Showing posts with label Drug Cartels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drug Cartels. Show all posts

December 30, 2015

Middle East Migrants In Germany Recruited By Drug Cartels as Couriers, Salesmen



Bild claim that migrants are being used as cheap drug traffickers and dealers as well as petty thieves but the extent of the crimes has been hushed up by police so as not fuel right-wing debate.

Americans are fortunate this kind of abuse, increased crime by migrants, with journalists and police silence, is not happening in the United States. Oh wait. It is happening here. Oh my. Oh my.

[From article]
German officials have ordered a cover-up of crimes committed by migrants to prevent causing alarm, a local newspaper has claimed.
Asylum seekers are being recruited across the country as cheap drug dealers as well as petty thieves, says German newspaper, Bild - the biggest daily paper in the country.
The paper accused the police of covering up the extent of migrant crimes in order to stop concerns among the general population.
It also claimed asylum seekers were prepared to work for a few euros couriering drugs across the country and said they were being signed up almost as soon as they had registered as asylum seekers.
[. . .]
Migrant crime was apparently the hot topic of discussion at gatherings of police, city officials, health officials and other officials dealing with the drug problem in the city of Frankfurt.
As well as drug related crimes, asylum seekers were also being used to sell stolen goods such as mobile phones, which in many cases were sold on to other refugees.
But the paper said that all of the officials dealing with the problem had been ordered not to talk about it, as it was an extremely sensitive subject that has been forbidden to be referred to in an 'offensive manner'.
[. . .]
The reason given by the paper was to avoid alarming the general public already concerned with the vast number of asylum seekers the country has allowed in, but also to avoid providing material for right-wing extremists.
New arrivals to the country were apparently the most desirable as they did not have any formal way of complaining about what they were asked to do and rarely gave problems to the drug-dealing Mafia.
The most successful couriers are then being recruited into the Mafia and are also being used to bring in further new recruits.
[. . .]
Germany's 16 federal states plan to spend about 17 billion euros to deal with the refugee crisis next year, a newspaper reported on Tuesday.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3378985/Police-Germany-covering-extent-migrant-crime-claim-Bild-country-revealed-taken-1-1-MILLION-people-2015.html

Police in Germany are covering up the extent of crime committed by migrants, claim Bild... as country is revealed to have taken in 1.1 MILLION people during 2015
Asylum seekers are being recruited as cheap drug dealers and traffickers as well as petty thieves, Bild newspaper claims
But police have apparently been ordered to cover up extent of crimes so as not to fuel 'right wing extremist debate'
Shocking claim comes as Germany registered over one million migrants in 2015 - five times last year's total
Germany has taken more refugees from the Middle East and Africa than any other EU state
The country is a magnet for migrants partly because of its generous social benefits
See more on Germany's refugee crisis at www.dailymail.co.uk/refugeecrisis
By Alexandra Genova For Mailonline
Published: 12:25 EST, 30 December 2015 | Updated: 13:18 EST, 30 December 2015

November 12, 2015

Riverside CA High Wiretapping Statistics



Riverside County Superior Court Judge Helios Hernandez approved nearly five times as many wiretaps last year as any other judge in the United States. 
(Photo: Brett Kelman, The Desert Sun)

[From article]
Federal drug agents have built a massive wiretapping operation in the Los Angeles suburbs, secretly intercepting tens of thousands of Americans' phone calls and text messages to monitor drug traffickers across the United States despite objections from Justice Department lawyers who fear the practice may not be legal.
Nearly all of that surveillance was authorized by a single state court judge in Riverside County, who last year signed off on almost five times as many wiretaps as any other judge in the United States. The judge's orders allowed investigators — usually from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration — to intercept more than 2 million conversations involving 44,000 people, federal court records show.


The eavesdropping is aimed at dismantling the drug rings that have turned Los Angeles' eastern suburbs into what the DEA says is the nation's busiest shipping corridor for heroin and methamphetamine. Riverside wiretaps are supposed to be tied to crime within the county, but investigators have relied on them to make arrests and seize shipments of cash and drugs as far away as New York and Virginia, sometimes concealing the surveillance in the process.
The surveillance has raised concerns among Justice Department lawyers in Los Angeles, who have mostly refused to use the results in federal court because they have concluded the state court's eavesdropping orders are unlikely to withstand a legal challenge, current and former Justice officials said.
[. . .]


Federal agents often prefer to seek permission to tap phones from state courts, instead of federal courts, because the process is generally faster and less demanding than seeking approval through the Justice Department. In addition, California law allows them to better conceal the identities of confidential informants they rely on to help investigate drug rings. Over the past decade, drug agents have more than tripled their use of wiretaps, mostly by using state court orders.
[. . .]
DEA officials said it should not come as a surprise that so much of their surveillance work happens in the area around Riverside — a vast expanse of suburbs and desert east of Los Angeles, crisscrossed by freeways that have become key shipping routes for drugs moving from Mexico to the United States and for cash making the return journey.
[. . .]


