Chismes



Questions for That Bola de Ratas

Mar 17th, 2010 | By Michel Marizco | Category: Chismes, General News

THE BORDER REPORT

They're lying. Or, they're wrong. Or both.

Suddenly, everyone's blaming La Linea for the murder of a consulate employee, her husband and the husband of a second employee. The Mexicans are saying it was the Juárez Cartel's La Linea who pulled the job; the FBI is saying it, the media is saying it. Not only are they saying it was La Linea/Barrio Azteca, they are saying it was a case of mistaken identity. This is infuriating.

Why?



¿Donde Va la Lana?

Mar 8th, 2010 | By Michel Marizco | Category: Chismes
THE BORDER REPORT So I thought I'd share a little of where your donations are going. Thanks to your donations, I'm now the proud owner of a new 23" inch Acer LCD monitor I picked up at NewEgg.com using donations acquired from last month. Got tired of peering at my laptop screen all day. You just helped BorderReporter.com not go blind; this is a much bigger deal than you may think. Later this week, I'll be using those accrued donations for a trip to Hermosillo to speak with a few people who have some interesting stories to tell about goings-on in Sonora. Sále, vále; y gracias.


¿Arrangement?

Mar 8th, 2010 | By Michel Marizco | Category: Chismes, General News, Organized Crime

THE BORDER REPORT

Take a look at this video interview of José Vázquez  Villagrana, El Jabáli, for a moment.

Captured last month in Mexico City, Mexico’s Ministry of Public Safety presented the clean-cut 40-year-old Jábali, a drug lord from Santa Ana, Sonora, sporting a turtleneck sweater. The interview bothers me for many reasons, not the least of which are his wild admittances about what exactly he did for a living and for whom. Jábali claims to work for the Sinaloa Federation, but some people I had an opportunity to speak with over the past few days say he actually worked for the Juárez Cartel, not Sinaloa. Yet, in his interview, not only does Jábali portend to work for Sinaloa, he gives an astonishing amount of detail about what he did, how much he charged, and, most interestingly, that his bosses sought to protect northern Mexico. Looking down at the ground and rarely meeting the camera’s eye, Vázquez said he was the Sinaloa Cartel’s lead man in northern Sonora. Every month, he announced, two tons of cocaine came up from Central America and were delivered into the U.S. through his ranch, La Cebolla. The details he alleges about the cartel’s figurehead principle, Joaquín El Chapo Guzmán, are interesting. “Have you spoken with El Chapo?” an officer off camera asks. “Yes, I spoke to him by telephone one day.” “And what does he say?” Even the question is put to him oddly. "Que te dice?" as if Guzmán is some estranged and well-regarded uncle living far away whom nobody has heard from and everybody wants news of. “He says that everything is at peace, that everyone must behave, that in this area, nobody is permitted to rob or to kidnap or to assault others. That anyone who does these types of things needs to be removed.” Really? How ... ingenuous. Guzmán wants the area to remain tranquil and under control, Vázquez said. Last year, the Mexican government said Vázquez worked for Arturo Beltrán Leyva. Last spring, when Mexican federal police arrested Cynthia Anahí Beltrán Cabrera with a M2 Browning .50-cal machine gun mounted on the back of a Ford pickup truck, she was identified as being in the service of Vázquez, and he, in turn, of the Beltrán Leyva family. The Mexican Federal Attorney General’s Office claims that Vázquez worked for both, the Sinaloa Cartel and Beltrán Leyva’s organization until the Beltráns joined with the Zetas, at which point he broke away because they were too violent. Yet people invested in northern Sonora's drug trafficking families say Vázquez never worked for either the Beltráns or Sinaloa. He worked for Juárez, they say. A minor corroboration; Jábali had feuded with Los Numeros for a long time and Los Numeros were the Beltrán's brazo armado in Sonora. A minor refute: Jábali had associated himself with Geovanni Páez, the Caborca cowboy who worked for Sinaloa. Sort of a micro-merger between Juárez and Sinaloa that didn't seem affected by the rivalry in Cd. Juárez. This leads me to a few questions on this fine, cold Monday morning: 1. Who did Vázquez really work for? If, in fact, he worked for Juárez, why claim Sinaloa? 2. Why was he in Mexico City and only then arrested? Why  not take him in Santa Ana when they've known for at least a year that he lived and worked here? 3. From the questions posed to Jábali, I ascertain that the federal interviewers knew what answers he would give. Was he told what to say? 4. The interview sure makes Chapo look good. It paints a picture of a security benefactor who will protect the Mexican people from the deranged Zetas. I wonder a little if that wasn't the point of the video; a manufactured public relations image of Chapo. Anyway.


And It Begins

Mar 6th, 2010 | By Michel Marizco | Category: Chismes, General News

THE BORDER REPORT

Update: The mayor of Cumpas was not killed; incorrect info.

The showdown between Dos Mil's people in the Sierra and Mexican law enforcement has finally come to a head.

Sources are reporting that a gunbattle broke out between the two groups in the city of Arizpe about twenty minutes ago. I'll keep you posted but you readers do so as well. The fight started sporadically last Tuesday southwest of Arizpe and Cananea and finally culminated this morning.



Chismes: ¿Silencio en Reynosa?

Feb 19th, 2010 | By Michel Marizco | Category: Chismes, General News

THE BORDER REPORT

Update: The tertiary chisme is that Miguel Treviño Morales, El Zeta 40, was captured in Reynosa. Don't know anything yet; just what's being said.

Another of these ... odd situations seems to be occurring in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, in the past week. Rumors abound that 40 to 60 thugs were killed in a gunbattle with the Mexican Army that left an additional ten soldiers dead. News accounts published in Sonora newspaper, El Imparcial stated that six men total died in a gunbattle on Feb. 8. However, residents appear to be flooding the Internet with remarks about a much higher murder count. Additional commentary here at LaVidaMafiosa, (registration required).



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