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

Saturday, May 10, 2025

La Mayiza and the Guasave Cartel form an alliance; they target Los Chapitos By MILENIO

CHAR

MAY 9, 2025
VIDEO BY MILENIO 




VIDEO TRANSLATION 



A new alliance between the La Mayiza and the Guasave Cartel, backed by El Mayito Flaco and El Chapo Isidro, has intensified violence in Sinaloa against the Chapos, accused of betraying old pacts. Clashes, armed convoys, and besieged communities reflect the escalation of conflict in areas such as Guamuchil, Mocorito, and Angostura. 

A new alliance contributes to the Sinaloa cartel's internal conflict. La Mayiza and the Guasave cartel sealed a pact to end what they called the Chapos' bloodshed and betrayal. The alliance was publicly endorsed by the criminal organizations themselves in a statement released on social media, indicating that the pact between Ismael Zambada, Sicarios, El Mayito Flaco, son of El Mayo Zambada, and Fausto Isidro Meza Flores, "El Chapo Isidro" is because Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán's sons reacted to the codes and have trampled on their own allies. 

As a result, violence intensified in Guamuchil, Mocorito, and Angostura. In the first city, a convoy of armored pickup trucks packed with armed men broke into the city in broad daylight. At night, they violently entered the Ranchito de los Angulo communities of Angostura and other surrounding areas. 

In an intercepted communication between members of the Chapos, someone warned that "El Mayito Flaco" and "El Chapo" Isidro are now allies. "Don't let them go, don't let them go." The cholos' people have become "Mayo Flaco," and "El Chapo Isidro" is also "Mayo Flaco." They're giving [ __ ] to Angostura. The "Angosturas are no more than the only chapos." Those from Chinito, the blue reform. 

All that combat, just chapo. And they're fighting. They picked me up. They picked me up. They're there. Tell your relatives that they shouldn't go out at night or during the day. They're going all out. All the people are there, people who aren't from there, because since the people have settled, they're all fighting. In the Cuathemoc Niños Héroes and La Gloria neighborhoods, also in Guamuchil, vehicles were abandoned, shot at, and homemade armored trucks were found. The army and the National Guard seized vehicles and weapons, but no arrests were made. Since September, the war has cost the chapitos vast territories they controlled in Ubolato, Choix, Escuinapa, El Rosario, Mazatlán, and Culiacán. 

The Guasave cartel controls the city that bears its name, in addition to the municipalities of Sinaloa and Juan José Ríos, but also has a presence in Los Angeles, Los Mochis, the municipal capital of Ahome, where El Chapo Guzmán's sons control the ranching area. With information from Carlos Rafael Morales, Milenio Noticias

Leydi and Alexa died due to confusion among soldiers, not due to an armed group confrontation, they claim In Badiraguato, Sinaloa

CHAR 

THIS INFORMATION WAS POSTED BY LOS NOTICIERISTAS 

MAY 9, 2025

WRITTEN BY: DIANA CRUZ 



Culiacán, Sinaloa.- The girls Leydi and Alexa lost their lives due to a mistake by soldiers who shot them in Badiraguato, their families reported.

Their loved ones have spoken out on social media to clarify that the girls' deaths were not due to "crossfire" in a confrontation in Badiraguato, but rather that the soldiers mistook the van in which the family was traveling and opened fire.

An aunt and cousin of the girls stated that it was a totally unjust act, stating that the military is there to fight crime, not to take the lives of innocent girls.

“May 6th, the day my little girls, Leydi and Alexa, had their lives taken away, being just totally innocent girls unaware of all the events that occurred in Badiraguato, the authorities are currently handling it as “collateral damage” or “crossfire” unfortunately the information that the authorities or some media report is TOTALLY FALSE, the government only talks about what suits them, my little girls had their lives taken away by the MILITARY, yes, our own government, the military confused the car in which my family was traveling and began to shoot incessantly until they ended the lives of my girls, it is a totally unjust act, they are supposed to “fight crime” but this time they themselves took the lives of my little girls, they took away their dreams in an instant, this cannot go unpunished, for my little girls, niece and cousin. NOT WITH GIRLS AND BOYS!!!”, it was expressed in the message.

It's worth remembering that this unfortunate incident occurred on May 6 in Badiraguato, following reports of an alleged confrontation between authorities and armed civilians.

The parents of one of the deceased girls were injured, as was another 12-year-old boy named Gael, who remains hospitalized.

Friday, May 9, 2025

Violent Events Shake The State Of Sinaloa On Wednesday May 7, 2025. Clashes, blockades and looting, this is how the night of terror was experienced in Sinaloa this May 7

CHAR 
MAY 8, 2025 
INFORMATION VIDEO BY LUZ NOTICIAS 



BY: CHAR 

Violent events shook the Mexican state of Sinaloa on Wednesday, May 7, 2025, as allegedly criminal groups are uniting with the La Mayiza/MF criminal faction to fight against the Los Chapitos/La Chapiza Cartel. Violence has now reached Badiraguato, Mocorito, Villa Juarez, Navolato, all strongholds of the Los Chapitos criminal group. 


