading….

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Update: El Paso police chief confirms woman shot by bullet from Juarez

Via: El Paso Times

View Shots fired in Downtown El Paso in a larger map
Police investigated in the 200 block of E. Overland Tuesday… (Ruben R. Ramirez / El Paso Times)
  • Update, 5:25 p.m.:

By Daniel Borunda / El Paso Times

El Paso Police Chief Greg Allen said the woman was a 48-year-old mother who was pushing a child in a stroller when she was shot in the upper right calf.

Allen said the round went through her leg. She was taken to University Medical Center of El Paso.

Allen, El Paso Mayor John Cook and El Paso County Sheriff Richard Wiles conducted a press conference late Tuesday afternoon at City Hall.

Allen said the woman is a Mexican citizen but has a residency card and lives in El Paso.

Allen said that the bullet came from a gunfight between carjackers and law enforcement in Juarez.

Cook said that the public should not panic over this incident and that El Paso is still a

Juárez police found, chased and exchanged gunfire with car theft suspects Tuesday morning. The suspects crashed at the intersection of Malecón Avenue and Xochimilco Street, less than half a mile away from the border. (El Paso Times)

safe place to live.Allen said the Police Department received about 10 911 calls reporting the sound of gunfire during the time of the shooting. Allen said that El Paso authorities are working with law enforcement in Juarez regarding this case.

Keep reading…

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Zetas gang killed rivals, escaped at Mexico prison

Via: PORFIRIO IBARRA RAMIREZ, Associated Press

MONTERREY, Mexico (AP) — Imprisoned members of the hyper-violent Zetas drug cartel stabbed and bludgeoned 44 members of the rival Gulf cartel to death and then staged a mass escape, apparently with the help of prison authorities, officials in northern Mexico said Monday.

Rodrigo Medina, governor of the northern state of Nuevo Leon, said the prison’s director and three other officials have been fired and are under investigation for purportedly helping in the escape. The same was done with 18 prison guards.

“Unfortunately, a group of traitors has set back the work of a lot of good police,” Medina told a news conference. “The most important thing is to make sure that the people working on the inside are on the side of the law, and that they not be corrupted and collaborate with the criminals, as the investigations indicate they presumably did.”

Medina did not say how the escape was carried out, but he noted that no members of any gang had broken into the prison to spring their colleagues, as has happened at other Mexican prisons. Nor were any firearms smuggled into the facility; all of the deaths apparently occurred with blunt instruments or improvised knives.

Medina confirmed that all 30 escaped inmates were linked to the Zetas cartel, a brutal gang founded by deserters from an elite Mexican military unit.

Keep reading…

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Mexico seizes $4 billion in methamphetamine

Mexican troops have made a historic seizure of $4 billion of pure methamphetamine in the western state of Jalisco, an amount roughly equivalent to the entire economy of the Isle of Man.

A Mexican soldier stands on guard at the Villareal farm, where more than 15 tons of methanphetamine were found

A Mexican soldier stands on guard at the Villareal farm, where more than 15 tons of methanphetamine were found Photo: EPA

The sheer scale of the bust announced late Wednesday drew expressions of amazement from meth experts. The 15 tonne haul could have supplied 13 million doses on the streets of the United States. To give a sense of scale: only 30 tonnes were seized worldwide in the entire year of 2009.

“This could potentially put a huge dent in the supply chain in the US,” said US Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman Rusty Payne. “When we’re taking this much out of the supply chain, it’s a huge deal.”

Reporters were shown barrels of white and yellow powder that were found in a laboratory on a small ranch outside of Guadalajara, Mexico’s second-largest city.

Keep Reading

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Mexican navy finds 10 bodies in mass grave sites

VERACRUZ, Mexico (AP) — A suspected member of the Zetas drug gang has led Mexican authorities to a mass grave site at two ranches in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz, the navy said Wednesday.

The navy says its personal detained suspect Francisco Alvarado Martagon Tuesday as he attempted to drive past a military checkpoint near the city of Acayucan in a vehicle without license plates.

Once in custody, Alvarado Martagon confessed to being a head lookout for the Zetas, it said.

Under questioning, the man mentioned two sites at local ranches that the Zetas allegedly used to dispose of bodies, including rivals or members of their own gang who had been executed.

The navy said it inspected the sites and found the buried, badly decomposed remains of 10 people on Tuesday and continued searching.

Veracruz has been the scene of bloody battles between the Zetas and the Sinaloa drug cartel.

Mexican authorities have found hundreds of bodies dumped by drug gangs in mass graves in recent years, mainly in the states of Durango and Tamaulipas.

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