Feral Jundi

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…)

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Mexico: Mexican Drug Gangs Worship Saint Death

Filed under: Law Enforcement,Mexico — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 9:59 AM

   You learn something new all the time.  I am sure there are numerous tattoos and symbols that these drug cartels are rallying around, but this one is pretty unique.  At least law enforcement has another way to identify these jackasses.

    The other little piece of interest in this story, is about Senor B.  He is a businessman that resorted to using ‘machine gun totting’ security in order to protect his business from drug cartels and corrupt police.  The point is, he didn’t trust anyone, to include the police, and so he resorted to using heavily armed private security and turned his business into a small fortress.  I am sure this same situation is repeating itself throughout the country, and it would be interesting to hear more about the evolution of the private security market there. –Matt

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Mexican drug gangs worship Saint Death

As bloody feuds grip the traffickers, many are turning to a grim icon. Tony Allen-Mills reports from Ciudad Juarez

January 10, 2010

Tony Allen-Mills in Ciudad Juarez

She was yet another desolate victim of the endless drug wars ravaging the northern Mexican borderlands, one of more than 2,600 people murdered in Ciudad Juarez last year. When police found her body in a residential area close to the Rio Grande river, there were two distinctive signs that she had been caught up in the bloodsoaked feuding between the rival Juarez and Sinaloa cartels.

First, her head had been crudely hacked off — a trademark cartel warning to rivals. Second, her torso bore a distinctive tattoo of a cackling skeleton dressed in suggestive female clothing.

Police recognised it at once as Santa Muerte — best translated as Saint Death, a macabre feminine icon who has replaced the Virgin Mary as an improbable source of unholy comfort to Mexico’s legions of gangsters and hitmen.

(more…)

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Mexico: Drug War Update–Tijuana Gets A Tough Guy, Drug Cartels Lose Leyva

    Big news with the drug war down south.  The Mexican Navy kills Beltran Leyva, a major drug boss with a two million dollar bounty on his head.  No word if anyone actually collected on that bounty.

    The other story that grabbed my attention is the new security jefe in Tijuana.  This guy is definitely working on being ‘bad ass of the week’.  I just hope he stays alive long enough to do some damage upon the cartels.

   Finally, I would like to say that if Mexico thinks they are doing all they can to stop these guys, think again.  Mexico could certainly open up the cartel killing market using the Letter of Marque concept, and open up a new front in the drug war.

     Mexico has a bounty system for these cartels already, but in order for it to work properly, they need to bring in companies under that system. Individuals, who have no way of protecting themselves and fear retribution if they turn in a drug boss or his buddies, are not likely to partake in a bounty system. But entire companies will join in, because they have the means to protect itself and usually has the kind of guys who can take care of themselves.

     And if there are hundreds of companies going after cartels, along with the police and military, well then you have a diversified strategy with a total drug war concept. More importantly, they need to give the companies involved with taking on the cartels, legal protections–hence the reason behind the LoM.

    One last thing. Mexico is not a signatory of the Declaration of Paris. And what is really cool about the LoM, is it is warfare on the cheap.  Just the kind of solution a country would need in case they ran out of money do to a protracted war or were in a deep recession because of other factors throughout the world.

     Drug cartels are loaded with loot, they fight to bring over billions of dollars of hard cash into the US in order to launder it, and they buy all sorts of ridiculous things with that money.  Privateers would love to take that wealth away from the cartels as well as kill or capture individuals to collect on the state offered bounties.  Seems pretty logical to me.  Dios mio. –Matt

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Death of a Mexican drug lord

Mexican forces won this battle, killing Arturo Beltran Leyva. But the war is far from over.

December 19, 2009

Understandably, Mexican President Felipe Calderon is trumpeting the navy’s success in taking down Arturo Beltran Leyva, wanted in the United States and Mexico for his part in the $15-billion to $20-billion-a-year drug trade. He was a criminal known to behead his rivals and believed to be responsible for last year’s killing of the federal police chief in his Mexico City home; he was the most powerful cartel boss to be removed by security forces since Calderon launched his drug war in 2006. The operation reportedly was the result of improved U.S.-Mexican intelligence cooperation, and although the naval troops failed to take Beltran Leyva and six cohorts alive, it should yield a trove of new information. Moreover, the battle between cartel grenades and the navy’s mounted machine guns was carried out without civilian casualties or, apparently, some of the other abuses that have marked army operations.For all the accomplishments, however, the operation reveals the extent of unfinished business in Calderon’s campaign. Beltran Leyva was discovered at a luxury apartment complex near the governor’s mansion in the city of Cuernavaca, just south of the national capital. Clearly he felt he had bought enough protection from security forces to stray far from his home base in Sinaloa and into the weekend getaway for Mexico City’s rich. But someone either infiltrated his inner circle or turned on him — possibly for the $2-million bounty on his head. (more…)

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Mexico: Drug Cartels Siphon Liquid Gold

Filed under: Crime,Mexico — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 8:32 AM

“Every possible encouragement should be given to privateering in time of war.” -Thomas Jefferson 

*****

   Now this is ridiculous. Yet again, my solution to this is simple.  The Mexican government should issue Letters of Marque and Reprisal to companies, both foreign and domestic, and give them the legal authority to destroy the cartels and get a percentage of what these animals own.  You create a free market based killing mechanism, and allow it to do it’s thing, and I guarantee you will see these vile organizations dry up.

   They are a threat to Mexico and to the free world, and I just don’t see the current drug war strategy working out too well. Actually, it is a dismal failure, and we are witnessing how bad it really is. I say diversify, and allow private industry to help, much like how private industry helped out my country during the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812.

   Thomas Jefferson, one of the founding fathers of my country, was a smart man.  His quote about privateering rings true today, as it did several hundred years ago.  I owe the survival of my country, in part, to the concept of privateering. So there must be something there, and especially if it was written into my country’s constitution. Too bad that weapon of warfare just sits over the mantel and collects dust like some old rifle from a war long ago.-Matt

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Mexico’s drug cartels siphon liquid gold

Bold theft of $1 billion in oil, resold in U.S., has dealt a major blow to the treasury

By Steve Fainaru and William BoothSunday, December 13, 2009

MALTRATA, MEXICO — Drug traffickers employing high-tech drills, miles of rubber hose and a fleet of stolen tanker trucks have siphoned more than $1 billion worth of oil from Mexico’s pipelines over the past two years, in a vast and audacious conspiracy that is bleeding the national treasury, according to U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officials and the state-run oil company.

Using sophisticated smuggling networks, the traffickers have transported a portion of the pilfered petroleum across the border to sell to U.S. companies, some of which knew that it was stolen, according to court documents and interviews with American officials involved in an expanding investigation of oil services firms in Texas.

The widespread theft of Mexico’s most vital national resource by criminal organizations represents a costly new front in President Felipe Calderón’s war against the drug cartels, and it shows how the traffickers are rapidly evolving from traditional narcotics smuggling to activities as diverse as oil theft, transport and sales.

Oil theft has been a persistent problem for the state-run Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, but the robbery increased sharply after Calderón launched his war against the cartels shortly after taking office in December 2006. The drug war has claimed more than 16,000 lives and has led the cartels, which rely on drug trafficking for most of their revenue, to branch out into other illegal activities.

(more…)

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