MEXICO: Mexico’s New Wave Of Drug Killings – Twenty Nine Killed

January 10, 2011
By CMAC

Mexico pipeline explosion death toll rises to 30

AP – 1 hour 16 minutes agoAn official says a police officer whose wife and two small children were killed in a crude-oil explosion in central Mexico also has died, bringing the death toll to 30.

  • America and champions Monterrey upset in Mexico openers

    Reuters via Yahoo! Sports – Sun Jan 9, 7:01 pm ETPachuca upset Mexican big guns America 2-0 away at the Azteca and title holders Monterrey lost 2-0 at home to San Luis on the opening weekend of Mexico’s Clausura championship.

  • 51 executed in Mexico drug violence

    51 executed in Mexico drug violence

    AFP via Yahoo! News – Sun Jan 9, 9:28 pm ETDrug-related violence over the weekend claimed 51 lives across Mexico, including 15 decapitations in the beach resort of Acapulco, authorities reported.

  • State-ranked Mexico derails Boonville 70-47 in NCMC

    Boonville Daily News – 1 hour 17 minutes agoFacing state-ranked and undefeated Mexico wasn’t exactly what the Boonville Pirates basketball team had in mind Friday night in NCMC action at Mexico. While starting the second half of the season with a close loss on Tuesday against Blair Oaks, the Pirates had only two days to recover before facing the Bulldogs on the road in front of a hostile crowd.

  • Mexico Global Economic Indicator Rises 0.48% In October

    RTT News – Mon Jan 10, 9:22 am ETMexico’s statistical office INEGI said on Monday that its global indicator for economic activity increased 0.48% month-on-month in October in seasonally adjusted terms. In September, the indicator dropped by 0.17%.

  • Mexico Trade Deficit Narrows In November

    INO News – Mon Jan 10, 9:18 am ET(RTTNews) – Mexico’s trade deficit narrowed to US$104.9 million in November from to US$814.4 million in October, latest data from the statistical office INEGI showed Monday. The figure was revised from US$102.8 million reported initially.

  • Mexico’s New Wave Of Drug Killings – Twenty Nine Killed

    Bernama – Mon Jan 10, 4:42 am ETMEXICO CITY, Jan 10 (BERNAMA-NNN-AGENCIES) – In a new wave of drug-related killings in Mexico twenty-nine people were executed by drug gangs in the southern Mexican port city of Acapulco over the weekend.

  • Court rejects case of US baby sent to Mexico (AP)

    Bayou Buzz – Mon Jan 10, 10:44 am ETWASHINGTON – The Supreme Court has rejected an appeal from a Texas woman who wants to sue the federal government for sending her U.S. citizen baby to Mexico with the child’s illegal immigrant father.

  • Research and Markets: Savory Snacks Industry inside the Emerging Markets Brazil, Hungary, Mexico, Poland, South Africa …

    Business Wire – 43 minutes agoDUBLIN–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/3eca61/savory_snacks_adv) has announced the addition of the “Savory Snacks: Advanced Emerging Markets (Brazil, Hungary, Mexico, Poland, South Africa, Taiwan) Industry Guide” report to their offering. The Savory Snacks: Advanced Emerging Markets (Brazil, Hungary, Mexico, Poland …

  • Research and Markets: Dried Food in the Advanced Emerging Markets (Brazil, Hungary, Mexico, Poland, South Africa and …

    Business Wire – 1 hour 43 minutes agoDUBLIN–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/01bcc7/dried_food_in_the) has announced the addition of the “Dried Food in the Advanced Emerging Markets (Brazil, Hungary, Mexico, Poland, South Africa and Taiwan) Market Overview and Forecasts to 2014″ report to their offering. This report covers key aspects of the dried food …

  • GEO Begins Operations in the State of Tabasco, Mexico

    PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance – 2 hours 0 minutes agoCorporacion GEO, S.A.B. de C.V. , Casas GEO, Mexico’s leading affordable entry-level housing developer, announced today the commencement of its operations in the state of Tabasco, expanding its presence across 19 Mexican states.

  • 27 deaths, many by decapitation, rock Acapulco, Mexico

    The Salinas Californian – Mon Jan 10, 8:22 am ETACAPULCO, Mexico — The image of this beach mecca has taken a new hit from Mexico’s drug violence, with 27 people killed in less than a day, including 14 men whose bodies were found with their heads chopped off at a shopping center.

