"Enojon", "Pernicious Propaganda" and "Char" for Borderland Beat
Saturday, February 22, 2025
Information Warfare Conducted By Armed Groups In Mexico
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
Live Thread: José Ángel Canobbio Inzunza 'El Güerito' Captured in Culiacan, Sinaloa
Borderland Beat Contributors
Saturday, November 23, 2024
Monday, September 23, 2024
Sinaloa Government Websites Hacked and Defaced With Threats Against Governor
"Enojon" for Borderland Beat
The website's for the Tax Administration Service of Sinaloa (SATES) and the Bachelor's College of the State of Sinaloa (COBAES) faced an attack on September 15th where hackers defaced the sites with threats against Ruben Rocha Moya, the Governor of Sinaloa, claiming more deaths will occur if he returns to the State.
Sunday, August 4, 2024
Los Chapitos Threaten FESC Officials Through Handwritten Banner In Mexicali, Baja California
"Enojon" For Borderland Beat
Image By: Villalugo Informa (Image of banner hanging from pedestrian bridge)Friday, June 28, 2024
Exposing the Carrasco Narco Family of 'Los Chapitos'
"Enojon", "Char", "HEARST", "Crux1469" For Borderland Beat
Thursday, June 27, 2024
Sinaloa Cartel Money Laundering in Los Angeles Part 1: Chinese Money Brokers
Part 1 of a Series Looking into Money Laundering Operations Out of Southern California tied to the Sinaloa Cartel.
Each week Borderland Beat will analyze and investigate links between legitimate businesses and fronts as well as underground money transfers including crypto and black market peso exchange systems. Southern California has long been one of the key territories of the Sinaloa Cartel not only for drug distribution, but for laundering and funneling back the profits back to Mexico and elsewhere to fund further operations.
Part 1 Chinese Money Brokers
More than $50 million in illegal funds flowed between the Sinaloa Cartel associates and Chinese underground money exchanges as part of this network. The Chinese government cooperated with the DOJ's investigation to make arrests.
Monday, June 10, 2024
"El R" Ruben Duarte Roque, Hitman for "Cabo 20" & "El Flaquito" Killed Outside Tijuana Night Club
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At around 8:15AM on Thursday morning, June 6. Three men were shout outside of a stripclub/bar, La Cueva Bar del Peludo in Tijuana. One of the men, the target of the attack died.
Rubén Duarte Roque was 35 years old and better known as "El R" and earlier on "El Roque" or "El RR" and was a longtime figure under "Cabo 20" David Lopez Jimenez in Tijuana. Authorities allege "El R" was responsible for much of the violence in the Sanchez Taboada area.
Thursday, August 3, 2023
Blockades Placed Throughout Chiapas By Members of CDS & 'El MAIZ' of CJNG
"Enojon" For Borderland Beat
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
Chapiza vs Quintero Battle Turns City into a War Zone in Sonora
"HEARST" and "Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat
Hitmen from los Chapitos and the Caborca Cartel battled each other in the streets of Caborca, Sonora, in a fight that left at least 7 dead, 2 of whom were innocent civilians.
The Battle
On March 19, 2023, Sinaloa Cartel - Chapitos hitmen battled it out in the streets of Caborca against hitmen from the Caborca Cartel. For a refresher on which groups are fighting over Caborca municipality, please see this previous story.
Local reports say the shooting began at around 6:30 pm. The gunfights appeared to be intermittent and scattered, occurring at multiple locations in the city. A majority of the fighting took place inside vehicles, with heavily armed gunmen shooting at rival hitmen who were also in vehicles. Whether one group was operating more offensively than the other is currently unclear.
Friday, October 28, 2022
High School Students Film Mock Narco Threat Video In Valparaiso, Zacatecas
By "El Huaso" for Borderland Beat
Videos have surfaced showing students posing as narcos and making joke threats towards other students at a high school in Valparaiso, Zacatecas. The videos are a reference to narco comunicados, violent videos released by organized crime groups in Mexico featuring threats, executions of rivals, and torture. They are a tragic reminder of the effect the hyper violent environment is having on Mexico's youth.
In the video, the students pose with musical instruments as weapons, wear masks, and yell mock threats at students at another high school in the area.
The Violent Context
News site NTR Zacatecas reported that the mayor of Valparaiso, Eleuterio Ramos Leal, lamented the normalization of violence that has affected young people.
According to Mexico's defense ministry, Zacatecas has become violent because of its geographical value to criminal groups, who seek to control it's highways and transportation routes north. Zacatecas ranks 10th by homicide count this year, with 861 deaths, amounting to a homicide rate of 53 per 100,000, according to a government security briefing in September. While these figure are alarmingly high, the homicide rate was actually twice as high the year before, the highest in the nation, at 107 per 100,000.
The conflict is between a faction of the Sinaloa Cartel and the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación, as reported by Borderland Beat. As the security situation spirals, publicly placed bodies, narco messages, and shootouts have become commonplace. As of March 2022, there were at least 10,000 internally displaced persons in the state, according to Zacatecas senator Geovanna Bañuelos.
