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

Showing posts with label vicente zambada niebla. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vicente zambada niebla. Show all posts

Thursday, February 27, 2025

‘Mayo’ Zambada' demands his repatriation, he says he was kidnapped. By: RIODOCE

 "Char" for Borderland Beat 

This information was posted by RIODOCE 

Author | Miguel Ángel Vega

Date | February 25, 2025

Time | 1:00 pm


David Weinstein, a lawyer and former federal prosecutor in the United States, claims that El Mayo can use the information he has about the government to reach an agreement with both countries

The information that Ismael El Mayo Zambada would provide, not only to Mexican and American authorities, but also to international public opinion through his lawyer Frank Pérez, would be an unprecedented bombshell, as it would reveal details related to the corruption of governors, politicians, military and police commanders, and businessmen from Sinaloa.

The information seems endless, according to intelligence sources in Mexico and the United States, and it would have started at the time of his arrest, on July 25, when he revealed details about how he had gone to Huertos del Pedregal, in Culiacán, to attend a meeting with the governor of Sinaloa, Rubén Rocha Moya, and the sons of Joaquín Guzmán Loera, and to mediate a dispute that the state governor had with Héctor Melesio Cuen Ojeda.

The meeting was actually a trap by Joaquín Guzmán López, as revealed by Mayo Zambada himself in a letter sent by his lawyer Frank Pérez to the media, because upon his arrival, the capo said that he was attacked, subdued, and later taken against his will to Texas, where he was handed over to agents of the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS, for its acronym in Spanish).

“The information that Ismael el Mayo Zambada has is a lot, and it would make the Mexican government tremble, more than that of the United States, due to his ties with politicians and officials,” said a military intelligence official, who at one time investigated cases such as that of Zambada García and Joaquín el Chapo Guzmán.

The kidnapping of the capo and his subsequent arrest has left a wave of death, because a little more than six months after the conflict between Mayos and Chapos began, the Attorney General of the State of Sinaloa has reported more than 900 deaths, and almost 1,300 missing persons.

As a new resource, Zambada García sent a letter to the Mexican embassy in New York, with a copy to the president of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum, to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and to the Attorney General's Office demanding that the Mexican government defend him, as a Mexican citizen, and demand that the United States immediately repatriate him to national territory, and at the same time, prevent the death penalty from being applied to him during the process, since his arrest and transfer to the neighboring country to the north was illegal.

"I was deprived of my freedom in national territory, through physical coercion and deception, and subsequently transferred to the United States by a Mexican individual, without authorization from the Mexican authorities, and without complying with any of the applicable legal procedures," reads the letter, sent by Frank Pérez to this weekly.

The letter adds: The Government of the United States of America has a responsibility for action by omission since it is a well-known fact that the legal requirements and international commitments that are mandatory for both countries were not met when I was received. Therefore, it can be stated clearly and precisely that the express commitments of the international treaties that I invoke in this section have been violated.

David Weinstein, a lawyer and former federal prosecutor of the United States, said that given the power of convocation that Mayo Zambada has, he could influence his repatriation, and that the death penalty not be applied to him, although everything will depend on the agreements regarding the extradition treaties that exist between both countries and taking advantage of what he knows to negotiate.

“In this case, the accused can use that information he has about the government, and reach an agreement with both countries,” said Weinstein, who is currently a trial lawyer in Miami.

President Claudia Sheinbaum said that as a government they would review the case, because beyond who Zambada García is, and the crimes he committed, it is a matter that has to do with the rights of a Mexican citizen about to be tried in the United States, but without having followed all the legal procedure that the law requires.

“No one is defending El Mayo Zambada, but the fact, and there is an issue in the letter that has to do with sovereignty and the trial,” Sheinbaum Pardo stressed.

Zambada García refers to a series of constitutional articles, human rights, migration laws and extradition agreements between Mexico and the United States, including the case of Dr. Humberto Álvarez Machain, who was kidnapped by US agents in Mexico in 1992 and taken against his will to the United States.

Although the U.S. Supreme Court then ruled that his kidnapping did not prevent U.S. courts from exercising jurisdiction over him, the case sparked international controversy and led to the signing in 1994 of the Treaty between the United Mexican States and the United States of America to prohibit cross-border kidnappings, which establishes that neither party should carry out or tolerate the capture of persons in the territory of the other party to take them to its jurisdiction.

El Mayo emphasized that while the Mexican government determines how to defend him, the United States must commit to offering sufficient guarantees so that the death penalty is not applied to him.

The former leader of the Sinaloa Cartel also mentions that he hopes that Mexico really defends him, but that if he notices a certain passivity on the part of the Mexican State, he could interpret it as a renunciation of its responsibility to protect its citizens and would set a dangerous precedent that weakens its ability to defend its nationals in similar situations.