But current and former Justice Department officials said prosecutors in Los Angeles repeatedly told the drug agency that they would not accept cases based on state-court wiretaps – and those from Riverside County in particular – because they believed the applications being approved by state judges fell short of what the federal law requires. Prosecutors were particularly concerned that the DEA was seeking state-court wiretap orders without adequately showing that it had first tried other, less intrusive, investigative techniques.
"They'd want to bring these cases into the U.S. Attorney's Office, and the feds would tell them no (expletive) way," a former Justice Department official said.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2015/11/11/dea-wiretap-operation-riverside-california/75484076/

Justice officials fear nation's biggest wiretap operation may not be legal

Brad Heath and Brett Kelman, USA TODAY 4:41 p.m. EST November 11, 2015

March 10, 2015

Son of Suriname President Dési Bouterse, Sentenced To 16 Years For Terrorism, Father Convicted Of Drug Trafficking



President Desi Bouterse and son Dino, head of the country’s anti-terrorist unit 
(Pic Reuter)
[From article]
The son of Suriname President Dési Bouterse got a big break from a sympathetic judge Tuesday when he was sentenced to 16 ¼ years in prison for attempting to assist the terrorist group Hezbollah in planning attacks on the US and conspiring to import cocaine.
With the government seeking at least 30 years to life in prison for Dino Bouterse — whose father Desi Bouterse is the drug-trafficking president of Suriname – Manhattan federal Judge Shira Scheindlin decided to go light on the defendant. The judge – who’s best known for infuriating the NYPD by ordering an overhaul of its stop-and-frisks procedures — agreed with Bouterse’s lawyers that there is no proof a threat to the US was imminent despite their client getting caught in an undercover federal sting operation agreeing to help Hezbollah set up terror training camps in his
country in exchange for $2 million.
[. . .]
Bouterse was recorded in Europe telling confidential sources and undercover DEA agents that he wanted to host 30 to 60 Hezbollah members in Suriname for training and operations, the indictment says. He also said he wanted a Hezbollah cell there — in part to serve as his personal armed forces.
In one conversation, a confidential source told Bouterse, “from what I heard, … there is not much love between you and the Americans.”
Bouterse responded, “We have a problem with the Dutch. And Americans.”
His father, President Dési Bouterse, was convicted in absentia by a Netherlands court in 1999 of smuggling over 1,000 pounds of cocaine into the country — but never served any prison time.
The elder Bouterse is a former military dictator accused of human-rights violations, including the killings of 15 political opponents in December 1982. He ruled the tiny country from 1980 to 1987 and regained power in 2010.
http://nypost.com/2015/03/10/son-of-drug-trafficking-president-gets-16-years-in-terror-case/

Son of drug-trafficking president gets 16 years in terror case
By Rich Calder
New York Post
March 10, 2015 | 7:14pm

January 29, 2015

Police Say They Need Informants, But Don't Always Protect Them



This undated photo from a wanted poster shows Pedro Flores, left, and his twin brother, Margarito Flores. (U.S. Marshals Service)

