Blog dedicated to reporting on Mexican drug cartels
on the border line between the US and Mexico
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Friday, May 13, 2022

Los Angeles, California: 2 Maintenance Workers Die After Fentanyl Exposure At Downtown LA Apartment Complex

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

Two men are dead after police believe they may have been exposed to fentanyl. 

Two maintenance workers are dead after police believe they may have been exposed to fentanyl at a downtown Los Angeles apartment complex.

The Los Angeles Police Department responded to a hazmat call in the 800 block of South Olive Street a little before 11 a.m. Thursday. When officers arrived at the apartment complex, they found two unconscious men.

Both men, who were maintenance workers at the building, were pronounced dead at the scene.

Officials have not released their identities. It is unknown how the two workers got exposed to fentanyl.

As of Thursday night, no arrests have been announced in connection to the deadly fentanyl exposure.

fox la

DEA Investigates Potential Hack of Law Enforcement Inquiry System

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat

Unidentified hackers shared this screenshot of alleged access to the Drug Enforcement Administration’s intelligence-sharing portal.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) says it is investigating reports that hackers gained unauthorized access to an agency portal that taps into 16 different federal law enforcement databases. KrebsOnSecurity has learned the alleged compromise is tied to a cybercrime and online harassment community that routinely impersonates police and government officials to harvest personal information on their targets.

On May 8, KrebsOnSecurity received a tip that hackers obtained a username and password for an authorized user of esp.usdoj.gov, which is the Law Enforcement Inquiry and Alerts (LEIA) system managed by the DEA. KrebsOnSecurity shared information about the allegedly hijacked account with the DEA, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the Department of Justice, which houses both agencies. The DEA declined to comment on the validity of the claims, issuing only a brief statement in response.

“DEA takes cyber security and information of intrusions seriously and investigates all such reports to the fullest extent,” the agency said in a statement shared via email. According to this page at the Justice Department website, LEIA “provides federated search capabilities for both EPIC and external database repositories,” including data classified as “law enforcement sensitive” and “mission sensitive” to the DEA.

A document published by the Obama administration in May 2016 (PDF) says the DEA’s El Paso Intelligence Center (EPIC) systems in Texas are available for use by federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement, as well as the Department of Defense and intelligence community. EPIC and LEIA also have access to the DEA’s National Seizure System (NSS), which the DEA uses to identify property thought to have been purchased with the proceeds of criminal activity (think fancy cars, boats, and homes seized from drug kingpins).

“The EPIC System Portal (ESP) enables vetted users to remotely and securely share intelligence, access the National Seizure System, conduct data analytics, and obtain information in support of criminal investigations or law enforcement operations,” the 2016 White House document reads. “Law Enforcement Inquiry and Alerts (LEIA) allows for a federated search of 16 Federal law enforcement databases.”

The screenshots shared with this author indicate the hackers could use EPIC to look up a variety of records, including those for motor vehicles, boats, firearms, aircraft, and even drones. Claims about the purloined DEA access were shared with this author by “KT,” the current administrator of the Doxbin — a highly toxic online community that provides a forum for digging up personal information on people and posting it publicly.

As KrebsOnSecurity reported earlier this year, the previous owner of the Doxbin has been identified as the leader of LAPSUS$, a data extortion group that hacked into some of the world’s largest tech companies this year — including Microsoft, NVIDIA, Okta, Samsung, and T-Mobile.

That reporting also showed how the core members of LAPSUS$ were involved in selling a service offering fraudulent Emergency Data Requests (EDRs), wherein the hackers use compromised police and government email accounts to file warrantless data requests with social media firms, mobile telephony providers, and other technology firms, attesting that the information being requested can’t wait for a warrant because it relates to an urgent matter of life and death.

From the standpoint of individuals involved in filing these phony EDRs, access to databases and user accounts within the Department of Justice would be a major coup. But the data in EPIC would probably be far more valuable to organized crime rings or drug cartels, said Nicholas Weaver, a researcher for the International Computer Science Institute at the University of California, Berkeley.

Weaver said it’s clear from the screenshots shared by the hackers that they could use their access not only to view sensitive information but also to submit false records to law enforcement and intelligence agency databases. “I don’t think these [people] realize what they got, how much money the cartels would pay for access to this,” Weaver said. “Especially because as a cartel you don’t search for yourself you search for your enemies so that even if it’s discovered there is no loss to you of putting things ONTO the DEA’s radar.”

Analysis

The login page for esp.usdoj.gov (above) suggests that authorized users can access the site using a “Personal Identity Verification” or PIV card, which is a fairly strong form of authentication used government-wide to control access to federal facilities and information systems at each user’s appropriate security level.

However, the EPIC portal also appears to accept just a username and password, which would seem to radically diminish the security value of requiring users to present (or prove possession of) an authorized PIV card. Indeed, KT said the hacker who obtained this illicit access was able to log in using the stolen credentials alone, and that at no time did the portal prompt for a second authentication factor.

It’s not clear why there are still sensitive government databases being protected by nothing more than a username and password, but I’m willing to bet big money that this DEA portal is not only offender here. The DEA portal esp.usdoj.gov is listed on Page 87 of a Justice Department “data inventory,” which catalogs all of the data repositories that correspond to DOJ agencies.

There are 3,330 results. Granted, only some of those results are login portals, but that’s just within the Department of Justice. If we assume for the moment that state-sponsored foreign hacking groups can gain access to sensitive government intelligence in the same way as teenage hacker groups like LAPSUS$, then it is long past time for the U.S. federal government to perform a top-to-bottom review of authentication requirements tied to any government portals that traffic in sensitive or privileged information.

