Posts Tagged Mexico

“Project Deliverance” Mexico and U.S. authorities join forces

The 22-month multi-agency investigation called “Project Deliverance” resulted in the arrest of more than 2,200 individuals and the seizure of $154 million in U.S. currency, 1,262 pounds of methamphetamine, 2.5 tons of cocaine, 1,410 pounds of heroin, 69 tons of marijuana, 501 weapons, and 527 vehicles.

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/08/mexico-and-us-joining-forces-to-fight.html

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13 Die in Drug-Related Violence in Mexico

A soldier stands guard at a crime scene with a covered-up body next to a crashed car in Yahualica Gonzalez Gallo August 15, 2010. Seven unidentified dead bodies were found scattered around the town on Sunday after shootings had been reported in different areas, according to local media.

Gunmen killed 13 people in separate incidents over the weekend in Mexico’s Guerrero and Jalisco states, police said.

Police found the bodies of seven men in Yahualica de Gonzalez Gallo, a town in the western state of Jalisco.

Coroner’s office personnel removed the bodies of the unidentified men from crime scenes in several neighborhoods in the small town located near the border with Zacatecas state.

Police stand near a burned car where the bodies of two burned people had been found on the outskirts of Yahualica Gonzalez Gallo August 15, 2010.

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/08/13-die-in-drug-related-violence-in.html

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Police Confirm Mexican Mayor Is Missing

Mayor Edelmiro Cavazos Leal

The mayor of the northern Mexican city of Santiago is missing and was apparently kidnapped by gunmen working for an organized crime group, police said Monday.

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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Zeta Leader Killed in Shootout in Monterrey

“Following a pursuit and confrontation with the military, four members of an armed group were killed by gunfire after they come out shooting from an SUV in Colonia Caracol south of Monterrey.

Military sources reported that a convoy of three army units ran into two SUV’s along Avenida Chapultepec, about 500 meters east of the junction with Revolution.

When the military attempted to stop the two vehicles for an inspection, the vehicles sped away at full speed on a west bound direction.

While fleeing, the gunmen launched an attack against the military that forced the military to respond back with gunfire.

Mexican police say narco-blockades are becoming more common in Monterrey, with the most recent occurring Saturday. Earlier this month, soldiers stood guard around stolen trailers used by gunmen to form a barricade on a main road.

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/08/zeta-leader-killed-in-shootout-in.html

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Mexicans Discover Mutilated Body of Police Officer

Residents in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, discovered the severely mutilated body of a federal police officer Sunday outside a strip mall, the latest victim in Mexico’s ongoing drug war.

Unknown assailants “pulled off the hands, feet, head, legs and arms” of the victim, the state of Chihuahua prosecutor’s office said.

Other victims reported over the weekend include three in the border town of Palomas — their heads were left on benches in the downtown plaza — three killed in the state capital Chihuahua City, four in Parral, and five shot dead in Ciudad Juarez, police said.

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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What happens if Mexico settles with the cartels?

The U.S. Department of Defense defines irregular warfare as “a violent struggle among state and non-state actors for legitimacy and influence over the relevant populations.” By this definition, Mexico is fighting an irregular war. The Mexican government’s campaign against the drug cartels is far more than a law enforcement problem; the two sides are engaged in a violent struggle for influence over the Mexican population.

Four years after Mexican President Felipe Calderón threw 80,000 soldiers at the cartels, their businesses remain as strong as ever. According to the Los Angeles Times, the overall drug trade continues to flourish, bringing in by one estimate $39 billion a year to the Mexican economy, equal to 4.5 percent of Mexico’s economic output in 2009.

The cartels, formerly just smuggling businesses operating largely out of sight, have evolved into political insurgents, and Calderón has openly wondered whether the Mexican state will survive.

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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Hezbollah, Radical but Rational

“This report is republished with permission of STRATFOR

By Scott Stewart

When we discuss threats along the U.S./Mexico border with sources and customers, or when we write an analysis on topics such as violence and improvised explosive devices along the border, a certain topic inevitably pops up: Hezbollah.

We frequently hear concerns from U.S. and Mexican government sources about the Iranian and Hezbollah network in Latin America. They fear that Iran would use Hezbollah to strike targets in the Western Hemisphere and even inside the United States if the United States or Israel were to conduct a military strike against Tehran’s nuclear program. Such concerns are expressed not only by our sources and are relayed not only to us. Nearly every time tensions increase between the United States and Iran, the media report that the Hezbollah threat to the United States is growing. Iran also has a vested interest in playing up the danger posed by Hezbollah and its other militant proxies as it tries to dissuade the United States and Israel from attacking its nuclear facilities.