BY LUZ NOTICIAS 

VIDEO TRANSLATION 


What happened yesterday at the north exit on Mexico 15? Ángel Beltrán was there with all the details. Angel, I'm happy to greet you. 

Good morning. Good morning, José. Likewise, to the audience. Indeed, minutes before 9 p.m. yesterday, Wednesday, a group of armed individuals robbed several vehicles on the Mexico 15 international highway near the motels located at the north exit of Culiacán. With these same units, they blocked both lanes of traffic and also set them on fire. These individuals left the highway practically blocked in both lanes. A few minutes later, dozens of personnel from various corporations, mainly from the Ministry of Security and Citizen Protection, arrived and secured the area so that firefighters could arrive, carry out maneuvers, and extinguish the fire.


First, a combat unit arrived and extinguished a truck and the problem was that the water ran out, and the remaining two units continued to burn. Later, more firefighter units arrived with more trucks and managed to put out the fire after a few minutes of maneuvers. These units were reportedly stripped and blocked, and the drivers were apparently allowed to leave. Fortunately, they were unharmed during these events. These maneuvers and the international highway lasted, well, blocked for several hours, just a couple of minutes before midnight after the fire was extinguished.

 These units were removed with the help of two State Preventive Police tow trucks, who shook these elements with the cranes to be able to remove these units and free the international highway. Mexico 15. The images, well, we were there, and this blockade occurred just a few minutes after a strong confrontation was reported, which is in The Pericos municipality in the municipality of Mocorito, which lasted several minutes, and the report also indicated that many armed people were driving around in double-wheeled trucks, clashing on the same international highway at the entrance to Pericos and also at the Bairahuato intersection. 

José, yes, there are the images. Ángel Beltrán arrived at the scene. He was the first reporter to arrive at this location, brave enough to inform the public of what was happening at that time, because, uh, we only had the report of the gunfire from the clashes in Pericos Mocorito, and it was said that the Mexico 15 highway was blocked at the intersection toward Badiraguato. 

But we didn't know there was a blockade, a major blockade at the northern exit near the motels. We went to verify and see if some trailers were indeed on fire. Hey, Ángel Beltrán, you arrived there.


We arrived around 9:10 p.m., and by the time I arrived, the vehicles were still practically on fire. Firefighters hadn't arrived. Only federal personnel from the Ministry of Security and Citizen Protection were guarding the area. Even so, they kindly allowed us to be close to where the vehicles were burning, at a safe distance for safety reasons. A few minutes later, firefighters arrived and began carrying out maneuvers. And it's worth mentioning that this blockade, José, wasn't the only one last night, right? There was also a blockade on the Benito Juárez Highway near the town of the battalion in the municipality of Navolato. This report also indicated armed individuals had fired shots to force drivers of heavy-duty vehicles to stop, and with the same Units carried out the blockade at that point on the highway, near the Culiacan Highway. Volato was in the battalion's polaro. This incident also caused heavy traffic congestion and long lines of vehicles that also blocked the highway for several hours. Yes, Angel, you were there.


We were all following your broadcast yesterday. Your live broadcast. I think all of Culiacán was following your broadcast yesterday because you were the only person there, and at first, we heard some explosions coming from the trailers. What exactly was it, Angel? Yes, because the units were completely on fire. The tires practically melted and began to explode as a result of this fire. And also, the fire reached the gas tanks. 

Jose, those were the two reasons why the explosions were being recorded at the scene: the gas tanks and the tires of the units. Well, that's what's happening. Well, what happened yesterday. This is what it looked like after the fire. These are the images that Angel Beltrán was commenting on at the scene. You were there for a while. There, right?

Angel, how long did the maneuvers take to put out the fire?
Yes, they lasted a little over an hour while the firefighters' support arrived because I mentioned that the first unit that arrived on the scene had run out of water, and only managed to pay for what a cargo truck was, but there were three more vehicles left. Later, support arrived, and with the support of two water trucks, they managed to put out this fire. The maneuvers for the firefighting operation lasted a little over an hour, plus the removal, you could say about three hours. By midnight, the international highway was already open, there at the north exit. But we continue with what happened yesterday, with this chronology brought to us by Ángel Beltrán, with the clashes in Pericos Mocorito and the roadblocks. Well, several highways of varying viability were blocked. It was Mexico 15. It was also Benito Juárez at the battalion level, also the Guamuchi entrance.


