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Thread: Mexican Cartels Dispatch Agents Deep Inside U.S.

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    Creepy Ass Cracka & Site Owner Ryan Ruck's Avatar
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    Default Mexican Cartels Dispatch Agents Deep Inside U.S.


    Mexican Cartels Dispatch Agents Deep Inside U.S.

    April 1, 2013

    Mexican drug cartels whose operatives once rarely ventured beyond the U.S. border are dispatching some of their most trusted agents to live and work deep inside the United States - an emboldened presence that experts believe is meant to tighten their grip on the world's most lucrative narcotics market and maximize profits.

    If left unchecked, authorities say, the cartels' move into the American interior could render the syndicates harder than ever to dislodge and pave the way for them to expand into other criminal enterprises such as prostitution, kidnapping-and-extortion rackets and money laundering.

    Cartel activity in the U.S. is certainly not new. Starting in the 1990s, the ruthless syndicates became the nation's No. 1 supplier of illegal drugs, using unaffiliated middlemen to smuggle cocaine, marijuana and heroin beyond the border or even to grow pot here.

    But a wide-ranging Associated Press review of federal court cases and government drug-enforcement data, plus interviews with many top law enforcement officials, indicate the groups have begun deploying agents from their inner circles to the U.S. Cartel operatives are suspected of running drug-distribution networks in at least nine non-border states, often in middle-class suburbs in the Midwest, South and Northeast.

    "It's probably the most serious threat the United States has faced from organized crime," said Jack Riley, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Chicago office.

    The cartel threat looms so large that one of Mexico's most notorious drug kingpins - a man who has never set foot in Chicago - was recently named the city's Public Enemy No. 1, the same notorious label once assigned to Al Capone.

    The Chicago Crime Commission, a non-government agency that tracks crime trends in the region, said it considers Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman even more menacing than Capone because Guzman leads the deadly Sinaloa cartel, which supplies most of the narcotics sold in Chicago and in many cities across the U.S.

    Years ago, Mexico faced the same problem - of then-nascent cartels expanding their power - "and didn't nip the problem in the bud," said Jack Killorin, head of an anti-trafficking program in Atlanta for the Office of National Drug Control Policy. "And see where they are now."

    Riley sounds a similar alarm: "People think, `The border's 1,700 miles away. This isn't our problem.' Well, it is. These days, we operate as if Chicago is on the border."

    Border states from Texas to California have long grappled with a cartel presence. But cases involving cartel members have now emerged in the suburbs of Chicago and Atlanta, as well as Columbus, Ohio, Louisville, Ky., and rural North Carolina. Suspects have also surfaced in Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota and Pennsylvania.

    Mexican drug cartels "are taking over our neighborhoods," Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane warned a legislative committee in February. State Police Commissioner Frank Noonan disputed her claim, saying cartels are primarily drug suppliers, not the ones trafficking drugs on the ground.

    For years, cartels were more inclined to make deals in Mexico with American traffickers, who would then handle transportation to and distribution within major cities, said Art Bilek, a former organized crime investigator who is now executive vice president of the crime commission.

    As their organizations grew more sophisticated, the cartels began scheming to keep more profits for themselves. So leaders sought to cut out middlemen and assume more direct control, pushing aside American traffickers, he said.

    Beginning two or three years ago, authorities noticed that cartels were putting "deputies on the ground here," Bilek said. "Chicago became such a massive market ... it was critical that they had firm control."

    To help fight the syndicates, Chicago recently opened a first-of-its-kind facility at a secret location where 70 federal agents work side-by-side with police and prosecutors. Their primary focus is the point of contact between suburban-based cartel operatives and city street gangs who act as retail salesmen. That is when both sides are most vulnerable to detection, when they are most likely to meet in the open or use cellphones that can be wiretapped.

    Others are skeptical about claims cartels are expanding their presence, saying law-enforcement agencies are prone to exaggerating threats to justify bigger budgets.

    David Shirk, of the University of San Diego's Trans-Border Institute, said there is a dearth of reliable intelligence that cartels are dispatching operatives from Mexico on a large scale.

    "We know astonishingly little about the structure and dynamics of cartels north of the border," Shirk said. "We need to be very cautious about the assumptions we make."

    Statistics from the DEA suggest a heightened cartel presence in more U.S. cities. In 2008, around 230 American communities reported some level of cartel presence. That number climbed to more than 1,200 in 2011, the most recent year for which information is available, though the increase is partly due to better reporting.

    Federal agents and local police say they have become more adept at identifying cartel members or operatives using wiretapped conversations, informants or confessions. Hundreds of court documents reviewed by the AP appear to support those statements.