I’ll say it because it needs to be said: The United States government is in urgent need of leadership on cybersecurity at the executive branch level — preferably someone who has the authority and political will to eventually disconnect any federal government agency data portals that fail to enforce strong, multi-factor authentication.

I realize this may be far more complex than it sounds, particularly when it comes to authenticating law enforcement personnel who access these systems without the benefit of a PIV card or government-issued device (state and local authorities, for example). It’s not going to be as simple as just turning on multi-factor authentication for every user, thanks in part to a broad diversity of technologies being used across the law enforcement landscape.

But when hackers can plunder 16 law enforcement databases, arbitrarily send out law enforcement alerts for specific people or vehicles, or potentially disrupt ongoing law enforcement operations — all because someone stole, found, or bought a username and password — it’s time for drastic measures.

Sources Krebon Security


More Than $18M In Meth Found In Single Tractor Trailer

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

More than $18 million worth of methamphetamines were discovered inside of a semi truck at the border over the weekend. 

The discovery was made on the World Trade Bridge connecting Laredo, Texas to Nuevo Laredo in Mexico on Saturday, May 7th. 

According to KSAT News, a 2013 International semi truck was hauling stainless steel scrap metal into the US when it was inspected by Border Patrol agents. A K9 officer and imaging system were used to reveal 912.82 pounds of alleged methamphetamine hidden inside of the trailer. 

The 33-year-old Mexican truck driver was promptly arrested, but his identity and the charges against him have not been released. 

The estimated street value of the drugs in question amount to approximately  $18,253,206.

cdl life

El Gary from Los Talibanes, Ally of Operativo MZ, Killed in Guadalupe, Zacatecas

"HEARST" and "Itzli" for Borderland Beat 

A cartel lieutenant named Gary ‘N’, alias “El Gary”, was killed by FGJ agents in the municipality of Guadalupe, in the state of Zacatecas. 


El Gary worked as a lieutenant and plaza boss under Martín Del Río, the leader of one of the two rival Los Talibanes groups. Their Talibanes group is allied to the Sinaloa Cartel subgroup Operativo MZ/Los Flechas, who work under Ismael Zambada García, alias “El Mayo” . 




The Shooting that Killed El Gary


On Tuesday, May 10, 2022, investigative agents working for the state Attorney General’s Office (FGE) were working within the town of Guadalupe when they spotted El Gary driving inside a BMW sedan, accompanied by a female passenger. The agents tried to pull him over for a stop but El Gary refused to stop his vehicle. Instead he sped up and the agents gave chase in their own vehicle.

Cartels In Oregon Are Morphing Their Pot-Growing Ops, Police Say

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

FILE - Josephine County Sheriff Dave Daniel stands amid the debris of plastic hoop houses destroyed by law enforcement, used to grow cannabis illegally, near Selma, Ore., on June 16, 2021. Jackson County Commissioners are discussing potential legislation that could tackle the issue of illegal grows.

Foreign drug cartels that established illegal outdoor marijuana farms in Oregon last year are adapting as pressure on them begins to mount, law enforcement officials said Thursday.

New challenges are emerging as a task force created by the Legislature met for the first time to figure out how to combat cannabis-related problems, some of which threaten Oregon's legal, regulated recreational marijuana industry.

The Task Force on Cannabis-Derived Intoxicants and Illegal Cannabis Production is also responsible for recommending funding and command structure to enable law enforcement to combat illegal cannabis production, changes to state laws to address labor trafficking and water theft by the cartel-financed pot farms and regulations on genetic engineering of cannabis, among other issues.

“It started with a simple ask of help and it’s turned into, ‘Oh, my goodness, there’s so much to deal with.’ And so I think we just have to kind of take one at a time,” said state Rep. Lily Morgan, a Republican from the southern town of Grants Pass, as the task force met via video link.

One of the biggest problems is the recent proliferation of illegal, industrial-sized marijuana farms.

In early 2021, hundreds of greenhouses began cropping up in southern Oregon's Josephine and Jackson counties — some within city limits, others brazenly established along highways or tucked into remote valleys.

They were not licensed by the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission and are financed by foreign criminal cartels, from Latin America, Europe and Asia, authorities have said. There were more pot farms than overwhelmed law enforcement officials could take down. Indoor illegal growing operations have long existed indoors, but now criminal gangs are pushing more in that direction, enabling them to grow year-round, a task force member said.

“We’re starting to hear about Josephine County, a lot of operations moving indoors,” said Oregon State Police Sgt. Tyler Bechtel. "It makes it all that much harder to see it from the street, see it from the air, just smell it. And it’s not a seasonal problem when you move indoors. It’s a year-round problem.”

Josephine County Sheriff Dave Daniel, though, said he hasn't heard of cartels operating in his county moving to indoor grows and are instead lowering their profile by establishing more numerous smaller grow operations.

“They seem to be diversifying and spreading out operations to many small grows to avoid the attention,” Daniel said in an email to The Associated Press. “We anticipated this change as we have primarily been focusing on the large grows and now smaller ones. It is a good business move for them and will slow us down.”

The state police have identified dozens of ethnic-based drug trafficking organizations, each operating between five and 30 marijuana grow sites, Bechtel said.

Giving an idea of the scope of the problem, the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission says 551,000 marijuana plants were seized in Jackson County, Josephine County and central Oregon's Deschutes County from July 1, 2020, to June 30, 2021. And that was a tiny fraction of the illegal crop. Authorities also seized almost $3.4 million in cash in the raids.

“Despite legal avenues for purchases and sales of marijuana within Oregon, an illegal marijuana market continues to cause public safety concerns, including diversion of marijuana to other states, sales of marijuana to underage buyers, illegal cultivation of marijuana on private, state, and federal property, and enrichment of organized criminal operations,” the commission said in a report.