Mocorito, there was a major blockade there, too, but let's talk about the shooting in Pericos Mocorito because we were receiving reports at 6671 609 that the shooting was taking place at the intersection toward Badirahuato, at that famous intersection on Mexico 15. And others said that inside the town of Pericos Mocorito, Ángel, and the gunshots lasted approximately two hours. They calmed down, returned. They calmed down, and returned. That's what they told us. Yes, that's right. The first reports indicated that subjects were fighting.


Armed at what is known as the entrance to the Pericos municipality in the municipality of Mocorito. This was on Mexico City-15 International Highway, and the gunshots effectively lasted almost two hours, while the authorities were conspicuous by their absence. These reports also indicated a large group of armed men driving around in double-wheeled pickup trucks, some of them white, others black, others with weapons embedded in the back. And these shots, well, some residents recorded the shots and also took some videos that went practically viral on various social media. 

This confrontation also spread to the intersection of the municipality of Badiraguato, where reports were also received about a large group of armed men, also in the municipal seat of Badiraguato, without any evidence so far. It is known, eh, if they caused any disorder there. Eh, but the main clashes were recorded mainly at the entrance to Pericos and at the Abauato intersection. José. Yes, well, yesterday, what terror Mocorito experienced. What terror Pericos experienced. Also, Villa Juárez, right? Ángeles. Are you hearing chants in Pericos and minutes later, Villa Juárez? Navolato. Do we have information on what exactly happened in Villajuez? Yes, that's right. José, well, the firefighters were just trying to put out the fire here at the blockade located on the international highway, Mexico 15, the city north of Culiacán. When, at that same location, reports were received about the clash on Highway 20, which leads from the Culiacán highway in Lorado to the municipality of Villajuárez, Navolato. This. Near Campo Cuba, reports were being received that men were fighting. 

Armed personnel were on board several trucks that were circulating, and the confrontation also lasted several minutes and was quite intense. A fact that was also videotaped by the residents of Campo Cuba and the surrounding area. And this confrontation took place precisely at a point where it is constantly maintained at National Guard events, almost at the intersection of the Culiacán El Dorado Highway, Highway 20, and Culiacán El Dorado. We were unable to confirm whether these National Guard members were on guard at the time of the confrontation on the same highway, but Campo Cuba is very close. These explosions also went viral. The videos showed that they were quite loud, high-powered weapons were heard, and during the same confrontation, another blockade occurred there on the Culiacán El Dorado Highway at the entrance to a poultry company that is also located near the same intersection with the highway.

Thursday, May 8, 2025

Jesús "El Azteca" Salazar del Villar, Son of CIS/Los Salazar Leader "Muñeco" Detained by ICE in Miami, Florida

 "Socalj" for Borderland Beat


A third generation drug trafficker from the Salazar family of Sonora was among 1,100 other alleged illegal aliens detained by ICE with the help local law enforcement in a week long sweep across Florida, dubbed Operation Tidal Wave. The operation targeted supposed gang members and illegal alien smugglers among others who had illegally entered the country.

The grandson of long sanctioned trafficker Don Adán Salazar Zamorano, and son of "Muñeco" had been targeted by rival cartel factions as recently as February of this year. 

Largest Fentanyl Bust in DEA History, 400 Kilos from the Sinaloa Cartel Seized in New Mexico

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat


Federal authorities have arrested 16 individuals and seized record-breaking quantities of fentanyl, cash, firearms, and vehicles across multiple states, dismantling what the DEA is calling 'one of the largest and most dangerous drug trafficking organizations in U.S. history.'

Heriberto Salazar Amaya, 36, also known as "El Paisa," is the alleged leader of a drug trafficking organization distributing across the Southwest for the Sinaloa Cartel. The busts took place in 5 different states and included the record 400 kilo fentanyl seizure in New Mexico as well as dozens of weapons, high end vehicles and nearly $6 million in cash.

“This historic drug seizure, led by the DEA, is a significant blow against the Sinaloa Cartel that removes poison from our streets and protects American citizens from the scourge of fentanyl,” said Attorney General Pamela Bondi. "This case represents DEA’s largest single seizure of fentanyl pills to date. I commend the men and women of DEA for their extraordinary work, day in and day out, and I remind the cartels that DEA is relentlessly in pursuit and will not stop until we destroy your networks.”

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

Operation Bastión Launched Against La Familia Michoacana In The State of Mexico

"Enojon", "Char", "Pernicious Propaganda", "Halipon", "Hearst", "Itzli"  for Borderland Beat

Photograph By: The State of Mexico Attorney General’s Office (Compilation of properties seized during Operación Bastión)

CJNG paid 70 thousand pesos to the mayor of Teuchitlán: Jalisco

 CHAR 

THIS INFORMATION WAS POSTED BY EL OCCIDENTAL 

MAY 5, 2025 

In exchange, he allegedly allowed the existence of the ranch where hitmen were trained.