    "This is the first time we've been seeing it - cartels who have their operatives actually sent here," said Richard Pearson, a lieutenant with the Louisville Metropolitan Police Department, which arrested four alleged operatives of the Zetas cartel in November in the suburb of Okolona.

    People who live on the tree-lined street where authorities seized more than 2,400 pounds of marijuana and more than $1 million in cash were shocked to learn their low-key neighbors were accused of working for one of Mexico's most violent drug syndicates, Pearson said.

    One of the best documented cases is Jose Gonzalez-Zavala, who was dispatched to the U.S. by the La Familia cartel, according to court filings.

    In 2008, the former taxi driver and father of five moved into a spacious home at 1416 Brookfield Drive in a middle-class neighborhood of Joliet, southwest of Chicago. From there, court papers indicate, he oversaw wholesale shipments of cocaine in Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana.

    Wiretap transcripts reveal he called an unidentified cartel boss in Mexico almost every day, displaying the deference any midlevel executive might show to someone higher up the corporate ladder. Once he stammered as he explained that one customer would not pay a debt until after a trip.

    "No," snaps the boss. "What we need is for him to pay."

    The same cartel assigned Jorge Guadalupe Ayala-German to guard a Chicago-area stash house for $300 a week, plus a promised $35,000 lump-sum payment once he returned to Mexico after a year or two, according to court documents.

    Ayala-German brought his wife and child to help give the house the appearance of an ordinary family residence. But he was arrested before he could return home and pleaded guilty to multiple trafficking charges. He will be sentenced later this year.

    Socorro Hernandez-Rodriguez was convicted in 2011 of heading a massive drug operation in suburban Atlanta's Gwinnett County. The chief prosecutor said he and his associates were high-ranking figures in the La Familia cartel - an allegation defense lawyers denied.

    And at the end of February outside Columbus, Ohio, authorities arrested 34-year-old Isaac Eli Perez Neri, who allegedly told investigators he was a debt collector for the Sinaloa cartel.

    An Atlanta attorney who has represented reputed cartel members says authorities sometimes overstate the threat such men pose.

    "Often, you have a kid whose first time leaving Mexico is sleeping on a mattress at a stash house playing Game Boy, eating Burger King, just checking drugs or money in and out," said Bruce Harvey. "Then he's arrested and gets a gargantuan sentence. It's sad."

    Typically, cartel operatives are not U.S. citizens and make no attempt to acquire visas, choosing instead to sneak across the border. They are so accustomed to slipping back and forth between the two countries that they regularly return home for family weddings and holidays, Riley said.

    Because cartels accumulate houses full of cash, they run the constant risk associates will skim off the top. That points to the main reason cartels prefer their own people: Trust is hard to come by in their cutthroat world. There's also a fear factor. Cartels can exert more control on their operatives than on middlemen, often by threatening to torture or kill loved ones back home.

    Danny Porter, chief prosecutor in Gwinnett County, Ga., said he has tried to entice dozens of suspected cartel members to cooperate with American authorities. Nearly all declined. Some laughed in his face.

    "They say, `We are more scared of them (the cartels) than we are of you. We talk and they'll boil our family in acid,'" Porter said. "Their families are essentially hostages."

    Citing the safety of his own family, Gonzalez-Zavala declined to cooperate with authorities in exchange for years being shaved off his 40-year sentence.

    In other cases, cartel brass send their own family members to the U.S.

    "They're sometimes married or related to people in the cartels," Porter said. "They don't hire casual labor." So meticulous have cartels become that some even have operatives fill out job applications before being dispatched to the U.S., Riley added.

    In Mexico, the cartels are known for a staggering number of killings - more than 50,000, according to one tally. Beheadings are sometimes a signature.

    So far, cartels don't appear to be directly responsible for large numbers of slayings in the United States, though the Texas Department of Public Safety reported 22 killings and five kidnappings in Texas at the hands of Mexican cartels from 2010 through mid- 2011.

    Still, police worry that increased cartel activity could fuel heightened violence.

    In Chicago, the police commander who oversees narcotics investigations, James O'Grady, said street-gang disputes over turf account for most of the city's uptick in murders last year, when slayings topped 500 for the first time since 2008. Although the cartels aren't dictating the territorial wars, they are the source of drugs.

    Riley's assessment is stark: He argues that the cartels should be seen as an underlying cause of Chicago's disturbingly high murder rate.

    "They are the puppeteers," he said. "Maybe the shooter didn't know and maybe the victim didn't know that. But if you follow it down the line, the cartels are ultimately responsible."

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    Default Re: Mexican Cartels Dispatch Agents Deep Inside U.S.


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    Default Re: Mexican Cartels Dispatch Agents Deep Inside U.S.