[From article]
"As two of the most well-known cooperating witnesses in the country, the Flores brothers (and their families) will live the rest of their lives in danger of being killed in retribution," prosecutors wrote. "The barbarism of the cartels is legend, with a special place reserved for those who cooperate."
The concerns over possible attempts at retribution extend to the brothers' Chicago attorney, whose identity has been kept secret for safety reasons in an extraordinary step. It's unclear whether the attorney will even be in court Tuesday for the sentencing. Extra metal detectors and bomb-sniffing dogs are expected to add another layer of security at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse.
The Flores brothers' cooperation has already had real repercussions. Shortly after word got out that the brothers were in DEA custody, their father, Margarito Flores Sr., returned to Mexico against his sons' wishes and despite stern warnings from their government handlers, according to prosecutors.
Within days, the father was kidnapped and presumed to be murdered, the filing said. A note found at the scene of the kidnapping said his sons were next.
Some of the brothers' double-dealing was the stuff of movies. The Flores brothers met with cartel leaders in mountaintop compounds, captured conversations with Guzman's lieutenants with a voice recorder hidden in a coat pocket and even helped prosecutors by cutting deals with a rival faction of the cartel that would have meant certain death if discovered by either side, court records show.
"It was incredibly daring," said Joseph Lopez, a Chicago attorney who has represented many cartel clients. "These guys were allegedly able to get Chapo on tape talking about heroin. He trusted them that much."
The Flores brothers' sentencing marks the end of one of the more remarkable stories of Chicago's cut-throat drug underworld, where in a few short years the twins rose through the ranks of the Latin Kings street gang to eventually run a drug distribution ring that shipped thousands of pounds of narcotics to wholesale customers in New York, Washington, Cincinnati and other cities.
By the time they flipped in 2008 and agreed to dismantle their operation, the twins had reached "the highest echelons of the cartel world," prosecutors said.
[. . .]
Their main supplier was Guzman, whose vast operations included a fleet of 747 jets that had all the seats removed, the brothers said in sworn statements to a federal grand jury.
According to their statements, Guzman would load the planes with clothes and other goods and fly bogus "humanitarian" missions to South America. On the return trip to Mexico City, the brothers said, the planes would be packed with as much as 12,000 kilograms — about 14 tons — of cocaine that was unloaded and driven out of the airport with the help of corrupt officials.
The brothers said Guzman's various lieutenants helped the cartel coordinate shipments of cocaine from Colombia to Mexico using submarines, speedboats and amphibious vessels to avoid law enforcement at sea.
[. . .]
In all, the Flores twins pleaded guilty to distributing more than 64,500 kilograms of cocaine, an "almost incomprehensible quantity ... with resulting harm that is incalculable but without question horrific," prosecutors said.
Their testimony led to sweeping indictments in 2009 against 54 defendants, including Guzman, who remained a fugitive until his sensational arrest in Mexico last February. It's unclear whether he'll ever be extradited to face charges in the U.S., where he is also under indictment in New York and Texas.
[. . .]
At the same time they were cooperating against the cartel, the Flores twins also assisted in the dismantling of their organization in 2009, creating a highly unusual situation where the bosses were cooperating against underlings.

http://my.chicagotribune.com/#section/-1/article/p2p-82637789/

Sentencing today for twins who flipped on 'El Chapo'
Jason Meisner, Chicago Tribune
8:00 am, January 27, 2015

* * *


The case of Rachel Hoffman, who was murdered while on a sting as a confidential informant in Tallahassee, FL.

http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/brian-ross-investigates-rachel-hoffmans-murder-spurs-confidential/story?id=11288735

