BajaNews
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Sinaloa cartel now calling shots in border region
http://www.sandiegored.com/noticias/20863/Sinaloa-cartel-now...
Por: Omar Millán
30 Noviembre 2011
TIJUANA – After a three-year bloody battle between the Arellano criminal organization and a breakaway cell that left 2,327 dead and dozens missing,
the winner appears to be the Sinaloa cartel.
The Arellanos’ bitter rival has firmly established itself on this stretch of the border and is inaugurating a new era in organized crime, two experts
agreed.
This has occurred despite the crackdown authorities have carried against organized crime in this region, which they have called a national success.
“One cartel has been dismantled, but another one has arrived because … consumption has not changed in a fundamental way and that leads to cartels
being present in this city,” said Vicente Sánchez, a researcher in the respected think tank College of the Northern border.
Signs of this new phase can be seen already; the number of violent deaths and high-profile crimes are down significantly.
According to authorities, most of the murders that occurred this year are linked to disputes among drug dealers or among various groups or cells, a
kind of “clean-up” or reorganization that’s going on at that level, mainly in the city’s east side.
Sánchez said the main difference with the old criminal organization that controlled the transportation and sale of drugs in this city is that the
Sinaloa cartel is relatively less violent.
Although not dedicated to the kidnapping industry nor targets the general population, the Sinaloa cartel is a criminal group that, like the others,
uses violence to impose its will, the researcher noted.
But that cartel, unlike other criminal organizations in Mexico, turns to violence as a last resort, according to Víctor Clark, a sociologist who has
analyzed drug trafficking on the border for more than two decades.
The cartel runs its enterprise – from dealing drugs on the street to money laundering – more like a corporation, and treats each seizure as the price
of doing business, Clark said.
The Sinaloa cartel is the largest and most powerful one in Mexico. The organization, headed by the fugitive Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán and Ismael “El
Mayo” Zambada, has faced several setbacks in Baja California this year.
These include the army’s discovery in July of 300 acres of marijuana plants south of Ensenada, the largest drug field ever found in Mexico; the tons
of marijuana in packages seized headed into the United States in recent months; and the nearly 800 pounds of cocaine confiscated in Tijuana in early
October.
Then there’s last week’s seizure of $15 million in cash found inside a vehicle, among other law enforcement operations.
On Wednesday, military authorities said that there were signs that the sophisticated crossborder tunnel discovered Tuesday in Otay Mesa was linked to
the Sinaloa cartel. In all, a record 32 tons of marijuana were seized.
In fact, authorities have said most of the drugs, cash and tunnels uncovered this year belonged to the Sinaloa cartel, which challenges the claim law
enforcement and military leaders have made frequently that no single organization controlled trafficking in the region.
Those seizures did not lead to a convulsion of violence, a common response by other cartels.
That’s not to say that the Sinaloa cartel will not use violence. The same week the $15 million was discovered in Tijuana, authorities found 23 people
who had been assassinated in Guadalajara and 17 burned to death in Culiacán, events that Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office blamed on the Sinaloa
cartel.
The organization is fighting other ones, including the Zetas cartel, for control of strategic drug routes along the border. These clashes have
generated unprecedented levels of violence in the states of Tamaulipas, Nuevo León and Chihuahua.
Clark explained that since the capture Nov. 4 of Juan Francisco Sillas Rocha, the lieutenant of cartel leader Fernando Sánchez Arellano, the Sinaloa
cartel has been able to dominate the border region.
He said it’s clear to him that the Arellano cartel has the least influence than it has ever had, and raised the possibility that its leader may have
even signed an agreement with the Sinaloa cartel after the bloody internal fight from 2008 to 2010.
The beginning of the end for the Arellanos began in late 2007, when Teodoro García Simental did not recognize Fernando Sánchez Arellano, the nephew of
the founders of the cartel, as the leader of the organization, Clark said.
A blood bath began the next year to eliminate Fernando Sánchez Arellano, known as “The Engineer,” according to state Attorney General Rommel Moreno.
Authorities said Sánchez Arellano had inherited the top job after Francisco Javier Arellano Félix, known as “El Tigrillo,” was detained off the Baja
California Sur coast in August of 2006.
