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2009 09 30: Destituyen a mando policiaco en Cuernavaca

Posted by Maher on September 30, 2009

Fuente: El Universal

Farfán Carriola asumió el mando policial el 30 de mayo pasado luego de que su antecesor, Francisco Sánchez, fue detenido por elementos de la Subprocuraduría de Investigación Especializada en Delincuencia Organizada de la PGR, por presuntos nexos con el cártel de los Beltrán Leyva

CUERNAVACA, Mor.— El general Manuel Farfán Carriola fue destituido como secretario de Seguridad Pública y Tránsito Metropolitano de Cuernavaca, tras ser acusado por agentes de ordenar el sábado pasado el desarme del sector uno de la dependencia, lo que provocó la muerte de un uniformado que acudió al auxilio de una familia sometida por tres asaltantes en una casa habitación.

Farfán Carriola asumió el mando policial el 30 de mayo pasado luego de que su antecesor, Francisco Sánchez, fue detenido por elementos de la Subprocuraduría de Investigación Especializada en Delincuencia Organizada de la PGR, por presuntos nexos con el cártel de los Beltrán Leyva.

Desde el sábado, policías de Cuernavaca señalaron que Farfán Carriola ordenó desarmar a los elementos para prestar las pistolas al cuerpo de Bomberos, ya que presuntamente realizarían prácticas de tiro.

También fue cesado el subsecretario de Reinserción Social en el estado, Daniel Montero.

Posted in Administration of Justice, Beltran Leyva Cartel, Narcotics Trafficking, Seguridad Pública | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

2009 09 19: Mexican DTOs Adopt Corporate Organizational Structure

Posted by Maher on September 23, 2009

Nearly all information in the following document is obtained from September 19, 2009 El Universal article that can be viewed at the following link:
http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/171372.html
.  Additional research analysis and information will support much of these findings in forthcoming documents.

Mexican cartels have changed their structures to resemble the organizational structure of transnational corporations.

  • They have consolidated by way of administrative cells that are moving towards a model of transnational administrative efficiency that serves the double purpose of improving business unit efficiency and protecting the overall cartel from operations disruptions resulting from the killing or capture of leaders.

The new organizational structure of the Mexican cartel has a corporate structure

  • CEO (Chief Executive Officer or Executive Director)
  • Operations Unit
  • Technology Unit
  • Finance Unit
  • Chief Channel Officer (Strategic Alliance Unit (coordination function))

Additionally they have functional programs that include:

  • Expansion strategies/programs
  • Recruitment activities
  • Internal control and monitoring
  • Taxation functions
  • Money laundering
  • Quality control
  • Public Relations

Case Example:

Gulf Cartel (following the capture of Osiel Cárdenas Guillén [March 14, 2003 & extradited Jan 20, 2007]) went through a radical transformation of its organizational structure and now operates like a triumvirate where the power has been divided between:

  • LA COMPANIA
    • Ezequiel Antonio Cardenas Guillen
    • Eduardo Costilla Sanchez (El Coss)
    • Heriberto Lazcano – head of Los Zetas

The Company: allegedly uses sophisticated registers (databases) to maintain their programs, track orders, employees, payroll, bribes to officials, accounts receivable.

Suppliers, payments, area specific price regulation, structuring bonds for members, employment in the plazas, protection of drug transport, logistics.

They control the distribution in the majority of the cities in the United States and have gained market share in the areas that they still do not control.

Every leader is placed in charge of a plaza. Known as a “Chief of Plaza”. Plazas are located in the US, Canada, Europe, Afirca, Central and South America too – not just in Mexico.

  • Establish strategic alliances in order to promote supply and distribution security/alternatives.

Period of Structural Shift (2008-2009) – violence increases dramatically:

  • Cartels stopped working together through the Federation
    • Rivalries sharpened – “violent war in Mexico among various actors”

What are they fighting for?

  • Control over routes of narco-traffic to the US
  • Loyalty of distributors – including the FLORES BROTHERS – who operate in the US and buy drugs from the SINALOA CARTEL, BELTRAN LEYVA CARTEL – IN New York
    • Disagreements over distributor loyalty resulted in the breakdown of the FEDERATION – exit of BELTRAN LEYVA
  • SINALOA
    • Two factions
      • CEO – Joaquín Guzmán Loera (El Chapo)
        • Ignacio Coronel Villarreal (Nacho Coronel)
          • Since it appears that El Chapo has prostate cancer, Ignacio has taken over managing this faction of the Sinaloa Cartel
          • CEO – Ismael Zambada García (El Mayo)
          • The two coordinated activities but were otherwise organizationally separate entities

The Federation was founded to coordinate all of the Mexican cartels and since 2008 was operating with the arranging of cooperation with suppliers of the drug to buy and transport it.