This Week on Brian Ross Investigates
July 30, 2010
By MEGAN CHUCHMACH

* * *


In exchange for leniency, untrained informants are sent out to perform dangerous police operations with few legal protections.
CREDIT LUKE SHUMAN
[From article]
On the evening of May 7, 2008, a twenty-three-year-old woman named Rachel Hoffman got into her silver Volvo sedan, put on calming jam-band music, and headed north to a public park in Tallahassee, Florida. A recent graduate of Florida State, she was dressed to blend into a crowd—bluejeans, green-and-white patterned T-shirt, black Reef flip-flops. On the passenger seat beside her was a handbag that contained thirteen thousand dollars in marked bills.
[. . .]
On the evening of May 7, 2008, a twenty-three-year-old woman named Rachel Hoffman got into her silver Volvo sedan, put on calming jam-band music, and headed north to a public park in Tallahassee, Florida. A recent graduate of Florida State, she was dressed to blend into a crowd—bluejeans, green-and-white patterned T-shirt, black Reef flip-flops. On the passenger seat beside her was a handbag that contained thirteen thousand dollars in marked bills.
Before she reached the Georgia-peach stands and Tupelo-honey venders on North Meridian Road, she texted her boyfriend. “I just got wired up,” she wrote at 6:34 P.M. “Wish me luck I’m on my way.”
“Good luck babe!” he replied. “Call me and let me know what’s up.”
“It’s about to go down,” she texted back.
Behind the park’s oaks and blooming crape myrtles, the sun was beginning to set. Young mothers were pushing strollers near the baseball diamonds; kids were running amok on the playground. As Hoffman spoke on her iPhone to the man she was on her way to meet, her voice was filtered through a wire that was hidden in her purse. “I’m pulling into the park with the tennis courts now,” she said, sounding casual.
Perhaps what put her at ease was the knowledge that nineteen law-enforcement agents were tracking her every move, and that a Drug Enforcement Administration surveillance plane was circling overhead. In any case, Rachel Hoffman, a tall, wide-eyed redhead, was by nature laid-back and trusting. She was not a trained narcotics operative. On her Facebook page you could see her dancing at music festivals with a big, goofy smile, and the faux profile she’d made for her cat (“Favorite music: cat stevens, straycat blues, pussycat dolls”).
A few weeks earlier, police officers had arrived at her apartment after someone complained about the smell of marijuana and voiced suspicion that she was selling drugs. When they asked if she had any illegal substances inside, Hoffman said yes and allowed them in to search. The cops seized slightly more than five ounces of pot and several Ecstasy and Valium pills, tucked beneath the cushions of her couch. Hoffman could face serious prison time for felony charges, including “possession of cannabis with intent to sell” and “maintaining a drug house.” The officer in charge, a sandy-haired vice cop named Ryan Pender, told her that she might be able to help herself if she provided “substantial assistance” to the city’s narcotics team.
[. . .]
Now she was on her way to conduct a major undercover deal for the Tallahassee Police Department, meeting two convicted felons alone in her car to buy two and a half ounces of cocaine, fifteen hundred Ecstasy pills, and a semi-automatic handgun.
[. . .]
Two days after Hoffman disappeared, her body was found in Perry, Florida, a small town some fifty miles southeast of Tallahassee, in a ravine overgrown with tangled vines. Draped in an improvised shroud made from her Grateful Dead sweatshirt and an orange-and-purple sleeping bag, Hoffman had been shot five times in the chest and head with the gun that the police had sent her to buy.
[. . .]
In legal parlance, she was a “coöperator,” one of thousands of people who, each year, help the police build cases against others, often in exchange for a promise of leniency in the criminal-justice system.
Informants are the foot soldiers in the government’s war on drugs. By some estimates, up to eighty per cent of all drug cases in America involve them,
[. . .]
Often, deploying informants involves no paperwork and no institutional oversight, let alone lawyers, judges, or public scrutiny; their use is necessarily shrouded in secrecy.
[. . .]
Many have been given false assurances by the police, used without regard for their safety, and treated as disposable pawns of the criminal-justice system.
The recruitment of young informants often involves risks that are incommensurate with the charges that they are facing. And the costs of coöperating can be high.
[. . .]
Shelly’s death was connected to work she had done as a police informant. Just days before she was killed, cops had spotted Shelly and a friend smoking a blunt on the balcony of a Motel 6 in a Detroit suburb. When they raided the room, they found a sandwich bag with half an ounce of marijuana in the toilet tank. One of the officers threatened Shelly with prison—a particularly terrifying prospect for a transgender woman, who would be sent to a male facility—and then offered her a way out: she could set up her dealer, Qasim Raqib, and walk free that same day. She agreed.
[. . .]
When Rachel’s parents arrived at the headquarters of the Tallahassee Police Department, they immediately grew suspicious. “I remember noticing that they weren’t taking us to the missing-persons unit,” Margie recalled. “Instead it was like, ‘Come over here to Narcotics.’ ”
[. . .]
Rachel’s parents watched the coverage on the television in her apartment. It marked, for Irv Hoffman, the beginning of what he sometimes refers to as “the smearing”—the period following Rachel’s murder during which their daughter was portrayed in police statements and front-page news stories as, in his words, “this horrible drug-dealing monster.”
[. . .]
“The first stories tried to paint Rachel as a low-life druggie drug dealer.” Two months later, in a TV segment on Hoffman’s death, the ABC News correspondent Brian Ross interviewed Police Chief Jones. “I’m calling her a criminal,”
[. . .]
“You need to understand that if you speak out you’re opening Pandora’s box,” Hoffman recalled being told. “You’re going to be out of your comfort zone real quick, and some people are going to support you and other people are going to come out against you.
[. . .]
According to Mitchell McLean, an agent from a federally funded narcotics task force laid out Jeremy’s options, saying, “You can sit down with us and make a deal. Or you can go upstairs, get a lawyer, and get ready to be ass-rammed in prison.” Jeremy signed a contract to “make purchases of controlled substances from four individuals,” in return for which his charges would be reduced, “with a recommendation of no jail time.”
[. . .]
Before long, using a camera hidden in his baseball cap, Jeremy had set up at least five local drug suspects. But, according to his parents, he was told that he would need to keep going,
[. . .]
On December 29, 2008, Jeremy left the house after a snowstorm to buy some milk. He didn’t return. Reagan had paid an accomplice to bait or kidnap Jeremy and bring him to a nearby motor home, where he was waiting with a .22-calibre pistol. He shot Jeremy three times in the back of the head, then once, at close range, in the face.
[. . .]
result of an equally cynical and utilitarian calculation. “The cops, they get federal funding by the number of arrests they make—to get the money, you need the numbers,” he explained, alluding to, among other things, asset-forfeiture laws that allow police departments to keep a hefty portion of cash and other resources seized during drug busts. “It’s a commercial enterprise,” he went on, citing a view shared by many legal scholars and policy critics. “That’s how they pay for their vans, for their prosecutors—they get money from the war on drugs. They put zero dent in the supply. They just focus on small-town, small-time arrests.”
[. . .]
It’s little fish chasing other little fish, like Jeremy and his eight methadone pills. This argument is at the heart of a lawsuit that Jeremy’s parents decided to file last December.
[. . .]
California, he later learned, was one of the few states that had rules governing the use of teen-age informants, and prohibiting recruits younger than thirteen. Those rules had been devised after a seventeen-year-old named Chad MacDonald was brutally murdered and his fifteen-year-old girlfriend raped and shot in retaliation for Chad’s work as a low-level drug C.I., in 1998.
[. . .]
An internal-affairs investigation revealed that police officers had committed at least twenty-one violations of nine separate policies in Hoffman’s case. “I didn’t think it would be so many policies not being followed,” Chief Dennis Jones told the Tallahassee Democrat, which covered the case extensively. He admitted that it had been wrong to blame the victim, and expressed regret.
[. . .]
Many vice cops, in particular, argued that forbidding the use of juveniles as C.I.s would force them to turn a blind eye to young people committing adult crimes. More record keeping would only increase the risk of C.I.s’ identities being disclosed. The right-to-an-attorney clause, they contended, would make it far too cumbersome to catch and “flip” a drug suspect on the spot, effectively nullifying a valuable, real-time tactic for fighting crime.
[. . .]
“There’s no such thing as training an informant,” Brian Sallee, of B.B.S. Narcotics Enforcement Training and Consulting, told me. “You direct them what to do, and if they follow those directions that will make it safer for them. There’s always going to be a risk, but when things go bad it’s usually because they didn’t do as they were told to. They get themselves hurt, not the officers. The informants cause their own dilemma.”
[. . .]
The revised bill passed both chambers of the Florida legislature unanimously. On May 7, 2009, the anniversary of Hoffman’s murder, Governor Charlie Crist signed Rachel’s Law.

