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THIS INFORMATION WAS POSTED BY EL OCCIDENTAL
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2025
The Government of Colima assured that operations are already underway to find the perpetrators.
Elizabeth Ibal
A violent incident shocked residents of the municipality of Colima, as armed individuals broke into a bakery and killed six people, while wounding another. State authorities are conducting operations to find the killers.
The incident occurred before dawn inside the El Pichón bread-making business, located on Francisco Javier Mina, in the Placetas neighborhood of Colima.
A group of armed individuals arrived at the scene, attacked seven people inside, and then left. After hearing gunshots, neighbors notified authorities through emergency numbers.
State Preventive Police officers responded to the establishment as first responders and found the seven people with gunshot wounds. Paramedics later confirmed that five men and one woman had died.
One woman was injured and was immediately taken to a nearby hospital.
In response to the multiple homicides, the Colima government and the State Attorney General's Office issued a statement confirming the death toll from the attack.
"This Tuesday morning, armed individuals entered a commercial establishment in the aforementioned location in the municipality of Colima and fired firearms, leaving six people dead and one injured, who was taken for medical attention."
They also indicated that the State Coordination Board for the Construction of Peace and Security in Colima is working in a coordinated manner to locate those responsible for the armed attack.
In addition, members of the Public Security Secretariat (SSP), the armed forces, and the Colima Coordination, Control, Command, Communication, Computing, and Intelligence Center (C5i) are supporting the investigation by following up on the investigation.
In this regard, the El Pichón bakery, which has been in operation since 1990, issued a statement regretting the events and announcing that they would not be able to deliver orders as they normally do to homes and businesses.
"We have been victims of insecurity in our family business. There are no words to express this event. We thank our clients and friends for their concern and displays of affection, and we ask for their humanity and empathy in the face of this terrible situation."
So far, no arrests have been made for this multiple homicide.
Most likely CJNG targeting this business because they refused to pay piso. I wonder if the killers grabbed a couple of conchitas before they ran away from the panaderos bakery. Nuff Said!!!
ReplyDeleteLife is worth nothing, to the killers.
DeleteThey should be rounded up and killed the same way they kill the victims....cold blooded.
Can yall do a report on mayos/cabrera fighting in chihuahua? And ncdj fighting in Guadalupe y calvo
ReplyDeleteNo body cares about those Durangutanes 🦧
DeleteSnitcher Truther snitched!!!
ReplyDeleteMost likely…
ReplyDeletePipe down.
You know 0.
Another day, another mass shooting. Does CNN have anything to say? Say it ain't so.
ReplyDeleteMan I just can't figure out, why Mexicans are killing Mexicans. Why kill the shoppers buying bread for the day. Over here ICE in face masks, taking migrants away, from there jobs.
ReplyDeleteRubio NYC
Rubio R. P. It's not just one race killing , there's many. I'm sure there's killings in NYC too.
Delete“The killers are being sought?!”
ReplyDeleteLMAO LMAO yeah right with your huge .0001% homicide solve rate
I'm still waiting for word from the FGR, on who killed Valeria, the influencer that was killed at her beauty salon.
DeleteInstead of investigating, they go to, the go go bars and get drunk
The Annihilation of Los Rusos
ReplyDeleteBy ZETA Investigations, September 1, 2025
An internal purge against “tienderos” or small-time drug dealers operating in various parts of Mexicali is the hypothesis that explains the unexpected wave of murders documented in various parts of the municipality, which investigators said had no pattern or territorial order, although most of them occurred in the western part of the city.
The agents justified that it was a real “sweep” perpetrated by the criminal structure of Los Rusos, a dominant group operating in the municipality of Mexicali and led by Jesús Alexander Sánchez Félix, known as El Ruso, who already has warrants issued by U.S. federal authorities for drug trafficking.
They revealed that it was not a confrontation between members of the two factions of the Sinaloa Cartel, but rather a “cleansing,” an annihilation of drug dealers who were allegedly discovered selling products other than those distributed by Los Rusos, aligned with La Mayiza, throughout the streets of the municipality of Mexicali.
Sources from the Security Tables for Peace Building state that, of the last 21 murders documented in Mexicali, 18 are linked to this internal “purge” by Los Rusos, who currently control the sale and distribution of narcotics, as well as their price.
This means that, in recent weeks, murders linked to small-scale drug trafficking have increased from 50% to almost 90%, causing alarm among the authorities.
Since the arrival of the Morena governments, Mexicali has documented 1,263 murders, with 2022 being the most violent year with 266. Since then, there has been a reduction in subsequent years of 181 and 204, in 2023 and 2024, respectively.
end of part 1
THE WAVE OF VIOLENCE
ReplyDeleteOn July 14, Lieutenant Colonel Julián Leyzaola Pérez resigned as director of the Municipal Police, a position that was taken over by lawyer Luis Felipe Chan Baltazar. While the new police chief had not yet fully taken over the office, criminals led by Javier Eduardo Barraza Ramos, known as El Misil (innocent until proven guilty by a judge, according to Article 13 of the CNPP), carried out an operation that culminated in the murder of Roberto Méndez Arreola, deputy commander of the Mexicali Municipal Police, who was shot 88 times with high-powered weapons.