  • 51 dead in Mexico, including 15 beheaded

    Herald Sun – Sun Jan 9, 10:00 pm ETDRUG-related violence over the weekend claimed 51 lives across Mexico, including a record-setting 15 decapitations in Acapulco.

1/9/2011

Four Bodies Found in Mexican Pacific Resort City
1/9/2011 Protesters Demand End to Violation of Migrants’ Rights in Mexico
1/9/2011 Police Ordered to Stay at Stations in Mexican City
1/9/2011 PRI Picks New Leader Ahead of Mexico’s 2012 Presidential Election
1/8/2011 24 Killed in Mexican Resort City
  • At least 25 killed in Mexico’s Acapulco, 15 beheaded

    New Kerala – Mon Jan 10, 8:21 am ETMEXICO CITY : At least 25 people were killed within a time lapse of 24 hours in Mexico’s touristic port of Acapulco, local media reported Sunday.

  • PHOTOS: Violent Weekend in Mexico – GRAPHIC CONTENT

    Valley Morning Star – Mon Jan 10, 6:04 am ETSoldiers stand near the bodies of two men lying on the sidewalk after they were killed by gunmen in Acapulco, Mexico, Saturday, Jan. 8, 2011. Several separate violent incidents overnight in this Pacific resort city have left more than 25 dead, including one where bodies of 15 dead men, 14 of them decapitated, were found in front of a shopping plaza.

  • Bodies discovered beheaded in Mexico

    The Irish Times – Sun Jan 9, 7:55 pm ETACAPULCO – Fifteen bodies, all but one of them decapitated, were found early on Saturday in the Pacific resort city of Acapulco as drug violence in Mexico intensified.

  • Cold snap kills 16 in Mexico

    People’s Daily – Mon Jan 10, 12:40 am ETAt least 16 people died from a cold snap that has been plaguing Mexico since October, the government said on Sunday.

They appear in Cancun two executives, one shot and another beheaded

Monday January 10, 2011 | Comments: 2 Comments

Forensic Medical Service personnel went to the sites.

Cancun dawned with news of two people executed, who became the first of 2011.

During the morning, authorities received distress calls, reporting on the discovery of two people executed in different parts of the city.

Of the first fact was revealed that the authorities arrived, they noticed that a man with three bullets in the head was found lying with a narcomensaje over the body, which is valued as follows:

Military captures four in Linares, Nuevo León

Monday January 10, 2011 | Comments:3 Comments In a statement, Secretariat of Defense National announced that it was the capture of several members of a criminal organization in the town of Linares, Nuevo León.
The men abducted two people last January 3, that in the municipality of Santiago, Nuevo León,   the facts are known who killed one of the hostages.
Reports say the victims were a 25-year-old, who tortured and cut into pieces and a taxi driver of 37 years, who helped to catch criminals.
Detainees respond to the name of Hugo Everardo Murillo Hernández Aurelio Garcia, Francisco Cervantes, and Luis Demetrio Lopez Zambrano.

Don Gaby stab Penal del Topo Chico

Monday January 10, 2011 | Comments: 82 Comments

Don Gaby controlled prisoner even piracy.

Since last June of 2009, Gabriel Ayala Romero, best known as Don Gaby, was detained at the Penal del Topo Chico, considered the tsar of piracy in the state of Nuevo León, and captured by anonymous citizens .

However, sources indicate that Don Gaby not only engaged in piracy, because for many years was the terror of legal and illegal traders, and who performed the collection of flat, extortion and kidnapping people who had nothing to do with apocryphal material business or drug trafficking.

On 23 June, the Mexican Army conducted an operation where he was arrested Don Gaby, who was in one of his business located on College Street in Monterrey Civil, 13 more people in your organization also were captured.

Gabriel Ayala’s band, performing their extortion and levantotes elements posing as federal police, sometimes carried out violations of women deprived of their liberty, then remove vehicles and money.

The subjects always talking about the Commander Ayala, it was no more and no less than Don Gaby.

Mexico says U.S. border agent killed teenage boy

The War Against Drug Trafficking Calderon choking penalties.

