On May 20, 2026, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued sanctions against individuals and entities tied to two separate money laundering networks linked to the Sinaloa Cartel and its Chapitos faction for drug trafficking and money laundering activities.
The sanctions targeted two criminal networks responsible for the illegal trafficking of fentanyl from Mexico into the United States and for laundering the proceeds through cryptocurrency exchange schemes.
The action resulted from a coordinated investigation led by the Homeland Security Task Force (HSTF), involving the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and OFAC, pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 14059, which targets the proliferation of illicit drugs and their means of production, and E.O. 13224, which targets terrorists and their supporters. The sanctions were also coordinated with the Mexican government’s financial intelligence unit, the Unidad de Inteligencia Financiera (UIF).
Targeting Wholesalers and Money Laundering Networks
The first set of sanctions focused on one of the Chapitos’ principal revenue-generating operations: the laundering of proceeds derived from illicit fentanyl sales. The network was allegedly led by Armando de Jesus Ojeda Aviles, who oversaw the collection of bulk cash in the United States and the integration of those funds into the cryptocurrency ecosystem before transferring the money to Mexico through blockchain transactions.
Armando de Jesus Ojeda Aviles reportedly took control of the criminal network after the death of Mario Alberto Jimenez Castro. The organization was responsible for overseeing narcotics shipments and laundering drug proceeds generated in the United States. Ojeda Aviles’s network consisted of Mexico-based drug suppliers and U.S.-based couriers tasked with collecting bulk cash derived from drug trafficking activities.
Also involved in Ojeda Aviles’s network were Jesus Alonso Aispuro Felix and Rodrigo Alarcon Palomares, who coordinated cryptocurrency transfers tied to the laundering of drug proceeds. In October 2023, Alarcon Palomares was detained in Mexico after authorities found him in possession of weapons and ammunition.
Another figure linked to the network is Alfredo Orozco Romero, who allegedly operated as a security advisor and debt collector for unpaid drug shipments. Authorities also identified him as controlling the Mexican company Grupo Especial Mamba Negra, S. de R.L. de C.V., as well as the Chihuahua-based restaurant Gorditas Chiwas, through family members Amalia Margarita Romero Moreno and Liliana Orozco Romero.
The second sanctioned criminal network was allegedly led by Jesus Gonzalez Penuelas, who authorities claim has been involved in large-scale drug trafficking operations since 2007, including the production and distribution of methamphetamine, heroin, cocaine, and fentanyl. In 2018, Gonzalez Penuelas was indicted in the United States on international drug trafficking charges. In January 2024, the DEA announced a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest and/or conviction.
Also sanctioned alongside Gonzalez Penuelas were Castulo Bojorquez Chaparro, Fredi Ismael Garcia Sandoval, Luis Arnulfo Moreno Zamora, Baltazar Saenz Aguilar, and Noe de Jesus Castro Rocha. According to U.S. authorities, the group coordinated drug distribution, bulk cash movement, and money laundering operations tied to drug trafficking activities.
“Drowning” The Chapitos
These sanctions are significant because, unlike operations targeting sicarios or plaza bosses — who are often quickly replaceable — authorities are now focusing on the financial structure that allows the Chapitos to operate.
The operation not only targets profits generated from individual drug shipments. It also disrupts the financial operators and distribution networks responsible for moving and integrating illicit proceeds into the formal economy. Coordinating these actions alongside Mexico’s UIF could produce a more immediate financial impact by disrupting key revenue streams essential to the organization’s operations.
Replacing experienced wholesalers, money launderers, and transnational financial operators is considerably more difficult than replacing a local plaza boss or even a synthetic drug precursor brokers. For that reason, these sanctions could represent a more strategic long-term threat to the Chapitos’ operational capabilities.
The sanctions also come amid ongoing rumors that Ivan Archivaldo Guzman Salazar and Jesus Alfredo Guzman Salazar may have been involved in discussions with U.S. authorities regarding a possible surrender agreement. Regardless of whether the surrender rumors are true, the sanctions demonstrate that U.S. and Mexican authorities are increasingly prioritizing the financial and logistical infrastructure sustaining the Chapitos’ drug trafficking operations.