Source: NTR Zacatecas, Portal Valparaiso, El Financiero, INEGI Homicide 2021, Regeneracion, SwissInfo, September 20 security briefing
Monday, September 26, 2022
Alleged CDS Banner Announces They Are At War With the CSRL
"HEARST" & "Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat
Identical narco message banners signed by the Sinaloa Cartel (Cártel de Sinaloa, CDS) in which they allegedly announced their intention to end the Cártel Santa Rosa de Lima (CSRL) have appeared within at least nine municipalities in the state of Guanajuato.
Already on social media, there are allegations of the banners being fake while others allege they are genuine. Regardless of the authenticity, here is what is what is being reported about these banners.
The Banners
According to Guanajuato’s leading security analyst, David Saucedo, the banners have been discovered in nine municipalities within the state so far.
Thursday, November 8, 2012
The Twins Who Betrayed El Chapo
Margarito Sr. was never heard from again.
The brothers, now in U.S. custody and acting as informants in a plea deal whose details remain secret, will be the star witnesses in the Chicago trial of Jesús Vicente Zambada-Niebla, a head of the Sinaloa cartel and the biggest Mexican drug kingpin ever to be prosecuted in a U.S. courtroom.
A status hearing on October 9 will set a new date for the trial, which has been delayed several times.
In court filings, Zambada-Niebla’s lawyers claim he, like the Flores brothers, was working with the Drug Enforcement Administration, and that in exchange for intel on rival cartels, the U.S. government turned a blind eye as “tons of illicit drugs continued to be smuggled into Chicago and other parts of the United States.”
In the months building up to the trial, a litany of court documents has been released that describe Chicago as a major distribution hub. The filings also suggest that damning details will be revealed about U.S. cooperation with some of the world’s most powerful narcos.
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Zambada |
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California Governor with drugs bound for Chicago |
Their ties to El Chapo meant they could circumvent the traditional supply chain controlled by local street gangs, and in turn, avoid the gangs’ trifling turf disputes. The purity and quantity of the cocaine they received directly from Mexico (roughly between 1,500 and 2,000 kilos, or about 3,300 to 4,400 pounds, of cocaine per month, according to court documents) further ensured the twins answered to no one but the Mexican cartels.
The Flores’s value and importance as traffickers for the Sinaloa cartel put them among a select number of people to have met in person with the elusive El Chapo, who escaped from a Guadalajara, Mexico, prison 11 years ago and is one of the most wanted fugitives in the world.

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Pilsen Chicago where life is rough and violence surrounds ( |
The shipments reached U.S. soil in Los Angeles and were trucked to Chicago, where the Flores operation received hundreds of kilos each week. They unloaded trailers of Colombian cocaine and Mexican heroin into inconspicuous warehouses in Bedford Park and Chicago. They would split up the powder and stash it in still more warehouses in Chicago, Justice, Romeoville and Plainfield.
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Court filings estimate their annual income at $700 million, according to a 2009 Washington Post article; the Flores crew reportedly shrink-wrapped the cash proceeds and hid them inside condominiums and brick split-levels in Chicago, Hinsdale, Palos Hills and Plainfield registered to relatives and girlfriends with no criminal records.
To get an idea of just how large the Flores operation was, one only needs to compare their $700 million estimated annual income to the total street value of all drugs seized in Chicago: $208 million worth in 2009, $139 million in 2008, $118 million in 2007, $143 million in 2006 and $235 million in 2005, according to the Chicago Police Department.
That the Flores operation had grown so huge isn’t surprising since Chicago has one of the largest Mexican populations among all U.S. cities, says Special Agent in Charge John “Jack” Riley, head of the DEA’s Chicago Field Division. (According to the 2010 census, Chicago’s Mexican population is fourth behind Los Angeles, San Antonio and Houston.)
Though the business rested on their family connections to Mexico, the Flores twins had managed to remain independent of any one cartel in the supply chain. Between 2002 and 2008, they had benefited handsomely from a power-sharing agreement in Mexico between the Sinaloa cartel and a clan of four brothers at the head of the Beltrán-Leyva crime family.
His brothers blamed El Chapo for tipping off authorities before the arrest. Their suspicion led them to declare war against the Sinaloa cartel. The Beltrán-Leyva brothers took their vengeance in the streets of Culiacán, the state capital of Sinaloa, where escalating drug-related violence claimed the lives of 387 people, presumably some innocent, in the bloody summer of 2008.
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Perhaps the most lurid piece of intel supplied by the Flores brothers involved conversations Margarito Jr. secretly recorded with the heads of the Sinaloa cartel in October 2008, some transcripts of which were released by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Chicago. Margarito Jr. was fitted with a wire during a meeting at a remote mountain compound in Sinaloa with the heads of the cartel: Vicente Zambada-Niebla, then 33; his father, Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada-Niebla; and El Chapo.
A close degree of familiarity is evident between the men on the recordings—at one point Vicente is heard affectionately calling Margarito Jr. twin—that offer a rare glimpse into the deliberations of men with a near-mythic reputation for secrecy in their affairs.
