Feral Jundi

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Industry Talk: DHS Pulls SBInet Funding

     She added that funds allocated to the program would be used to for proven technologies like mobile surveillance equipment, thermal imaging devices, ultra-light plane detection systems, mobile radios, cameras and laptop computers for Border Patrol vehicles.  

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   I guess the economy dictates, and this project has been killed.  It is kind of interesting that they would list ultra-light plane detection systems as something to be funded.  I wonder if that includes the Flat Top Paramotor Border Patrol para-gliders I brought up awhile back? If it does, I didn’t know that was considered ‘proven technologies’. –Matt

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DHS Pulls SBInet Funding

By Jack Mann

17 March, 2010

DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano

The Department of Homeland Security has pulled the plug on $50 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds for the “Virtual Border Fence,” meant to secure the U.S.’s border with Mexico.  The SBInet project would mesh security cameras, motion sensors, radar and other technologies into a high-tech detection system to defeat illegal border crossings.

“Effective immediately, the Department of Homeland Security will redeploy $50 million of Recovery Act funding originally allocated for the SBInet … to other tested, commercially available security technology along the Southwest border,” said Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. She added that funds allocated to the program would be used to for proven technologies like mobile surveillance equipment, thermal imaging devices, ultra-light plane detection systems, mobile radios, cameras and laptop computers for Border Patrol vehicles.  She said that DHS has also frozen all funding beyond SBInet’s initial deployment to two areas south of Tucson and Ajo, Arizona, an assessment ordered in January.

Story here.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Mexico: The War In Mexico–Drug Slayings Rock U.S. Consulate

   This is just sad and my heart goes out to the families of the deceased. The infant daughter will now grow up without her parents, all because of the brutal acts of cowards.

   Now on to some thoughts with this.  We must do a better job at containing the border, and we must do a better job at protecting folks in Mexico.  This attack is a clear message by the cartels that they are not pleased with the U.S. It is my view that once we said ‘hey, we will help Mexico out’, then we just declared war on the cartels.  So when the cartels actually strike back and kill one of our own, we should now know that this is an act of warfare, and not some random killing.

    Obviously we have been assisting Mexico in their war down south for awhile, and I have talked about that here. The question I have is will this attack result in us ratcheting up our assistance, or backing off? I also expect more demand on the private side of the house, when it comes to protecting companies operating down there. Hell, we might even see an increase of WPPS folks for Mexico. And of course, there is always the idea I floated here on the blog about how to deal with these thugs.  Who knows, and I would like to hear what the readership thinks? –Matt

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 Drug Cartel Weapons

A captured drug cartel cell and their tools of warfare.

Drug Slayings in Mexico Rock U.S. Consulate

March 15, 2010

By ELISABETH MALKIN and MARC LACEY

CIUDAD JUÁREZ, Mexico — The married couple gunned down Saturday as they drove back from a children’s birthday party with their infant daughter in the back seat were concerned about the violence plaguing this border town, but they never believed they could be its next targets, the husband’s brother said in an interview on Monday.

The couple, Leslie Enriquez, 35, a pregnant American consulate worker, and her husband, Arthur H. Redelfs, 34, an officer at the county jail in El Paso, were within sight of the bridge leading to the United States border crossing when gunmen said to have links to drug traffickers drove up to their car and opened fire, killing them both.

“He was a wonderful man,” said the brother, Reuben Redelfs. “We just regret this as a senseless act of violence.”

Gunmen also killed the husband of another consular employee and wounded his two young children in a near-simultaneous shooting elsewhere in the city, in what appeared to be coordinated assaults on American officials and their families. The killings provoked outrage from Washington and raised new questions about whether employees of the United States and their family members were increasingly at risk of being swept into the cross-fire of Mexico’s bloody drug wars.

The couple had been married for a couple years and lived in El Paso, where they were raising their 7-month-old daughter, who was unharmed in the shooting. Mr. Redelfs said he was now caring for the girl.

Despite concerns about the security in Ciudad Juárez, the couple traveled frequently between Texas and Mexico, where they had friends and Ms. Enriquez worked in the visa section of the American Consulate, Mr. Redelfs said.

“They weren’t worried as targets,” he said.

Asked if he believed the couple were targets because of Ms. Enriquez’s consular job, Mr. Redelfs chose his words cautiously, saying, “I find it more than a coincidence that two separate incidents involving consular employees who were shot and killed occurred on the same day.”

Silvio Gonzalez, a spokesman for the United States Consulate in Ciudad Juárez, said the agency would be closed Tuesday “as we mourn the loss in our community.” The consular office was closed Monday for a holiday.

The killings came during a particularly bloody weekend when nearly 50 people were killed nationwide in drug-gang violence, including attacks in Acapulco as American college students began arriving for spring break.

(more…)

Monday, February 15, 2010

Law Enforcement: The Heroin Road–A Lethal Business Model Targets Middle America

   Fascinating.  These guys have definitely tapped into a drug dealing business model that is far more superior than the major cartels. Small de-centralized  businesses, all getting their heroin from one region in Mexico, and distributing it ‘pizza delivery style’. lol And get this, they are focused on customer service and satisfaction.  Did the Xalisco Boys read the Toyota Way or something?

   So how do you defeat this is my question? You could create doubt about the product they sell, kind of like how the fuel peddle issue is really tweaking Toyota right now. But eventually the product issues will be hashed out, and rumors squashed and business would crank up again.

