“Sol Prendido” for Borderland Beat
Chapter 1 Introduction:
For years we've been told the same story: that drug trafficking comes from Latin America, crosses borders, and arrives in the United States as if it were just a victim of the problem.
But what if it weren't that simple? What if, within that same country, there were organized criminal networks as profitable as any famous cartel? Today we're not going to talk about kingpins with extravagant nicknames or armored convoys crossing deserts.
We're going to talk about something less visible, but just as real: drug traffickers born and raised in our neighboring country. Some with the appearance of businessmen, others dressed as bikers, moving tons of drugs without attracting attention.
That's the story that rarely appears in movies and news reports, but it helps us understand why the fentanyl crisis isn't just an imported problem, but also an internal one.
So stick around until the end because what you're about to discover shatters the traditional image of drug trafficking. And if you're interested in the topic, we'll tell you how it directly affects entire communities, even ordinary families.
Chapter 2: The Story of a PlayStation and the DEA.
Let's start with a story straight out of a movie. According to court reports, in 2017 four DEA agents had spent months trying to dismantle a fentanyl trafficking network. The outlook seemed bleak; they only had a small group of street users in sight.
But then something as trivial as a gift changed everything. A buyer received a Sony PlayStation, but the people keeping watch noticed something strange. The box was much heavier than expected.
Upon opening it, they discovered 30 kg of an illicit substance with opioid characteristics, worth approximately 3 million Mexican pesos. This discovery led agents to trace the drugs to Novi, Michigan and ultimately identify the organization's leader, Maurice Mountain McCoy, a white American living in Los Angeles.
This case shows us something important. Not all cartels are Latino. Not all drug traffickers use armored trucks or speak Spanish. Some use motorcycles, have connections throughout the country, and operate under the guise of organizations or gangs.
Chapter 3: The American Cartels and the US Definition
Now, let's put this in context. In the United States, the Department of Justice defines drug cartels as large foreign criminal organizations. Yes, foreign. That means that for the US government, if the organization is from here, it simply can't be called a cartel, even if it does exactly the same thing: traffic fentanyl, control routes, and launder money.
That's why terms like motorcycle gangs or outlaw motorcycle gangs, have emerged, with famous groups such as the Hells Angels, Outlaws, Pagans, or Bandidos. They’re highly sophisticated structures. They travel in groups, covering miles across the country, distributing synthetic opioids and armed to the teeth. According to experts, thanks to these gangs, drugs like fentanyl are no longer just a problem on the southern border with Mexico, but affect entire neighborhoods in the northeast and the Great Lakes region.
Chapter 4: And how do the American cartels operate?
Unlike Mexican cartels that control territories and employ paramilitary violence, American gangs operate with a system of local cells. Each leader manages their own area, each dealer does their part, and there is no central command that orders everything. For example, these networks buy drugs from Mexican cartels and handle everything else: transportation, distribution, sales, and recovery of the money.
They even use sophisticated money laundering methods, either through financial institutions or by secretly moving cash across the southern border. This makes them surprisingly efficient. They don't need to be Latino or have notoriety to generate enormous profits. While in Mexico drug lords seek fame, here discretion protects their operations. That's why, although around 33,000 violent gangs operate in the United States with nearly 1.4 million members involved in drug trafficking and urban violence, according to the DEA, their leaders rarely achieve the notoriety of a Chapo Guzmán.
Chapter 5: The reality of fentanyl
Now, a crucial point is how these entities directly impact the population of the United States. Fentanyl ceased to be seen as a border problem and became a domestic threat. The distribution route crosses wealthy and densely populated states, reaching places where few would imagine the presence of these substances: naval bases, universities, and neighborhoods.
A shocking case occurred in 2021 at a naval base in Illinois. Four young sailors bought what they thought was another drug from a motorcyclist. They didn't know it contained fentanyl. One of them died of an overdose.
Incidents like this show that the crisis doesn't discriminate based on uniform, profession, or economic status. Drugs not only crosses borders, it permeates entire environments, enters ordinary homes, and transforms an illegal trafficking problem into a public health emergency and national security.