The report examined results after an outlay of millions of dollars in grants to the three counties to address increasing unlawful marijuana cultivation and distribution operations in Oregon. The commission said it could not judge the effectiveness of the grant program “because the illegal marijuana market is an especially nebulous sector to evaluate.”

The Task Force must provide its findings to an interim committee of the Legislature by Dec. 31, 2022

katu

Drug Cartel Ties: Feds Say Local Suspects Linked To Sinaloa Cartel

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

Federal authorities have said that a group of people in Indiana who were indicted on drug trafficking and money laundering charges late last month had ties to a Mexican drug cartel that was once run by notorious leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman — including four people in Bartholomew and Jackson counties.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Indianapolis announced April 29 that 18 people from Indiana are facing charges for allegedly conspiring to distribute methamphetamine and other drugs in Bartholomew County and elsewhere in central and southern Indiana. Nine are accused of laundering proceeds of the conspiracy.

Photo provided Federal agents confiscated this cocaine in Chicago in acase involving a Columbus resident, who was also arrested

The announcement was made a day after raids were conducted in Columbus, Seymour, Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Detroit. Suspects include two people from Columbus, two from Seymour, 11 from Indianapolis, one from Terre Haute, one from Phoenix and one from Mexico.

The announcement was made a day after raids were conducted in Columbus, Seymour, Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Detroit. Suspects include two people from Columbus, two from Seymour, 11 from Indianapolis, one from Terre Haute, one from Phoenix and one from Mexico.

An additional six people face state drug charges in Bartholomew and Jackson counties, federal authorities said.

Drug Enforcement Administration officials told The Republic that the individuals facing federal charges have ties to the Sinaloa Cartel, which experts say controls a wholesale distribution network in the U.S. and elsewhere to get drugs into the hands of local street dealers.

Some local officials, including Bartholomew County Sheriff Matt Myers, said people with ties to the cartel may still be operating locally.

“This is a big hit,” Myers said. “But I want people to know, locally, that the cartel is in Columbus, Indiana.”

“There are cartels presently here,” Myers added. “They’ve been here. They’re organized, and there’s probably cartel (members) here right now that we don’t even know (about).”

The suppliers

Officials declined to discuss the specifics of the case as it makes it way through federal court, but said the investigation resulted in the seizure of about 82 pounds of methamphetamine, 1,750 fentanyl pills, 35 grams of fentanyl, 1 kilogram of cocaine, 4 pounds of marijuana, “a large quantity” of suspected THC gummies, $9,000 in cash and nine guns.

As of Wednesday, no further details on the case had emerged in federal court filings.

Mike Gannon, assistant special agent in charge at the DEA’s Indianapolis Field Office, said the suspects were “some of the biggest suppliers” of drugs in Bartholomew and Jackson counties — including methamphetamine and fentanyl, a opioid that is more potent than heroin which officials say is one of the main culprits of a record surge in local overdose deaths in recent years — including at least 101 deaths since 2019.

“The outer counties were being supplied with significant quantities of methamphetamine from high-level sources in Indianapolis and then, of course, the ties back to Mexico,” Gannon said.

Gannon said the arrests and indictments were the culmination of a “long-term” investigation in collaboration with local law enforcement agencies, including the Bartholomew County Sheriff’s Department, Columbus Police 

Department, Seymour Police Department, among others.

“The partners were able to work with care and try to make a difference in our community, just like DEA. It was extraordinary work.” Gannon said. “…We’re going to continue to work hand in hand with Seymour police, Columbus police, Bartholomew County (Sheriff’s Department) and all our state and local partners to do what we need to do to combat this problem.”

Latest arrests

The announcement of the arrests came just over a year after federal, state and local law enforcement said they had dismantled a drug trafficking network in the Columbus area with ties to a Mexican drug cartel, leading to about 60 arrests — including at least 36 federal indictments and 23 local prosecutions — and 25 federal convictions.

Named “Operation Columbus Day,” the investigation is believed to be the largest multi-agency drug investigation in Bartholomew County history.

It is unclear whether the 18 people recently indicted in federal court had any connection to Operation Columbus Day.

At least one of the people who was indicted — Allison Perdue — had been around one man who pleaded guilty to federal drug trafficking charges as a result of Operation Columbus Day.

Perdue, 24, was identified in a probable cause affidavit in 2018 as yelling “(expletive) the police” while a Columbus police officer wrestled Bryan Miranda-Alvidrez to the ground as a loaded 40-caliber Smith &Wesson pistol slid down the suspect’s pants.

Miranda-Alvidrez was later indicted and pleaded guilty to two counts of distributing 50 grams or more of methamphetamine and sentenced to 10 years in prison. He is serving time at a federal prison in Terre Haute, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Besides Perdue, who was living in Seymour, other local residents facing federal charges stemming from the arrests last month include Abel Ayala-Garcia, 31, of Columbus; Claudio Garcia-Morales, 35, of Columbus; and Victor Vazquez-Hernandez, 41, of Seymour.

All four were arrested within minutes of each other on the morning of April 28 and booked into the Bartholomew County Jail before being turned over to federal authorities.

Ayala-Garcia was arrested at 112 N. Hughes St., a few blocks from Columbus East High School, while Garcia-Morales was taken into custody at 2313 Maple St., just south of Columbus North High School. Perdue and Vazquez-Hernandez were arrested at undisclosed locations in Seymour.

Arrests ensue

The first local arrests of suspects named in the U.S. Attorney’s Office’s announcement took place a few months ago, court records show.

In February, Zachariah Farris, 36, of Seymour and Samantha Farris, 34, of Seymour were arrested after allegedly selling methamphetamine to a police informant twice, according to a probable cause affidavit.

