Showing posts with label Los Zetas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Zetas. Show all posts

Friday, November 24, 2017

Los Zetas Gunmen Being Set Free

PIEDRAS NEGRAS, Coahuila — A team of cartel gunmen belonging to one faction of Los Zetas were released after a state judge dismissed their cases. At least four of those gunmen are now linked to a double execution.
Breitbart Texas learned through court filings that Coahuila State Judge Maritza Gonzalez Flores ordered the release of 10 gunmen allegedly part of a Zetas faction that entered Coahuila to carry out attacks on rivals. The judge released one of the gunmen after he was arrested in connection with a murder and blocked investigative efforts to capture others.

As Breitbart Texas originally reported in early October, Piedras Negras and Coahuila State Police Officers arrested 10 members of the Vieja Escuela Zeta after a shootout. During questioning, the gunmen claimed they slipped into Piedras Negras intending to destabilize the area and fight their rivals, the Cartel Del Noreste (CDN) faction of Los Zetas. The CDN continues to control drug and human trafficking in the area.

Thursday, December 8, 2016

Texas Fisherman Murdered On Border Lake

Texas Fisherman Murdered On Border Lake


ZAPATA, Texas — Authorities continue to look into how two Texas fishermen were shot while boating on a border lake. One died from wounds while the other remains under medical care.


This is the famous cathedral at Guerrero Viejo, and as you can see rising waters have started to reclaim her.  She was partially restored and painted by followers during the last few years.
The shooting took place Tuesday night on Falcon Lake, information provided to Breitbart Texas by the Zapata County Sheriff’s Office revealed.

Preliminary information indicates that 26-year-old Oscar Garza and 21-year-old Javier Gonzalez were operating a boat in Falcon State Park, a famous fishing spot on the border with Mexico. According to Zapata County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Ray Del Bosque, the events that led to the shooting remain unclear–but another craft approached the men prior to the shooting. A confrontation took place, prompting the boaters to flee while the alleged attackers opened fire–striking Garza while Gonzalez dove into the water to avoid the hail of bullets. The boat used by the shooting suspects is believed to have fled back to Mexico. . . 
Source: http://www.breitbart.com/texas/2016/12/08/texas-fisherman-murdered-border-lake-police-say/

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Los Zetas Boss Captured

By Cartel Chronicles

This week, Mexican Marines and Federal Police officers arrested top Zeta boss Luis “El Rex or Z-12” Reyes Enriquez in the ritzy suburb of San Pedro, Nuevo Leon.  Reyes, who also went by the name Enrique Velazquez Salazar has been identified by Mexican authorities as a regional Zeta leader for the organization in Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas.

Rex

Source: http://www.breitbart.com/texas/2016/08/14/graphic-founding-los-zetas-leader-arrested-amid-cartel-war/

Civil War In Los Zetas Cartel

NUEVO LAREDO — The ongoing civil war within the Los Zetas drug cartel has resulted in

the splintering of groups within the rival factions and more murders just yards from the Texas border.

As Breitbart Texas has been reporting, for more than 10 months two rival factions of the Los Zetas cartel have been fighting for control of lucrative drug distribution territories and drug trafficking routes. The raging violence has resulted in almost daily cases of beheadings, dismemberments, drive by shootings, gun battles and other violent acts.

One side of the war involves various groups calling themselves Carteles Unidos that allegedly include Grupo Bravo, Vieja Escuela Z, Talibanes and members of the Gulf Cartel. That group has been invading territories previously controlled by the faction that went by the name Cartel Del Noreste (CDN). . . .
Source: http://www.breitbart.com/texas/2016/08/16/groups-splinter-los-zetas-cartel-civil-war-rages-near-texas-border/

Looking For Incinerated Victims of Los Zetas

By Cartel Chronicles
Last week, Coahuila state police, along with the help of Mexican Federal Police forensic officers, carried out an intensive search for evidence in the rural community known as El Venado (Deer). According to information provided to Breitbart Texas by the Coahuila government, the evidence gathered from the operation was turned over to federal authorities to undergo intensive lab work. . . 
Source: http://www.breitbart.com/texas/2016/08/17/mexico-searches-disappeared-likely-incinerated-victims-los-zetas-cartel/

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Los Zetas Ambush Police

by CARTEL CHRONICLES

NUEVO LAREDO, Tamaulipas — War broke out in the streets of Nuevo Laredo as rival cartel factions clashed in their ongoing struggle for power. During the fighting, members of the Los Zetas cartel ambushed the Mexican military. Unofficial information points to dozens of victims being shot. . . 

Nuevo Laredo Zetas

Source: http://www.breitbart.com/texas/2016/08/02/graphic-dozen-shot-drug-cartel-clashes-mexican-military-texas-border/

Cartel Execution in Tamaulipas

by ILDEFONSO ORTIZ

Cartel members executed three men and set fire to a historic bar in the state capital of Tamaulipas. The fiery execution marks just one of the many chapters in the saga of escalating cartel violence that continues to take over the Mexican border states.

el gallito 2

The execution took place on Saturday night when a group of unknown cartel gunmen shot three men in the head and then used grenades or some other incendiary device to set fire to a local bar in the city’s downtown area, information provided to Breitbart Texas by the Tamaulipas government revealed. . . 