    Another way, is to decentralize the drug war.  If you want to eradicate small groups, you need small groups who have the incentive to go after them.  A team of bounty hunters, if given sufficient authority necessary to go after these folks, could do the job just fine.  And if you attach a sizable bounty that makes this profitable for the hunters, or implement an awards system based on seized assets, then you could create an industry out of capturing these small time thugs. To really amp up the effectiveness of bounty hunters, they need to be able cross state lines.  Issuing Letters of Marque could be one way to give them that authority, or having some federal agency deputize these hunters. Perhaps some federal and state laws could be modified in order to make bounty hunting more effective?  In either case, you need to give bounty hunters protections that will give them sufficient authority to really go after these dealers.

   Like with the military and issuing Letters of Marque to individuals, law enforcement can have problems relinquishing authority to bounty hunters. It’s one part Max Webber, and one part ego. I happen to think that both groups can exist just fine, much like the Post Office and Fedex exist in the same market, and I think it is an excellent idea to create industries out of killing or capturing terrorists and pirates, or create industry out of capturing drug dealers. What bothers me about what the Xaliscos are doing, is they have decentralized the drug trade and have a business model that is scary efficient. Decentralizing the drug war against these folks is something that should be looked at if we want to keep pace with this business model. –Matt

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THE HEROIN ROAD

A lethal business model targets Middle America

Sugar cane farmers from a tiny Mexican county use savvy marketing and low prices to push black-tar heroin in the United States.

By Sam Quinones

First Of Three Parts

February 14, 2010

Immigrants from an obscure corner of Mexico are changing heroin use in many parts of America.Farm boys from a tiny county that once depended on sugar cane have perfected an ingenious business model for selling a semi-processed form of Mexican heroin known as black tar.Using convenient delivery by car and aggressive marketing, they have moved into cities and small towns across the United States, often creating demand for heroin where there was little or none. In many of those places, authorities report increases in overdoses and deaths.Immigrants from Xalisco in the Pacific Coast state of Nayarit, Mexico, they have brought an audacious entrepreneurial spirit to the heroin trade. Their success stems from both their product, which is cheaper and more potent than Colombian heroin, and their business model, which places a premium on customer convenience and satisfaction.Users need not venture into dangerous neighborhoods for their fix. Instead, they phone in their orders and drivers take the drug to them. Crew bosses sometimes call users after a delivery to check on the quality of service. They encourage users to bring in new customers, rewarding them with free heroin if they do. (more…)

Friday, January 15, 2010

Mexico: Cartel Inc.–In The Company Of Narcos

   This is a fascinating look at the inner workings and organizational methods of a drug cartel.  This is pure free market warfare, but practiced by thugs.  This is like pre-Westphalia stuff, and certainly deserves some attention if you are a student of the drug war and narco-terrorism.

    I also look at these cartels like big juicy targets, over flowing with cash and assets that could end up in the pockets of privateers given authority to take them down. That is how you take down folks who are playing by pre-Westphalia rules and living without any regards to the rule of law or borders. –Matt

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Cartel Inc: In the company of Narcos

Jan 14 2010

By Robin Emmott

RIO BRAVO, Mexico (Reuters) – Late last year, Mexican soldiers raided a house in Rio Bravo, a dilapidated town just across the border from Texas. What they found was a kind of “back office” that belonged to the Gulf cartel, the country’s most violent drug gang.

Inside the gray, one-storey house, clerical workers helped run cocaine shipments hidden in U.S.-bound avocado trucks from southern Mexico, said soldiers on patrol in the town. The office tracked the drug movements in trucks equipped with GPS and progress was logged into spreadsheets on laptops.

The Gulf cartel as well as its hitmen often refer to themselves as “The Company” — and not without reason. Often overlooked amid all the violence and chaos they engender is the fact that Mexico’s drug cartels are capably run businesses that have turned into some of the most lucrative criminal enterprises ever.

(more…)

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Industry Talk: The Steele Foundation Expands Latin American Footprint With New Monterrey Office

   This is good to hear, and I am glad that Steele is getting in there with some value added and highly organized services.  What is also interesting, is that most of my readership in Mexico, comes from Monterrey.  So for you guys reading the blog, congrats and I hope business goes well for you down there.  And if you are one of the numerous thugs in Monterrey that are reading this, go play with your Santa Muerte doll.

   One other thing.  The Steele Foundation was really into the Haiti stuff back in the day, and it would not surprise me if those guys were involved with rescuing clients there as we speak. Hopefully someone from the company could pop up in the comments section and maybe add a little to that?  I know Steele was pretty busy during the Katrina hurricane disaster, and this stuff is right up their ally.-Matt

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STEELE Expands Latin American Footprint With New Monterrey Office

January 12, 2010

Focus on Security Consulting, Protective Services and Emergency Response for Mexican and Multinational Companies

SAN FRANCISCO & MEXICO CITY–Responding to a spike in client demand and violence that has destabilized regional security conditions, The Steele Foundation™, a global provider of investigative, consulting and strategic security services, today announced plans to expand its world-class services in Mexico City and Baja California with a new regional office and operations hub in Monterrey focused on security consulting, protective services and emergency response for businesses with operations in the vital Monterrey market.

“Recent months have been marked by a worrisome increase in the level of violence in Monterrey – and by the brazen nature of these acts,” said Greg Pearson, Chief Operating Officer at STEELE. “Organized crime organizations throughout the region have tightened their grip and have no regard for foreign business operations and their associated personnel. STEELE’s expanded footprint in Monterrey will enhance personal safety and access to security services for our clients and their family members on a daily basis.”

Thousands of U.S. and other multinational companies and major manufacturing facilities are based in Monterrey, the capital of the state of Nuevo Leon and second largest city in Mexico. Security conditions have deteriorated throughout the area over recent months as criminal groups have taken firmer hold of territory, fostering increased risk for kidnappings and other related violence. “The rules have changed and personal safety is clearly under threat. Multinational companies are paying attention to the need for appropriate security not only for their top executives but also for their family members,” said Pearson.

(more…)

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