Monday January 10, 2011 | Comments: 40 Comments According to official figures, one of the causes of the increase in prison population is the war on drugs since December 2006 to the same month of 2010 were delivered in total 88,000 sentences, of which 82 thousand 500 were type condemnatory

Are 429 detention centers throughout the country and mostly state or municipalities, are overcrowded or in the best case, the maximum capacity.

Furthermore, patios and walkways roam at least 50 000 federal inmates, some considered “highly dangerous” serving long sentences or are under trial or any sentences. They range from murderers to drug dealers hired, and their presence represents risks but also benefits.

For each of the inmates of the federal courts held in prisons these states receive central government bonds under the rubric of “relief law.”There are governments that criticize the presence of federal inmates in its jails, others prefer and even defend it, because they know they represent additional money to the coffers of their state.

Record-Breaking January executions in Jalisco

Monday January 10, 2011 | Comments: 25 Comments In the 10 days of the month will have been registered 26 crimes.

1.001 In 2010 there were murders and 80 percent were foreclosures.

The settling of accounts of organized crime have reached levels never before seen in Jalisco, only violent deaths last year were 1.001, of which more than 85 percent are related to adjustments of accounts or related to the sale of control drugs, according to information provided by staff of the Attorney General of the State of Jalisco (PGJEJ).

If last year was the most violent ever seen in the state, the 2011 began more aggressive, as only nine days of January there have been 26 executions in the sale of narcotics.

In January last year, until day 31 there were 29 violent deaths, including gang problems, disputes and matters beyond the settling of scores, which meant that 60 percent of the crimes were for questions relating to the dispute of “spaces” of the mafia. In the metropolitan area and central Florida area in nine days have executed 26 people, which exceed all that was in January 2010. If the trend continues, the year seems like it will easily exceed the deaths in the past 2010.

Granadazo in Sabinas Hidalgo, Nuevo León

Monday January 10, 2011 | Comments: No comments

Mario Mireles Raul Garza, mayor of the municipality.

During last night, an armed attack carried out at a residence in the municipality of Sabinas Hidalgo, Nuevo León.
The gunmen threw a grenade at the house of the brother of the current mayor of the municipality, Mario Mireles Raul Garza.
It also indicates that the subjects were shot with a firearm, although people were inside the house managed to ward off the attack without injured submit only material damage.

Are two executed in Aguascalientes

Monday January 10, 2011 | Comments: 15 Comments
Aguascalientes police authorities received during this morning’s report of two executives who were in a vacant lot, this in Lomas del Chapulin.
In place, the police noticed that the bodies were handcuffed, taped to his head and giving the coup de grace.
Witnesses say that during the night could see two men suspected vehicles, which fell two bags, not imagining they were both executed.
Indicating no detonations were heard, so it is suspected that the men had been killed elsewhere.

“Silver or Lead” in Mexico: Bribes or Death

Monday, January 10, 2011 | Borderland Beat Reporter Ovemex

Byron Pitts Reports From The Mexican Drug Wars

In the past four years, more than 30,000 people have been killed in Mexico’s battle against powerful drug cartels. The violence and corruption is now appearing in places that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago: places like Santiago, a quaint tourist town just a few hours from the U.S. border.

Last August, Santiago’s mayor, Edelmiro Cavazos, was kidnapped and killed. To understand what’s happening in Mexico, you need to understand what happened in Santiago. There, and elsewhere around the country, drug cartels armed with guns and cash are forcing a choice on politicians and law enforcement. That choice – as beleaguered Mexicans put it – is between silver or lead: take a bribe or a bullet.

Veronica Cavazos and her husband, Edelmiro, were enjoying a good life, raising three children. He was a successful lawyer with a family run real estate business. Then, in November 2009, at the age of 38, Cavazos was elected mayor of Santiago, a picturesque town where he and his wife grew up.

Asked if she thinks her husband was born to be mayor, Cavazos told “60 Minutes” correspondent Byron Pitts, “Probably. He had this special light, this special feeling of helping people since he was a kid.”

But she was worried. “It was a dangerous time to be the mayor, in my opinion,” Cavazos told Pitts.

“He was well known. You all were comfortable financially, so why do this?” Pitts asked.

“And you know what his answer was? There is something I can do to help my town, to help my people. And that’s the way I’ll do it,” she replied.