This expansion also helped to understand why the issue has escalated into a political matter. According to international reports, Washington has increased pressure to strengthen cooperation with Mexico in operations against fentanyl labs and production routes. The reason is clear. When overdoses grow within your own cities, the problem ceases to be something distant and becomes an internal strategic priority. Because today, more than a story of borders, fentanyl is a crisis that connects streets, families, hospitals, and governments on both sides.
Chapter 6: The Difference with Latin American Cartels
Does this mean that criminal groups in the United States operate the same way as the large cartels in Latin America? Not exactly. The main difference lies in the scale, territorial control, and the way they operate.
Organizations like those of Sinaloa, Medellín, or Cali have been known for using paramilitary-style violence, disputing entire regions, and establishing networks of corruption that reach local authorities and even political structures. Their power is visible.
They dominate territories, impose rules, and build reputations that instill fear. In contrast, many criminal networks within the United States operate in a more fragmented manner. They operate through cells with local leadership and intergroup agreements that prioritize distribution and profits over open control of the territory.
Coordination is usually commercial, not hierarchical, and that makes them less visible, but no less active, and this doesn't mean they’re less dangerous. They move millions of dollars, take advantage of modern technology to communicate and distribute substances, and adapt quickly to avoid arrest.
The big difference is that they don't seek the limelight or political power. Their strength lies in their low profile. While some Latin American drug lords become public figures, these networks prefer anonymity because going unnoticed is precisely what allows them to continue operating. And this model has a face on the streets.
Chapter 7: Gangs and Motorcycle Clubs
These organizations include the Latin Kings, MS-13, Bandidos, among others, with thousands of members. They operate like small corporations, they negotiate the shipments, transport them, distribute them, and then launder the money within the legal financial system or by smuggling cash into Mexico. Their power is territorial, but fragmented. They control streets, blocks, and neighborhoods. And although they don't have Improvised Armored Fighting Vehicles (IAFV) or flashy trucks, they do have souped-up motorcycles, weapons, and sophisticated logistics. Their modus operandi is efficient and deadly, poisoning entire communities in the United States.
Chapter 8: The Bias in How Drug Trafficking Is Named
There is another aspect that is hardly ever discussed: the bias in the way drug trafficking is described within the country. Although many members of these criminal networks are white Americans with surnames like Firestone, Wyatt, Adams, or Jones, the media and official discourse tend to reserve the word "cartels" for Mexican, Colombian, or Latin American organizations.
As journalist Jesús Esquivel, who specializes in drug trafficking, has pointed out, racism even exists in the terminology used to describe drug trafficking in the United States. Groups made up of white people are called gangs or organizations.
While Latinos are directly labeled as cartels, even though their structures, profits, and levels of violence may be comparable. This doesn’t mean that all gangs are made up of white people. There are also Hispanic, African American, and other groups from diverse backgrounds.
However, the language used to describe them isn’t neutral. It reflects a historical bias in how drug traffickers are perceived and where the problem is supposed to originate. The result is a public narrative that continues to present the drug trade as primarily foreign, when in reality there is an organized domestic market with sophisticated structures and national corridors that maintain the flow of fentanyl and other synthetic opioids within the country itself.
Understanding this completely changes the traditional image of this illegal business, because our neighboring country has faces we rarely imagine. White men on motorcycles moving tons of cocaine across the territory, without the need for Improvised Armored Fighting Vehicles (IAFV) or flashy trucks.
At this point, it's worth asking ourselves, what do you think about the existence of American cartels that few know about while we continue to believe that narcotics are just a foreign problem? Do you think that would change the conversation about drugs if more were said about the internal criminal networks of our neighboring country and not just the Latin American cartels?
Source: Milenio

🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️ I cant even read this bullshit. its so stupid.
ReplyDeleteBut its true whos buying all these drugs by the ton? Americans, who abuses these drugs? Americans. Who are the drug pushers on tje streets americans! Whos behind all the murders in tje i.s over drugs americans!
DeleteYou already read it fool.
DeleteAnother stupid article. Why don’t you focus on actual news. Stop acting like a clown.
DeleteOh my goodness.
DeleteDon’t worry, you still can learn reading. It is never too late and you don’t have to be ashamed. You can do it!
DeleteNobody cares what you can and can’t do. Get off the site plain and simple.