"If that is the situation, it would lead me to denounce my own country before international bodies," said the boss.

Article published on February 23, 2025 in issue 1152 of the weekly Ríodoce.


Friday, August 16, 2024

El 'Vampi' Linked To Zambada Family, One Of Those Killed In La Campana: Sinaloa

 "Char" for Borderland Beat

This article was translated and reposted from RIODOCE 



Juan Carlos “G”, “El Vampi”, one of the two men who were found murdered Wednesday night inside a Jeep Rubicon pickup truck near the town of La Campana, in the Villa Adolfo López Mateos syndicate, El Tamarindo, belonged to the Zambada faction.

In a photograph, El Vampi, who was originally from Culiacán, appears alongside two of Ismael Zambada García's sons, Vicente Zambada Niebla, El Vicentillo, and Ismael Zambada Imperial, El Mayito Gordo, as well as Eliseo Imperial Castro, El Cheyo Ántrax, El Mayo's nephew, Francisco Arce Rubio, Pancho Arce, also a member of the Ántrax, and José Miguel Güero Bastidas Manjarrez.

Along with Juan Carlos, Ivan Ivanhoe or Ivan Onofre, 40 years old, who was nicknamed “El Tocino” and was originally from Badiraguato, was murdered.

According to the information, the two men were returning from the funeral of a relative when they were killed. Their bodies were left with bullet wounds inside the luxury van, on the side of the Mexico 15 International Highway, near the town of La Campana, in the Villa Adolfo Lopez Mateos El Tamarindo syndicate, municipality of Culiacan.

In the photograph, El Vampi appears at the lower left, next to Güero Bastidas, who was killed in 2011, according to the testimony of Dámaso López Núñez, El Licenciado, on the orders of Chapo Guzmán. Behind Juan Carlos is Vicentillo and his brother El Mayito Gordo, both arrested and extradited to the US, and behind them, Cheyo Anthrax, executed last May in Culiacan, as well as Pancho Arce, also gunned down in 2011 in the same city.


FOLLOW-UP            BY: CHAR 

WARNING GRAPHIC IMAGE





LA CAMPANA, SINALOA 







Thursday, February 25, 2010

Mexican Cartel Figure Pleads Not Guilty

In this courtroom artist's drawing Vicente Zambada Niebla appears before a U.S. District Judge Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2010, in Chicago's federal court. Zambada-Niebla, accused of leading Mexico's Sinaloa drug cartel, has pleaded not guilty to charges that he conspired to import large quantities of heroin and literally tons of cocaine into the United States.

The Associated Press

Chicago, IL US - A man accused of being one of the leaders of a powerful Mexican drug cartel pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges that he conspired to import and sell large amounts of cocaine and heroin in the United States.

Jesus Vincente Zambada-Niebla, 34, listened silently to an interpreter as his New York-based defense attorney, Edward Panzer, entered the plea before Judge Ruben Castillo.

An especially large security contingent were on hand for the hearing in what prosecutors are calling the largest international drug conspiracy case in the Chicago's history.

Authorities say Zambada-Niebla was an influential, second-generation member of the Sinaloa drug cartel, and that he helped move large amounts of cocaine and heroin from South and Central America to the United States from 2005 to 2008. They say hundreds of kilograms of cocaine were taken to Chicago.

Zambada-Niebla was arrested last year in Mexico City and was turned over to U.S. authorities on Thursday in what Justice Department officials said was a major step forward in the war on drugs. The Drug Enforcement Administration led the Chicago-based portion of the investigation, but numerous other federal and local law enforcement officials also took part.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Narco Junior Extradited to the U.S.

Mexico: Alleged "narco-junior" Vicente Zambada extradited to the U.S.

Los Angeles Times

Mexico City - Vicente Zambada, son of one of Mexico's top drug kingpins and allegedly a major operator in his own right, was extradited Thursday to the United States, where he will stand trial on federal trafficking charges, authorities in both countries said.

He joins a list of Mexican drug traffickers such as Juan Garcia Abrego, Osiel Cardenas, Francisco Javier Arellano Felix, Hector "El Guero" Palma, Miguel Caro Quintero Vicente Zambada Niebla all now serving sentences in U.S. jails

Zambada, 34, was flown to Chicago and will be arraigned on Tuesday before U.S. District Judge Ruben Castillo.

Federal agents arrested Zambada in March of last year in an affluent neighborhood in southern Mexico City. He was picked up along with five heavily armed bodyguards. He has been held in a maximum-security prison in the northern border state of Tamaulipas and on Thursday was handed over to U.S. authorities at the border crossing at Brownsville, Texas.