Also in February, Daniel Parrish, 35, and Mariah Crowe, 39, both of Semyour, were arrested after a Jackson County Sheriff’s deputy found methamphetamine and paraphernalia during a traffic stop.

All four face felony state charges for dealing methamphetamine.

Another arrest came shortly before midnight on April 14, when a Bartholomew County Sheriff’s deputy parked in the median of Interstate 65 near Indiana Premium Outlets in Edinburgh was notified that a blue Honda traveling northbound had switched lanes without properly signaling.

Not long after, the deputy spotted the vehicle heading north on Interstate 65 and performed a traffic stop. As the deputy began questioning the driver, later identified as Antonio Cuautle-Cuenca, 37, of Indianapolis, he noticed an open can of Modelo beer in the center console.

Cuautle-Cuenca told the officer that he had been drinking and did not have a driver’s license. He later assured the officer that there was nothing illegal in the vehicle. However, the deputy found a glass pipe with residue under the driver’s seat cover.

A can of Red Bull also caught the officers’ attention, as it was heavy but didn’t appear to have any liquid inside. The can had a top that could be unscrewed. Inside, there were “several bags containing a crystal substance” that later tested positive for methamphetamine. Other bags containing what appeared to be methamphetamine were found in the vehicle, including inside a pack of cigarettes.

As of Monday, Cuautle-Cuenca, who is facing state felony charge of dealing methamphetamine, was still being held in the Bartholomew County Jail on $1.23 million bond.

It is unclear the extent to which the individuals facing charges were involved with the suspects who have been charged in federal court. Officials declined to comment because the investigation is ongoing.

From Mexico

Local and federal officials viewed the indictments as a further indication cartels have broadened drug distribution beyond major urban areas and are increasingly setting up shop in smaller cities.

Mexican cartels took over the U.S. methamphetamine trade in recent years, replacing the patchwork of “mom and pop” meth labs across the U.S. with clandestine, industrial-scale labs in Mexico, according to the DEA.

“They have dispatched people all over the United States,” Gannon said. “…They’re mass producing methamphetamine at the highest levels of purity. They’re mass producing fentanyl, and counterfeit fentanyl pills and then they have flooded the United States with it.”

“Certain people will be responsible for supplying certain areas,” Gannon added. “…You will see individuals who try to take over certain areas or supply certain areas, because you know, if you’re in Indianapolis, and you’re looking to supply drugs or other counties, you may be making more money (in other counties) than you would get on a price out of Indianapolis or a price from Chicago.”

Now, drug traffickers are increasingly mixing fentanyl into other drugs and counterfeit pills that are made to have the appearance of prescription medications like Xanax and pain medications, Gannon said, adding that a fatal dose of fentanyl “can fit on the tip of a pencil.”

“You don’t want to be in a situation where you’re taking any type of prescription medication unless you went to a doctor and you were examined by a physician,” Gannon said.

If people are getting the pills from a drug dealer on the street, “you just have to assume it’s being laced with fentanyl because we’re here to tell you that they’re being mass produced by these same cartels,” Gannon said.

By mail, highway or plane

Federal, state and local authorities have intercepted drugs in sent through the mail to numerous addresses throughout Bartholomew County. Law enforcement in Indiana and elsewhere have found drugs concealed in the nooks and crannies of vehicles heading east through Illinois on Interstate 70, as well as south from Indianapolis and north from Louisville on I- 65.

“Fentanyl is being shipped here through the mail,” Myers said. “It’s being brought up from the southwest border with Mexico. It’s coming up (Interstate) 65. Every night, our street guys are making arrests from people that have fentanyl or meth or stuff on them.”

Drugs also have also arrived in Indiana on private jets, including one that flew from Mexico to Gary multiple times as part of a drug pipeline that authorities say involved a Columbus resident.

This past November, DEA agents were staking out an undisclosed hotel in downtown Chicago about a block from the city’s famed Magnificent Mile shopping district when a 2015 Toyota Highlander with an Indiana plate pulled up near the hotel.

The driver of the vehicle, later identified as Columbus resident Rodrigo Alexis Jimenez-Perez, 26, got out and helped a suspect the agents had under surveillance load a suitcase that “appeared to be significantly weighted down” into the trunk.

The agents had been following the suspect since he arrived at Gary/Chicago International Airport in a private jet a couple hours before on a flight from Mexico that stopped over in Houston that officials suspected had millions of dollars of cocaine on board.

Jimenez-Perez had been booked into Bartholomew County Jail in January 2018 on charges of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated and released two days later. But nearly five years later, DEA agents were following him as drove through one of Chicago’s upscale neighborhoods.

The agents performed a traffic stop and found about approximately 176 pounds of cocaine in the trunk. A search of the other suspect’s hotel room netted an additional 44 pounds of cocaine. Currently, a criminal case against Jimenez-Perez is pending in U.S. District Court in Chicago.



the republic

Thursday, May 12, 2022

Former DEA Agent Sentenced to 11 Years for Accepting Bribes from Drug Trafficker

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat

DEA Agent Nathan Koen became group supervisor of the Little Rock, Arkansas office in 2016.

The Office of the United States Attorney announced Wednesday that a former Drug Enforcement Administration agent was sentenced for accepting bribes from a drug trafficker. Nathan Koen, 45, now of Auburn, Illinois, was sentenced to 135 months in federal prison by United States District Judge Brian S. Miller.

According to a press release, Koen was charged by a federal grand jury in November 2019 with one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine, and one count of bribery of a public official. In August 2021, officials said he pleaded guilty to bribery in exchange for dismissal of the drug-related charge.