Cavazos was eager and everywhere. He could be found with a smile at civic presentations and at every improvement project.

Cavazos told Pitts her husband had no apprehension about the job. “He was a dreamer, I think.”

“A dreamer, your husband? What did he dream for Santiago?” Pitts asked.

“A perfect place for his kids,” she replied.

Santiago dates back to the 1600s. Its history and natural setting make it a popular tourist destination. But beneath the postcard appearance is another Santiago, a place important to drug traffickers.

The town straddles a major highway from the drug producing regions of southern Mexico and South America. Controlling Santiago makes it easier to move shipments north to Monterrey. From there, the marijuana, cocaine, heroin and methamphetamines are shipped to cities on the border – three hours away – and smuggled into the United States.

“So from that place, you can go anywhere in the border,” Ramon Garza, who has been an investigative journalist in Mexico for 35 years, explained.

“So in many ways, the drug world intersects at Santiago?” Pitts asked.

“Exactly,” Garza said.

Garza says Santiago became a safe haven for wealthy drug cartel bosses who blended in with the town’s other wealthy residents. “It’s a place where you can hide your activities because it’s a place for tourism, for nice homes, for weekends,” he explained.

And for years, the drug trafficking organization in control of the region – including Monterrey and Santiago – was the Gulf Cartel. Their enforcers: the Zetas, a ruthless gang that started with former Army officers from Mexico’s elite special forces.

“Hired guns,” Pitts remarked. “Well-trained hired guns.”

“Well-trained. They were like a SWAT,” Garza agreed.

According to Garza, they were originally trained to go after the cartels, but now are part of it. “They became the Army for the cartels,” he said.

In February, only three months after becoming mayor, Cavazos was caught in a feud when the two cartels split. By then, many of Santiago’s police were on the payroll for one of the cartels. Cavazos later disciplined some of the officers for extortion.

“So, Cavazos thought he was in control of everything,” Pitts remarked.

“He wanted to be in control of everything,” Garza said.

“But he wasn’t,” Pitts said.

“He knew that he was not in control because I had a chance to talk to him several months before his killing. He was worried of the police department,” Garza said.

According to Garza, Cavazos was worried because of the corruption. “He didn’t know exactly who do they work for,” he explained.

“And he’s not willing to look the other way,” Pitts remarked.

“He wanted the police department to be the cleanest possible and not to be involved with the group of cartels. That’s what he wanted,” Garza said.

“And that was dangerous, to want that,” Pitts said.

“Well, because at that moment, the police department didn’t belong exactly to the mayor or to the county,” Garza said.

Their uniform may have said “Santiago Police Department,” but Garza said, “In reality, they were working for the cartels.”

Mexico’s four year war against drug trafficking has led to chaos and bloodshed. Many of the more than 30,000 drug related deaths are due to the criminals killing each other. But not always.

“I was worried about him. Everybody was. My mother-in-law also was worried about his life,” Veronica Cavazos said.

If Cavazos was worried, he never told his family.

Last August 15, the mayor was in Santiago’s town square celebrating International Youth Day. It was the last time townspeople would see him alive. With his family visiting relatives in Texas, Cavazos went home to an empty house. A security camera captured what happened next.

The video shows the police officer who guarded the house at night walking towards an approaching line of cars. When they pulled up to the front, armed men got out. Another camera caught the gunmen threatening Cavazos at the door. Moments later, he was pushed into the back seat of the lead vehicle. The police guard walked to the car behind and got inside. In less than three minutes the kidnapping was over.

“The surveillance camera at his house, how important was that to your investigation?” Pitts asked Alejandro Garza y Garza, the attorney general for the state of Nuevo Leon, the lead agency in the Cavazos investigation

“Very important,” he replied.

Garza y Garza says when the police guard was found the next morning, he claimed he was also a victim. “And he says he has been kidnapped with the mayor,” he explained.

But the video, Garza y Garza says, showed the guard had not been kidnapped.

At the Cavazos home, family waited hours by the phone for a ransom demand. None was made.

“When I saw that this wasn’t for money, I suspected that this wouldn’t have a happy ending. Because he loved his town so much. And since beginning, he wanted to do things right,” Veronica Cavazos said.

She told Pitts she believed her husband would not negotiate and would not be bought.