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2012/09/03/the-throwaways

SEPTEMBER 3, 2012 ISSUE
The Throwaways
Police enlist young offenders as confidential informants. But the work is high-risk, largely unregulated, and sometimes fatal.
BY SARAH STILLMAN

* * *

http://abcnews.go.com/US/dangers-college-student-campus-police-drug-informant/story?id=28357345

The Dangers of a College Student Becoming a Campus Police Drug Informant
By GAIL DEUTSCH, STEPHANIE FUERTE, JONATHAN BALTHASER (@JonBalthaser) and LAUREN EFFRON (@leffron831)
Jan 23, 2015, 1:47 PM ET


World News Videos | ABC World News

January 6, 2015

Mexican Drug Cartels Reportedly Force New Members to Eat Hearts of Victims



Vigilantes in the Michoacan state have been battling vicious drug gangs that forced some of their members to eat their victims' hearts. Photo: Reuters

[From article]
A vicious Mexican drug gang forced some members to eat the hearts of murder victims as part of a gruesome initiation rite to root out infiltrators, a government security official said Tuesday, citing witness testimony.
For much of the past year, Michoacan, a mountainous, agricultural state in western Mexico, has been ravaged by fighting between drug gang henchmen and vigilantes who took up arms against the cartels but have since splintered into violent factions.
[. . .]
The renewed fighting in Michoacan comes as President Enrique Pena Nieto faces his deepest crisis since taking office, following the apparent murder of 43 trainee teachers by a drug gang working with corrupt police in neighboring Guerrero state.
[. . .]
The main gangs operating in Michoacan, La Familia Michoacana, and later offshoot the Knights Templar cartel, were founded by Nazario Moreno, or “The Craziest One,” a cultish crime boss who was finally killed in March 2014 after the previous government declared him dead in 2010.
[. . .]
Interviewed on local television, Alfredo Castillo, Michoacan’s federal security commissioner, denied cannibalism was widespread, but said there were various testimonies indicating heart-eating was part of a macabre initiation Moreno used to root out moles or test his men’s loyalty.
“The ritual ranged from dismembering people they intended to kill to sometimes serving up the heart,” Castillo said.
[. . .]
More than 100,000 people have been killed in gang-related violence in Mexico since 2007.

http://nypost.com/2015/01/06/mexican-drug-gang-eats-hearts-of-their-murder-victims/

Mexican drug gang eats hearts of their murder victims
By Reuters
New York Post
January 6, 2015 | 1:07pm

July 17, 2014

Mexican Drug Cartel Kidnaps NC Man Holds For Ransom


One more indication that Mexican drug cartels are operating in these United States. But we are told that more illegal aliens, more same sex marriage and more executive orders will solve problems. Oh wait, I forgot more focus on the history of racism  and white privilege in the nation. That is the way to tranquility and prosperity. 


