FACTS:
1.) Mexicans are the most violent culture in the western hemisphere.
2.) According to CA attorney general, nearly half of all murders in Mex-occupied CA are by MEXICAN GANGS.
3.) Of the top 200 most wanted (murder) criminals in Los Angeles, 183 are Mexicans, and most of the rest are Russians.
4.) Phoenix is the largest center for MEXICAN KIDNAPPING next to Mexico City.
5.) CA has the largest and most expensive prison system in the nation. Nearly half of all inmates are MEXICANS.
6.) The terrorist Mexican drug cartels now operate in more than 2,500 Ameircan cities according to the FBI.
HERE'S WHAT OBAMA'S OPEN and UNDEFENDED BORDERS HAVE HELPED TO CREAT:
MIGUEL ANGEL TREVINO
MORALES. THE MEXICAN DRUG LORD TERRORIST FROM
DALLAS, ENDORSES BARACK OBAMA, Hispandering president for OPEN BORDERS.
BARACK OBAMA IS DESPERATE FOR
MEXICO TO INVADE AND OCCUPY. FOR OBAMA, LA RAZA “THE RACE” ARE “CHEAP” LABOR
FOR HIS WALL STREET PAYMASTERS, AND UNREGISTERED VOTERS.
DEMS ARE NOW THE PARTY for
ILLEGALS.
WHILE OBAMA HAS SQUANDERED BILLIONS
TO PROTECT THE BORDERS OF MUSLIM DICTATORS, HE HAS DELIBERATELY SABOTAGED OUR
BORDERS WITH NARCOMEX.
HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING ON OBAMA’S
OPEN AND UNDEFENDED BORDERS:
Ruthless Drug Lord Takes Control of Deadly Cartel
By RANDY KREIDER and MARK SCHONE | ABC
News – 2 hrs 19 mins ago
ABC
News - Ruthless Drug Lord Takes Control of Deadly Cartel (ABC News)
The new head of the
Zetas drug cartel is a former Dallas resident who is scorned as a traitor by
many of his own cartel soldiers and mocked as an ex-"car washer" by
his enemies, but has risen to power thanks to a fearsome reputation for
violence.
"[Miguel Angel
Trevino Morales] is extremely brutal, to the point of sadism," says George
Grayson, an expert on the Zetas. "He is prepared to advance his interest
through unspeakable violence." Grayson's recent book on the cartel, "The Executioner's Men," opens with a scene in which Trevino
Morales slowly beats a female police officer to death, in front of her
colleagues, with a two-by-four.
Trevino Morales, also
known as El 40 or the Monkey, became the uncontested head of the Mexico's most
feared drug cartel when former kingpin Heriberto Lazcano was killed in a
shootout with Mexican Marines on Sunday. Lazcano had been linked to hundreds of
murders, including the massacre of 72 civilians, but Trevino Morales is
allegedly even more bloodthirsty. One of his preferred methods of dealing with
enemies, say authorities, is burning them alive.
Trevino Morales, 41,
was born in Mexico but spent some of his formative years in Dallas, Texas,
where authorities say he had a criminal record as a teenager. He has a dozen
siblings and reportedly still has family in the Dallas area.
According to the
Associated Press, he became a teen go-fer for the Los Tejas gang, which was
powerful in the Mexican border city of Nuevo Laredo, just across the Rio Grande
from Laredo, Texas.
Trevino Morales
joined the Zetas soon after their formation. The Zetas began in the late 1990s
as the security wing of the Gulf Cartel. The 14 core members of the Zetas,
including Heriberto Lazcano, all had military backgrounds, and took ranks based
on when they'd joined the group. Lazcano was known as Z-3. By 2004, due to the
death of Z-1 and the arrest of Z-2, Lazcano had become the leader of the Zetas.
Trevino Morales, who
did not have a military background, got the designation 40, with his brother
taking number 42. In 2005, Miguel Trevino Morales became the boss of the Nuevo
Laredo "plaza," or drug territory.
As a newly minted
underboss, Trevino Morales had traditional gangster tastes for fast cars, women
and fancy guns, and reportedly liked to hunt game imported from Africa. He
also, however, developed a developed a particular reputation for brutality in
group already renowned for violence. His favored methods for dispatching
enemies were dismembering them while still alive, or making them into a
"guiso," or stew -- stuffing them in 55-gallon oil drums, adding
gasoline and burning them alive.
By 2009, Trevino
Morales had been named in multiple federal indictments in Texas, D.C. and New
York for alleged crimes ranging from drug trafficking, kidnapping, and money
laundering to ordering a half dozen murders in Laredo, Texas. The DEA offered a
$5 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction, and
accused him of controlling more than 200 operatives and smuggling hundreds of
kilograms of cocaine into the U.S. weekly.
Early the next year,
the Zetas finally split from the Gulf cartel after the Gulf Cartel crossed
Trevino Morales. In January 2010, the Gulf Cartel tortured and killed one of
his close friends. Trevino Morales responded with an ultimatum demanding that
the cartel give up the killer. "Hand over the assassin of my friend,"
demanded Trevino Morales. "If you don't comply, there will be war."
