NOW IF THE HIGHLY CORRUPT LA RAZA DEPT. OF JUSTICE HAD ITS
WAY, THIS FUCKER WOULD NOT ONLY GET AMNESTY, HE’D GET A POSITION IN OBAMA’S LA
RAZA INFESTED ADMINISTRATION!
As
television cameras rolled, authorities this morning trotted out Erick Valencia
Salazar, known as “El 85,″ and said he was the head of a drug gang called the
New Generation Jalisco Cartel.
OBAMA’S DEPT OF JUSTICE PUSHES FOR ILLEGALS VOTES – OBAMA’S
CONTEMPT FOR OUR LAWS AND BORDERS:
OBAMA ARMS THE MEX DRUG CARTELS AFTER PROMISING LA RAZA OUR
BORDERS WILL BE LEFT OPEN AND UNDEFENDED TO EASE THEM INTO OUR JOBS AND VOTING
BOOTHS!
Posted: 12 Mar 2012 11:02 AM PDT
As television cameras rolled, authorities this morning trotted out Erick Valencia Salazar, known as “El 85,″ and said he was the head of a drug gang called the New Generation Jalisco Cartel.
Police
put a neon orange vest on Valencia before the perp walk, and he looked slightly
scruff but alert during the news conference. (These are AP photos.)
Valencia
is certainly a notable alleged drug lord, inheritor of the cocaine and
methamphetamine routes of Ignacio Coronel, one of the leaders of the Sinaloa
cartel at the time of his killing in July 2010. Valencia is also the mastermind behind a group
known as “Zeta Killers” deployed to Veracruz stay in mid-2011 to do
battle against the archenemy rival gang to Sinaloa, authorities say. The Zeta
Killers dumped 35 bodies on the streets of the port of Veracruz one afternoon
last September.
Throughout
much of Guadalajara, gunmen commandeered or carjacked vehicles, blocked major
thoroughfares with them, and set them afire. By Friday night, Jalisco Gov.
Emilio Gonzalez said 25
vehicles had been stolen and most burned.
In
some cases, assailants boarded city buses and forced passengers off at gunpoint
before pouring gasoline inside and setting them on fire.
The
U.S. consulate in Guadalajara got quite concerned and sent out a message via
email and Twitter urging “all American citizens (to) stay put while we gather
more information. Anyone on the road should continue directly to the nearest
safe area and stay put.”
This
might seem like minor mayhem. Only one person is known to have died. But it
shows what drug lords are capable of if cornered and still able to mobilize
forces. It might be called the “nothing to lose” scenario, and the real concern
of public security officials is over the more powerful drug lords who have
plastic explosives and know-how to make car bombs or who have big arsenals of
rocket-propelled grenades or weapons able to down aircraft.
Moreover,
a lot of the narco gangs have police and military uniforms. So imagine the
chaos if they were to deploy confederates at a delicate moment for one of their
leaders.
Even a
smaller gang like the New Generation Jalisco Cartel has significant firepower.
This is what was found during the raid that netted Valencia: six handguns, 37
long guns (among them 19 AR-15s equipped to fire grenades, two submachine guns,
and two Barret 50-caliber sniper rifles), three hand granades, 119 ammo
cartridges, 69,000 rounds, three silencers, and communications equipment.
Let’s
hope Mexican security officials are planning what to do if one of these drug
gangs really lets loose when a capo is captured.
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