Juan Manuel Fuentes-Morales was arrested at a different house and found with one of the phones used to negotiate the extortion, the FBI says.

[From article]
Three alleged members of a Mexican drug cartel are in jail after allegedly bringing their brutal tactics north of the border and using them on a South Carolina man who owed them a $200,000 drug debt.
The FBI says the men kidnapped a 23-year-old from his hometown in St. Matthews, South Carolina, on July 9 and held him for nearly a week while they tried to extort up to $400,000 from his family.
He was rescued mostly unharmed early Tuesday from a home in rural Roseboro, North Carolina, where he was found chained to the floor and blindfolded.
Authorities say the man was a drug runner, responsible for distributing marijuana and cocaine across North and South Carolina for a Mexican drug cartel.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2694589/FBI-3-cartel-members-accused-kidnapping-SC-man.html

Mexican drug cartel 'kidnapped South Carolina man and held him chained to the floor for a week' over $200,000 drug debt
23-year-old was kidnapped outside his home by three alleged drug traffickers posing as cops
Cartel members say he ripped them off of 200lbs of marijuana worth $200,000
Gang members tried to extort man's family of up to $400,000
FBI says up to 500 agents and officers worked to free the man
He does not face any charges and is being treated as the victim of a crime
By ASSOCIATED PRESS and MICHAEL ZENNIE
Daily Mail (UK)
PUBLISHED: 14:33 EST, 16 July 2014 | UPDATED: 17:36 EST, 16 July 2014

June 11, 2014

Mexican Cartels Take Control of U.S. Southern Border


[From article]
In an interview with Breitbart Texas, NBPC Vice President Shawn Moran revealed that the Mexican cartels control the flow of illegal immigrants across Mexico through the monopoly on coyotes, otherwise known as human smugglers. “Mexican cartels are exploiting this crisis to get their shipments through. They know our schedules, our shifts, our manpower, and how we react to these situations,” said Vice President Moran.
“The cartels control the flow of people from south of our border. The coyotes are mostly at the employ of the cartels. They rent the smuggling routes that are protected by the cartel enterprises. We are being completely reactive and chasing the cartel activity.

http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-Texas/2014/06/11/Crisis-Leaves-Border-Unprotected-Cartels-in-Control-Says-BP-Union

CRISIS LEAVES 'VAST SWATHS' OF BORDER UNPROTECTED, CARTELS 'IN CONTROL'
by BRANDON DARBY
11 Jun 2014, 8:52 AM PDT

July 29, 2013

Customs Plane Seizes 7,000 Pounds of Cocaine



CBP surveillance aircraft helped seize three tons of cocaine, shown here

[From article]
The P-3s’ detection capabilities allow highly trained crews to identify emerging threats well beyond the land borders of the U.S. By providing surveillance of known air, land and maritime smuggling routes in an area that is twice the size of the continental U.S., the P-3s detect, monitor and disrupt smuggling activities before they reach shore.

http://www.gsnmagazine.com/node/29815?c=maritime_port_security

CBP seizes almost 7,000 pounds of cocaine worth more than half a billion dollars
Thu, 2013-05-30 03:04 PM

* * *


Huge burden: One shipment was found to be carrying 7,000 pounds of cocaine, while the other held 6,000 pounds

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2333520/Feds-seize-1-billion-worth-cocaine-Memorial-Day-weekend-superbust.html

Feds seize $1 BILLION worth of cocaine in Memorial Day weekend superbust
U.S. Customs intercepted two narcotics shipments over the holiday weekend, one off the coast of the Galapagos Islands in the Pacific and one on the Caribbean off Central America near the Panama and Columbia border
The cocaine shipments weighed a combined 13,000 pounds
By Daily Mail Reporter
PUBLISHED: 14:45 EST, 30 May 2013 | UPDATED: 15:19 EST, 30 May 2013

May 20, 2013

South American Countries Consider Legalizing Drugs



Game-changer: Latin American countries could stop deploying law enforcement agencies to fight cartels after concluding that the human costs of the 'war on drugs' is just too high


[From article]
Keeping track of the drug deaths is difficult, as official figures have been issued sporadically but in Mexico alone, upwards of 70,000 people have died in drug-related violence over the past six years.
[. . .]
Honduras, for example, now has the highest homicide rate in the world, with about 7,200 people murdered last year in the tiny nation of 8 million people, most in drug-related crime.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2326955/Could-South-America-end-participation-war-drugs-Fears-horrific-human-cost-tackling-cartels-lead-change-policy.html