A close look at Hezbollah reveals a potent capacity to conduct terrorist attacks. The group is certainly more capable and could be far more dangerous than al Qaeda. An examination also reveals that Hezbollah has a robust presence in Latin America and that it uses its network there to smuggle people into the United States, where it has long maintained a presence. A balanced look at Hezbollah, however, shows that, while the threat it poses is real — and serious — that threat is not new and it is not likely to be exercised. There are a number of factors that have limited Hezbollah’s use of its international network for terrorist purposes in recent years. A decision to return to such activity would not be made lightly, or without carefully calculating the cost. Read the rest of this entry »

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Mexico Drug Cartels use Gory Videos to Spread Fear

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/08/mexico-drug-cartels-use-gory-videos-to.html

“Powerful drug cartels are increasingly using gruesome videos of executions and interrogations to intimidate their rivals, police and an already terrified public in Mexico’s vicious drug war.

In one video, a man with a black eye is tethered to a chair in his underwear and appears to be strangled to death with a tourniquet by his captors. There is a “Z” scrawled across his chest, for Zetas, a spinoff of the Gulf Cartel.

In another video, a man is slowly beheaded with a knife.”

Seems somehow familiar…where have we seen this tactic before…?

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Mexico’s Juarez Cartel Gets Desperate

“This report is republished with permission of STRATFOR

By Scott Stewart

On Aug. 3, the U.S. Consulate in Juarez, Mexico, reopened after being closed for four days. On July 29, the consulate had announced in a warden message that it would be closed July 30 and would remain closed until a review of the consulate’s security posture could be completed.

The closure appears to be linked to a message found on July 15, signed by La Linea, the enforcement arm of the Juarez cartel. This message was discovered at the scene shortly after a small improvised explosive device (IED) in a car was used in a well-coordinated ambush against federal police agents in Juarez, killing two agents. In the message, La Linea claimed credit for the attack and demanded that the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and FBI investigate and remove the head of Chihuahua State Police Intelligence (CIPOL), who the message said is working with the Sinaloa Federation and its leader, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman Loera. The message threatened that if the intelligence official was not removed by July 30, La Linea would deploy a car bomb with 100 kilograms of high explosives in Juarez.

The deadline has now passed without incident and the consulate has reopened. Examining this chain of events provides some valuable insights into the security of U.S. diplomatic facilities as well as the current state of events in Juarez, a city that in recent years has experienced levels of violence normally associated with an active war zone. Read the rest of this entry »

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How does Mexico deal with THEIR illegal aliens?

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Los Zetas vs CDG battleground spreads to Piedras Negras.

“The bloody battles between Los Zetas and the Cartel del Golfo (CDG) for control of the Tamaulipas plazas in la Frontera Chica (Reynosa, Miguel Aleman, Camargo and Guerrero) and Nuevo Laredo are now spreading west to the Piedras Negras, Coahuila area.

All these cities and towns face the Rio Grande and South Texas and together with the Ciudad Juarez-El Paso plaza are major conduits for the trafficking of drugs and humans north into the Mid-Western and East Coast areas of the U.S..”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/08/los-zetas-vs-cdg-battleground-spreads.html

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Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel Villarreal, shot and killed

“When the late drug kingpin Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel Villarreal, was shot and killed by soldiers in his luxury safehouse, he was in possession of 10 suitcases containing $ 7 million (U.S.) a vast collection of jewelry, at least half a dozen cellphones, and most important of all, a laptop computer whose data storage contains information vital to the operation of his empire.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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Ciudad Valles: Gunmen in convoy of 8 vehicles kill six policemen

“Gunmen in a convoy of eight vehicles killed six policemen, a city worker and a civilian and terrorized the population in Ciudad Valles, San Luis Potosi, during a string of consecutive attacks as the convoy crossed the length of the city.

Local media reported that the convoy entered the city between 6:00 PM and 7:00 PM on Friday, July 30, and drove boulevard Mexico-Laredo Boulevard and arrived first at a Coca Cola bottling where they shot down and killed two state police officers without stopping.

Several blocks later the gunmen stormed a municipal police installation and opened fire, killing three policemen and a civilian worker. Another policeman died later that night in a local hospital of his wounds.

On Sunday, August 1, the Mexican Army officially took control of police duties in the city.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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15 more execution-style murder victims were found in Northern Mexico

“Tamaulipas was the scene of yet another harvest of death as the bodies of 15 more execution-style murder victims were found abandoned by their killers on the highway between Matamoros and San Fernando Thursday afternoon, July 29.

The 13 men and 2 women were found with their hands bound with plastic cable ties, faces bandaged and with visible marks of torture and beatings. All had been executed with a shot to the head.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/

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85% of Drug Traffickers arrested in Mexico are Set Free

“Only 1.5 of every 10 individuals charged with drug trafficking and murder in Mexico ends with a sentence, while the remaining of the 85% go free for lack of evidence even if the PAN government brags about their arrests in the media.

It is a ritual that takes place almost every day: people accused of drug trafficking and murder are paraded before the media to show that Mexico is winning its war against drugs.

But once the camera lights go out, three-quarters of them are released.”

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/07/85-of-drug-traffickers-are-set-free.html

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