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

Showing posts with label gangs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gangs. Show all posts

Sunday, October 1, 2023

Mexican Mafia Fugitive "Evil," Who Controlled Ventura County Killed in Rosarito

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat


Martin Madrigal Cazares, known as "Evil," was a fugitive Mexican Mafia member who controlled Sureño gangs in Ventura County, California, from a base in Mexico. He was killed in Rosarito, Baja California last month. He had been arrested with another fugitive Mexican Mafia member and 9 others in Rosarito carrying weapons and drugs back in January 2023.

However, it seems he was released from custody since that time. His release and death have gone unreported in Mexico, with only the LA Times reporting on the incident.

Borderland Beat has received exclusive information and photographs surrounding his death.

Sunday, February 19, 2023

Mexican Cartels Use Street Gangs to Distribute Drugs

By Buggs for Borderland Beat

On February 9, 2023, at around 10pm a New Mexico state police officer clocked a white Dodge Durango travelling at 125 miles per hour on interstate highway I-25 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The vehicle fled at high speed and ultimately, the vehicle crashed after exiting the freeway sustaining heavy front damage after hitting a cinder block wall. Inside the vehicle were Edward Vallez, 42, and Jonathan Acuna, 22, who attempted to flee the scene on foot. Acuna was held at gunpoint by a citizen before officers arrived, while Vallez was caught an hour later with head injuries as a result of the crash.

Inside the car, officers found three cell phones, a cache of drugs and money. The FBI says roughly $130,000 in cash was inside the car, along with approximately 230,000 fentanyl pills. Both suspects were arrested on state charges related to the crash. According to news reports, Acuna was arrested for leaving a scene of the crash and resisting, evading, or obstructing an officer. Acuna was eventually released from jail on bond. Vallez was arrested on charges of crimes related to the crash, including speeding, DWI, and leaving the scene of a crash. Except, Vallez was held in jail in relation to a federal warrant for probation violation.

According to documents filed in federal court, Vallez has been arrested 27 times in New Mexico. The traffic stop piqued the interest of the FBI because Vallez is an alleged member of the Sureños gang who was on probation at the time. His residence was recently among 15 locations raided by the Violent Gang Task Force since September of 2022 as part of a violent spree involving racketeering and drug distribution.

Vallez belonged to a network of gang members distributing large amount of drugs in Albuquerque, including large amounts of Fentanyl.

The Albuquerque FBI Violent Gang Task Force executed 16 federal search warrants in various locations in and around Albuquerque on September 1, 2022, as part of an ongoing RICO/VICAR investigation targeting violent street and prison gangs.

More than a dozen federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies, including SWAT teams from the Albuquerque, Denver, and El Paso FBI field offices, participated in what could be the largest ever fentanyl takedown in New Mexico.

Among the items seized:

More than 1 million fentanyl pills.
142 pounds of methamphetamine.
$2 million in cash.
37 firearms.
6 vehicles, including 2 stolen ones.
9 ballistic vests and a ballistic baseball cap.
2 hand grenades.

FBI agent in charge in Albuquerque could not recall a bigger seizure of money or drugs in the state of New Mexico. The national director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) called the drug bust in Albuquerque the “largest” in the Bureau’s history. “In September, our Albuquerque office conducted the largest takedown of fentanyl ever for the FBI,” Director Christopher Wray said in a video posted on YouTube (below). It was “enough fentanyl to have killed thousands of people,” according to Wray.

Seven years ago, the FBI launched Operation Atonement, with the goal of dismantling the notorious Syndicato de Nuevo Mexico (SNM) prison gang whose violent crimes included a plot to kill New Mexico’s corrections secretary. This high-profile bust marks the latest twist in a massive seven-year criminal investigation by the FBI into the ultraviolent Syndicato de Nuevo Mexico. The 42-year-old prison gang that operates inside and outside prison walls has been crippled in recent years by more than 160 arrests of its members and associates and five federal racketeering trials that landed its top leader and 11 other gang members in federal prison for life. Eleven homicides have been solved in the investigation to date.