Elizabeth Ibal

Statements and allegations that he allegedly received 70,000 pesos a month for allowing a training camp in his municipality are the basis of the accusation against the mayor of Teuchitlán, José Ascención Murguia Santiago, who was arrested last weekend by a special group from Mexico City. He was not informed of the operation by either the state government or the Jalisco-based delegation of the Attorney General's Office (FGR).

Therefore, they intend to charge him with organized crime, which would result in the mayor of the Citizens' Movement party being placed in mandatory preventive detention until the conclusion of the judicial investigation, as these are serious crimes.

In the same judicial investigation, the Federal Public Prosecutor's Office presents evidence to prove the alleged relationship between the official and José Gregorio Armida, alias "El Lastra"—the author of the accusations—and Gonzalo Mendoza Gaitán, alias "El Sapo" and/or "El 90," the latter one of the main leaders of the Jalisco Nueva Generación Cartel.

The Izaguirre ranch was used as an alleged criminal training camp and was raided twice by authorities. First, National Guard personnel carried out an operation at the site in September 2024, arresting ten men with firearms and freeing two people.

His Capture
It was Saturday afternoon when the tranquility of the municipality was disrupted. Men in official uniforms aboard two white pickup trucks intercepted Mayor José Ascención Murguia Santiago just a few meters from his home.

They forced him into one of the vehicles, and the hooded men took him away. They took his house and car keys and threw them on the ground, according to municipal officials.

Afterward, his family and other municipal officials experienced tense moments. They didn't know who was behind the scenes, the Jalisco government didn't know what was happening, and the Attorney General's Office in Jalisco denied any involvement in the police operation.

The National Registry of Arrests confirmed his capture at approximately 9:42 p.m. (Central Time) and his transfer to the penitentiary. It was stated that he was wearing a maroon T-shirt, blue jeans, and black shoes. It was also reported that he has a lion tattoo on his right arm.

He is charged with serious crimes.
He spent part of the night at the facilities of the Specialized Prosecutor's Office for the Investigation of Organized Crime (FEMDO) and was later sent to the Puente Grande Preventive Prison.

The arraignment hearing at the Federal Criminal Justice Center of the State of Jalisco, located in Puente Grande, was scheduled for 9:00 a.m., but José Ascención didn't appear until 44 minutes later.

It was announced there that the Special Prosecutor's Office for the Investigation of Enforced Disappearances of the Attorney General's Office (FGR) intends to charge him with organized crime. A public defender accompanied him during the first part of the hearing and, when given the floor, he claimed he didn't have a trusted attorney. He reappeared at 12:13 p.m., represented by a new private attorney, who in turn requested a recess to speak with his client.

The hearing resumed at 1:10 p.m., with a request that it be closed, forcing the media and the general public to leave, arguing that it was to protect the identity of victims and witnesses.


He is linked to CJNG leaders
The indictment includes testimony confirming meetings with members of the Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel between April and June 2024, with figures such as José Gregorio "N," alias "El Lastra," who is imprisoned in the Altiplano prison, and Gonzalo Mendoza Gaitán, alias "El Sapo" and/or "El 90."

José Ascención has governed Teuchitlán for six years and was headed for another three. He served his first term as a member of the PRD from 2012 to 2015 and for the Movimiento Ciudadano party from 2021 to 2024. He was recently reelected by the same party for the 2024-2027 term.

According to the indictment, he met with "El Lastra" between September and October 2024, when his first term as a member of Movimiento Ciudadano was ending and his second term was beginning. In a gap between San Marcos and Etzatlán, to agree on a monthly income of 70,000 pesos in exchange for allowing the criminal organization to operate in the area. According to the person involved, they arrived at the meeting "connected" through calls made from the phones of the so-called "cacahuatitos," which they later destroyed to avoid leaving evidence.

Another testimony suggests that between 15 and 20 days before September 18, the date of the seizure of the Izaguirre ranch, the mayor and José Gregorio woke him up to dig a pit, using a backhoe to deposit organs and skeletal remains. Therefore, the Public Prosecutor's Office, who read the document, confirmed that José Ascención was fully aware of what was happening, as it was even claimed that he uttered the phrase, "These dogs won't live to tell the tale." José Ascención, present at the hearing, made a gesture of disbelief at the statements of the person testifying against him.

It is emphasized that among the agreements were that members of the Jalisco Nueva Generación Cartel would operate the ranch and be able to circulate around Teuchitlán armed and in stolen vehicles without being disturbed. In addition, they were also "providing human capital," that is, allowing municipal police officers to conduct surveillance of the Izaguirre ranch to prevent the recruits from escaping.