Disappearance Rates In Tamaulipas

 Wednesday, 03 August 2016
Tamaulipas has some of the highest missing persons rates in Mexico due to major migrant routes that traverse the border state and an ongoing territorial battle between the Zetas and Gulf Cartel organized crime groups.
Data released by Mexico's National Security System (Sistema Nacional de Seguridad Pública) show thatTamaulipas has the highest number of reported disappearances of any Mexican state with 5,583 missing persons. Following Tamaulipas were the states of Mexico state and Jalisco, with 2,830 and 2,390 disappearances respectively. . . 

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Los Zetas: Mexico's Most Dangerous Cartel

Los Zetas: Inside Mexico’s Most Dangerous Drug Gang


Hal Brands



Los ZetasIn January 2009, retired Mexican general Mauro Enrique Tello Quiñones took command of a special police task force charged with combating drug-related violence in Cancún, the popular tourist town located in Quintana Roo state. The assignment lasted all of one week. In early February, Tello and two aides were kidnapped and killed. Before murdering Tello, assailants broke both of his arms and legs and subjected him to ghastly, prolonged torture. The incident provoked shock across Mexico; the governor of Quintana Roo called it “truly horrible.” Even by the standards of the increasingly violent drug war that has consumed Mexico of late, this crime stood out for its brazenness and brutality. In short, it bore all the marks of an attack by the notorious paramilitary group known as Los Zetas.1

Los Zetas Transnational Impact

Los Zetas is one of the most powerful and violent cartels of the seven primary cartels currently operating in Mexico. In addition to drug trafficking, it is accused of money laundering, human trafficking, kidnapping, extortion, intellectual property theft, and executions, making it a truly “polycriminal” organization. Part of its strength comes from its strategy of taking over territories where criminal activity already flourished and co-opting that activity for itself. While Mexico bears the brunt of the violence stemming from this drug trafficking organization (DTO), Los Zetas’ reach extends throughout Central America, the United States, Europe, and the Middle East. The actions of this group have significant transnational impact, generating instability and demanding resources wherever it operates.

Los Zetas Recruiting Americans

The Mexican Cartel, Los Zetas, has been vigorously expanding its U.S. connections and influence since at least 2010, a confidential FBI document shows.
The recently leaked FBI bulletin was published by the equal information advocacy website Public Intelligence. It says U.S. gangs formed by both Mexican and non-Mexican Americans are actively collaborating with Los Zetas in drug dealing and enforcement activities on both sides of the border.
The bulletin also noted a shift in their recruiting methods. In the "past, accurate FBI reporting indicated Los Zetas previously focused its recruitment on members with prior specialized training... However, current FBI reporting indicates that Los Zetas is recruiting and relying on non-traditional, non-military trained associates."
Security analysts and law enforcement organizations say the cartel, which is currently Mexico's most powerful, is also now working side-by-side with organizations that would have been immediate rivals a few years ago. Rather than spend resources on turf wars, the criminal groups now cooperate, providing one another with greater reach.
In the U.S., Los Zetas have established business relations with gangs like Tango Blast and Los Piojos in cities that range from Houston to Chicago -- a city the Drug Enforcement Administration says is home to more than 100,000 gang members.
These ties don't mean the gangs are now part of the Zetas hierarchy, but this novel approach could still herald new crime waves.
"Many of the gang members that work with Zetas are just work for hire," said George W. Grayson, co-author of "The Executioner's Men: Los Zetas, Rogue Soldiers, Criminal Entrepreneurs, and the Shadow State They Created. "You may want to extort money, so you hire an American-based or a bi-national gang to participate in the extortion. You can pay them without inducting them into the cartel."
Across America, Los Zetas operatives have reportedly been doing just that. According to the FBI and to recent trials, the Mexican cartel has hired American gang members to steal cars for them and to assist them in smuggling weapons across the border. In addition, men allegedly linked to Los Zetas have started U.S. business ventures as part of an effort to launder millions of dollars of drug money.
The United States has, in fact, become a major operations hub for drug cartels. Like Los Zetas, several other Mexican cartels have moved parts of their businesses north, according to a recent in-depth investigation by the Associated Press, raising concerns among experts and security officials.
"It's probably the most serious threat the United States has faced from organized crime," Jack Riley, head of the DEA's Chicago office, told the AP.
Source: http://abcnews.go.com/ABC_Univision/los-zetas-recruiting-americans-2010-fbi-document-shows/story?id=19014852

Los Zetas and Mexico's Transnational Drug War

Hal Brands Friday, Dec. 25, 2009

Editor's Note: This article was originally published on Sept. 15, 2009, as part of the WPR feature "Illicit Flows and Transnational Threats." It is made available here for free, as part of a promotion that ends Jan. 5. To experience more of WPR's subscription service, sign up for a 30-day free trial.

In January 2009, retired Gen. Mauro Tello Quiñones took command of a police unit charged with combating drug-related violence in the popular Mexican tourist destination of Cancún. The assignment lasted just one week. In early February, Tello and two aides were kidnapped and killed. Before murdering Tello, the assailants broke his arms and legs and tortured him for hours. The incident provoked shock across Mexico, with the governor of Quintana Roo state calling it "truly horrible." Even by the standards of the violent drug war that has consumed Mexico of late, this crime stood out for its brazenness and brutality. In short, it bore all the marks of an attack by the notorious paramilitary organization known as Los Zetas.