Delete1054
DeleteI didnt read it you kidding
@11:40 Than you're an idiot for assuming instead of being informed. Dummies like that usually live in ignorance not knowing what is really going on. Pathetic people.
DeleteFor real, has the author never heard of RICO laws or read about how the American Sicilian Mafia was crushed? Does the US not go after Prison Gangs, Street Gangs, Motorcycle Gangs, etc.?
Delete11:40 if you read shit or not, beleeme, nobody cares!
Deletelike the cartels dont call themselves cartels? cartel del gulfo.. cartel de sinaloa..etc. why is this author so obessed with semantics? this was a dumb read
ReplyDeleteIs this real? Like go back and read the article you just wrote. Maybe even read it three times before you get it.
DeleteTrue
DeletePay attention. It's clearly stated that the U.S. only brands foreign organizations as cartels. Why??? Why are they always just talking about the foreign cartels/organizations and not the domestic organizations/cartels???
Deletekind of a weak argument in my opinion. he explained the difference. cartels control territories to the extent that they are essentially seperate states. cartels have an army, biker gangs do not. also, internally trafficking drugs rather than internationally trafficking drugs is another big difference. seems like grasping at straws to me. yes america has crime and gangs but it doesn't have cartels, controlling entire regions and fighting with the national military effectively. it's an entirely different kettle of fish.
ReplyDeleteEverything you wrote is wrong. If you only knew.
Delete@8.47 everything you wrote is meaningless, if only you said something.
Delete818 Many Americans (Caucasian), MX Americans, African Americans, play a pivotal roll in pushing weight to other countries out of US. From every US port. Just like Americans brining work into the US. Not through Border Wall. Main door.
DeleteWhat you described is something that is more recent and has nothing to do with cartels. They were called cartels before they started not giving a damn about attaching attention. And sorry to inform you but gangs do control territory, and biker gangs do have armed cells . Look into shit instead of just running your mouth and making yourself look like a jackazz.
DeleteWtf. What heap of trash article. Been getting more of these lately. You're pathetic.
ReplyDeleteYour mom is pathetic.😭
DeleteSorry it hurts you so much that I know my who my dad is.
DeleteTypical US Trump supporter let’s focus and point the finger elsewhere, because in the U.S. we dont have any problems . Yes we have the most addicts in the world but Mexicans bring the drugs if it wasn’t for them we wouldn’t have addicts lol sarcasm . Because anyone who knows economics knows supply comes before demand right? lol oh wait it’s the other way around .
DeleteStart your own site then. F@&
Delete''Wtf. What heap of trash article''
DeleteNo shit,this is that bitch sol and his anti U.S bullshit
Sol fuck off with your crap
Delete''Typical US Trump supporter let’s focus and point the finger elsewhere''
DeleteThat is a fuckin classic,this is how insane this shit is becoming,label gangs in the U.S as terrorist because Trump labelled cartels terrorist in mexico? Your probably white anyway with a ring in your nose and blue hair,go protest ICE and dont forget to step in front of an SUV....
Lmao, biker gangs have a heavier drug influence in Canada and Australia, they’re small time in the US. Majority of big buyers in the US are African American. I can tell you that from experience.
ReplyDeleteWrong. Simply wrong. The majority of "big buyers" in the US are not African American. Stop with the bullshit.
DeleteLMAO , sure U.S has small biker problem. U.S probably has the most diverse and powerful criminals of all sorts operating in its borders....
DeleteWhy not make the cartels register as sex offenders and charge them with jay walking. Why do we need adjectives to communicate what we're talking about anyway? Let's just blur all the lines because feelings.
DeleteYou must be stupid af to think otherwise. Fucking tweakers on motorcycles don’t do much in the US and neither do caucasians. Chicanos and African Americans are the biggest buyers. Turn the TV off, this isn’t 1955.
DeleteSol has went completely woke on us with this bull. This is why trump is winning at everything. The left is gone off the rails.
ReplyDeleteI agree....this is dumb...we have the some of the best criminal organizations such as La cosa nosta ...but it all originated in Italy. The columbians we're making millions on the 80s and 90s and now the Mexicans are doing their thing. But this article makes no sense
DeleteTrue again
DeleteTrump is winning at everything? The guys a convicted felon lol looks like he won at that , the first president to also be a convicted felon lol
DeleteYes let's blame everything on Sol, your unemployed blame Sol, your wife left you blame Sol.