The same indictment mentions that the Izaguirre ranch was subjected to extreme physical violence against victims recruited through false job offers. Activities included training, human trafficking, and forced killing and eating of human flesh. Meanwhile, the La Vega ranch was also used for training and drug production.

The mayor was invited by the Control Judge to respond to the accusation, but he decided to abstain. His lawyers announced that they will present evidence in subsequent hearings, requesting an extension of the 144-hour constitutional deadline for the final hearing to be held. The deadline expires next Saturday at 6:21 p.m.

At the end of the hearing, the group of Public Prosecutors removed the investigation file, which was stored in four enormous plastic containers, which contained the entire bed of a recent Silverado pickup truck.

Jalisco Government and Municipality Request
The Jalisco Government and the Citizen Movement party, which was the most recent party to champion the case, made their position clear in separate statements regarding the arrest and arraignment of José Ascensión Murguía before a federal judge.

For its part, the State Executive expressed its confidence that the Attorney General's Office (FGR) will conduct the investigations impartially and without political bias.

For its part, the State Government will be attentive to the development of the judicial process and will collaborate in all necessary ways so that, regardless of the case, the truth is discovered and justice is served.

Meanwhile, the Citizen Movement party spoke out and demanded an investigation free of partisan bias.

“Federal authorities are obligated to verify their accusations and clear up all doubts in this and all cases. We trust that the mayor of Teuchitlán will demonstrate that he always acted within the law. The citizens elected him as their representative and then reaffirmed their trust in him to govern for a second term: this support speaks to the results of his administration,” the document states.

It concludes by stating that “In Citizen Movement, we demand that the authorities conduct a fair, comprehensive investigation free of political bias or partisan motivations. We firmly defend the presumption of innocence and the right of all people to a fair trial. Without truth, there will never be justice.”

Teuchitlan
Mayors


The 'Los Alegres del Barranco' appeared this Tuesday morning before Court 16 of Puente Grande: Jalisco

 CHAR 

MAY 6, 2025 

THIS INFORMATION WAS POSTED BY EL OCCIDENTAL 

The group continues to play music that glorifies crime.


Elizabeth Ibal

The Los Alegres del Barranco group appeared Tuesday morning before the 16th Court of Puente Grande, where their investigation file for apology for crime is being prosecuted.

The members arrived in a van, dressed in blue and black suits, but they refused to tell the media that they were waiting for them before the arraignment hearing.

They went to the courthouse accompanied by their lawyers to file charges for the investigation opened against them for that crime, following their performance on March 29 at the Telmex Auditorium in Zapopan.

That day, the group allegedly projected images of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias El Mencho, alleged to be the leader and founder of the Jalisco Nueva Generación Cartel, which led to the investigation being opened against them.

Since then, they and any other group have been banned from singing corridos inciting violence at concerts and public events.

This Monday, the Jalisco Prosecutor's Office reported that two other investigations were opened against them, also for condoning crime, following their performances in Cihuatlán and Tequila.


Sunday, May 4, 2025

Armando "N", "Delta 1", CJNG operator, has been granted house arrest.

 CHAR 

MAY 3, 2025

THIS INFORMATION WAS POSTED BY LATINUS

The alleged criminal was arrested on October 28, 2024, at a home located in Jalisco, where firearms and cartridges for the exclusive use of the Armed Forces were seized, as well as one kilogram and 53 grams of methamphetamine hydrochloride, according to the FGR.



WRITTEN BY: HECTOR GORDOA

Armando "N," alias "Delta 1," the operator and chief hitman for "Los Delta," the armed wing of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), had his precautionary measure changed by a federal judge, who granted him house arrest, his defense attorney reported.

On October 28, 2024, "Delta 1" was captured along with a woman by the National Guard after an operation in the Lagos Country residential neighborhood in Zapopan, Jalisco. During this operation, the Attorney General's Office (FGR) reported that he was seized with firearms and cartridges for the exclusive use of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, and charged with simple possession of one kilogram and 53 grams of methamphetamine hydrochloride. He was subsequently charged with crimes against public health, for which he was brought to trial.

The alleged criminal was presented by federal ministerial authorities before a Specialized District Judge of the Accusatory Criminal System of the State of Mexico, based in Almoloya de Juárez, who ordered Armando "N" to be prosecuted and placed in pretrial detention at the Federal Social Readaptation Center No. 1 "Altiplano" and granted a four-month period for the complementary investigation.


Víctor Beltrán, the defendant's defense attorney, asserted that the federal prosecutors failed to substantiate the evidence presented to the judge against Armando "N."


"The prosecution failed to prove anything; once again, they fell short, offered no evidence, and ultimately tried to rectify their poor work by making laughable and unfounded arguments, as reflected in today's ruling," the litigant emphasized.