During the sentencing hearing, Judge Miller found that Koen accepted bribes from a known, large-scale drug trafficker for the purpose of helping facilitate a drug conspiracy and that the conspiracy involved at least 15 to 45 kilograms of methamphetamine.

The official document stated the drug trafficker testified during the hearing and explained that he believed Koen provided was providing sensitive, law-enforcement information, which helped the trafficker avoid detection by law enforcement and run his drug organization. The drug trafficker, who is in federal custody, also stated that his organization was responsible for distributing kilogram quantities of methamphetamine cocaine, heroin, fentanyl, and marijuana.

"This defendant's actions are a disgrace to the thousands of dedicated law enforcement officers who work with integrity every day to protect and serve our communities," United States Attorney Jonathan D. Ross said. "His greed and deception have no place in law enforcement, and we are pleased to see this case come to its rightful conclusion."

As reported by Borderland Beat, the FBI began investigating Koen, who had been working for DEA since 2002 and had transferred in 2016 to work as a group supervisor in the Little Rock DEA office from Jacksonville, Florida. FBI agents interviewed the drug trafficker who told law enforcement he had paid Koen cash for information and protection related to his drug-trafficking activities.

The complaint is largely based on alleged interactions between Koen and dealer turned informant, Francisco Benitez, between late 2016 and October 2017. Benitez was arrested in Duval County in 2012, where a jail inmate put him in touch with Koen, according to the complaint. Benítez told investigators he would pay Koen for “top cover protection,” which included running the names of Benitez’s drug associates thought DEA databases to determine whether they were “safe” for him to do business with.

Court documents said the drug trafficker told FBI agents he had been in custody on federal drug charges in 2013-2014 when another inmate told him he should contact Koen and offer to work as an informant, which he did. After his case was resolved, the informant resumed distributing large amounts of heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana, and cocaine in Florida, California, Arkansas, and elsewhere, while making payments to Koen for protection.

According to authorities, the informant paid approximately $31,500 to Koen before he began cooperating with the FBI. The informant began working with the FBI, and he agreed to set up a controlled delivery of a bribe payment to Koen. Koen and the informant agreed to meet in Las Vegas on December 3, 2018.

FBI agents said they equipped the informant with $9,000 cash and multiple audio recording devices. Koen and the informant met on the sidewalk across from the Bellagio hotel and walked together to the Paris Las Vegas hotel, where they went inside a bathroom away from casino cameras. Once inside, officials said the informant placed the cash in Koen's backpack, and they left the hotel, each going in different directions.

Recordings of the encounter revealed that Koen asked the informant, "Did you make this worth it?" "The informant responded, "Come on, man, you know I always make it worth it for you." Koen responded, 'I know." Officials said Koen also advised the informant that he should get rid of all his phones and change his address because he expected a search warrant to be executed at his home soon. Koen was arrested when he returned to Arkansas later that day, and he admitted to accepting bribes from the informant.

"By protecting a drug trafficking organization and accepting bribes from a drug kingpin, former Group Supervisor Nathan Koen deceived and betrayed his brothers and sisters in the DEA," FBI Little Rock Special Agent in Charge James A. Dawson said. "His disgraceful and corrupt conduct only strengthens our resolve to continue attacking corruption at all levels. We're grateful for the strong, ongoing partnerships we share with both the Drug Enforcement Administration and U.S. Attorney's Office."

"Today's sentencing reflects DEA’s commitment to hold accountable any DEA employee who abuses the trust of the American people by violating their oath as a federal law enforcement officer," DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said. "Nathan Koen put himself ahead of the principles he swore to protect. I commend our federal law enforcement partners who investigated this case and the U.S. Attorneys who prosecuted it."

"Koen turned his back on his duty to protect the public. As a DEA Agent, Koen was tasked with investigating drug traffickers. Instead, he accepted a cash bribe and provided a known drug trafficker with sensitive law enforcement information. The Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General will continue to investigate those who engage in this kind of conduct," Cloey C. Pierce, Special Agent in Charge of the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General Dallas Field Office said.

In addition to the term of imprisonment, Koen was sentenced to two years of supervised release following his term of imprisonment. The investigation was conducted by the FBI, and the case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Benecia Moore and Chris Givens.



Chiapa de Corzo, Chiapas: The Templarios Video Communique To Their Adversaries

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

An armed criminal cell who have dubbed themselves Los Templarios has just released a video communique for their adversaries in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas. At this time it is unknown if they’re affiliated with the Knights Templar, a splinter group of the once-mighty Familia Michoacana.

On Monday, four mutilated bodies were abandoned in Chiapa de Corzo, two are from Soconusco and the other two from Jalisco.


Video translation is as follows:

Sicario #1: Go ahead. 

Sicario #2: Hey there. Good evening you dumb ass sons of fucking bitches. This goes out to everyone out there that's watching us transmitting live here. Take a look at this, I'm standing next to the grand dick himself here in Chiapa de Corzo. You sons of fucking bitches. This is the division commander, the state diplomat, the commander of commanders, and the boss of all the groups in Chiapa de Corzo. I've got something to say to all you bitches. As long as I'm standing here with the godfather you sons of bitches are all going to suck my dick. Let this be your good evening so that you all can sleep well tonight you fucking gang of greedy bitches.

Sicario #3: We are the absolute Templarios you sons of bitches!

Warning: Graphic Pictures




Codigo Negro Mx

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

DEA Zeroes In On China As Fentanyl Deaths Soar

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat


The leading cause of death for Americans between 18 and 45 isn't COVID-19 or car accidents — it's fentanyl overdoses. With a majority of the chemicals in fentanyl produced in China, the Drug Enforcement Administration is now calling on the Chinese government to crack down on the supply chain networks producing the illegal drug. 

