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

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Informant puts out a hit on another informant

A man accused of hiring a U.S. Army soldier and another man to kill a Mexican drug cartel lieutenant who was cooperating with U.S. authorities was himself a government informant, police said Tuesday.


In this photo provided by the El Paso police department, Ruben Rodriguez Dorado is shown, Monday, Aug. 10, 2009.

Ruben Rodriguez Dorado hired Pfc. Michael Jackson Apodaca, 18, and Christopher Duran, 17, to help kill Jose Daniel Gonzalez Galeana, El Paso police said Tuesday in charging documents against them. The three men were arrested Monday and charged with capital murder in the May 15 slaying of Gonzalez, who was shot eight times outside his pricey El Paso home.

Rodriguez, like Gonzalez, was an informant working with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement service, El Paso Police Chief Greg Allen said. He said a warrant has been issued for a fourth man who police say ordered and paid for the killing.

Monday, August 10, 2009

The Capture of El Gilillo

A fourth leader of the Arellano Félix Organization falls as Mexican and U.S. law enforcement make unprecedented strides together to crush the cartel.

In the pre-dawn darkness of Aug. 22, an elite team of heavily armed Mexican federal agents surrounded a house in a small town east of the Baja California capital of Mexicali. At a pre-arranged signal, the masked agents burst into the home. Inside, they found their quarry – a long-hunted narco-trafficker under indictment in both the United States and Mexico. The U.S. government had posted a $2 million reward for information leading to his capture.

The suspect and an alleged accomplice were arrested, handcuffed and whisked away to the Mexicali airport. The entire operation, carried out with textbook precision and without a shot fired, was over in a mere three minutes.

In San Diego, jubilant agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration stamped "captured" over their wanted-poster photograph of Gilberto "El Gilillo" Higuera Guerrero, formerly a top lieutenant of the Tijuana-based Arellano Félix drug-trafficking cartel.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

A Brutal Sadistic Death

Tijuana, BC -  Brutal torture suffered by the young aide Adriana Ruiz Muñiz, before being beheaded. This is a preliminary inspection revealed her body, found the evening of Wednesday in a trash the secret cologne Altiplano, La Presa delegation.


The body and head were two black polyethylene bags, in a semi-used to dump garbage and debris.

Her had been feet smashed by blows with a blunt instrument.

The murderers tore off her nails and pinkie fingers.

Expertise in the Attorney General for the State (PGJE) assume that the death occurred Tuesday afternoon, the body was probably dumped there the night of that day or the early hours of Wednesday.


As it is an unoccupied site, the neighbors could not give any information about who made the hole about one meter in depth which was unexpectedly buried at the edge of a crude way open for local people.

Although it is said that inside the bag were several pictures of Adriana, the PGJE refused to confirm until yesterday afternoon that it was indeed her.

Friday, July 31, 2009

More Cops Die as Drug Lord Wants Chief Out

TIJUANA — The first attack came at 7 p.m. Monday. Gerónimo Calderón Jiménez was getting off guard duty in southern Tijuana when heavily armed men shot him repeatedly and left behind a handwritten sign: Five officers will die each week unless police chief Julián Leyzaola resigns.


Gerónimo Calderón

The next 15 hours saw four more assaults in Tijuana and Rosarito Beach that left two officers dead, one wounded and one unhurt but badly shaken. In the brutal showdown between drug cartels and Mexican law enforcement, these victims were shot at random, authorities said – officers who found themselves in harm's way as a brutal drug lord named Teodoro García Simental sent a deadly message.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Jaime González Durán "El Hummer"

Jaime González Durán (a.k.a: El Hummer) is one of the 31 original founding members and he ranked third in the chain of command of the criminal organization known as Los Zetas.

A former Mexican Army elite soldier of the Grupo Aeromóvil de Fuerzas Especiales (GAFE), he was trained in counter-insurgency and locating and apprehending drug cartel members. He deserted in the late 1990s and was hired along other 30 ex-soldiers by the Gulf Cartel leader, Osiel Cárdenas Guillen as his private enforcement army.