Despite all that, the gangs are involved in substantial drug trafficking activities, firearm-related offenses, and numerous homicides. The homicide rate in Albuquerque has been increasing in the last three years, breaking records year after year. Most of it due to illicit drugs and gang violence.

Recently, the FBI uncovered evidence that SNM had partnered with the Sureños and West Side Locos (WSL) in furtherance of drug trafficking, homicides, and other crimes.

Now the FBI believes the members of the Sureños, a California-based gang linked to the Mexican Mafia prison gang have stepped in to help the SNM continue its mission of violence, revenge, and illicit drug distribution in New Mexico.

The number of Sureños has increased in Albuquerque in recent years, with some of those being released from federal prison choosing to settle in New Mexico rather than return to California.

One confidential informant was quoted as saying, “A lot of California Sureños were not returning to California due to tougher laws there, the cost of living, and the fact that New Mexico was an 'easy place to live … and be us' (Sureños).”

The Sureños have significantly more personnel on the street and in custody, and informants have reported the Sureños have taken over the illicit drug market in Albuquerque, unloading hundreds of pounds of methamphetamine a week and tens of thousands of fentanyl pills.

“The instant investigation pertains to an intergang conspiracy between the SNM, Sureños, and WSL to commit murder in aid of racketeering and the distribution of controlled substances within the District of New Mexico, and elsewhere,” Special Agent Bryan Acee wrote in an affidavit in support of the search warrants.

Acee wrote that multiple sources have “indicated the Sureños intended to better organize, direct and/or broker fentanyl and methamphetamine sales within the various Hispanic street gangs in the Albuquerque area.” The gang network seems to be a mid-level traffic organization buying the lethal Fentanyl from the Mexican cartels, such as the Sinaloa Cartel.

At the same time, The SNM, with assistance from the Sureños, are seeking to make ‘examples’ of former SNM members who cooperated with the government. … Similarly, SNM members in good standing who fail to assault or kill SNM informants are being targeted for violence by the SNM and the Sureños.

Meanwhile, SNM members incarcerated in the federal system have been discussing reorganizing the gang, imposing new rules, such as requiring two “carnales” or SNM members to be present anytime they speak with prison or jail staff to ensure no one is telling on the gang.

US law Enforcement is doing their part in battling the epidemic of Fentanyl being flooded in the US. They are constantly taking down operations of mid-level trafficking organizations and smaller street drug dealers. But how about the source? Where are these gang criminal organizations getting all their drug supply? The answer, Mexican cartels. 

Many of these mid-level criminal organization who are trafficking in drugs supplied by Mexican cartels in the US are mainly the street gangs.  They broker large purchases of drugs from Mexican cartels to distribute in US streets. Remember, the Mexican drug cartel deal in wholesale, they traffic the lethal Fentanyl to the US in kilos. The cartels use the already established infrastructure of gang organizations to sell their product. While US authorities target organizations in the US, the Mexican cartels remain for the most part safe in Mexico. It is harder to reach the cartels in their own turf, especially with their ability to corrupt Mexican officials. 

Mexican cartels have the same level of organization and power in the US as they do in Mexico, minus the level of corruption and violence. It is in their best interest to avoid the violence as much as possible to avoid attracting attention. This will disrupt their operation and hurt their drug business enterprise. They tend to work under the radar, hardly being detected. Most of the Mexican operatives that get caught are the lower-level operatives, like the mules who transport the drugs for the cartels, or trusted operatives who coordinate drug trafficking in transport or in safe houses. The big hitters remain in Mexico, who coordinate all of their operations from abroad.