  • Shared routes, judicial protection, and community protection
  • El Chapo negotiated (on behalf of the Federation) prices of multi-ton loads of cocaine coming from South and Central America (including Colombia and Panama)
    • Directed and arranged the transport of multi-kilo loads of cocaine and heroin from the interior of Mexico to the border with the United States – afterwards towards the interior of the United States

Belrán Leyva allied itself with the PEDRO and MARGARITO FLORES brothers in the United States to ‘not divide’ the family and use several means of communicating between them – including but not limited to cell phones, radios, computers, and electronic agendas – to facilitate activities.

  • They used codes to communicate, conceal and confuse or hide information – with the goal of evading detection from authorities.
  • They use the media to evade justice, protect their activities (including bribery, violence, threats, intimidation of authorities, rivals and their own members of the cartel)

“The cartels are not interested in political power; they use it to their advantage.  They are organizations that are anti-State, and they seek protection from political power.”

The Juarez-El Paso corridor/plaza:

  • 70% of cocaine crosses through this plaza into the United States

Juarez Cartel has historically denominated this corridor by continuously adapting and modifying its structure.

  • Vicente Carrillo Fuentes and five our more people make up the cartel leadership
    • VCF is the supervisor/manager, principal administrator
  • Delegates
    • Manufacturing
    • Importation
    • Distribution
    • Bribery/ Payoffs (law enforcement & public officials)
    • Enforcers (acts of violence, debt collection)

Mexican cartels control 80% of cocaine coming from Colombia.

90% of cocaine entering the US comes through Mexico.

Posted in Arrellano Felix (Tijuana), Beltran Leyva Cartel, Gulf Cartel, Juarez Cartel, Narcotics Trafficking, Sinaloa Cartel (Pacifico), Zetas | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

2009 08 20: Department of Justice Press Release

Posted by Maher on August 20, 2009

Fuente: Department of Justice

Ten Alleged Mexican Drug Cartel Leaders Among 43 Defendants Indicted in Brooklyn and Chicago as Part of Coordinated Strike Against Mexican Drug Trafficking Organizations

Forty-three defendants in the United States and Mexico, including 10 alleged Mexican drug cartel leaders, have been charged in 12 indictments unsealed yesterday and today in U.S. federal courts in Brooklyn and Chicago, the Department of Justice, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) announced. The alleged leaders and other high-ranking members of several of Mexico’s most powerful drug cartels are charged with operating continuing criminal enterprises or participating in international drug trafficking conspiracies.

“Breaking up these dangerous cartels and stemming the flow of drugs, weapons and cash across the Southwest border is a top priority for this Justice Department,” said Attorney General Eric Holder. “The cartels whose alleged leaders are charged today constitute multi-billion dollar networks that funnel drugs onto our streets and what invariably follows is more crime and violence in our communities. Today’s indictments demonstrate our unwavering commitment to root out the leaders of these criminal enterprises wherever they may be found. We will continue to stand with our partners in Mexico to dismantle the cartels’ insidious operations.”

“Realizing that neither of our two countries can win over drug traffickers on its own, we have built up the bilateral cooperation between the United States and Mexico to allow us to combine our investigative and legal resources to dismantle these transnational drug organizations and bring the leaders to justice,” said Mexican Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora. “We can only protect the right of our societies to live in peace and harmony through our governments’ mutual trust and shared responsibility.”

Three of the suspected leaders were charged in both Brooklyn and Chicago. Joaquin “el Chapo” Guzman-Loera, Ismael “el Mayo” Zambada-Garcia and Arturo Beltran-Leyva, who are allegedly among the most powerful drug traffickers in Mexico, are alleged to be present and former heads of an organized crime syndicate known as the “Sinaloa Cartel” and “the Federation.” Each of these three is designated as a Consolidated Priority Organization Target or CPOT by the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF).

Also charged in the Brooklyn indictments were seven other cartel leaders, including CPOT Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel Villarreal, Hector Beltran-Leyva (Arturo’s brother) and Jesus Zambada-Garcia (Ismael’s brother), each alleged leaders within the Federation; CPOT Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, the alleged head of the Juarez Cartel; CPOT Luis and Esteban Rodriguez-Olivera, alleged leaders of Los Gueros; and CPOT Tirso Martinez-Sanchez, the alleged head of his own international drug trafficking organization.