After Osiel's arrest, González controlled a large-scale illegal drug distribution and transfer to the United States, mostly of cocaine and marijuana.

He also controlled much of the illegal drug trade in the Mexican states of Nuevo León, Michoacán, Hidalgo, Veracruz, Tabasco, Quintana Roo and Mexico City. The Attorney General has cataloged him as one of the most dangerous and violent of organized crime members, and was one of the most wanted by Mexican and U.S. justice.

Jaime González Durán is believed to have been responsible for the murder of narcocorridos singer Valentín Elizalde

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Ciudad Juarez is Mexico's Poster Child for Violence

By Mark Scheinbaum
American Reporter Correspondent

Do you start with the decapitated heads of police officers found in local ice cream coolers, the kindergarten kids threatened with mass kidnappings, the vigilantes who have emailed the media to prove they are serious about murdering "criminals," or do you just give up explaining it in Ciudad Juàrez, Mexico, a mile from Interstate 10 and just down the road from El Paso?.

The day before Barack Obama became President, a packed house at the Cinemark theatre saw the award-winning film "Slumdog Millionaire" with its tale of urban decay, hope, and incessant violence.

When many of the folks returned to their cars in the parking lot with license tags from Chihuahua State in Mexico for the ride home, they probably thought that the film was a local documentary.
"My seven-year-old son watched the inauguration of President Obama in school, but for me, I just want to get home from work in time to get him home safely, help with his homework, and stay safely in our house," an El Paso nurse's aide we'll call "Rosa" told me about her trip back to Juàrez each day.

Tour groups in this cross-border metroplex of 2.4 million people now emphasize boot and saddle shops and cowboy ghost towns on the Texas side instead of evening Mexican dining and daylight Emiliano Zapata tours on the Juàrez side.

Families blog in the El Paso Times about how they have stopped visiting relatives just across the border, and the cars from Mexico in the huge lot outside the Super Wal-Mart on Gateway West Blvd. thin out at dusk.

In Spanish, Comando Ciudadano por Juàrez, or CCJ, emailed that local newspaper yesterday to prove they exist. The plea would be a pathetic Rodney Dangerfield lack of respect if the issue had not been so deadly.

The self-proclaimed vigilante group is apparently sick and tired of Chihuahua Attorney General Patricia Gonzalez saying they don't exist.She keeps telling the press there is no vigilante movement aimed at retaliating against a drug and gang culture which killed more than 1,600 people last year, and a federal government and local police authority which seems part eunuch and part AWOL.

The CCJ said it was setting a July 5, 2009, deadline for some government action or it would kill a criminal a day: "The government wants to believe that we don't exist," a line at the end of the CCJ announcement read. "But we are closer than they think." The 10-point manifesto issued Tuesday was the second communication from an organization that was unheard of prior to its initial threat, made on Jan. 15.

"The CCJ declares war on the thieves, kidnappers and extortionists that have put in risk the rights of citizens and reiterates its plan to terminate the life of a criminal every 24 hours for the good of all Juarenses," the document stated in Spanish.

The manifesto, sent via e-mail to the El Paso Times and other media, was signed by leaders identified only as Comandante Abraham and Sub-Comandante Gabriel "Durito" (Hard).
If order is not restored by midnight July 5, "the CCJ will take to the streets with its army of men and women to do what the government could not," the group stated.

Classes at a pre-kindergarten were canceled Tuesday when a note threatening the lives of children was posted at the school's entrance, demanding about $5,000, the Norte newspaper reported. That seemed like a reprise of a bizarre attempt by drug cartels to build community support in November, in a perverse way, but threatening to kill or kidnap young school children if the local government did not honor promised salary bonuses to school teachers. Maybe bizarre is too mild a term.