Two days after he was kidnapped, the body of Edelmiro Cavazos was found dumped by the side of a road in Santiago.

“Were they trying to send a message in the way in which they killed him, in the place in which they dumped his body?” Pitts asked Attorney General Garza y Garza.

“The message of the bad people is that, ‘We don’t stop with anybody. We can kill people. We can kill policemen. We can kill mayors. We can kill everybody,’” he replied.

Santiago was stunned when state investigators arrested six of the town’s police officers for their alleged role in his kidnapping and murder, including, the man assigned to protect the Cavazos home. The state’s case against the officers rests heavily on their confessions.

“We have testimony of six or seven policemen that say they thought he was working for the other cartel. Mayor Cavazos was against them. So that’s why they kill him,” Garza y Garza said.

“When they captured some of the persons that were involved, they said that to the authorities. He didn’t want us to do our job. So, he was like a rock in the way, and we just took him away,” Veronica Cavazos said.

Asked what she means by a “rock in the way,” she told Pitts, “For them. For the rest of the town, and for me, he was our light.”

By week’s end, the people of Santiago were back in the town square to pay their final respects to the mayor. Earlier, his wife Veronica had bid a private farewell.

“I thank him. I thank him,” she told Pitts. “For all the happy moments we lived together. For my three kids. For letting me being a witness of all the good things he made through life.”

Santiago today is sad and fearful, and tourists are staying away. Journalist Ramon Garza says another casualty of the drug war is trust.

“How many people want to work at the police department in Santiago now?” Garza asked. “Nobody want to be a police anymore here. Why? Because they know if they have to go – they have to go – silver or lead.”

“Either you take the money and live or reject the money and die,” Pitts remarked.

“Exactly,” Garza said.

Taking money from the drug cartels has been an easy choice for many police officers, with starting salaries at only $500 a month.

Jorge Domene, director of public security in the state of Nuevo Leon, told Pitts the officers are easily corrupted, since the cartels pay much more than the police force.

How much more? “Double,” he explained.

Jorge Domene says that, for now, the drug cartels hold the upper hand with both silver and lead.

“There’s no police in Mexico that can fight the cartels in terms of the level of equipment they have,” he explained.

Asked what kind of equipment a police officer in Santiago would have, Domene said, “A pistol. That’s it.”

But when asked how the cartels are armed, Domene said, “You name it. Whatever comes to your mind, they have it. AK-47, AR 15.”

“So it sounds like local police are bringing a pocket knife to a gunfight?” Pitts asked.

“Right. You’re like Tarzan against Rambo,” Domene agreed.

Domene is directing a new effort to eliminate all local police departments in Nuevo Leon, including Santiago’s. In their place would be a state police force that is better trained, better equipped and, even more important, better paid. Professionals, he hopes, that won’t be corrupted.

“How long before you think the cartels decide, ‘Okay, we’ll start paying you more money,’?” Pitts asked.

“In my opinion, my experience is a point in time that is not more money. It’s your beliefs, your principles,” Domene said.

Three months after his death, a Mass was held to remember Edelmiro Cavazos. He was one of 14 mayors murdered in Mexico in just the past year. In places where the cartels are in control, being a public figure means being a target.

No one knows that better than Attorney General Alejandro Garza y Garza. His own brother, one of the state’s top criminal investigators, was gunned down by a cartel four years ago.

“We’re in a war, all Mexico is in a war against the cartels,” Garza y Garza said. “But in this war, the bad guys, they don’t have any rules.”

Extra: Mexico, A Neighbor in Trouble

Extra: Corrupt Cops

Extra: Calderon and The Violence

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La Familia Michoacana and their U.S. contacts

Sunday, January 9, 2011 | Borderland Beat Reporter Smurf

Protected witnesses reveal the names of contacts in the U.S. that aid LFM in the receiving drug shipments, distributing the product and laundering illegal money.

Francisco Gómez | El Universal

According to information received by the PGR through witness testimony, California, New México, Texas, Georgia, Illinois, Atlanta, North/South Carolina, Florida, are all important territories and centers of operation for ‘La Familia Michoacana’ in the United States, a fact that is also recognized by the DEA.

In one of the most recent cases, cartel operatives were arrested in less than 30 days in places such as Georgia, Illinois, and Washington D.C.