DeleteExactly bro this clown is promoting the same bullshit..Sol keep your opinions to yourself
DeleteLearn what "woke" is first.
DeleteIn America its the Mob, old school shiiit. Kinda like the unions... amd fo course political parties. In Europe their "cartels" are nothing more but a synonym of the word cartel. Good read by the way, excuse the others it might help next time adding a gory video of some sorts for their viewing pleasure
ReplyDeleteBS .....
DeleteSome of you guys in USA seem to live in denial.....
DeleteCause SOL Snitched
ReplyDeleteNo period kid, snitcher thruther snitched!
DeleteDTO or TCO is a more accurate term for both.
ReplyDeleteThere is a big difference between our gangs and cartels in Mexico. Our gangs only sell and distribute locally. They don't ship to other countries. Cartels ship international to anyone who buys. Our gangs are low key and don't wage war with governments like cartels. Our gangs try very hard to not draw up attention unlike Mexican cartels that like to hang dead bodies on bridges. Your comparing apples to oranges my friend. Very different. Nuff Said!!!
ReplyDeleteRight , because Ms -13 doesn’t operate in the U.S. and hells angels aren’t in Canada too …should I keep exposing how ignorant you sound?
Delete*You're
DeleteRight on Nuffy.
DeleteUSA is the market dummy with all the zombie addicts why would they be having to export. Use ur brain dammit.....
DeleteThey don't ship internationally because the US is the destination. Not much of a difference.
DeleteYeah, I heard the Canadian HA control the drug markets in China and Mexico.
DeleteBike riding junky gangbangers with their fancy vests are not a cartel.
ReplyDeleteLet me guess, cartel boys only drive Tahoes and wear white cowboy hats.
DeleteAhi van de chillones los de Mileño a decir "en mi país habrá muchos problemas, corrupción, violencia política top mundial, medios de comunicación al servicio del mal, cultura del terror, puede que seamos uno de los paises más inseguros para vivir, pero como ven que los gabachos tienen weyes en moto que venden droga y una vez encontraron un pleiesteishon con droga".
ReplyDeleteNaaamaaameeeeen🛏 💤
That's Koo foo
DeleteAs a son of Mexican immigrants living in California....all the drug dealers i knew were my tips who came from michoacan...all the drug users were me..my cousins and all the other Mexican kids in town....quit with your bullshit sol prendido. ...Mexico is one dirty,trash on side of road, corrupt..no economy...no jobs....shit aint even no fucken running water in our michoacan town... more then half the 15yr old kids are alcohol drinkers
ReplyDelete11:07 PM
DeletePreach to these losers mano,nothing to do with race but Sol wants to preach that shit and create more division ?
Dammit boy Stop trying to think and persuade playboy. Go sit in the truck before you break something. You’re following is small in number and simple minded. Just cover the gore videos bc that’s what you’re good at. Let the grown ups do the talking.
ReplyDeleteGC
Because Americans are not united in any aspect of society (Me me me me) and the criminal world is no different. We have school shooters and YNs acting independently “CUS IM A GROWN ASS MAN N SHIET I DONT NEED ANOTHA MAN TO HELP ME TWIN” obviously there’s no need to classify them as gangs/cartels
ReplyDeleteThe weight of hundreds of Billions of dollar's tells you who keeps the money. 🏦
ReplyDeleteGet a dictionary
ReplyDeleteWhat's your point, what for?
DeleteThe cartel in USA is called the federal government… the lieutenants are called state government officials. They have sicarios we just call them Military & Police. I once had a local cop as a neighbor, one day he was driving off to work & a business card flew out his open window. I picked it up & on it was his phone # and a list of various types of narcotics, quantities, & prices. I was a little kid, this was late 90’s or early 2000’s. His lifestyle was far beyond a cop too he had many expensive horses for which he had an $80k fence built, huge luxurious barn, huge mansion home, multi-millions-a-year lifestyle same as a Mexican narco one level below jefe de la plaza
ReplyDeleteChapo Isidro started at the very bottom from age 12 no nepotism involved worked his way up the ladder, gringos don’t want to put the time and work in and earn the position of boss
ReplyDeleteMotorcycle clubs, and street gangs don't make millions like Mex cartels and they don't have 100 million to bribe president's
ReplyDeleteIdk why doesn’t he call them cartels?