Resources: U.S. Department of the Treasury
Archi keeps singing to survive another day
ReplyDeleteit won't work and even if it did they would just be replaced by another group this whole approach is incapable of working. you can't just impose your will on the world like this, should have learned that from trying to prohibit alcohol. it instantly created a massive underworld economy and surrounding criminal networks. it also removed quality controls and regulations and resulted in a dangerous product. it's the same exact thing with drugs. if you want to disenfranchise these criminal groups then you have to provide the same/equivalent products for cheap then they can't get ultra rich selling random plants.
ReplyDelete9:27 yep. It’s the same strategy since the days of Al Capone. They never seem to learn that it’s a demand based problem, not a supply based problem. As long as there’s a demand, there will always be people willing to meet it, even under the threat of death.
Delete9:27 the problem with legalizing shit is that the adictos and their families soon find a way to sue the providers of the "health solution" like the US Big Pharma getting sued and losing 5 billion dollars or more to losers, the sacklers are not happy, they and other opioids providers knew their products were deadly addictive but the money was all that mattered to them and their Republican Lawmakers they bribed to get the democrats help to rush their bills through congress for a little bit more kickbacks...then they threw the Ball to nacho coronel and nacho to el Mencho, they had their captive addicts ready and desperate all over the US.
DeleteProhibition works just fine in some Muslim countries. It would work in the US only under extreme measures "a puro putazos" to keep everybody in line but there's too much druggies, too much debauchery.
Delete10:36 the illegal businesses stolen by legal entities from the mafia and gangsters, have produced state sponsored criminality with no end in sight, industrializing "gaming" and Big Pharma's legalizations of drugs that had been known addictives for a long time until they started losing their nalgas in court, and sent the manufacture and trafficking back to the streets and big US Capitalistas using captive chinese slave labor to enhance their revenue and "save jobs for americans" and allying with russian neo-liberal satraps to conspire against what is left of the US inder the vigilante eyes of the CIA and the FBI have produced the drugged and the debauchery, how do you propose to fix the generators of drug addiction that just want to extort their colleagues and their lowly associate niggaz?
Deletethey usually escape through corruption and delays, and appearing to have "a lot of money" they can't show where they got it from or where it is...
I'm curious, how effective do you think these measures will be in dismantling the financial networks of groups like the Chapitos?
ReplyDelete7/10
DeleteGoing after the money has worked in the past. And its not about getting rid off drugs for all and forever. Its more like a garden, you have to go after weeds.
DeleteIt's endless swamp but better than nothing and surely hurts. It's just too easy to establish variations transferring cryptos.
DeleteAll's good what is good, after OFAC and UIF get done untangling the chapitos financials, they can start untangling the mechanics of turning russian asset trump into a krypto billionaire "Presidente" working for putin and the israilises while stealing all that's can be stolen and degrading the US, NATO, the EU and that can be degraded by one blankety blankety blankester.
ReplyDeleteCraig Unger may be too busy to assist us, but there are many books of his around, "komrads"
Jorge Caro? Is he working with US. He barely comes up on anything and has the biggest pockets.
ReplyDeleteEl “irving o 18” arrested for weed in San Bernardino!!
ReplyDeleteLove San Bernadino! Orange tree groves, mountains right by.
DeleteBerdoooooo
DeleteThey sanctioned some members of 2 cartels...whoop!
ReplyDeleteWhy not sanction all the cartels and everyone connected to them?
Then immediately arrest everyone sanctioned?
No one approach works you need to target every angle hard and relentlessly.
ReplyDelete7:54 one approach that could work is amnesty for those that confess and finger point their higher up associates, even giving people the right to sue those who hooked them into that world of violence and weapons and drugs, death penalty for reincidents, you would see the higher ups bitching to be first to deliver themselves, i think there are still police officers and military in colombian prisons confessing to the falsos positivos and corruption of Alvaro Uribe Velez who is still protected by the US and the CIA.
DeleteThe Arab bloodline is strong !
ReplyDelete