The alleged criminal's expert legal counsel submitted a brief requesting a change in the precautionary measure. The hearing was held remotely on May 1, 2025, at the Federal Criminal Justice Center in the state of Jalisco, at the Puente Grande Penitentiary Complex, before Control Judge Juana Beatriz Aguilar Jiménez.


"Through a ruling in favor of my client, it was proven that he has been housebound, allowing him to enjoy his full freedom, carrying out his proceedings outside the country, going to sign in every 15 days, and continuing with the technical tasks associated with his job, running his business as a merchant," the lawyer explained.


Latinus asked the Attorney General's Office what actions it will take following this ruling by the Control Judge, but so far it has not responded.




SOURCE: LATINUS 

Friday, May 2, 2025

Utah Family Charged for $300 Million Stolen Pemex Crude Oil Smuggling Scheme with CJNG Cartel

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat


A Utah family who owns a large oil importation company in Texas is making headlines after being arrested and indicted on federal charges in connection with a scheme to smuggle crude oil from Mexico into the United States.

James Lael Jensen and his wife Kelly were booked into the Salt Lake County Jail after authorities executed an arrest warrant at their $9.1 million mansion. The couple is accused of conspiring to smuggle 2,881 different shipments of crude oil from Mexico. Two of their sons were arrested as well.

According to the indictment, the Jensen family began laundering money and illegally importing crude oil in May 2022. But accusations made by PEMEX in a 2011 lawsuit show James Jensen had been involved in the illegal oil smuggling from Mexican cartels for well over a decade.

Authorities allege that more than $47 million was transferred from businesses operated by James and Kelly Jensen to "Mexican businesses" from 2022 until 2025.

Mexican Federal Judge Candidate in Durango Served 5 Years in US Federal Prison for Trafficking Meth

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat
From a La Silla Rota Article


Leopoldo Javier Chávez Vargas, candidate for district judge for Durango, has been accused of allegedly having been imprisoned in the United States for crimes related to drug trafficking for over 5 years.

According to US court documents cited by journalist Miguel Alfonso Meza, the now candidate was detained on November 13, 2015, at the Lincoln Juárez International Bridge, while traveling on a passenger bus.

From the attack in Villa Purificación, Jalisco, to his execution: the story of Iván Morales Story By MILENIO. All Eyes On CJNG Cartel

CHAR 
MAY 2, 2025




VIDEO TRANSLATION 


Oscar Balderas, dear Oscar, thank you
as always for being with us
dear Elisa, good night, sad night


Hey, yes, how chilling, we were talking while we were also listening to this information from our colleague Ángel eh, after learning the story of this man who had survived the attack and who, well, he, he showed himself as someone, who had been lucky to have survived this tremendous, tremendous attack, yes, when Deputy Officer Iván Morales is called on April 30th, which is the same day he is assassinated in 2025, he is assassinated on April 30th, and on April 30th, 2015, he is called on a secret mission because of the profile of the person they were going to arrest. 

Neither he nor his other colleagues from the Federal Police knew the target, nor did they even know where they were going in particular. They simply ask that when they are, an elite group is going to execute an arrest warrant against an important
boss of a major criminal organization. Already in the air, almost arriving, over Villa Purificación, Warrant Officer Iván Morales and his other companions learn about a guy who, at that time,
Elis was almost unknown to the country, a certain Nemesio Ruben Oseguera Cervantes, who they told the guy belonged to an
organization that didn't sound familiar to us as a major national evil: the Jalisco Cartel Nueva Generación 10 years ago
Exactly, that is, on April 30th. They summon him. Don't they tell him, "You have this mission?" He takes off from Mexico City and arrives in Villa Purificación on May 1st. 

On May 1st, he is attacked. Here, the Jalisco Cartel completely breaks down and becomes a historic event for several reasons. First, because the person organizing this airstrike, according to official reports, is another criminal of whom we had no record. It was Menchito, the son of Nemesio Oseguera, who, I insist, was also virtually unknown nationally. 

In 2015, we discussed the Knights Templar, the Michoacan family, and the Zetas cartel, which became the Northeast Cartel. But there were still people in the Jalisco Cartel, even people who still call them the MataZetas, or who I still mistook for the Millennium Cartel. Then, Menchito, who was only 25 years old at the time, ordered this attack, which completely shattered what we knew about the actions of organized crime. Because, on the one hand, they used First, a .50-caliber weapon publicly to shoot down a federal forces aircraft, and second, a Russian-made rocket launcher. 

I was telling you about a criminal organization with significant firepower, and then the attack on an aircraft in which they knew federal police were on board. What we know is that Warrant Officer Iván Morales had received news hours earlier from his partner that he was going to be a father. And when the helicopter crashed, under attack, and he himself narrated it, he felt himself receiving the bullets, seeing how some of his colleagues had already been killed. His uniform was burning with him, which caused these terrible burns that we saw in this image that went viral. 