"We would like China to do more," DEA administrator Anne Milgram told CBS News. "For example, we need to be able to track every shipment of chemicals that's coming out of those Chinese chemical companies and coming to Mexico. Right now, we can't do that." 

To stop fentanyl from getting into counterfeit drugs, the DEA is focusing on what's called precursor chemicals — the ingredients needed to make fentanyl. Milgram said the materials are made in China then shipped to Mexican cartels before arriving at the U.S. border. 

The DEA has seized 2,100 pounds of precursor chemicals from January 2021 to March 2022, Milgram said. It's enough to make one billion potentially lethal doses, but Milgram knows her agency is not getting all of it. 

"This is what we worry about," she said. "That's part of why we are so focused right now on stopping the chemicals coming out of the Chinese chemical companies. If we can go as far upstream as possible to China, we have a much better chance of stopping it ever being made in Mexico." 

Milgram said Chinese chemical companies are currently the largest producer of precursor chemicals used to make fentanyl. 

"There's a relationship between these Chinese chemical companies and the criminal cartels in Mexico," she said. 

Milgram said that once the drugs make it to the border, "it is too late." 

"I can say with 100% assurance that the criminal drug cartels in Mexico will stop at nothing to get fentanyl into the United States," she said. 

Fentanyl's threat to teens is also a concern because of how easily fentanyl-laced drugs can be bought online, Milgram said. Three quarters of teen overdose deaths in 2021 involved fentanyl, according to a study published in JAMA in April. 

"We know that these fake counterfeit prescription pills are widely available on social media," Milgram said. "If your child is on TikTok or Snapchat or Instagram or Facebook, drug dealers can access them there. And that —  it's almost like Uber Eats, being able right now in America to get a fake pill delivered to your doorstep." 

"There's no question that within one or two clicks on a social media app, teens are ordering these drugs," she said. "By and large, they're not going out looking for fentanyl. They're looking for a Xanax or an Adderall or an Oxy thinking they're gonna get a prescription pill. They're not thinking at all that they're gonna get a pill that contains fentanyl."  

Four of 10 pills seized last year contained a deadly dose — 2 milligrams or more — of fentanyl, she said. 

"The amount that could be on the tip of a pencil is enough to kill someone," Milgram said. 

cbs news

Photographer's Dangerous Double Life

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

For more than 30 years, Baruch Vega has worked behind the lens, photographing fashion models in exotic locations.

But he also claims to have led an astonishing double life, working undercover and risking his safety to help the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration arrest some of South America's most notorious cocaine traffickers.

It was a scary yet lucrative sideline. During his 30 years as a government informant, Vega became very rich, caused the U.S. government great embarrassment, and ultimately lost everything.

"I brought in 114 individuals — the biggest. The biggest. Nobody else was doing it," Vega told ABCNEWS' Primetime.

The DEA won't confirm Vega's figures, but officials do admit that he helped arrange the surrender of several valuable drug dealers, among them Orlando Sanchez Christancho, who was for years responsible for smuggling 30 tons of cocaine a month into the United States on behalf of Colombian cartels.

"He used his contacts, his access with high-level drug traffickers to mediate their surrender on different indictments," said Tom Raffanello, head of the DEA's field office in Miami. Vega was extremely useful, Raffanello said.

"DEA agents can't just go in and knock on the door of Orlando Christancho and say 'I'm the mail man, would you like to go to America?' It took a Baruch Vega to infiltrate,"said Richard Sharpstein, a Miami-based lawyer well-versed in the undercover drug world, who represents one of Vega's DEA supervisors.

Money From Misunderstanding

It all began by accident, Vega said. One day in the 1970s, an acquaintance who was arrested for drug trafficking came to Vega for help. Vega said he called an old friend who worked for the FBI.

"He says, 'Let me research, let me see what I can do,' " recalled Vega. "Next day he called me up, he says, 'I found out that the guy was in the wrong place at the wrong time. He's going to be released.' "

Vega's acquaintance and his associates believed the photographer had helped the guy get out of jail, even though Vega had nothing to do with it. Nevertheless, he says, he was summoned to Colombia, and was offered an "incredible amount of money" as a reward.

He said he took the money and a list of other names that the drug dealers thought he might be able to help.

Soon, Vega says, he was a guest in the homes of infamous Colombian drug dealers like the Ochoa brothers — who ran the Medellin cocaine cartel with Pablo Escobar.

He was working as a fashion photographer by day and living the fast life at night — all the while moonlighting as a confidential informant — first for the FBI and later for the DEA.

"He ran in that jet set. People with money run in those circles. His value to us was being able to talk to people and convey a message," Raffanello said.

An Expensive Operative

According to the DEA, Vega was supposed to persuade drug lords to turn themselves in by making them believe that he had incredible connections in the United States and could bribe judges or prosecutors. It is a plan that worked very well.

Vega is proud that he was responsible for many arrests. But while he was helping the government, he was helping himself, too.

The photographer charged the drug dealers fees for arranging negotiations with the feds. He says he charged them for his time and expenses, averaging $100,000 for each case, and once making $400,000.

"When you entertain these individuals, the bills were between $5-, 7-, 10,000 per evening," Vega said.

He admits he was living the high life through his income as a mediator for the government, but some in the FBI began to see his earnings not as fees but as extortion.

One night in March of 2000, Vega was arrested on charges of money laundering and obstruction of justice.

He had become a criminal to the government he had worked for — the government he says gave him permission to collect those fees in the first place. "I was reporting every single penny that I was receiving from the drug traffickers," Vega said.

Vega says his FBI and DEA handlers authorized him to charge the drug dealers fees, but Raffanello denies that was the case. "We play by the rules. We don't authorize anyone to break the law," he said.

