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

Saturday, July 4, 2026

From Fuel Theft to Customs: Family Link Revealed to Operator Sanctioned by the US

“Sol Prendido” for Borderland Beat 




An investigation by Mexicans Against Corruption (MCCI) revealed that Analee de Jesús Juraidini Silva, sister of fuel-theft kingpin Oscar Guillermo Juraidini—who was recently sanctioned by the U.S. Department of the Treasury—continues to work undisturbed as a key official at the Matamoros Customs Office.


The criminal network operated by declaring U.S. fuel as lubricant to evade taxes for the benefit of the CJNG, using the same customs post previously occupied by another official who is now imprisoned at El Altiplano.





Years ago it was an open secret. Today it’s proven that the Jalisco New Generation Cartel is infiltrated in the customs of Matamoros, Tamaulipas. Proof of this, they assure, is the case of the sister of Oscar Guillermo Juraidini Silva. Sanctioned by the US Department of the Treasury as one of the most important financial operators of organized crime. 


His sister, whose name is Analee de Jesús Juraidini Silva, works at none other than the Matamoros customs office through which her brother Oscar Juraidini trafficked millions of liters of stolen fuel in recent years for the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.


According to Mexicans Against Corruption and Impunity (MCCI) since 2019, Analee de Jesús Juraidini, has held various key positions in the Matamoros customs office. One of them being the director of procedures and legal affairs. 


The same position held by Carlos Eugenio Benítez Orta until he was arrested in Texas on charges of facilitating the smuggling of illegal fuel across that border. He is currently imprisoned in Mexico at the El Altiplano prison.


This character, Benítez Orta, held the same position until 2022, which was later left to Juraidini's sister, right? So we have this link between the former customs official who was arrested in the United States in early June of this year. 


Juarini's sister, who came to occupy the position that he left at the time he was arrested, Carlos Eugenio Benítez Orta was in charge of supervising the customs supervisors at the Matamoros customs office. 


According to official documents, Analee de Jesús Jurdini continues to work undisturbed from the Matamoros customs office, the national epicenter of fuel smuggling in our country. 

Despite the fact that on June 30th, the US Department of the Treasury included his brother and several shipping companies that he managed on the list of the Office of Foreign Assets Control for being part of a fiscal huachicol network of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.


In this same statement, the Treasury Department affirmed that the drug cartels in Mexico use the dirty money from fiscal huachicol to finance political campaigns throughout the country and to buy the wills of corrupt and colluding politicians. Just as well, to ensure that they, the cartels, can obtain drug routes or obtain positions of their associates in different branches of the federal public administration.






Sources: Azteca Noticias, Borderland Beat Archives

The Mexican Version of El Cartel de los Sapos

“Sol Prendido” for Borderland Beat 





The term "Cártel de los Sapos" (Cartel of Snitches) was coined in 2008 by Andrés López, a former drug trafficker who chronicled in a book the collapse of the Norte del Valle Cartel—the last major Colombian criminal organization of which he was a member.


In this context, a "sapo" (snitch) is a trafficker who betrays their organization and provides information about their associates to the United States in exchange for a reduced sentence.


The central premise of the book—which was later adapted into series and films—is that the United States developed an incentive scheme in which traffickers competed to provide information on other members of their organizations; this dynamic ultimately brought down the Norte del Valle Cartel and similar groups.


The United States is now replicating this strategy with Mexico; it requested the extradition of 92 kingpins in three waves. Once in the U.S., these individuals have been forced to negotiate from a position of disadvantage; to avoid spending the rest of their lives in prison, they are providing information about their own organizations, their rivals, and the politicians who aided their operations.


A similar situation arose regarding the accusations against Rubén Rocha Moya and nine Sinaloa officials for collusion with drug cartels; two of the accused turned themselves in to provide information. Furthermore, according to *The New York Times*, 12 high-level politicians linked to the MORENA party—including several governors—are already providing the U.S. with information regarding ties between organized crime and public officials across the country.


This is creating uncertainty not only within criminal organizations but also within government ranks, where former allies could turn into informants. Consequently, many are considering surrendering or at least cooperating with the U.S., as failing to do so carries the risk of becoming a scapegoat for others' confessions, thereby triggering the disintegration of criminal networks.




Source: Milenio

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

U.S. Government Targets Fuel Theft Networks Linked to Mexican Cartels

On June 30, 2026, the U.S. government launched a coordinated financial and law enforcement operation against a fuel theft network operated by the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG). The action, carried out by several U.S. agencies in coordination with Mexico's Financial Intelligence Unit (UIF), targeted two Mexican nationals and nine entities involved in the network.