Mexican plaza bosses will punish their own people who dare to "calentar la plaza," or disrupt their operation by a means of violence. This is very common in Mexico and they are certainly very careful to ensure it does not happen in the US. That is why violence directly tied to the Mexican cartels in the US does not happen often. The Mexican operatives tend to follow the rule of their drug lords. In Mexico, sometimes renegade cells working for a cartel lose control and increase violence in their turfs, but usually it's the plaza bosses waging war against rival cartels. 

Many times, these cells start working independently and do their own thing.  We started to see this happen more often after the fall of the Guadalajara cartel when cartels broke up in different factions. We also saw this happen after the fall of Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán with the Sinaloa cartel. The organization fell into three factions; one of Ismael El Mayo Zambada, Los Chapitos and that of Rafael Caro Quintero who did not get along. This increased the violence, after internal fighting in the state of Sonora, a Sinaloa strong hold. 

When it comes to US gangs, they usually will resort to violence when cornered or to retaliate against other people. An example of this was the "cartel-style" massacre in Central, California that shocked America. Six people were executed in a home invasion, including a young mother and her 10-month-old son. The two shooters were described as members of the Norteños, a Northern California gang, while two of the victims were well-known, validated members of the Sureños.  News media reported that the suspects and members of the victims' family had a long history of gang violence and drug trafficking.

The dynamics are very different in how the Mexican cartels operate in Mexico versus the US. Mexican cartels supply the illicit drugs to street gangs in the US, who are always willing to make a good profit. But the US often plays a small role in hitting the actual cartels to slow them down in the US. That is why it is very difficult to stop the drug flow from Mexico. 

The U.S. is limited in what they can do in Mexico, especially with the current Mexican government of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (AMLO) who was elected with the slogan campaign of "abrazos no balasos," or "hugs no bullets." AMLO has set restriction on how the US sets up operation in Mexico, limiting DEA operations. US will still attempt to eradicate the flow of illicit drugs, but to really stop it, or slow it down significantly, it must be shut it off at the faucet, the source.

Sources: KOAT Channel 4, KRQE Channel 13, Albuquerque Journal, FBI, DEA, 

Sunday, April 18, 2010

He's Called the Face of Ciudad Juarez Terror

Authorities say Eduardo Ravelo has helped turn the border city into Mexico's homicide capital. Now investigators think he played a role in the U.S. Consulate slayings.

Los Angeles Times
El Paso, Texas - Authorities think he had his fingertips altered to disguise his prints and plastic surgery to mask his face. Except for his dark eyes, federal officials doubt he looks anything like his 12-year-old FBI most wanted photo -- round face, trim mustache and a scar along his cheek.

Eduardo Ravelo, known on the street as "Tablas," or "lumber," for his ability to crush, allegedly rules thousands of acolytes in an operation that authorities say specializes in killing, conspiracy, extortion, drug trafficking and money laundering.

Though he is thought to live across the border in Ciudad Juarez and regularly cross into Texas, he has eluded arrest.

"He's a butterfly, a moth," said Samantha Mikeska, an FBI special agent leading the hunt for Ravelo. "He takes care of his people and that keeps him under the radar."

Ravelo, 42, is said by law enforcement to have been a major factor in turning Ciudad Juarez into the homicide capital of Mexico, with nearly 5,000 people slain there since 2008 and more than 600 this year. He is thought to be responsible for dozens of the slayings.

Now he has risen to new prominence as authorities in the U.S. and Mexico investigate whether he was behind the recent drive-by killings of three people associated with the U.S. Consulate in Ciudad Juarez.

Arthur H. Redelfs, a detention officer at the El Paso County Jail, and his wife, Lesley A. Enriquez, a consulate employee, were ambushed and killed March 13 as they drove home from a birthday party. A third person, who was married to a consulate employee, was apparently killed by mistake as he drove from the same party in a vehicle similar to the Redelfs'.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Barrio Azteca Targeting Police DHS Warns

Mexican 'Assassin Teams' May Target U.S. Law Enforcement, DHS Warns.