Could South America end its participation in the war on drugs? Fears horrific human cost of tackling cartels will lead to change in policy
Latin American countries could stop deploying law enforcement agencies
'Gamechanging' report on global drugs policy released
Almost all cocaine consumed in West is produced in Latin America
Report advocates for softer policies toward drug users
By JILL REILLY
Daily Mail (UK)
PUBLISHED: 09:15 EST, 19 May 2013 | UPDATED: 09:30 EST, 19 May 2013

September 4, 2012

Spain To NH Drug Route Busted

http://bostonherald.com/news/regional/view/20220904feds_make_massive_mexican_cartel_coke_bust_in_nh/

Feds: Mexican drug cartel was building Europe-N.H. pipeline
Boston Herald
By Matt Stout
Tuesday, September 4, 2012

August 6, 2012

Drug Cartels Use Drones Finding Safe Border Crossings



http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/aug/6/drone-industry-eager-to-road-test-science-fiction/?page=1

Drone industry eager to road-test science fiction
By Ben Wolfgang-
The Washington Times
Monday, August 6, 2012



* * *
http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/08/06/2930381/the-emerging-drone-culture.html

The emerging ‘drone’ culture
Miami Herald
BY EUGENE ROBINSON
EUGENEROBINSON (at) WASHPOST.COM

* * *

[From article]
A flurry of activity on Capitol Hill in recent weeks has drawn even more attention to the drone industry, which can begin offering its products for commercial and private use in 2015. The FAA has estimated that by 2020 there could be as many as 30,000 drones flying in U.S. airspace, and a variety of sectors — ranging from the news industry to family farmers — are expected to buy them by the thousands.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/aug/5/convention-puts-drones-on-big-stage-debate-still-r/

Las Vegas convention puts drones on big stage
Debate still rages on about privacy, safety
By Ben Wolfgang
The Washington Times
Sunday, August 5, 2012

February 29, 2012

Parts Of UK Ruled By Drug Gangs

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/politics/4160139/UN-Drug-mobs-rule-UK-cities.html

UN: Drug mobs rule UK cities
By GRAEME WILSON, Deputy Political Editor
Last Updated: 29th February 2012
VIOLENT drug dealers have turned parts of Britain into South American-style "no-go areas", the United Nations has warned.

November 4, 2011

Online Help Fighting Mexican Drug Cartels

[From article]
"It is common knowledge that members of local, state and federal governments in Mexico support various cartel groups. In the state of Veracruz, it is generally believed that some members of the state government support Los Zetas, the dominant cartel there.
[. . .]
Mexico’s various cartels long have used the Internet to trumpet their triumphs on the battlefield and to taunt and even degrade their enemies. The cartels have posted videos of the torture, execution and desecration of the corpses of rivals. They also frequently monitor narcoblogs and sometimes even post on them. As demonstrated by the September blogger killings in Nuevo Laredo, Los Zetas appear to possess at least some rudimentary capability to trace online activity to people in the physical world. They are known to employ their own team of dedicated cyber experts and to have sources within the Mexican government.
In addition to technical intelligence, the Zetas can use old-fashioned human intelligence to track down their online enemies.
[. . .]
Even if Anonymous cannot provide information that damages Los Zetas smuggling operations, the very fact that the collective has decided publicly to challenge Los Zetas will result in some sort of response.
[. . .]
Mexico has become one of the most dangerous countries in the world for journalists, and many media organizations practice heavy self-censorship to protect themselves.
[. . .] As a result, many Mexicans believe the mainstream media are not of any real assistance in the face of cartel violence.

http://finance.townhall.com/columnists/stewartscott/2011/11/04/anonymous_vs_zetas_amid_mexicos_cartel_violence

Anonymous vs. Zetas Amid Mexico's Cartel Violence
Stewart Scott
Townhall.com
November 4, 2011

September 29, 2011

Vigilante Groups Fight Drugs in Mexico

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204226204576599161405735224.html?mod=WSJ_hp_MIDDLENexttoWhatsNewsThird

Mexico Fears Rise of Vigilante Justice
Gang's Claim It Killed 35 Violent Traffickers to Help Society Suggests Arrival of Paramilitary Groups
By JOSé DE CóRDOBA
Wall Street Journal
September 29, 2011

September 26, 2011

Mexican Gang Kills Journalists, Others

http://www.cnn.com/2011/09/25/world/americas/mexico-editor-decapitated/index.html

Police find decapitated body of Mexico newspaper editor
CNN
September 25, 2011

July 19, 2011

Brave Mexican Women Leave For US

[From article]
"Valles called her husband and told him to grab their 1-year-old son. She got her two sisters on the phone, and then her parents. Within half an hour, the entire family was mobilized.
[. . .]
the family held its collective breath for the 20 or so miles it took to arrive at the shared border with Texas.
[. . .]
Many of the gun smugglers the ATF sought may have been informants for the FBI and the US Drug Enforcement Administration, Melson said. The ATF was kept in the dark about the smugglers’ connection to other law enforcement agencies, he testified.
[. . .]
In the past four years, there were 34,612 drug-related killings in Mexico, according to government figures. Last year was the bloodiest on record — 15,273 people were killed in drug-related violence.
[. . .]
Marisela Escobedo Ortiz, was murdered in broad daylight on the steps of a Chihuahua government building on Dec. 16, 2010. Escobedo was pressing the local government to pursue the murder of her daughter, Rubi, killed a year earlier, allegedly by a member of the Zeta gang."