ReplyDeletePoorly thought out article. Total waste of time. The cartels themselves call themselves Cartels. No real depth. No mention of obvious factors like the word Mafia.
ReplyDeleteSol retrasado again with the worthless read
ReplyDeleteWhy don’t you call yourself a journalist?
ReplyDeleteOh…nevermind. Just read it.
Great way to solve a problem. Never take responsibility and play the blame game. "They're bad too, see. Don't look here, look there." Sol has an inferiority complex big time.
ReplyDeleteSol, you bring up motorcycles and biker gangs a lot. Does it bother you that 46 percent of gangs in the US are latino, 44 percent are black while only 8 percent are white and 2 percent aisian?
ReplyDeleteTotally different Cartels are considered more broader, international trafficking, volume of manufacturing and supplying and last not least the extreme violence and the tremendous amoubt of harsh harm that they caused to the world. American gangs, mob etc. are generally considered within cells only in the US for buying and distribution. Now there are many Americans that associate themselves with the Cartel, but that does not mean they are a cartel member its more business associate.
ReplyDeleteThey're not called cartels because it wouldn't be political feasible and Trump is soft on crime. The American public has to be kept in a fantasy bubble.
ReplyDeleteBecause Mexico is like the wild west
ReplyDeleteLatinos for Trump !!! Legal inmigrants that came here the correct way . Tired of all the leaches from the Biden era wanting everything for free.
ReplyDeleteFu speak for yourself, I am Latino and did not vote for Lying Trump .
Delete10:17 AM
Delete''Latinos for Trump !!! Legal inmigrants that came here the correct way''
Right on mano
El cartel del trompas
ReplyDeleteCan the sun explode already.
ReplyDeleteSol start a petition in Mexico bro,protest for your rights in the U.S ? Go try protest in Mexico
ReplyDeleteget this creepy old cunt off here with his politics
ReplyDeleteSol and his politics again dont wanna hear it theres enough crying on here already..
ReplyDeleteRelax, 3 period dic.
DeleteI hope trumpo gets even more radical something needs to happen with these crying fuckers who live and work in the U.S BUT CRY LIKE BITCHES ABOUT THE U.S you all could leave ?
ReplyDeleteBB IS GETTING WORSE WITH THIS SOL CREEP
ReplyDeleteWe will be happy to refund your subscription. Have a nice day.
DeleteWhere is anything like cartels in the U.S ?
ReplyDeleteWhat a fucking stupid post,label Bloods Crips as terrorists ?
This is how fucking ridiculous this bullshit is getting,this is nothing more thatn ridiculous jingoism from false claiming bitches
Does BB really need articles like this ?
ReplyDeleteYes!
DeleteAbsolute nonsense
ReplyDeleteWhat a pathetic post ?
ReplyDeleteSol stick to the topic not your personal bullshit views
ReplyDeleteWhat a pathetic ridiculous question ?
ReplyDeleteWhere is the comparison ?
BB has to close this down
This fuckin idiot SOL and his politics ?
ReplyDeleteWhat politics?
DeleteSol hysterical over trump again ?
ReplyDeleteWhat is hysterical about it?
DeleteWaste of time or what SOL your bringing BB down
ReplyDeleteWhat a fuckin imbecile posting rubbish like this on BB..SOL you must try harder of fuck off
ReplyDeleteFu too learn to use periods.
DeleteLuis Gerardo Lopez Guajardo Mexican bureaucratic director in Mexico arrested with Child Porn,potential 20 years in prison say it aint so
ReplyDeleteThe us court is blaming z 40 for the allende massacre.
ReplyDeleteSol got the article from Milenio.
ReplyDeleteYou kids are trash talking, go to school make something of yourselves.
Because the USA is garbage, that's why. Just a bunch of punk bitch hypocrites.