After four frozen heads were apparently found by local residents in ice cream and ice machine coolers in Juàrez and its suburbs in a little more than a week, the trend continued at a record pace in the young new year.

The El Paso Times reported that "the headless body of a man, the second in as many days, was found Wednesday in a canal in the community of Juàrez y Reforma. possibly linked to three severed heads left the day before in an ice chest in Guadalupe Distrito Bravos, police said."

The attorney general told a local radio show Wednesday that the alleged vigilantes are just locals trying to stir up more trouble and destabilize legitimate efforts by local, committed public servants to clean up the drug gangs and narco culture which has swept northern Mexico in recent years.

Just see the headlines pro and con of outgoing President George Bush's commutation of sentences of two U.S. drug agents involved in a controversial incident in the region, to feel the international heat on the issue. Yet for more than 800,000 El Paso residents and perhaps 1.4 million more in Juàrez, it is day-to-day horror, fear, frustration, and domestic disruption which noone not living there could fathom;.

The current mayor of Juàrez, José Reyes Ferrìz - who must live with the knowledge that colleagues in other cities have fled their posts, become puppets of drug lords, or been assassinated - surveys the daily carjackings, kidnappings of U.S. factory managers, neighborhood turf wars, and personal violence to innocent residents, and tells citizens just to "maintain faith in the authorities."

In the past 48 hours, while asking his constituents to stay cool, calm and loyal, these things, among others, happened:

The attempted kidnapping of a U.S. "maquiladora" (border factory) manager was foiled at the last second; a 13-year-old boy was shot and seriously wounded in a drive-by shooting; three more headless bodies were found in a Juàrez suburb; a local urban anthropologist says weapons, laundered cash, Colombian, and Dominican drug dealers all interact sometimes with impunity along the Tex-Mex border here, and numerous people were carjacked and held for ransom.

Thinking back to the urban plight and breakdown in law and order in the Indian "Slum Dog" film, I could only think that life mimics art which mimics life which makes reality so, so, much stranger than fiction.

How else do you rationally explain that in what sounds like a last, desperate act of frustration to do "something"?: To have its threats taken seriously, the purported vigilantes - the CCJ in effect are now saying something like "Okay guys, now, well, now you are pushing us toooo far! You are forcing our hand."

If the threat to kill "a criminal a day" by July 5th wasn't serious enough, the CCJ email said that if authorities don't crack down, they would be forced to "form a website with information on our group by February 2nd!"

Saturday, June 20, 2009

The Strange and Tragic Story of Valentin Elizalde

The Strange and Tragic Story of Valentin Elizalde

"Now you know who you're dealing with, come and test your luck." - from "To My Enemies"

Nicknamed "The Golden Rooster," Valentin Elizalde, 27, was well known in Northern Mexico for his brass-based traditional "banda" music: polka-inspired and with gritty lyrics. Musicians like him along the Mexico-Texas frontier have long documented the trials of border life and have turned the region's drug lords into living legends.

In August 2006, on the popular video-sharing Web site YouTube.com, someone posted a photo slideshow depicting a succession of bullet-riddled bodies set to Elizalde's song "A Mis Enemigos" ("To My Enemies") as the soundtrack.

The gory collection had a partisan theme: it was taunting the Gulf Cartel, showing only victims aligned with it and its enforcement arm, known as Los Zetas. And just so nobody missed the point, the screen name of the person who shared the gloating documentary was "matazeta," or Zeta killer.

Volleys of foul-mouthed insults soon began to be posted to the site, resulting in a strange dialogue between self-described supporters of the Sinaloa and Gulf cartels, which are locked in a turf battle over lucrative smuggling corridors into the United States.

On the YouTube site, the rhetoric escalated in the days before Elizalde was slated to play in Reynosa a border town in the heart of Gulf Cartel territory. "Videos like this cause the death of Chapitos," warned a Gulf supporter in a posting one day before the concert, using a slang term for El Chapo's followers.