This action is directed at disrupting the cartel's transnational operations on both sides of the border by targeting fuel smuggling, falsified customs documents, and shell companies operating as part of a transnational criminal enterprise.


The sanctions also include FinCEN's provision of additional information on financial typologies and red flags indicative of Mexican fuel theft networks and other Mexico-based Transnational Criminal Organizations (TCOs) involved in smuggling fuel from the United States into Mexico through schemes involving tax evasion within Mexican territory.


What Is “Huachicol Fiscal” (Fiscal Fuel Theft)?

 

Fuel theft in Mexico has long been a major source of criminal revenue for different cartels.It gained greater relevance after 2014 in the state of Guanajuato and the so-called Red Triangle, which encompasses the state's geography and its network of fuel pipelines.

 

However, as regulations tightened and profit margins increased, this criminal enterprise evolved from the local theft and sale of gasoline through clandestine vendors into a multinational network of companies operating across different countries.

 

In recent years, cartels and brokers involved in these activities (huachicoleros) have increasingly purchased and smuggled fuel from the United States into Mexico, where it is sold on the Mexican black market. Recent estimates indicate that between one-third and one-half of all fuel consumed in Mexico is linked to the illicit fuel smuggling trade.

 

A Criminal Crisis Announced

 

Following the enactment of Mexico's energy overhaul in 2013 under President Enrique Peña Nieto, the government intended to: (1) end energy subsidies; (2) increase the IEPS tax rate on fuel imports; and (3) allow Mexican, U.S., and other international energy companies to obtain permits facilitating U.S.-Mexico energy trade.

 

All Mexican companies importing fuel must obtain a permit from Mexico's Secretariat of Energy (Secretaría de Energía, SENER) and pay the IEPS tax as a licensed fuel importer. However, SENER does not authorize these companies to wholesale fuel within Mexico. To sell imported fuel to other Mexican companies, they must obtain an additional permit from Mexico's National Energy Commission (Comisión Nacional de Energía, CNE) to store, transport, and ultimately commercialize it within Mexico.

 

This created a bottleneck in Mexico's wholesale fuel market because entities holding CNE permits are prohibited from importing fuel, while most Mexican companies do not possess both SENER and CNE permits. "In summary, companies involved in importing fuel into Mexico must hold a SENER permit, while companies involved in buying and selling fuel within Mexico must hold a CNE permit."

 

This changed under the administration of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO). During his administration, the government rescinded most existing SENER licenses, restricted new SENER permits to a limited number of fuel importers, and further limited CNE authorizations. These policies reduced the legal supply of imported fuel and significantly limited the number of entities authorized to wholesale it, resulting in greater market concentration among a small number of energy companies.

 

Combined with the price spread between U.S. and Mexican fuel prices created by the IEPS tax, these conditions created a highly profitable opportunity for organized crime. Fuel purchased in the United States could be smuggled into Mexico without paying taxes and then wholesaled through entities linked to criminal cartels.

 

Breaking the Political-Criminal Pact

 

Since President Trump declared a national emergency at the U.S. southern border and expanded actions against the Mexican cartels, the U.S. government has sought to ensure the total elimination of the cartels and other Transnational Criminal Organizations (TCOs) through their designation as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) and Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGTs).

 

This approach has prompted U.S. authorities not only to target the principal kingpins but also to disrupt the flow of money and the political protection these organizations receive within Mexican territory. Following financial investigations that identified fuel theft as the second-largest source of cartel revenue, criminal investigations linked these networks to major financiers of political campaigns in Mexico.

 

U.S. authorities have intensified their efforts to disrupt this source of revenue, thereby reducing the financial resources that allegedly sustain the political protection enjoyed by these criminal organizations.

 

Because the primary investigations and sanctions are directed at the CJNG and its allies within the CDG, the principal point of entry into Mexico is located in the state of Tamaulipas.

 

This development also coincides with two recent events in Tamaulipas: reports linking Governor Américo Villarreal to alleged negotiations involving Mexican officials and U.S. authorities, and the arrest of Octavio Leal Moncada, known as "El Profe" or "El Tarzán," in Santiago, Nuevo León. These events might indicate that pressure from the United States on Mexican authorities is increasing to compel the Mexican government to act against these criminal networks.

 

However, if the principal political actors remain associated with the MORENA party, the Mexican government continues to resist the extradition of Rubén Rocha Moya despite the ongoing investigations—even after Mexican authorities reportedly uncovered a network of companies allegedly operated by the Rocha Moya family to embezzle public funds—and progress in dismantling the cartels remains limited, these developments may ultimately result in broader sanctions against Mexico.