    Police: Professional Criminal Organization Responsible For Southlake, Texas Killing

    May 23, 2013



    An organized, professional criminal outfit is suspected in the killing of a 43-year-old man outside the Southlake Town Square on Wednesday night, police say.

    The victim was identified as 43-year-old Juan Guerrero-Chapa, a ranch owner and lawyer from Nuevo Leon, Mexico who had been residing in Southlake for two years.

    While Police Chief Steve Mylett stopped short of connecting the plain-sight shooting death to a Mexican drug cartel, he did confirm that investigators believe the murder was a targeted affair conducted by professional killers.

    "Obviously the nature of this homicide, the way it was carried out indicates –– and I said indicates –– an organization that is trained to do this type of activity," Mylett said during an afternoon news conference at the Southlake Police Department. "When you're dealing with individuals that operate on such a professional level, certainly caution forces me to have to lean towards that this is an organized criminal activity act. "

    Guerrero-Chapa was shot dead at 6:47 p.m. in a parking spot in the 100 block of Grand Ave. at the Town Square, a popular outdoor shopping mall. He arrived with his wife about 45 minutes prior to shop. And as Guerrero-Chapa's wife loaded bags into their SUV, another newer model white SUV pulled in behind it.

    Mylett said a man wearing a piece of cloth over his face exited the passenger side of the vehicle and immediately fired a barrage of shots into the car. Guerrero-Chapa was hit multiple times. He died Wednesday evening at Baylor Regional Medical Center at Grapevine. The suspects were gone within seconds, last seen driving westbound on FM 1709.

    The shooter was a Hispanic man who stood between 5'7'' and 5'10''. The white SUV had Texas plates with the characters "B" and "Y." Mylett said investigators found nine shell casings at the scene.

    Despite reports from some shoppers who said they didn't hear the gunshots, the chief said the department is confident the shooter did not use a silencer.

    "One of our officers was working off duty in Town Square and was stationed in position on the steps of Town Hall. He heard the gunshots," Mylett said.

    The FBI, the Drug Enforcement Agency, the Department of Homeland Security and the Texas Department of Public Safety are all assisting in the investigation. The wide array of local, state and federal investigators fueled speculation that the murder was related to a Mexican drug cartel.

    Mylett refused to connect the two.

    "There's a lot of information that's being circulated," Mylett said. "I'm not in the position to make any formal statement on that yet."

    However, Mexican journalists have reported that Guerrero-Chapa represented high profile members of the brutal Gulf Cartel, including one man who was once its leader.

    exican newspaper La Jornada reported that Guerrero Chapa in 2002 represented Osiel Cardenas Guillen, a federal drug trafficker and former leader of the violent Gulf Cartel. Cardenas, who was known as the 'Friend Killer' and 'El Loco', is currently serving a 25 year sentence for drug dealing, money laundering and the attempted murder of federal agents related to a standoff in 1999.

    Guerrero Chapa's former client oversaw a criminal outfit that flooded the United States with tons of cocaine and sparked a bloody conflict that has claimed nearly 50,000 lives in his home country.

    Jose Reyez, a reporter with the Mexican investigative magazine Contralinea, also cites Guerrero Chapa as a defense lawyer for members of Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel prior to their acrimonious, bloody split in 2010.

    Guerrero-Chapa operated a privates business in Mexico and also practiced law there, Mylett said. He may have been affiliated with a law firm in McAllen, as well.

    Mylett, however, said the department is still working with the FBI to confirm the Mexican journalism reports. He did say there was no indication that Guerrero-Chapa was living in hiding. However, a police car now sits outside his wife's location, a place where Mylett would not confirm.

    Guerrero-Chapa also leaves behind three teenaged children. The chief would not say whether they attended school in Southlake or remained in the city.

    Investigators do not believe the killers stayed in the city. Mylett, meanwhile, said the targeted killing does not mean Southlake, one of the nation's most affluent suburbs, is incurring an influx of gang activity or is any less safe to live than it was on Monday.

    "This happened in Southlake, this could have happened in any community anywhere in Texas or anywhere else," the chief said. "Southlake continues to be a very safe community, we enjoy a very low crime rate, this was not a random act where a gang member came into our community and randomly shot people, so it will continue to be a safe community."

    This is the city of Southlake's first murder since 1999.

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    Default Re: Mexican Cartels Dispatch Agents Deep Inside U.S.

    "refused to connect the two...."


    Why? Afraid the cartels are going to kill him too?
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: Mexican Cartels Dispatch Agents Deep Inside U.S.

    http://www.tortillaland.com/community/radio



    I realize I have posted this twice but its what keeps going through my head when i read about these things.
    Last edited by Phil Fiord; June 4th, 2013 at 12:06.