“This government is letting the gringos do whatever they want,” El Mayo is heard complaining in one conversation, referring to Mexican President Felipe Calderón and his open-door policy to U.S. law enforcement operating in Mexico.
“They are fucking us everywhere,” El Chapo concurs.
Firepower—how to obtain more of it and what to use it on—is a recurrent theme from the taped excerpts. Vicente is heard asking Margarito Jr. to obtain explosives and military-grade weapons. The men even voice a desire to “send a message” to U.S. authorities by setting off an explosion near a government building or media outlet in Mexico City. No such attack ever took place.
“Twin,” the younger Zambada-Niebla says in one recording, “you know guys coming back from the war. Find somebody who can give you big, powerful weapons, American shit.… We don’t need that small shit. I want to blow up some buildings. We got a lot of grenades, we got a lot of .50 calibers, we’re tired of AKs.” Citing these conversations, prosecutors have expressed confidence in their ability to convict Zambada-Niebla.
Zambada-Niebla, better known in the Mexican press by his nickname, El Vicentillo, which translates roughly to “Pretty Boy Vicente,” was arrested in March 2009 in a predawn raid in Mexico City by an elite team of army troops and federal agents. According to court documents, Zambada-Niebla stands accused as the logistical coordinator of drug shipments for the Sinaloa cartel.
Vicente Zambada-Niebla caught the attention of the Latin American press corps last March when he entered a plea of not guilty by reason of a pre-existing immunity agreement with the DEA. The two-pronged defense argued immunity and “public authority,” a specific kind of immunity that claims he acted under the auspices of the U.S. government. Zambada-Niebla asserts that U.S. law enforcement gave him carte blanche to coordinate the cartel’s smuggling operations into Chicago and throughout the U.S. and permitted the remittance of billions of dollars in cash back to Mexico.
Indeed, the circumstances of Zambada-Niebla’s arrest raised eyebrows in Mexico. A mere five hours prior to the raid on his safe house, Zambada-Niebla had met with two special agents from the DEA in an upscale Mexico City hotel located across the street from the U.S. Embassy, according to court documents filed last year by both the prosecution and the defense. Zambada-Niebla attended the DEA meeting with Humberto Loya-Castro, a lawyer and adviser to the Sinaloa cartel. The defense argues that Loya-Castro had agreed to serve as an intermediary in the DEA’s communications with the cartel.
Nevertheless, then-U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, who stepped down in June, dismissed Zambada-Niebla’s claims. “Contrary to [the] defendant’s claim, no immunity was conferred upon him… Nor was any immunity conferred upon Loya-Castro,” Fitzgerald declared in documents filed last September with the U.S. District Court in Chicago.
Still, Henning is skeptical of Zambada-Niebla’s chances in court. “It’s not an easy defense to make out,” he says. “It just can’t be his word against what the government says. A lot of times [when] these defenses are raised, they are not raised successfully."
As a result, for seven months Zambada-Niebla was kept in solitary confinement at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, a 27-story federal prison located in Chicago’s Financial District. He was deprived of daylight and nearly any interaction, with no one below the rank of lieutenant permitted to speak within earshot, says a lawyer familiar with the case. His meals were slid on a tin plate through a slot in the door to his six-by-eight-foot cell, the lawyer says.
In September 2011, Judge Castillo heard a request from the defense that Zambada-Niebla be allowed daily outdoor exercise. The prosecutor responded by reading a letter to the court from MCC’s warden, Catherine Linaweaver, warning that permitting Vicentillo access to the prison’s recreational area on the 27th-floor rooftop might invite an attack—or even a dramatic prison escape straight out of a Hollywood thriller. But Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Shakeshaft eventually relented. “Mr. Zambada-Niebla will be moved to another institution,” he told the judge.
Zambada-Niebla, his head now shaved and skin tightly drawn against his cheekbones, was transferred in October to a federal prison in Milan, Michigan. But his lawyers claim the conditions in prison have actually worsened, with new restrictions placed on his ability to see visitors and to receive his mail on time. The location of the prison, nearly five hours from Chicago, has brought accusations from the defense that the government is hampering his lawyers’ ability to communicate with their client.
The breaks the Flores twins have received for cooperating with the government have made for contentious courtroom exchanges between the government prosecutors and the defense team, who have been filing competing motions dating back to July 2011. At the heart of the issue is the fight for government documents revealing communication between federal agents and cartel members, and the 32-year-old Classified Information Procedures Act the prosecution has cited in denying the release of the overwhelming bulk of these documents.
Alvin Michaelson, a lawyer for the defense, complained at a pretrial hearing last December that the government was withholding information that impugned the credibility of the Flores twins as witnesses. “We know that there are witnesses that have been interviewed here in the Chicago area who…talk about the reputation of the Flores brothers as murderers, as thieves, liars,” Michaelson said before Judge Castillo.
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“Look,” Michaelson observed in court, “no one in the Flores family, there were many of them involved in the organization, they have not been charged with any crimes. We want to know the evidence as to why they were not charged with these crimes.”
Judge Castillo refused to comment on Michaelson’s assertions, brushing off the lawyer’s statements as hubris. “I don’t know if that [grandstanding] is for the media or someone else,” Castillo said.