Sources: OFAC, FINCEN, BorderlandBeat

Monday, June 29, 2026

Columna Armada Auto-Defensa Founder “El Profe" Octavio Leal Moncada Arrested in Nuevo Leon

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat


Octavio Leal Moncada, known by the aliases "El Profe" and "El Tarzán," was arrested this Sunday in Santiago, Nuevo Leon. His arrest led to protests and blockades on the Victoria-Monterrey Highway in Hidalgo.

Octavio Leal Moncada is an 83-year old social and political leader from Tamaulipas, known mainly for founding and leading the Columna Armada Pedro J. Méndez, an organization with a presence in the central region of the state, especially in Hidalgo, Mainero, Villagrán and San Carlos.

Los Rusos Retaliate for Operations, Killing Two State Police Agents in Mexicali, Baja California

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat

Two police officers were gunned down in separate events in Mexicali, Baja California this weekend. State authorities claim these attacks are linked to recent operations against Los Rusos, a faction of the Sinaloa Cartel.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Five Bodies and Burned Vehicles Found after Shootout in San Francisco de Borja, Chihuahua

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat


A shootout between La Línea and La Gente Nueva del Tigre left at least five dead outside the town of Tutuaca, in San Francisco de Borja, Chihuahua this morning.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Military Seizes Flamethrower in Escorpiones Territory in Matamoros, Tamaulipas

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat

During a routine patrol on Wednesday, the Mexican military seized dozens of firearms, extensive tactical equipment, five vehicles, and a Throwflame XL18 flamethrower in what appears to be a disrupted weapons drop linked to Grupo Escorpiones.

Los Chapitos Plaza Boss El Güero Pin Captured in Escuinapa, Sinaloa

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat

Misael Guererro, “El Güero Pin, the Los Chapitos plaza boss in southern Sinaloa, was captured in Escuinapa, Sinaloa by the Mexican military yesterday morning. Throughout the day, locals reported shootouts, blockades, and burning vehicles across the region.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Six Gunmen Dead After Shootout With Soldiers Near Uruapan, Michoacán

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat


Six gunmen were killed and one was arrested after a shootout with the National Guard and the Mexican Army in the town of Jucutacato, south of the municipality of Uruapan, this morning.

La Familia Michoacana is Leaving Burned Corpses Across Puebla

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat


On June 22, two bodies were discovered inside a burned-out vehicle on the Periférico Ecológico near the Chapulco lagoon, south of the city of Puebla. A narco banner attributed to La Familia Michoacana was left at the scene. Two days later, more burned bodies were found.

Eleven Killed in Two Massacres Over Weekend in Guanajuato

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat


Eleven civilians were killed in two separate massacres in the state of Guanajuato this weekend. 

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

24,000 Liters of Meth Found at Warehouse in Los Mochis, Sinaloa

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat

Mexico's Army and National Guard seized 24,000 liters of liquid methamphetamine and massive amounts of precursor chemicals at a Sinaloa Cartel warehouse in Los Mochis, Sinaloa last week.


Monday, June 22, 2026

Sinaloa Cartel Cocaine Brokers Arrested in Medellín, Colombia

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat

Two Mexican citizens acting as cocaine brokers for the Sinaloa Cartel were arrested in Medellín, Colombia, during a coordinated operation between Colombian and US authorities on June 19.

I’m Not Showing Up Hungry In Hell

“Sol Prendido” for Borderland Beat 




There’s a crude joke often heard amongst Mexican foodies that talks about them not arriving to hell with hunger in their guts. The hilarity behind that metaphor is that it’s a funny rebuttal frequently said in frankness for anyone that has shit to say against high-calorie humans. 


In many ways, a woman by the name of Briseida Abigail lived her life in that regard. Callous about her appearance or the dangerous situation she accidentally fell into. One of her last moments alive shows her on film in her underwear, accompanied by another woman while lip-syncing several narco ballads. 


Assassins from the Mayiza mob took it as an insult to see a Velcro patch with the letters GDGP on her chest rig. And they had no problems executing her during a recent armed attack in Escuinapa. The acronym which stands for the Gente de Güero Pin or El Güero Pin’s Mob is what lead to her death. 


Briseida Abigail


Escuinapa, Sinaloa



Source: Ivan

3D Printers Found at Explosives Workshop in Lerdo de Tejada, Durango

By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat

Mexican authorities seized four 3d printers at a criminal explosives workshop in Lerdo de Tejada, Durango last week. The bust highlights the ease of constructing IEDs using commercially available components and machinery.