FOXNews.com

Law enforcement officers in west Texas are on guard following an alert issued by the Department of Homeland Security warning of retaliatory killings for a recent crackdown on the Barrio Azteca gang.

March 30: Police officers escort Ricardo Valles de la Rosa, right, to a court hearing in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

Law enforcement officers in west Texas are on guard following an alert issued by the Department of Homeland Security warning of retaliatory killings for a recent crackdown on the Barrio Azteca gang.

El Paso, Texas - David Cuthbertson, special agent in charge of the FBI's El Paso division, said the paramilitary-style gang has an "open policy" to kill its rivals and may turn its sights toward local law enforcement officers.

"[They] are extremely cold-blooded and aggressive," Cuthbertson told FoxNews.com. "The killings are done really without thought and any kind of remorse."

Citing uncorroborated information, Homeland Security issued an Officer Safety Alert on March 22, advising lawmen in the El Paso sector to vary their routes to and from work and to wear body armor while on duty. The alert also suggested that officers' relatives pay closer attention to unusual activity in the area.

"The Barrio Azteca gang may issue a 'green light' authorizing the attempted murder of [law enforcement officers] in the El Paso area," the alert read. "Due to the threat, it is recommended that [law enforcement officers] take extra safety precautions."

Monday, March 22, 2010

The Street Gang Connection

Mexican DTO's will not think twice to utilize the US and Mexican street gangs to maximize their effort in ensuring they remain the primary supplier of illicit drugs to the US.

Most recently the street gangs in Mexico and the US have been receiving a lot of notoriety. The recent execution of the two Americans in Ciudad Juarez with ties to the US consulate has many in the media and both sides of the government pointing their finger at Barrio Azteca, and with reason. 

Looking at the crime spree in the last few years in Mexico they have good reason to be suspect and be very concerned. The massacre of 16 students in cold blood in February of this year in Ciudad Juarez was possibly done to take out some of the "Double A" or "Artistas Asesinos." The mass killings last year in some of the rehab centers in Juarez have had ties to Barrio Azteca.

It has been rumored for some time that street gangs have allied with the big drug cartels, in the US and Mexico. They do this to distribute the drugs and in many cases to be the foot soldier of the big drug corporations.

The Barrio Azteca has had a strong relationship with the Juarez cartel while the “AA” have been rumored to support the Sinaloa cartel of El Chapo Guzman.

These are just two of the more prominent gangs active in both Juarez and El Paso, but there are more, a lot more. Only someone very naïve about drug trafficking strategy would think that gangs do not have links to the Mexican drug cartels, simply because they deal in the same business; drugs and violence.

So we should not be surprised when Mexico apprehends sicarios and they find them to be from a street gang with a cartel connection. Americans are very concern about the “spillover” of violence and drugs in to US soil, and some even dread that perhaps someday the Mexican drug cartels will set up shop in the US as they do in Mexico.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

The Foot Soldiers of the Drug Cartel

The drug cartel connection that has been overlooked;
the US/Mexican street gangs.

From the The New York Times -
"They carry both American passports and high-caliber weapons, making them the perfect cross-border assassins. They confuse the authorities by using a coded language that blends English, Spanish and the Aztecs’ ancient tongue of Nahuatl. The threat of prison is no big fear for members of the Barrio Azteca street gang, because they consider the cellblock to be home.

Barrio Azteca supplies hired killers for the drug traffickers who operate in Ciudad Juárez,

Barrio Azteca works for the Juárez cartel, which is run by Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, and the drug gang’s enforcement arm, which is known as La Línea, or The Line. Their avowed enemies on the Mexican side of the border are members of the Sinaloa cartel, which has been fighting for control of the lucrative smuggling route through the northern state of Chihuahua."

On Monday we will take a closer look at the street gangs like "Los Aztecas," and how they interact with the Mexcian cartel in their mayhem to retain their power base.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Gangs Unite for Cartels

Drug cartels unite rival gangs to work for common bad

USA Today

Rival prison gang members, including warring white supremacist and Hispanic groups, are brokering unusual criminal alliances outside prison to assist Mexican drug cartel operations in the U.S. and Mexico, federal law enforcement officials say.