ReplyDeleteLets all pretend these animals aren't decapitating and skinning people alive on camera, it cant go on drone them all
ReplyDeleteThat's cute that some of you clowns are all up in your feelings for some shit Milenio wrote. 😂
ReplyDeleteDon’t be a whiny bitch cause you are seen right through with your attempt at making cartel the new can’t say word unless you want to be called a racist. Victim victim victim I am being oppressed I am a victim of Whitey, I am a victim of this word I am a victim of this persons post I am a victim of this law I am a victim of where I was born. It’s pathetic! And it all boils down to blame the White man and the fake racism for all my problems BUT I also get to claim I am proud and strong. Quite the pathetic contradiction whenever I hear the term racist being thrown at anybody White.
DeleteClowns is right.
DeleteGood journalists don't give a damn what the circus thinks.
And here you go posting it lol. You are so smart that you post garbage that you think is somehow intelligent. Makes us look ignorant as a culture on how to define things.
DeleteFor real! I was just bout to comment that Sol did not even write the article.
DeleteBunch of buffoons in here lol.
You posted it nobhead,talk about feelings you got trump on the brain ?
Delete''for some shit Milenio wrote''
DeleteAnd you posted the shit ?
Let them know Sol saludos mi comandante
DeleteThat's what I said, those diaper kids did not note the credit line given at end of article.
DeleteTricky
'Cartel' is in inaccurate term for these organized crime groups at various level of operation. It just became custom to describe drug trafficking organizations south of the border as cartels. But a group that steals oil from pipelines will also be called a cartel.
ReplyDeleteThe number one reason US gangs do not sell to other markets is because they already live in the biggest most profitable drug market in the world aka the US.
ReplyDeleteIt is not because they wouldn't do it out of being small groups, them being naive or innocents in the game if that is what some readers here think.
American drug dealers here are just as greedy, ambitious and deadly if it came down to it as cartels!
When a writer first starts with a false premise, then tries to build the story to reflect that.....it almost always ends contradicting itself.
ReplyDeleteThere are many references in USA media with stories about the cartel in the country. The cartels are everywhere where drugs are being spread.
It seems that alot of people are having a hard time accepting this. They rather live in denial.
ReplyDeleteYou people on here really have no idea of the corruption in Mexico,it is unbelievable,look at Tamaulipas,look at Americo Villareal financed by Z40,look at El Contador you cannot touch his son Axel even when ordered to stop he does not,then his father orders his Escorpions to shoot up police stations to warn them who is in charge,it goes way deeper than you idiots realize,no comparison with the U.S
ReplyDeleteDo you people know who gave the order to kill Panochitas?The order was given to Primito who passed it to El Mofles to carry out and kill Panochitas it was Mencho to heat up Monterey before the football and other reasons ?
ReplyDeleteA lot of born and bred Mexicans approve of Trumps designation of cartels as terrorists,not you born and bred U.S gringos who shout and whine the loudest...
ReplyDeleteWhat made you decide to publish this piece?
ReplyDeleteFrom 1122 to 1151, same dude posted basically the same comment over and over again.
ReplyDeleteVery mature.
Piss poor article. Words have meaning. As I have pointed out here prior, there are ZERO “cartels” in Mexico and there are certainly none that I know of in the US. Words have meaning and the word “cartel” is a clearly defined term - it’s unambiguous: I don’t care how many times some of you call a boy a girl, but he’s still a boy. Playing pronoun games with clearly defined words is low IQ. A singular organization cannot, by definition, be a “cartel.”
ReplyDeletecar·tel
/kärˈtel/
noun
noun: cartel; plural noun: cartels
an association of manufacturers or suppliers with the purpose of maintaining prices at a high level and restricting competition.
"the Colombian drug cartels"
HISTORICAL
a coalition or cooperative arrangement between political parties intended to promote a mutual interest.
Maurice McCoy was not white
ReplyDeleteTrump, paradoxically, may very well be the first "lolcow" president.
ReplyDeleteNow I see why the lazy chubby ninos in here are crying like babies. The article is too much to read. Ninos pea brains get headaches when reading more. As a matter a fact, they would cringe when ..
ReplyDeletethe 10 paragraph incarcerated Rambler, would be in here hogging the comments section.
boy the trolls are annoying. If you sit and think about how much that money and corruption infiltrates police precincts and bureaucrats its scary.
ReplyDelete