Authorities said they seized about 80 pounds of crystal meth with a street value of more than $3.5 million, by far the largest meth seizure in Washington’s history. The previous record was about two pounds. D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier says they also seized 10 gallons of liquid meth, more than 1,000 grams of cocaine, 11 pounds of marijuana, three guns and more than $35,000 in cash.

To date, La Familia Michoacana has its principal base of operations in California and Texas, two of the states that are seeing a major influx of immigrants from Michoacán. Often, the members of the criminal organization meet and discuss strategies on improving distribution and sale, as well as the topic of more effective ways to launder money.

A protected witness named “Emilio” gave details to SIEDO that “these meeting were for the discussion of logistical strategies related to the sale of drugs in the U.S. and to leave an understanding that those on the north side of the border needed to charge the correct amount, so all the accounts and figures would and up evenly on both sides,” according to information exclusively obtained by EL UNIVERSAL.

At the meetings arranged by Nazario Moreno González, El Chayo (deceased), and the actual leader of his cartel, Jesús Méndez, El Chango Méndez, “they would go over the figures of the money that was collected by their collectors who dealt with the money coming in from the United States. They would also name the people who would be in charge of overseeing the drug shipments that were marked for Texas and California. Every detail was discussed, from the methods of distribution, to the amounts charged as the package would be broken down by retail suppliers.,” assured the witness.

“Carlos”, another protected witness for the PGR, said that La Familia Michoacana dealt mostly with crystal meth and cocaine in the U.S., and they had a fairly strong foothold in the state of California.

He said that the cocaine the cartel bought came from Colombia and would arrive in the port of Lázaro Cárdenas, Michoacán. From there is was transported tot he town of Apatzingán, where it was packed into trailers headed to Tijuana, Baja California, and then on to California and the rest of the U.S..

According to the witness testimony, El Chango Méndez has a pact with the head of the Tijuana cartel, Fernando Sánchez Arellano, El Ingeniero, that allows La Familia Michoacana to use their smuggling routes. “Cooperation is the way that these large quantities of drugs are reaching the U.S. on a weekly basis.”

The Accomplices

These testimonies reveal the extensive cooperation that La Familia Michoacana requires from their connection in the U.S. to receive and distribute the product and launder money so that it makes its way back to the cartel leaders in Mexico.

In Georgia, a representative of La Familia Michoacana was a man known as El Boricua because of his South American origin; however according to witnesses, La Familia prefers to have its own people Michoacán handle the product. In Austin, Texas, the Cornejo brothers were in charge of the operation, and they also controlled the drug trade in certain parts of California. Another man of Michoacan origin was El Nacho who was their representative in Chicago.

In Texas, a man named El Pachichi or El Tapachichi, is the person who received many of the crystal, cocaine, and marijuana shipments for LFM. Annel Noriega, La Bonita was the liasson to Los Ángeles for the cartel in regards to their money and drug shipment logistics.

Others who conspired to receive large shipments of drugs and oversaw the distribution were the Martínez Espinosa brothers, Samuel and Martín, who are originally from Pilón Chico, a municipality of Tuzantla, Michoacán. According to Emilio, in 2007 the two brothers, along with El Chango Méndez coordinated drug shipments of marijuana and crystal meth that would make its first stop in Texas and was received by Antonio Avilés, (a) La Pelusa, who has apparently since been murdered. La Pelusa oversaw retail drug sales in Atlanta and his base of operations was a club called Padrinos Night Club, although he maintained several residences and businesses.

Another U.S. operator was Salvador García, originally from Ranchito or Francisco Villa, municipalities of Tuzantla, Michoacán. He received drug shipments in Gaiville, Nort Crosse and in Doraville. “This person would break down the large packages nd distribute them to mid leval dealers for La Familia Michoacana”.

In Athens Teódulo Valdez is the person in charge for LFM, he is responsible for the sale of drugs in the Carolina’s and parts of Florida. He also runs money laundering schemes that use local car dealerships and small stores to clean the illicit cash. Both Valdez and Garcia report directly to Annel Noriega Ríos,(a) La Bonita or La Chula.

Others involved in the U.S. side of LFM are two men known only as Osmar and El Güero, who specialize in bringing the illegal cash back to Michoacán.