Together, the four Brooklyn and eight Chicago indictments charge that between 1990 and December 2008, Guzman-Loera, Ismael Zambada-Garcia, Arturo Beltran-Leyva and others were responsible for importing into the United States and distributing nearly 200 metric tons of cocaine, additional large quantities of heroin, and the bulk smuggling from the United States to Mexico of more than $5.8 billion in cash proceeds from narcotics sales throughout the United States and Canada.

The indictments unsealed today collectively seek forfeiture of more than $5.8 billion in drug proceeds. Also, more than 32,500 kilograms of cocaine have been seized, including approximately 3,000 kilograms seized during the Chicago investigation, approximately 7,500 kilograms seized during the New York investigation and 22,500 kilograms seized previously that were later linked to the activities of the Federation. The indictments also detail seizures of 64 kilograms of heroin and more than $22.6 million in cash during the course of the investigation.

As part of the coordinated actions, eight defendants have been arrested in the Chicago and Atlanta areas in the last week.  Earlier this year, 10 additional defendants, all customers of or couriers for the organizations, were charged separately in Chicago. Five defendants, all New York-based wholesale distributors or logistics coordinators for the cartels, were charged separately in Brooklyn. In all, 58 individuals have been charged in the investigation coordinated between the U.S. Attorneys’ Offices in Brooklyn and Chicago. All but one of the defendants face a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted of the charges against them.

“The indictments announced today are the result of a sweeping national and international effort to stem the flow of drugs across the U.S./Mexico border and into our communities,” said Benton J. Campbell, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. “We will apply all available resources to win this battle.” Mr. Campbell extended his grateful appreciation to ICE and the DEA Task Force in New York, the agencies responsible for leading the Eastern District’s investigation, and to the assistance provided by ICE and DEA in Miami, Houston, Mexico and Colombia.

“These indictments are among the most significant drug conspiracy charges ever returned in Chicago,” said Patrick J. Fitzgerald, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois. “They charge two major international supply organizations with importing many tons of cocaine and large quantities of heroin into the United States, often to wholesale distribution customers in Chicago, as well as to customers in other major cities. The defendants allegedly used practically every means of transportation imaginable to move these large amounts of drugs and to funnel massive amounts of money back to Mexico. I applaud the efforts of the DEA investigators who worked hard to put these cases together.” Mr. Fitzgerald also thanked the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Division agents in Chicago and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Wisconsin in Milwaukee for their assistance.

“Today’s indictments are yet another strike against the leadership of the Mexican drug cartels,” said DEA Acting Administrator Michele M. Leonhart. “Our relentless investigations penetrated deep into these pervasive criminal organizations, connecting street operations in U.S. communities like Chicago and New York to the top drug kingpins calling the shots in Mexico.  Make no mistake; along with our courageous partners in Mexico, we will break these cartels and pursue their leaders.”

“Law enforcement agencies in the Americas are working closer than ever before and setting up a united, borderless offense against drug cartels,” said Homeland Security Assistant Secretary for ICE John Morton.  “This is a significant step in breaking down the infrastructure of these criminal organizations.”

According to one of the Brooklyn indictments, between 1990 and 2005, Guzman-Loera, Ismael Zambada-Garcia and Arturo Beltran-Leyva, together with Hector Beltran-Leyva, Jesus Zambada-Garcia and Villareal as leaders of the Federation, conspired to import more than 120 metric tons (264,000 pounds) of cocaine into the United States through the cooperative arrangements and coordination that the Federation provided. Members of the Federation shared drug transportation routes and obtained their drugs from various Colombian drug organizations, in particular, the Colombian Norte Valle Cartel. For example, in 2004, two shipments totaling 22,500 kilograms of cocaine were seized by the U.S. Coast Guard off the coast of Mexico. The indictment alleges that the defendants employed “sicarios,” or hitmen, who carried out hundreds of acts of violence in Mexico, including murders, kidnappings, tortures and violent collections of drug debts, at their direction.