The shock waves of Vega's arrest reverberated through the DEA: Two of his immediate superiors were suspended and are currently being investigated for their handling of him.

"The DEA is embarrassed that Vega ran so rampant. The DEA is afraid to confront the issue," says Sharpstein.

Sharpstein believes Vega stole "anywhere up to $40 million" from the Colombian drug lords. But Vega himself says he made that money legitimately, and the total was closer to $4 million, which he used to buy a mansion off Miami Beach and a 78-foot yacht.

Double Life Doubled Back?

About a year after Vega was arrested, virtually all of the charges against him were quietly dropped. He recently pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge for failing to file taxes on time and is awaiting sentencing.

Today Vega is bitter and, he claims, broke. He says he's the victim — and that now it's the U.S. government that's stolen the money from him.

"They have seized my money, they have seized my equipment and everything. I was not able to work," Vega said.

He said the money he took from the Colombian drug lords is "in the hands of the U.S. government. They seized from me: $1,486,000 exactly."

And there is one final twist to this fantastic tale. Despite alleged death threats from traffickers, Vega says he's now once again working undercover — not for the DEA but for some other branch of the U.S. government.

"If he is, that would be the biggest, saddest joke in the world," Sharpstein said. "But knowing the United States of America and our government, anything could be true."

abc news

Michoacan Governor Announces Ending the War Against the Cartels

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat


Michoacan Governor Alfredo Ramírez Bedolla announced that he and his government "have left behind the idea of continuing a war [against criminal organizations]" and will focus on addressing the causes, including poverty and marginalization. On Monday, the statement was made during a Michoacán Secretary of Public Security (SSP) parade.

During the event, the head of the SSP, José Ortega Reyes, stated that while insecurity has become a risk for the state and its citizens, the SP strategy has been reinforced to support critical areas. Ramírez Bedolla responded, "We have decided to work with all possible measures to achieve peace. We have left behind the idea of continuing a war that for decades has only aggravated the vision of violence. Today, we are heading towards the vision of Citizen Security, because we are working to address the causes that generate violence, such as poverty and inequality in historically marginalized communities.

He added that his government would create the necessary conditions to cement the training and the professionalism of the police, arguing that improved working conditions would decrease the rate of police officers defecting to organized crime. Over the past two years, Michoacan has recorded some of the highest levels of violence, including the second-highest homicide figures in the country.

In Aguililla, over 1,500 residents have fled their homes; while in Tepalcatepec, more than 3,000 residents have fled. Residents Apatzingán, Buenavista, Coalcomán, Múgica and Tomatlán continue reporting high levels of violence.

Source Twitter/GOB de Michoacan




Mexico & US Agree to Divert Commercial Traffic Away from Texas Border

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat

Marcelo Ebrard and Alejandro Mayorkas meet in Washington. 'I don't think we're going to use Texas anymore,' says the economy minister.

The Mexican and United States governments have agreed to divert some northbound cross-border traffic away from Texas to New Mexico in retaliation for the strict vehicle inspection program implemented by the Lone Star State last month. Some traffic will be diverted to the border crossing between San Jerónimo, Chihuahua, and Santa Teresa, New Mexico. The crossing, located about 70 kilometers south of Las Cruces – New Mexico’s second-largest city – and approximately 25 kilometers west of El Paso, Texas, is set to be expanded to cope with increased commercial vehicle traffic.

The decision to divert some traffic to that crossing was taken Tuesday during a meeting between Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard and the United States Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas in Washington. It will take months to implement, the newspaper Milenio reported.

Ebrard said on Twitter that he spoke to Mayorkas about “new infrastructure for the border with New Mexico in San Jerónimo-Santa Teresa to facilitate binational transport.” Mexico’s ambassador to the United States, Esteban Moctezuma, and the U.S. ambassador to Mexico, Ken Salazar, were the other officials who attended the meeting.

The final decision to expand the New Mexico border crossing was taken after reaching the conclusion that Mexico couldn’t trust Texas as a trade partner. In early April, Governor Greg Abbott – who claims that the U.S. government isn’t doing enough to secure the border with Mexico – directed Texas authorities to conduct more thorough inspections of all commercial vehicles crossing into the state from Mexico in order to detect drugs and migrants trying to enter the U.S. illegally.

The more stringent vehicle inspection program, which lasted about a week, caused long delays for truckers trying to cross into Texas and generated substantial economic losses. It was suspended after Abbott reached agreements with governors of four Mexican border states, who committed to enhancing security measures on the southern side of the border.

Ebrard accused the Texas governor of extortion for his negotiation methods with the governors of Tamaulipas, Nuevo León, Coahuila, and Chihuahua, saying that Abbott had attempted to blackmail them, instead of looking for compromise. “It’s extortion. Closing the border and forcing you to sign whatever I say. That’s not an agreement, an agreement is when you and I agree on something,” he said.

To reduce Mexico’s reliance on border crossings with Texas to export products to the U.S., authorities are also considering the possibility of a rail link to the New Mexico border. “I don’t think we’re going to use Texas anymore,” Economy Minister Tatiana Clouthier said last week, referring to a proposed rail link to connect Mexico’s Pacific coast to the northern border via the Bajío region, a manufacturing hub. 
“We’re going to seek a [rail] connection to New Mexico because we can’t put all our eggs in one basket and be held hostage by someone who wants to use trade as a political issue,” she said.

President López Obrador accused the Texas government of acting against the principles of free trade in implementing a stricter vehicle inspection program. The measures introduced were “completely contrary to free trade” and amounted to “chicanery” on the part of Texas, he said last month. “Legally they can do it but it’s really despicable,” López Obrador said. “… Why do they do it? I believe that the governor of Texas aspires to be the Republican Party candidate,” he said, apparently referring to the U.S. 2024 presidential election.