The order was
ignored, and Trevino Morales allegedly began killing members of the Gulf Cartel
en masse. The Zetas, now an independent cartel with Trevino Morales second in
command, were soon battling the Gulf Cartel for control of Northern Mexico, and
winning.
Civil
War Inside the Zetas Drug Cartel
By 2011, however,
there was a schism within the new cartel between Trevino Morales and those
loyal to Heriberto Lazcano. When Zetas boss "El Mamito," Enrique
Rejon Aguilar, was arrested in July, he said that he had been betrayed. Though
he did not name any names, the next month someone uploaded a slickly produced
music video to YouTube that bluntly accused Trevino Morales of being a
"Judas" who was disloyal to Lazcano and had betrayed Mamito and other
Zetas to the authorities.
Addressed to all the
members of "the Mafia," every major drug organization in Mexico by
name, and to the general public, "The True Story of Z 40" uses a
specially written "narcoballad" to detail the alleged offenses of
Trevino Morales against his fellow Zetas, especially leader Heriberto Lazcano.
One of the first
images in the five-minute video is a picture of Judas whispering in the ear of
Jesus. It then shows repeated images of Trevino Morales with the words "El
Judas" under his face, and displays arrest photos of all the Zetas bosses
he has allegedly betrayed, who were "captured because they trusted Z
40." Intended as a warning to Lazcano, it asks "El Lazca" why he
thinks so many of his underlings have been arrested.
The video also mocks
Trevino Morales as a former car washer for Los Tejas, and plasters his face
onto photos of police officers and a shiny-suited pop idol.
Rival groups have
also disparaged Trevino Morales as a car washer. In March, Joaquin Guzman, AKA
El Chapo or Shorty, the head of Mexico's other dominant drug organization, the
Sinaloa Cartel, sent his men into Trevino Morales' territory to murder and
dismember Zetas soldiers. He issued a public challenge to Trevino Morales on
huge banners above the body parts of his victims.
One banner,
accompanied by seven severed heads, accused Trevino Morales of failing to use
his own head, and of being Heriberto Lazcano's jockstrap. "You will always
be a car washer to me," said the banner, which was signed "El
Chapo." Another mocked Trevino Morales as a shoeshine boy, car washer and traitor
who killed innocent people.
In the summer of
2012, Trevino Morales' brother Jose, a U.S. citizen, was arrested in the U.S.
for moneylaundering after allegedly channeling the Zetas's drug money through a
successful horseracing operation. Not long after his arrest, the split within
the Zetas apparently cost 14 lives. The survivor of a mass execution in San
Luis Potosi state in mid-August said that the victims and the killers were
Zetas. Authorities believe the massacre was revenge by Trevino Morales on
"El Taliban," a leader opposed to EL 40's ascent.
By the end of August,
U.S. officials began saying that Trevino Morales seemed to have merged as the
winner in the Zetas' civil war, and had officially taken operational control of
the Zetas in Mexico from Lazcano.
High-ranking Zetas
then began to fall. El Taliban was arrested in late September, "The
Squirrel" just last Saturday. Lazcano, who was attending a baseball game
with two other men, died in a firefight on Sunday.
Grayson speculates
that Trevino Morales may have shared information with U.S. authorities to get
better treatment for his brother Jose, who is in U.S. custody.
Trevino Morales must
now direct the Zetas against the combined strength of the Gulf Cartel, the
Sinaloa Cartel and other players, who have united to drive the Zetas from their
"plazas." Grayson says that with Lazcano's death, El Chapo Guzman of
the Sinaloa cartel will be aided in his primary goal of taking control of Nuevo
Laredo, El 40's home base. Guzman has already dispatched what Grayson calls
"shock troops" to help the Gulf Cartel fight the Zetas.
El Chapo's troops
will be facing younger, less experienced, and less disciplined Zetas plaza
bosses than in the past, says Grayson. But he also notes that the Zetas new
leader, in addition to being more violent than his predecessor, may be more
cautious and wily as well. "El 40," says Grayson, "would never
have been at a baseball game."
*
Mexican cartels flood U.S. with cheap meth
Mexican drug cartels
are quietly filling the void in the nation's drug market created by the long
effort to crack down on American-made methamphetamine, flooding U.S. cities
with exceptionally cheap, extraordinarily potent meth from factory-like
"superlabs."
Associated Press
ST. LOUIS —
Mexican drug cartels
are quietly filling the void in the nation's drug market created by the long
effort to crack down on American-made methamphetamine, flooding U.S. cities
with exceptionally cheap, extraordinarily potent meth from factory-like
"superlabs."
Although Mexican meth
is not new to the U.S. drug trade, it now accounts for as much as 80 percent of
the meth sold here, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. And it is
as much as 90 percent pure, a level that offers users a faster, more intense
and longer-lasting high.
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