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/life_inside_the_asylum_dUWi0c0QjC6Gv8rK0VB5oI

Life inside the asylum
Bloody drug cartels, an ATF sting gone bad and a 21-year-old sheriff begging for protection threaten to spark a war on the Mexican border
By GINGER ADAMS OTIS
New York Post
Last Updated: 4:37 AM, July 17, 2011
Posted: 8:32 PM, July 16, 2011

June 30, 2011

Drug Cartel's Influence

[From review]
"with their 1993 revenues eclipsing $7 billion. Their influence was so great that they not only got their country’s constitution changed — with the help of experts from the US — to outlaw extradition, but also used more than $6 million in political contributions to elect a president."

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/books/behind_enemy_lines_hw3vwQrwfpmJ7LP3BeCsWO

Behind enemy lines
How an informant hobbled the world’s deadliest drug cartel
By LARRY GETLEN
New York Post
Last Updated: 11:26 PM, June 25, 2011
Posted: 11:18 PM, June 25, 2011
[Book Review]
At The Devil’s Table
The Untold Story of the Insider Who Brought Down the Cali Cartel
by William C. Rempel
Random House

March 29, 2011

Lawyer Murdered in Guatemala

I read this story just after reading one in New York magazine about Alex Jones. Jones was disparaged as the leader of conspiracists. But the story about reality in Guatemala makes Jones seem like a normal human being. Reality is more bizarre than fiction. I see many parallels with groups in the US, operating as they do in Guatemala.

[From article]
"Criminal networks have infiltrated virtually every government and law-enforcement agency, and more than half the country is no longer believed to be under the control of any government at all.
[. . .]
Incredibly, the death rate in Guatemala is now higher than it was for much of the civil war. And there is almost absolute impunity: ninety-seven per cent of homicides remain unsolved, the killers free to kill again. In 2007, a U.N. official declared, “Guatemala is a good place to commit a murder, because you will almost certainly get away with it.”
[. . .]
In 2007, Colom, representing a social-democratic coalition, won the Presidency—the first time in five decades that a left-of-center leader had ruled Guatemala. The election was one of the bloodiest in the country’s history: more than fifty local candidates and party activists were murdered, and Colom’s campaign manager was nearly killed by three grenades thrown at his motorcade.
[. . .]
Since Colom took power, two of his interior ministers have been indicted for corruption (a third died in a mysterious helicopter crash), and four consecutive heads of the national police have been dismissed, indicted, or jailed for alleged malfeasance.
[. . .]
In the nineteen-fifties, the C.I.A. had contemplated an assassination campaign against left-wing Guatemalan targets and disseminated a treatise on the art of political murder: “The subject may be stunned or drugged and then placed in the car, but this is only reliable when the car can be run off a high cliff or into deep water without observation.”
[. . .]
Castresana realized that he could not bring criminals to justice before he had removed at least some of the most corrupt officials.
[. . .]
Castresana seized upon a rule in CICIG’S charter that permitted the organization to petition local officials to punish unethical officials. Through this process, his team began to remove more than fifteen hundred corrupt police officers, including fifty police commissioners and the deputy director of the national police. CICIG also “invited” nearly a dozen prominent prosecutors to leave their posts,
[. . .]
Anita Isaacs, a political scientist and an expert on Guatemala, who knows Castresana, told me that the networks traditionally relied on three ways to remove an enemy: “The first is to bribe you—but they could not bribe Castresana. The second is to kill you—but they could not kill Castresana. Finally, if all else fails, they destroy your reputation. And that is what they did to Castresana.”
[. . .]
At a press conference announcing his decision, Castresana, in a final salvo, denounced Colom’s new Attorney General for alleged ties to “parallel powers,” including organized crime.
[. . .]
He said of the attacks on his reputation, “They have hurt my image forever.”
[. . .]
The proliferation of counterfeit realities underscored the difficulty of ascertaining the truth in a country where there are so few arbiters of it.

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/04/04/110404fa_fact_grann?currentPage=1

A Murder Foretold
Unravelling the ultimate political conspiracy.
by David Grann
New Yorker
April 4, 2011