Abbott is already in the race for November’s election to elect a new governor in Texas after winning the Republican Party nomination in April. He is currently serving his second term as governor.

Mexico City: U.S. Anti-Drugs Agency Pulls Plane From Mexico In Fresh Cooperation Blow

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has stopped stationing a plane in Mexico for anti-narcotics operations for the first time in decades after Mexican officials rescinded its parking spot, three sources said.

The withdrawal of the aircraft is a new hit to joint cooperation against drug crime which has frayed in recent years under Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

The DEA has had its own aircraft based at Toluca near Mexico City since at least the early 1990s to conduct missions against cartels, ferrying U.S. agents and elite Mexican units to supervise time-sensitive raids across the Latin American nation.

The current plane, a twin-turboprop King Air able to fly about 10 people, played a key role in capturing some of the world’s most powerful drug lords, and was used on raids against former Sinaloa cartel chief Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman. It also served DEA operations in Central America.

According to a U.S. government official and two security sources familiar with the topic, the airplane has now been moved to Texas. All three requested anonymity as they were not authorized to speak about the issue.

“It will bring things to a halt. We can’t drive through parts of Mexico, it’s too dangerous,” said one of the security sources familiar with DEA operations.

The DEA declined to comment on the matter. The Mexican Attorney General’s Office (FGR) and the Mexican president’s office did not respond to requests for comment.

The aircraft’s removal threatens to undermine U.S. efforts to battle organized crime groups inside Mexico and risks delaying extraditions of high-ranking capos.

It is another example of the fissures in the relationship between the DEA and Mexico’s government since Lopez Obrador came to power in 2018 and vowed to take a less hostile approach to battling organized crime.

Reuters reported in April that Mexico last year disbanded a select anti-narcotics unit that for a quarter of a century worked hand-in-hand with the DEA to combat the cartels.

Despite the sharp reduction in anti-narcotics cooperation under Lopez Obrador, some U.S. officials say it has improved since a near-total rupture in 2020 when U.S. authorities arrested Mexico’s ex-army chief Salvador Cienfuegos for allegedly taking bribes from a drug cartel.

Following an outcry from Mexico, a U.S. judge released Cienfuegos after prosecutors requested it citing “sensitive” foreign policy considerations.

Lopez Obrador has frequently criticized the DEA over its methods that he says run roughshod over Mexico’s sovereignty.

Problems with the plane began soon after Lopez Obrador took power, according to the security source familiar with DEA operations.

Its use slowed in 2019 after the Mexican Secretariat of National Defense (SEDENA), which controls the airspace and enjoys an enlarged role under Lopez Obrador, began to demand a written request from the U.S. government two weeks prior to any flight.

This made many missions unworkable due to the need for flexibility and speed, the security source said, but the DEA’s appeals to Mexico’s foreign ministry were in vain and the aircraft’s use stagnated.

Then, about a month ago, the DEA moved the plane after Mexico’s FGR asked the agency to relinquish its parking space in the FGR hangar in Toluca airport, according to the U.S. government official.

Former and current U.S officials said the plane’s absence would hobble DEA’s work, recounting the aircraft’s pivotal role of transporting top Mexican policemen, elite Navy special forces and their equipment for major raids.

“The plane was invaluable to our missions,” said Leonardo Silva, a former DEA agent who served in Mexico. “It’s very important to the DEA’s ability to function and be effective in Mexico.”

With two DEA pilots on standby at all times, the plane has also been critical to rescuing U.S. agents facing death threats, including in 2011 when the Zetas cartel in central Mexico killed a U.S. Homeland Security Investigations agent and hunted his wounded colleague, Victor Avila, who had to be flown out.

Extraditions of traffickers are also likely to be imperiled because the DEA often only has a matter of hours to take cartel chiefs abroad before their lawyers tangle the process in a web of judicial moves, said one former senior DEA agent who worked in Mexico.

Drug cartels waging turf wars over trafficking routes have driven Mexico’s murder rate to above 30,000 homicides per year. In the United States, the new hyper potent drugs produced by Mexican cartels have triggered a sharp jump in overdoses that led to more than 100,000 U.S. deaths last year.  

The National Post

San Luis Potosí: Armed Criminal Cell Attacks Policemen In Real de Catorce And Cedral

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

Through social networks it transpired that on Sunday night a group of armed men had a confrontation with elements of the Municipal Police, starting hostilities when an Investigative Police was allegedly attacked at the intersection of Highway 62 with the junction to Real de Catorce.

When the alarm was raised, elements of the Matehuala Public Security Directorate and Ministerial Agents attended the scene, among whom some were injured by firearms and it is said that the numerical superiority of the aggressors forced the police elements.

The injured were transferred in patrols and ambulances to the different hospitals in the city. However, there is only speculation about how many units participated on the sides and what was the balance of the wounded.

So far, the Prosecutor's Office has not issued any statement and the uncertainty continues in the municipalities of Catorce and Cedral.

El Sol de San Luis

Six Hitmen Arrested in Pitiquito, Sonora. Some Were As Young As 14 Years Old

"HEARST" for Borderland Beat


Six hitmen were arrested by Army soldiers near the town of Puerto Libertad in the state of Sonora.


The governor noted that three of the six were minors, saying there was a 17 year old, 16 year old and 14 year old among the detainees. He then commented that as a society, we should be concerned that organized crime is able to hook in young men who are practically children.


The Arrests Near Puerto Libertad 

At roughly 11:00 am on Monday, May 9, 2022, soldiers from the Army (SEDENA) who were on a routine patrol noticed a group of gunmen traveling in a convoy near the town of Puerto Libertad, in the municipality of Pitiquito.