The indictments in Chicago allege that in approximately early 2008 Arturo Beltran-Leyva split his alliance with Guzman-Loera, Ismael Zambada-Garcia and the Federation due to various issues, including control of lucrative narcotics trafficking routes into the United States and the loyalty of wholesale narcotics customers, including the alleged leaders of a Chicago distribution cell. The indictments charge that Guzman-Loera and Ismael Zambada-Garcia, together with seven other high-ranking associates, including two of their sons, Alfredo Guzman-Salazar (Guzman-Loera’s son) and Jesus Vicente Zambada-Niebla (Ismael Zamada-Garcia’s son, who is in custody in Mexico), coordinated their narcotics trafficking activities to import multi-ton quantities of cocaine from Central and South American countries, through Mexico, and into the United States using various means of transportation, including Boeing 747 cargo aircraft; submarines and other submersible and semi-submersible vessels; container ships; go-fast boats; fishing vessels; buses; rail cars; tractor trailers; and automobiles

Guzman-Loera and Ismael Zambada-Garcia allegedly coordinated their cocaine and heroin smuggling activities to wholesale distributors throughout the United States, including a large distribution cell in Chicago of which 16 individuals were charged in an indictment unsealed today. On average, the Chicago cell allegedly received 1,500 to 2,000 kilograms of cocaine per month, at times obtaining all or a large portion of that quantity from Guzman-Loera and Ismael Zambada-Garcia and the factions of the Sinaloa Cartel they controlled, while also obtaining a substantial portion of that quantity from the Arturo Beltran-Leyva Cartel. From Chicago, the indictments allege that large quantities of cocaine and heroin were further distributed to customers in Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio; Detroit; Milwaukee; New York; Philadelphia; Washington, D.C.; Vancouver, British Columbia; and elsewhere.

Guzman-Loera, Ismael Zambada-Garcia and the factions of the Sinaloa Cartel they controlled allegedly used various means to evade law enforcement and protect their narcotics distribution activities, including obtaining guns and other weapons; bribes; engaging in violence and threats of violence; and intimidating with threats of violence members of law enforcement, rival narcotics traffickers and members of their own drug trafficking organizations. According to the indictment, Guzman-Loera, Ismael Zambada-Garcia and his son, Jesus Vicente Zambada-Niebla, discussed obtaining weapons from the United States and using violence against American and/or Mexican government buildings in retaliation for each country’s enforcement of its narcotics laws and to perpetuate their narcotics trafficking activities.

In one of the indictments unsealed today in Brooklyn, Vicente Carrillo Fuentes is alleged to be the leader of the Juarez Cartel, which operates in the Juarez-El Paso corridor, one of the primary drug smuggling routes along the border between the United States and Mexico running from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, to El Paso, Texas. The DEA estimates that approximately 90 percent of the cocaine that enters the United States comes through Mexico. The Juarez Cartel allegedly received multi-ton cocaine shipments in Mexico from the Colombian Norte Valle Cartel and from the Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (AUC), a Colombian paramilitary organization and a major drug trafficking organization. According to the indictment, the Juarez Cartel maintained its power through the payment of bribes and through numerous acts of violence, including murder.

In another Brooklyn indictment, brothers Luis and Esteban Rodriguez-Olivera are charged with leading Los Gueros, a drug trafficking organization that rose to prominence within the Federation. According to court documents, Los Gueros operated a narcotics supply route that originated in Mexico, stretched into Texas and then branched off to various points, including the New York metropolitan area. Between 1996 and 2008, Los Gueros allegedly imported more than 100,000 kilograms of cocaine into the United States. The DEA estimates that between 2004 and 2006, the organization was responsible for shipping more than 2,000 kilograms of cocaine to New York City alone. In January 2006, Mexican authorities seized approximately 5,200 kilograms of the organization’s cocaine destined for the United States.

Tirso Martinez-Sanchez is alleged in one of the Brooklyn indictments to be an organizer and leader of an extensive international narcotics importation, distribution and transportation organization that is responsible for the distribution of multiple tons of cocaine in the United States. Martinez-Sanchez’s organization allegedly imported cocaine into the United States from Mexico through California and Texas, and then transported the cocaine overland to large distribution centers, including Los Angeles, New York and Chicago. In addition to coordinating the distribution of his own organization’s cocaine, Martinez-Sanchez also allegedly transported and distributed narcotics for members of the Juarez Cartel and the Federation.

The cases in the Eastern District of New York are being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Andrea Goldbarg, Claire Kedeshian, Bonnie Klapper, Stephen Meyer, Walter Norkin, Patricia Notopoulos and Carolyn Pokorny.

The cases in the Northern District of Illinois are being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Thomas Shakeshaft, Michael Ferrara, Greg Deis, Lindsay Jenkins, Renai Rodney, Angel Krull and Halley Guren.