The groups, including the Aryan Brotherhood and Mexican Mafia, remain bitter enemies in prison, divided along racial and ethnic lines. Yet outside, the desire for profits is overcoming rivalries.

Kevin O'Keefe, chief of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives criminal intelligence division, says investigators have linked the rival gangs to stolen vehicles, some loaded with currency and weapons, moving toward Mexico from Texas, Colorado, California and even Georgia.

"They realize that the financial gain is so lucrative that they have been willing to work together," O'Keefe says. "It's all about business."

Herb Brown, section chief of the FBI's gang division, says the groups use tactics of intimidation and violence. "What has concerned us — and, frankly, surprised us — is the increasing nexus between these gangs and the cartels," he says.

Most are involved with drugs, but officials say members also are moving into human smuggling.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Padilla's Gang Leaders in Custody


Albuquerque, NM - Police said they arrested two gang leaders during a South Valley raid. The alleged leader of the South Valley Los Padillas gang, Jerry Padilla Jr, 42, and his 25-year-old son are being held without bond until a preliminary hearing Monday in federal court.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Daniel Schnieder ordered Padilla Jr. and Jerry Padilla III to be held in a federal holding facility over the weekend while they work out arrangements for legal representation.

The elder Padilla is charged with three counts of distributing cocaine, and his son is charged with one count.

The federal charges stem from alleged undercover drug purchases made last spring, according to criminal complaints filed in federal court.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Gang Connections Within the U.S. Military

 
Law enforcement authorities are concerned the influence of warring Mexican drug cartels may now be penetrating the U.S. military.

Retired Border Patrol agent David Jackson flips through pictures of last Christmas. "This is Mike," he said, referring to his grandchild, Michael Jackson Apodaca.

David tells ABC-7 he encouraged Michael to join the military. "We talked him into going in the military just to get him away from this environment," he said.

However, Michael's past caught up to him this summer. He's now facing capital murder charges for the alleged contract killing of a drug cartel informant in El Paso. "They picked him because of his background," said David. "Before of he joined the military he was a member of a gang, the East Side whatever."

Sunday, November 15, 2009

The Barrio Azteca Gang-Cartel Interface


Barrio Azteza (BA) is only one of dozens of prison gangs operating along the U.S.-Mexican border that help Mexican drug trafficking organizations smuggle narcotics across the border and then distribute them for the cartels. Mexican drug trafficking organizations need groups that will do their bidding on the U.S. side of the border, as the border is the tightest choke point in the narcotics supply chain.

Getting large amounts of drugs across the border on a daily basis requires local connections to bribe border guards or border town policemen. Gangs on the U.S. side of the border also have contacts who sell drugs on the retail level, where markups bring in large profits.

The current trial has revealed that the partnership goes beyond narcotics to include violence as well. In light of the high levels of violence raging in Mexico related to narcotics trafficking, there is a genuine worry that this violence (and corruption) could spread inside the United States.


One of the roles that BA and other border gangs fill for Mexican drug-trafficking organizations is that of enforcer. Prison gangs wield tight control over illegal activity in a specific territory.

They keep tabs on people to make sure they are paying their taxes to the gang and not affiliating with rival gangs. To draw an analogy, they are like the local police who know the situation on the ground and can enforce specific rules handed down by a governmental body — or a Mexican cartel.

Barrio Azteca


Barrio Azteca is one of the most violent prison gangs in the United States. The gang is highly structured and has an estimated membership of 2,000. Most members are Mexican national or Mexican American males. Barrio Azteca is most active in the southwestern region, primarily in federal, state, and local corrections facilities in Texas and outside prison in southwestern Texas and southeastern New Mexico.