An image where he was decorated in the National Arena with more than a minute of standing ovation, and he said, "At this moment, I'm going to have to make a decision or let myself die here because the pain is Unbearable, and what if I get captured and I'm going to have a worse time, or do I fight to survive because I have a child on the way, and he makes this very brave decision and survives? They decorate him. The state then gave him certain facilities, but what they didn't give him, apparently, was an escort to protect him after he participated in the Menchito trial, who is now serving a life sentence. The story is circular. Elisa, and it's terrible because 2025 becomes a decisive year for the two figures at the extremes of this story. 

Menchito is going to life imprisonment with 35 years, or a very harsh prison sentence, and this one, I consider the federal police officer Iván Morales a hero. He is murdered along with his wife. Oh, what a story, exactly 10 years apart, and we've seenThis absolute growth of the power of a cartel in Mexico, right? Like few others, because of course we have in mind the Sinaloa cartel, which is also the root of all the other groups, right? But the growth of the Jalisco Cartel has been like that, right? In power, in capacity, right? And by the way, we were also commenting a moment ago that we've seen a lot of news related to the Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel, including operations, arrests, all of this, and the issue of the Sinaloa cartel has been put aside, at least in these arrests, in operations. 

No, I don't know if that's what you think, Oscar. Has the information been lowered, or is more of this type of data coming in? In general, yes, we started the year with our eyes on what was happening in Culiacán? No, the fight between them, with the attention in May and then all this war that broke out after In September, Chapiza and Miza, and shortly after, we started this year saying the war in Culiacán has been going on for 100 days and it doesn't look like it's going to continue, and suddenly there was very intense pressure on Governor Rubén Rochamoya. There were even rumors that they were already preparing an embassy for him because he wasn't going to last much longer. Now, well, nothing else remains, because he remains in his position. I don't know if governing, yes, let's not say, with the position, with the position, but what happened is that first we got the news about Rancho Izaguirre, the images of the shoes, triggered a popular outrage that, I think, was dormant, and thanks to the power of images, society began to unite around a demand to know what happened at the ranch, whether it was an extermination camp, a training camp. We began to learn about the right-wingers. 

Then we moved on to the issue of recruitment. Forced, and then
This infamous concert by Lo Alegres del Barranco comes along, which puts us back in front of narco-culture, and we begin to debate: whether we ban drug trafficking, regulate it, or remove it from public spaces. The Jalisco cartel was once again at the center. Then, for example, today, the United States Treasury Department puts an important leader of the Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel, El Priito, at the center of a series of financial tensions that are within the context of the Jalisco cartel now being considered a terrorist organization in the United States. So, yes, we have focused heavily on this cartel, whose explosive growth in 10 years has shown that it could have international reach. The latest count is that it has representatives in more than 55 countries around the world, as far away as New Zealand. Imagine how big this criminal group is. And yes, I think we have lost sight of others. That may not be in the national discussion at this moment, but they control the daily lives of millions of people. Exactly. Exactly. And especially there in Culiacán, specifically. Right? Yeah, Sinaloa. Yes, the war is raging there. Reality overwhelms. Yeah. Regardless of all this very relevant news that we're reporting every day, aren't there these stories? And yes, today the murder of this man, this former federal police officer, is confirmed. These images that went around the world, that we're seeing, and it's incredible that after testifying against El Menchito, the son of the leader of the Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel, he didn't have this total and absolute protection, of course, because, besides, my reflection is that federal police officer Iván Morales, eh?



He could have easily said, "I've already done my service to Mexico." And no one could accuse him of more than fulfilling his promise. When they put the uniform and the badge on him, God gave more than he could give. The scars on his body are a sign of that commitment. And even after he had hung up his uniform, he went to present himself to the United States Attorney's Office. He gave his testimony, knowing the risk, that is, the fulfillment of his duty had already surpassed him. He still found the courage to serve Mexico. Injured in civilian clothes with the least possible protection. 

And so, I do believe that after this, Elisa, we will have to reflect on two things: one: are we adequately protecting the witnesses who are about to begin because we still have several trials ahead of us in the United States, and there are many people in Mexico who are sufficiently protected. We have sufficient bodyguards in number and in training to protect them. And second, will she receive a tribute? Will she receive a mention? At least in the morning press conference, his commitment will be honored because it seems to me that as narco-culture advances, yes, of course, in various regions, the culture of honoring our heroes also had to advance, the people who go above and beyond the call of duty and who, from a silent position because we didn't know about the non-commissioned officer for a long time, had a very important role to pacify this country. If you want, let's listen and see the moment when the helicopter was shot down 10 years ago. Isn't this this moment that sowed a very important situation that continues to this day, which had to do with the sentence that the United States received from Menchito for this incident. It was one of the shocking cases that the jury heard in the United States about del Mencho's son, and well, and that also led to the terrible murder that was confirmed today. 