The cases were investigated by the DEA, ICE and Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation, in cooperation with Mexican and Colombian law enforcement authorities. Additional assistance was provided by U.S. Attorney’s Offices in Milwaukee, Miami and Houston. The Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs provided assistance in these cases. The investigative efforts were coordinated with the Special Operations Division, comprised of agents, analysts and attorneys from the Criminal Division’s Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section (NDDS); DEA; FBI; ICE; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; U.S. Marshals Service; and Internal Revenue Service. Certain individuals named in indictments unsealed today have also been charged by other U.S. Attorneys’ Offices around the country and by NDDS.

An indictment is a formal charging document notifying the defendant of the charges. All persons charged in an indictment are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Copies of indictments can be found at:
http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/opa_documents.htm

Posted in Administration of Justice, Beltran Leyva Cartel, Narcotics Trafficking, Seguridad Pública, Sinaloa Cartel (Pacifico) | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

2009 08 20: Feds Charge Dozens in Mexico-U.S. Drug War

Posted by Maher on August 20, 2009

Fuente: AP

New Indictments Accuse 10 Alleged Cartel Leaders of Pumping Vast Quantities of Drugs into Major U.S. Cities

Federal prosecutors unveiled a dozen new indictments Thursday charging accused Mexican drug cartels members pumped vast quantities of drugs into major U.S. cities.

Ten accused cartel leaders and dozens of others are charged in indictments unsealed in Chicago and New York. Many of the suspects charged are already being hunted by U.S. and Mexican authorities. The new court documents depict a sprawling distribution network stretching back nearly two decades, based on investigations by the Drug Enforcement Administration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Internal Revenue Service.

Investigators and Attorney General Eric Holder jointly announced the charges at the Justice Department in Washington.

“Breaking up these dangerous cartels and stemming the flow of drugs, weapons and cash across the Southwest border is a top priority for this Justice Department,” Holder said.

Three suspects – Joaquin “el Chapo” Guzman-Loera, Ismael “el Mayo” Zambada-Garcia and Arturo Beltran-Leyva – are accused of being the past and present heads of the organized crime syndicate called the Sinaloa cartel, or the Federation.

The three allegedly oversaw the shipment of nearly 200 metric tons of cocaine and large amounts of heroin into the United States.

Eight suspects were arrested in Chicago and Atlanta earlier this week. Earlier this year, another 10 suspects, all accused customers or couriers of the ring, were charged in Chicago.

The indictments grew out of a street gang investigation in Chicago and drug-related killings in New York.

Posted in Administration of Justice, Beltran Leyva Cartel, Narcotics Trafficking, Sinaloa Cartel (Pacifico) | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

2009 08 11: Roberto Beltrán Burgos – SINALOA

Posted by Maher on August 12, 2009

Source: La Jornada

Trasladan a penal del Altiplano a operador de “El Chapo” Guzmán

México, DF. Roberto Beltrán Burgos, alias El Doctor, presunto operador subordinado a Joaquín El Chapo Guzmán Loera e Ismael El Mayo Zambada, fue trasladado al penal de máxima seguridad del Altiplano, ubicado en Almoloya de Juárez, estado de México.

En un comunicado, la Procuraduría General de la República (PGR) indicó que dentro de la causa penal 582/2009, el detenido está acusado de los ilícitos de delincuencia organizada, contra la salud, operaciones con recursos de procedencia ilícita, portación de arma y posesión de cartuchos de uso exclusivo de las fuerzas armadas.

Beltrán Burgos fue detenido por personal militar el pasado 28 de mayo en Culiacán, Sinaloa, en posesión de tres armas de fuego, cocaína, más de tres millones de pesos, 350 mil dólares, equipo de comunicación, un vehículo Hummer y documentación diversa.

De acuerdo con las indagatorias, dentro de la organización comandada por El Chapo,

El Doctor realizaba las funciones que en su momento
Alfredo Beltrán Leyva,
El Mochomo y posteriormente
Vicente Zambada Niebla,
El Vicentillo, en la plaza de Culiacán, Sinaloa.

El traslado de Beltrán Burgos al penal del Altiplano se dio al cumplimentar una orden de aprehensión girada en su contra por el Juez 5 de Distrito de Procesos Penales Federales, con sede en el estado de México.

Posted in Beltran Leyva Cartel, Narcotics Trafficking, Sinaloa Cartel (Pacifico) | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
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