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Los Zetas Leader's Arrest Leaves Drug Cartel Down
#727267
07/17/13 05:55 AM
07/17/13 05:55 AM
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Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,266 Balkans
Strax
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The capture of Zetas drug cartel leader Miguel Angel Treviño Morales on Monday has been labeled as “possibly the biggest capture in the past few years” of any of Mexico’s notorious organized crime leaders.
It has also drawn speculation over what the future looks like for one of Mexico’s most violent drug trafficking organization.
Treviño's relatively peaceful capture by Mexican Marines on a remote road near the border city of Nuevo Laredo -- across from Laredo, Texas -- is another sign that Mexico’s second most powerful drug cartel is fragmenting and loosing grasp on its power, experts said.
“The Zetas are in for some tough times,” George Grayson, an expert on Mexico’s drug war at the College of William & Mary, told Fox News Latino.
SUMMARY
The capture of Treviño is also a major coup for the government of President Enrique Peña Nieto, who preached during his presidential campaign last year and during his nascent presidency that he was more concerned about reducing violence than about capturing major cartel members.
The arrest is just the latest in a series of arrests, killings and setbacks that have authorities and rivals closing in on the Zetas.Both U.S. and Mexican officials have been closely investigating the cartel and they have been locked in bloody battles with their former bosses, the Gulf Cartel, and Mexico’s most powerful cartel, Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán’s Sinaloa Cartel.
“The big winner here is the Sinaloa Cartel,” said Grayson. “This should bolster their change of securing territory in Nuevo Laredo and other regions.”
Treviño's capture is also a major coup for the government of President Enrique Peña Nieto, who preached during his presidential campaign last year and during his nascent presidency that he was more concerned about reducing violence than about capturing major cartel members.
The so-called “kingpin” approach to the drug war was implemented by former Mexican President Felipe Calderón and has been blamed by many critics as the reason for the escalating body count in the conflict. Since 2006, when Calderón declared war on the drug cartels, an estimated 70,000 people have been killed.
Calderón’s approach had been championed by both the U.S. government and law enforcement agencies working with their counterparts in Mexico to combat drug trafficking.
Despite working with Mexico on numerous counter-narcotics efforts, U.S. federal law enforcement agencies – including the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) – denied any involvement in the capture of Treviño despite speculation that U.S. intelligence agents were involved.
“We had nothing to do with this. This is just kudos to the government of Mexico for doing an excellent job,” DEA spokesperson Barbara Carreno told Fox News Latino when questioned about U.S. involvement.
While experts argue that this capture won’t immediately curtail the mayhem, it could help give authorities a better grasp on what challenges remain.
“Over the medium to long term it could reduce the violence,” said Shannon O’Neil, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “Treviño was by all accounts a very violent man who oversaw the massacre of many Central American migrants.”
But it would be short-sighted to think his arrest will have a big impact on the multi-billion drug trafficking trade.
O’Neil argued that the capture will not have much of an effect on the flow of illicit substance across the border into the U.S. Unlike the Sinaloa and Gulf cartels, the Zetas don’t rely as heavily on the drug trade to fund their enterprise as their rivals and instead focus on more in-country crime trades such as kidnapping, extortion and immigrant smuggling.
“I don’t see a huge change in the drug market because of this capture,” O’Neil said. “If there is any change at all it will be in the domestic organized crime in Mexico, especially in regards to extortion.”
Source:http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2013/07/16/los-zetas-leader-arrest-leaves-drug-cartel-down-but-not-out-experts-say/
"A fish with his mouth closed never get's caught"
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Re: Los Zetas Leader's Arrest Leaves Drug Cartel Down
[Re: TheKillingJoke]
#727543
07/18/13 08:29 AM
07/18/13 08:29 AM
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Joined: Jul 2012
Posts: 179
Antonio
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Made Member
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Posts: 179
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Zeta 40 was easily the most brutal and probably theuk only cartel leader or member I would consider evil in its purest form. Unlike other cartel leaders that would use corruption to control his turf he would commit evil acts to control hisorganization that piece of shit is known to torture women and children of rivals police and kidnapping victims. There are rumors about La Mona.( another nickname he goes by in Nuevo Laredo). He is known to of boiled alive 3 infants here in Nuevo Laredo , he would order his sicarios to kidnap people so that he would torture them. I thinl he also puredd boiling water into females his sicarios would ca pture until their slin melted off. The people of Nuevo Laredo are tired of his crap and his loyal henchmen for all the pain they have caused in this city. They throw grenades inside parties when the citizens reported them to the army. La Mona would go around in his car telling his estacas to stop the car to kill a random person that looked at him funny. It has been over R years since we had the police on the streets because La Mona would threaten the Someone once told me that it takes a man to be ruthless against his enemies, but a coward to be ruthless against innocents. Whether this statement is correct, is open to debate of course. I don't live in Mexico, nor do I know everything about the war going on over there but I think that no other criminal organization has commit so many vile acts against innocent citizens as the Zetas did under his command. What goes around comes around, I hope. I do think the Mexican Cartels are the most brutal, especially at this moment anyway. However these kinds of crimes have been committed by many other crime groups as well. All Four major mafia groups in Italy have done much of the same thing but to a lesser extent and in a less vile fashion. The Triads, Colombians and everyone else have also been involved in kidnappings, torture of children e.t.c. But yeah the Mexicans tend to go for this gore shit pretty bad...
Tony Soprano : I thought I told you to back off Beansie!
Richie Aprile : I did, Then I put it in drive..
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