Without Francisco Javier Arellano new traffickers flocked to the border, including cells from the Sinaloa and La Familia de Michoacán cartels.
And the problems and violence escalated between García Simental and Sánchez Arellano.
In the ensuing three years, more than 2,000 people were killed, dozens disappeared and an indeterminate number moved out of Tijuana, all which
combined to put an end to the Arellano organization.
Sánchez, the researcher for Colef, said the criminal groups currently operating in the city are not independent, rather associated with a cell or are
paying a “user’s fee” to be able to work in a certain area. They are mercenaries that have no problem switching allegiances if need be, he said.
For his part, Clark said that, unlike the Arellanos, the Sinaloa cartel prefers to work silently, avoiding public attention.
However, like the other criminal organizations, the Sinaloa cartel uses the strategy of infiltrating law enforcement, in addition to bribing police
and judicial leaders, Clark said. And it has far superior economic power than the other organizations, he noted.
The researcher attributes the drop in high-profile murders this year in Tijuana to this strategy rather than the coordinated law enforcement-military
efforts to control drug trafficking. The other researcher, Sánchez, says the reduction of these crimes is due to a combination of both.
Baja California authorities said that there have been 436 murders in Tijuana through Nov. 19, about 300 less than the same period last year.
Authorities and politicians, for their part, say that the drop in violent deaths is the result of the efficient coordination between the various
levels law enforcement agencies and the military.
They have held up the these efforts as a national model; in fact President Calderón has cited “the Tijuana model” as an example of how the war against
drug traffickers can be won.
The Sinaloa cartel’s operation extends into the United States, where the son of its co-leader, Vicente Zambada Niebla, and nearly three dozen others
have been indicted.[ They are accused of conspiring to import tons of cocaine and large quantities of heroin to Chicago and other American cities
between 2005 and 2008.
In documents filed this month in the U.S. District Court in Chicago, the son alleges that U.S. authorities allowed him and other cartel traffickers to
operate their business in exchange for information on rival cartels. He said he was promised immunity from prosecution in the United States if he
provided that intelligence to DEA agents.
Federal prosecutors deny those allegations and are pressing their case against the son and his alleged accomplices.
In Mexico, President Calderon’s Cabinet has made defeating the Sinaloa cartel a priority of the federal government.
Its leader, “Chapo” Guzmán, 51, remains at large after escaping from a prison in 2001.
This year, Forbes magazine listed his worth at $1 billion and called him the world’s most wanted criminal.
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toneart
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...and so it goes...
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Woooosh
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that's only news if you haven't read this board in the past year. They started moving their families into Rosarito last year and waited for the gov't
to give them the nod to takeover Baja Norte. It's the best deal the gov't can get.
"the Sinaloa cartel uses the strategy of infiltrating law enforcement, in addition to bribing police and judicial leaders, Clark said. And it has far
superior economic power than the other organizations, he noted."
... Yup, El Chapo and his $Billions did the clean sweep--- now he's moved on to Australia.
[Edited on 12-3-2011 by Woooosh]
\"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing\"
1961- JFK to Canadian parliament (Edmund Burke)
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JoeJustJoe
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Quote: | Originally posted by Woooosh
that's only news if you haven't read this board in the past year. They started moving their families into Rosarito last year and waited for the gov't
to give them the nod to takeover Baja Norte. It's the best deal the gov't can get. |
Woooosh you got proof the gov't gave them the nod? Although the Mexican government seems to favor this cartel, but I just don't know about all those
conspiracy stories I read.
I think that "Narcosphere " Bill Conway is just a conspiracy nut, and I don't take him that serious anymore.
"Zeta" sure has an ax to grind. Take for example the piece they did on Rhon. It was all one-sided and they never talked about Rhon's Mexican
Constitutional rights.
Maybe the Sinaloa cartel just took over and didn't ask anybody's permission, because they brutality took over the turf of the weakened competing
cartel.
Anyway Woooosh you should be happy. If we have one dominate cartel in the area. There should be less violence in Baja, and I understand the Sinaloa
cartel runs their operation like a business and is less brutal than other cartels most of the time.
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