On his second day, Luis Felipe Chan had to bury a police officer and face a family demanding justice. From that moment on, the number of homicides skyrocketed unusually and broke with the downward trend, as 22 murders were documented in January, February closed with 17; March saw 16, and April reached its lowest point with six. May and June remained at 11 and 15, respectively, and July closed with 17, due to the “cleansing” that began in the last few days.
August has already seen 21 homicides, with the possibility of closing as the most violent month of the year. Some of the most notable cases were on July 28, for example, where three people were killed in Valle de las Misiones. They were surprised by a group of criminals who broke into their home, beat a woman named Sugey to death, and shot the other two men, Carlos and Jesús, in the head, whom they also tried to burn after they were dead.
end of part2
The address was identified as a drug dealing location, according to investigating authorities. Five homicides were documented that day in a matter of hours. Two days later, heavily armed criminals broke into the Elegance motel, west of Mexicali, with the intention of murdering the business manager. They stormed in with assault rifles and fired their weapons, then left, allowing workers to take the victims to a hospital in Mexicali, where they received medical attention. The violent episodes continued, but on August 7, one of the most clear-cut crimes was committed when the body of a person was abandoned in the Popular Santo Niño neighborhood, west of the city. The body was thrown out of a red pickup truck and was naked, with its face covered and two messages, one on the body and the other on a cardboard sign.
ReplyDeleteThe first one said, “Palomo, you're next,” while the second one said, “This is going to happen to all the grasshoppers for selling in bulk.” There was no signature, but it was clear that the crime came from a cell of Los Rusos, as they are the dominant group. The identity of this individual known as Palomo has not been established, although in March of this year, the nickname emerged during the alleged threats by Los Rusos against Lieutenant Colonel Leyzaola, which were posted on various bridges in Mexicali, just days after he took office.
The banners were signed by El Ruso, El P1, and Palomo, although it was ultimately confirmed that the real authors of the threats were Los Chapitos, with the intention of creating a state of alert in the area. Another notable crime during this violent day took place away from this area, specifically in the Industrial neighborhood of Mexicali, where he was surprised by two hitmen who shot him outside his residence on August 14.
The lawyer, Antonio Hernández Espinoza, who posed as a human rights activist but was linked to Comandante Cobra, Iván Riebeling—now deceased due to illness—was killed by hitmen, according to intelligence information from the authorities, because he was located at a drug sales point. From this, it was concluded that there were indications that this was a point of sale for cocaine and heroin.
In total, 20 murders by firearm were documented this season, 18 of which were linked to organized crime and the same wave of murders that were documented -most of them- in the western urban area of the city, where Carlos Alberto Villamán Luna, known as 6-1, and his criminal cell operate, as well as Mario Antonio Valenzuela, alias El Cabezón, who is identified as the leader of a cell of hitmen operating in the western part of the city.
end of part3
BEHIND THE BIG HEAD AND THE CAIMAN
ReplyDeleteMembers of the Peacebuilding Security Committees identify two men, Marco Antonio Valenzuela, alias El Cabezón, and José Alonso Rocha Lazcano, alias El Caimán, as the main suspects in most of the crimes (innocent until proven guilty by a judge, according to Article 13 of the CNPP), as the alleged leaders of the cells responsible for investigating, detecting, and assassinating any small-time drug dealer who is not aligned with them or who is receiving product from other criminal groups for urban drug sales.
The first of these leads a cell of hitmen that operates mainly in the northern part of the city, where he has a cell under his command that has even been found to include municipal police officers, who support them in searching homes and committing crimes.
The second is another cell leader who was previously in charge of supervising human trafficking, but now controls several areas of drug dealing, which means he is responsible for detecting irregularities in the sale of narcotics in the communities. It is important to note that since Los Rusos began exercising absolute operational control in Mexicali in 2020, independent local groups have been prohibited from engaging in all types of illicit activities, from urban drug sales, which used to be an open business as long as it corresponded to the Sinaloa Cartel, to human trafficking, usury, slot machines, car cloning, and other illicit activities, which could be run by independent criminal groups.
As Los Rusos' territorial control advanced, prices and caps began to be set for the sale of drugs or quotas for any illicit activity. In Mexicali, a pound of methamphetamine can be worth up to 60,000 pesos, when its real value is 5,000 pesos, but the “shooters” only get a small percentage of that, because most of it is captured by Los Rusos, who also promise protection from other criminal groups and some authorities. The drugs are already marked and packaged, making it difficult to distribute or sell drugs from another supplier, and if they do, it becomes detectable on the streets. Investigators are analyzing whether the murders in the area are also related to the criminal cell of 6-1, and Jorge Peralta, known as El Tío Nay, who also have significant influence in the areas where most of the murders in the area took place. However, no concrete conclusions have been reached yet.
They are also keeping open the possibility that an outside group, also from La Mayiza, led by a man known as Samuel Fuentes, alias El Muchacho con Barba, leader of Los Demonios, from Sonora, could be operating in Mexicali, although they do not know the extent of its influence.
last part