The gang’s main source of income is derived from smuggling heroin, powdered cocaine, and marijuana from Mexico into the United States for distribution both inside and outside prisons.

Gang members often transport illicit drugs across the U.S.–Mexico border for DTOs. Barrio Azteca members also are involved in alien smuggling, arson, assault, auto theft, burglary, extortion, intimidation, kidnapping, robbery, and weapons violations.

The Barrio Azteca was founded in 1986 by gangsters Benito “Benny” Acosta, Alberto “Indio” Estrada, Benjamín “T-Top” Olivarez, Manuel "Tolon" Cardoza, Manuel “El Grande” Fernandez, Raúl “Rabillo” Fierro and José “Gitano” Ledesma.


The gang succeeded in attracting thousands of violent offenders who hated the Mexikanemi and Texas Syndicate. The Barrio Azteca’s primary goal was to dominate the prison system and gain control of it’s lucrative drug trade.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

More Gangs in El Paso than Juarez?


Police authorities have identified 539 gangs operating in El Paso, about 80 more than in Ciudad Juarez.

The official data also indicates that members of local criminal organizations total more than 5,600 men, women and children.

Although a few are just transitional and only a few are actually considered dangerous such as Barrio Azteca, otherwise known as the "Aztecs" when they cross the Rio Grande, the rest of the gangs pose a risk to border security as they could easily be hired by drug cartels that operate in the Mexican territory.

That is why local and state authorities have requested from the Transportation Committee of the Senate under the Homeland Security for more police resources and intelligence initiatives to dismantle these gangs and stop a possible expansion of the narco-violence in this border.

During the hearing held at the University of Texas at El Paso, the seven-member state committee heard progress and needs on infrastructure development of roads, border security and combating transitional gangs.

Mexican Drug Cartels Forming Alliances with American Street Gangs

The War on Drugs has become the longest most costly and dangerous war in American history


By Michael Webster: Investigative Reporter
Laguna Journal

As America wages its war on drugs and terror with costs to the tax payer in the billions; organized criminal gangs here in the U.S. have merged with the Mexican drug cartels. The threat to U.S. interests from the emerging international crime cartel grows more serious every day. 35 years after Nixon started the war on drugs the War on Drugs has become the longest and most costly war in American history. The Drug War is a disastrous failure.

The American war on drugs shows how money, power and greed have corrupted not just drug dealers and drug users, but how it can corrupt entire governments like Columbia, South America, Mexico and yes, the U.S. The critical question - what can be done about it? The track record to date is dismal.

Groups like the Sinaloa, Juarez, Tijuana, gulf Cartels, has virtually taken over law enforcement and high ranking Mexican government officials in their host country.

These dangerous and significant players on the international stage, carry out their criminal activities across borders at will and threaten the stability and interests of the United States. In other words they are a big security threat to this nation.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Gangs on the Borderland


American border towns have not seen anything remotely approaching the blood-stained carnage of some north Mexican cities where rival drug cartels are in a high-stakes war that killed over 6,000 people last year, but that may changed if the problems in Mexico spiral out of control. The links that U. S. gangs have with the Mexican cartels should be a concern. Gangs already control the distribution of the majority of illicit drugs in the streets of the U.S. The drug lords to the south can easily tap this ready-made criminal infrastructure for a range of nefarious purposes. And we better read the writing on the wall because it already has.


Gangs and their culture of violence, drugs and crime are one of America's pressing social ills, but in the borderlands the problem has an urgency. In the United States local gangs play a major role in the distribution of the drugs brought in from Mexico. It has been well documented that there is a significant cooperation between the drug cartels and the gangs in the US. are following established links with the cartels to expand their own business operations. Gang members will do what is profitable. Hardened gangs are carving out turf on the border and beyond as part of a scramble to make money from the tons of illegal drugs pouring north from Mexico each month.

Cross-border links between the cartels and gangs face one obstacle more formidable than the Rio Grande River:

Trust.