That happened last night, that happened 10 years ago. years no survivor of this tremendous attack 10 years ago. Terrible, terrible, the reading that leaves this, that the audience is the one who does the reading, but it does seem to me that it is terrible. Thank you very much, thank you, as always. Good night, good night.



IVAN MORALES 



CJNG CARTEL LEADER 




Thursday, May 1, 2025

Press Release: "El Primito" Sanctioned by OFAC

 El Armadillo for Borderland Beat from OFAC

WASHINGTON — Today, the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned three Mexican nationals and two Mexico-based entities involved in a drug trafficking and fuel theft network linked to the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion (CJNG). This network generates hundreds of millions of dollars annually, benefitting CJNG, through a slew of criminal activities, including fentanyl trafficking, fuel theft, and smuggling stolen crude oil from Mexico across the southwest border. Concurrently, Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued an Alert that provides financial typologies and red flags indicative of crude oil smuggling schemes on the U.S. southwest border associated with CJNG and other Mexico-based transnational criminal organizations.

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

MF And The La Chapiza Criminal Groups Involved In Heavy Clashes In Potrerillos Del Norote, Elota, Sinaloa. Clashes Extended To Surrounding Communities April 28, 2025

 CHAR 

APRIL 29, 2025



Heavy clashes with armored vehicles were reported on the night of April 28, 2025, in Potrerillos Del Norote, Elota, Sinaloa, between La Mayiza/MF against the La Chapiza/Los Chapitos. Both criminal groups have continued to clash for almost eight months. In a previous post, La Mayiza announced their arrival in Potrerillos Del Norote by hanging a La Chapiza member with a rope in the municipal head. 

In the subsequent videos, a ferocious firefight can be heard between criminal groups and a hitman driving in an armored truck records himself attacking a rival's pickup truck. Unsure if the individual recording is an MF or La Chapiza member, although sources claim it is an MF member. 


HEAVY CLASHES CONTINUE IN ELOTA





CLASHES IN EL ESPINAL IN ELOTA REPORTED AT DAWN 







VIDEOS UPLOADED BY ZULU TELEGRAM CHANNEL 






Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Eleven Bodies Found In Clandestine Grave In Costa Rica Municipality South Of Culiacan, Sinaloa. MF And Los Chapitos Forces Clashes Continue. APRIL 25, 2025

CHAR 
APRIL 28, 2025 
INFORMATION BY LUZ NOTICIAS 




VDEO TRANSLATION 


We can't forget that this week one of the most significant events was the discovery of clandestine graves with around 11 bodies inside. 

Yesterday, Governor Rubén Rocha Moya revealed that most of the bodies in this Mezquitillo Culiacán grave are recent, meaning they haven't been there for long. We're going to contact our colleague Sebastián Martínez, head of information in the central region. He has more information about Governor Sebastián's statements. 

Go ahead, good morning, how are you, Samuel. Good morning to you, and good morning to the entire Luz Noticias audience. I would like to say that it was on the morning of Tuesday, April 22nd that members of the Zabuesos Guerreras collective found these clandestine graves in the Mesquitillo area in the municipality of Culiacán. For this reason, The State Attorney General's Office has conducted many investigations there, so yesterday, the state governor, Rubén Rocha Moya, informed us that most of the bodies buried in those graves are residents, that is, they have been buried there for between one and six months. 


Let's listen to the governor. The investigators say they have been abandoned for a few days or weeks, that they are bodies, well, still, new, new, yes, most likely, that most of them are recent, we're talking about from now to a month or six months, so, all of that will be reviewed by the search commission, and the investigators, both of us and the prosecutor's office, are working intensively together, and then they bring them here for the purpose of making the identifications, and then they are working on the forensic reports. The governor was also commenting that The Prosecutor's Office's expert report will determine the condition of these bodies, because some could be remains of deceased relatives. 

He mentioned that they are working on identifying each of these bodies, and once there is progress, they will be presented in sections so that their families can identify them. Yes, well, that's the issue. So, they are recent, between one and six months old. Governor Sebastián said, yes, between one and six months old. Remember that on September 9th, this wave of security incidents began. That has been unleashed here in the state. So, between one and six months old, these bodies, well, we're talking about the possibility of being people who have been killed as a result of these same incidents. If they fall within the timeframe, right? Not this time of war we're having in Sinaloa. Well, we've been here for almost eight months. Next May 9th will be eight months old, and well, if they're six months old, they're limited to Regarding the violence experienced in Sinaloa in this recent period, I thank you for the information.


Good morning, Sebastian.
Good morning