In regards to the two brothers Claudio and Chava Cornejo, the first one is the nickname of Salón Centenario who resides in Austin, Texas, and he also launders money for La Familia Michoacana, through nightclubs that specifically carry live music. As for Chava Cornejo, operator in Los Ángeles California, he was executed.

Anther member of the U.S. side of the organization if Irineo Silva, (a) La Tripa, originally from El Salitre, she controls all the crystal meth, cocaíne a marijuana that is introduced to Texas, New mexico, by way of California. The same is also said of La Bonita, who also oversees drug shipments that arrive in the U.S. and she alone decides which dealers receive packages and how much product they each get.

In Dallas, Texas, another big name drug courrier is Omar, (a) La Foca, originally from Parácuaro, Michoacán, 22 or 25 years old, “he is a bigtime operator for La Familia Michoacana in Dallas and he answers directly to La Tripa”.

Source: http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/735950.html
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“THE NEW FEDERATION” Threatens Local Nuevo Leon Media.

Saturday, January 8, 2011 | Borderland Beat Reporter Ovemex


Saturday morning photocopies of a communication signed by ‘The New Federation’ were passed out to citizens throughout Monterrey.

The message made reference to a recent attack on the Telediario News Twitter account. It also made reference to local Nuevo Leon media outlets stating that many of them continue to work with organized crime.

Lastly, The New Federation called upon the people of Nuevo leon to assist them in their efforts to eliminate Zetas from the state.

TO THE PEOPLE OF NUEVO LEON:

BE ADVISED THAT THE HACKING OF TELEDIARIO’S TWITTER ACCOUNT LAST WEEK WAS JUST THE BEGINNING OF CLEANING THE SCUM THAT ALSO EXISTS IN LOCAL MEDIA.

TO THOSE WHO CLAIM TO BE JOURNALIZTZ, BE VERY CAREFUL, MEDIAS SUPPOSEDLY REPORT THE TRUTH, STOP LIEING AND SELLING YOURSELVES OUT. JOURNALISTS WHO CONTINUE TO TAKE MONEY FROM THE SCUM WILL ALSO FIND THEMSELVES IN SHIT.

WE BEGIN WITH MULTIMEDIOS BECAUSE THEY ARE THE ONES DEEPEST IN SHIT. THEIR DEALINGS WILL BE MADE KNOWN.

YOU (MULTIMEDIOS) CONTINUE LYING TO THE CITIZENS THAT TRUST IN WHAT YOU SAY, NOT KNOWING THAT THEY HAVE BEEN DECEIVED, YOU DO NOT MEET YOUR OBLIGATIONS AND COMMUNICATE ONLY WHAT YOUR TRUE BOSSES TELL YOU TO.

TO ALL OF THE PEOPLE OF NUEVO LEON, DO NOT WORRY, SOON WE WILL INFORM YOU WITH THE RESULTS OF THE CLEANING WE HAVE BEEN DOING.

TAKE CARE AND BE SURE NOT TO SLIP ON THE BLOOD THAT HAS ALREADY BEEN SPILLED FROM THE “POLIZETAS”.

CITIZENS OPEN YOUR EYES AND STOP IDOLIZING THOSE WHO HAVE BETRAYED THEIR TRUE RESPONSIBILITY, WHICH IS WITH YOU, STOP ALLOWING YOURSELVES TO BE FOOLED BY THESE PEOPLE WHO ARE ALSO BENEFITING FROM SCUM.

WE WANT TO CLEAN AND WE ARE GOING TO CLEAN UP THE ENTIRE TERRITORY, MEN AND WOMAN ALIKE, BE CAREFUL, BECAUSE YOU WILL NOT BE SAVED.

GET YOURSELVES IN LINE AND STOP BEING TWO FACED BECAUSE YOU ARE ALSO ALCOHOLICS AND DRUG ADDICTS.

PEOPLE OF NUEVO LEON, ALL OF YOU GOOD, HARDWORKING PEOPLE, HELP US. WE WANT TRUE PEACE, WITHOUT ZETAS. WE WILL NOT TOUCH INNOCENTS. UNDERSTAND THAT SOMEONE HAS TO DO SOMETHING FOR YOU TO RECOVER YOUR LAND.

RESPECTFULLY,
THE NEW FEDERATION
“TO LIVE BETTER”

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