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    Default Re: Mexican Cartels Dispatch Agents Deep Inside U.S.

    Teen assassin, 14, who BEHEADED his four victims to be released from jail as Mexico and U.S. clash over where he should live



    • Edgar Jimenez Lugo beheaded four boys in Mexico in 2010
    • His sentence comes to an end next week
    • There are fears for his safety if he stays in Mexico so it has been suggested he move to the U.S.


    By Daily Mail Reporter
    PUBLISHED: 09:42 EST, 24 November 2013 | UPDATED: 11:19 EST, 24 November 2013


    A teenage hit man sentenced to three years in prison for beheading four boys in Mexico may be sent to the United States when his sentence ends next month.
    It's not known where Edgar Jimenez Lugo’s will head to given that it is likely he would face violent reprisals at his former home in a working-class village south of Mexico City.

    The governor of Morelos, the state where Edgar is being held, wants him sent to the United States when his sentence is completed on December 3rd.

    Aged 14 when he committed his crimes, his time behind bars was just three years - the maximum penalty allowed under Mexican law.
    The request by the governor for him to be sent to the U.S. is not an unreasonable one. Lugo was born in the United States and is therefore an American citizen.



    Beheading: A video allegedly shows The Ponchis and his associates preparing to cut the neck of a victim





    Heinous crimes: Mexican authorities arrested 14-year-old Lugo who was accused of serving as a drug cartel hitman and beheading the victims


    'We have 13 days to see if he can be deported to the United States so that he can be placed in an institution there,' Gov. Graco Ramirez told a radio station in Mexico on Thursday. 'He is an American citizen.'
    Edgar was 14 in August 2010 when he killed the young men — a student, a cook at a university, a gas station attendant and a small-business owner.



    Lugo, nicknamed 'El Ponchis,' received a three-year term, which was the maximum allowed under law, after he admitted to beheading the four boys in central Mexico. The beheaded bodies were hung from a bridge in the tourist town of Cuernavaca.
    When he was arrested, he calmly admitted to the killings but said he was kidnapped at age 11 and had been forced to work for the Cartel of The South Pacific.

    Violent: The military stopped a group of young people in the town of Jiutepec aged between 12 and 23 who were linked to the South Pacific Cartel



    Captured: Edgar 'El Ponchis' Jimenez Lugo while under the custody of Mexican army soldiers in the city of Cuernavaca, Mexico on Dec. 3, 2010



    Siblings: Mexican soldiers guard Elizabeth (L) and Oliva Jimenez Lugo (R), aka 'Las Chavelas', sisters of Edgar Jimenez Lugo


    At the time he told reporters, 'I participated in four executions, but I did it drugged and under threat that if I didn't, they would kill me.'
    Mexican and U.S. officials are now trying to weigh the appropriate response to concerns about what comes next for the 17-year-old whose birth certificate confers the rights of U.S. citizenship.
    Lugo became notorious due to his age and online videos that discussed him. There was also a Youtube video of him beating a man with a two-by-four while the man was hanging from the ceiling.
    Edgar was convicted in juvenile court in July 2011 of homicide and organized crime charges, and sentenced to three years in custody, the maximum allowed. With time served before his conviction, he’s now due for release.

    Jailed: Edgar Jimenez Lugo, of California, known as 'El Ponchis' (The Cloaked One), was given the maximum sentence allowed for a minor in Morelos, Mexico but his sentence ends in one week



    Back in 2011: 'El Ponchis' is transported by Mexican police officials with a bag over his head. The 14-year-old boy was on trial for murder, organized crime and drug trafficking


    Once freed, Edgar will face no clear legal obstacles to crossing into the United States.
    'He can come live here when he turns 18 (in May) without any supervision. The U.S. can't do anything, and Mexico cannot do anything,' she said. 'He wasn't charged with conspiracy in the U.S.' said Guadalupe Valencia, a San Diego criminal defense attorney.
    Lugo was arrested at a Mexican airport when he and a sister were trying to flee authorities and fly to their mother in San Diego, the outlet reported.
    Yolanda Lugo Jimenez was then arrested a few days later on immigration violations and deported in April, the outlet reported noting her whereabouts are now unclear.
    Because of his criminal background, his family in Mexico fears his return could also put them at risk.
    In recent weeks, his case and pending release has received intense media attention locally. A book bearing Edgar’s image on the cover was released last month. It included his former street address.

    Furor: Police officers surround a suspect believed to be Edgar Jimenez, also known as "El Ponchis", while escorting him out of a juvenile court in Cuernavaca December 5, 2010. There are likely to be similar scenes when he is released next week

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    Default Re: Mexican Cartels Dispatch Agents Deep Inside U.S.

    deported? EXECUTE the little fucker.

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