El Mayito: The Half Billion Dollar Kingpin + ¿Sigue La Reina?
Feb 19th, 2010 | By Michel Marizco | Category: General News, Organized Crime, Politics
THE BORDER REPORT
Well here's a city council meeting that may be worth attending tomorrow - for the public comment period if nothing else.
Three El Paso city councilmembers are trying to pass a resolution condemning the violence in Juarez. I'm not even sure what to make of this yet. In some ways, it's absolutely worthless, almost childlike (we demand Calderon and Obama meet here to re-examine our failed war on drugs? Really?). And of course, there's the "free the weed" clause; they've tried this move before.
THE BORDER REPORT
So, we have Arturo Beltran down; a blow to his own family, the Zetas and Juarez. Then we have Teodoro Garcia, Teo, and that's a blow to Mayo and Chapito. Hm. Uno y uno. Granted, Teo's never been more than a regional drug trafficker and, frankly, barely that. I remember seeing a crew of his taken down in Tijuana, must have been some eight months ago. Police Chief Leyzaola had boasted that he would eliminate "the smaller elements irritating his city like a virus."
THE BORDER REPORT
Near Mazatlán, Sinaloa, Noroeste newspaper is reporting at least 40 people murdered in a gunfight between ... well, nobody's saying which groups but I think we all know. Rumors are flying and the cops aren't saying much but from the chismes coming across my desk this morning, there may be more bodies than the initial 40. Or none.
THE BORDER REPORT
That's what the Feds are saying anyway. Look at these blusterings by top DEA officials celebrating the death of Botas Blancas. In Arizona, lead DEA cop Beth Kempshall tells the Arizona Republic that the flow of drugs "could decline as Beltrán's gang struggles to sort out its chain of command and re-establish contacts with Colombian cocaine suppliers." Would Mrs. Kempshall have us believe that Arturo Beltrán was the only one with the cellphone number to Diego Espinosa's frontman within Colombia's Norte del Valle Cartel? Does she truly believe that El General, Hector, Mario and Carlos along with Sergio Villarreal and Sr. Barbie are frantically looking through big brother's Address Book for a supplier? Or trying to friend the guy on Facebook? Sadly, this is very much what the DEA either believes or wants the rest of us to believe. Here's Anthony Placido, chief of intelligence for the DEA, talking to The Associated Press yesterday: "Nobody left out there has the extensive contacts that Arturo had. He moved thousands of metric tons of drugs into the United States, including cocaine, methamphetamine and heroin," Placido said. Really, Mr. Placido? And here I thought his MoreExpress S.A. de C.V. transport company, with offices from Tapachula, Chiapas to Ensenada, Culiacán and Hermosillo was in the tomato shipping business. Nobody left out there has his magnitude of contacts, eh? Not Chapo Joaquín Guzmán, Mayo Ismael Zambada, La Tuta Servano Gómez, El Viceroy Vicente Carrillo, El Ingeniero Fernando Sanchez Arellano; El Azul Juan Diego Esparragoza, Nacho Coronel, nadie. For years, at least dating back to 1997 and Amado Carrillo's death, the Mexican traffickers have dissipated the old power structure that brought men like Carrillo and Pablo Acosta to power. Too much investment, too much centralized influence. That structure is dated and archaic; which is why we have fragmented hyper-local organizations with blurred boundaries, like the Sinaloa Cartel, who've proven vastly more effective at transporting narcotics and feeding the monster. I'm no fan of Arturo Beltrán Leyva; I've lost two colleagues, one a good friend, to his brand of murder and seen a third exiled from Mexico for the crime of reporting on his transgressions. However, I'm also not going to play up his influence in the drug business. As recently as 2007, he was little more than a supporter to Joaquín Guzmán. In 2001, it was he and Barbie who hid Chapo out after his escape from Puente Grande "max security" prison. In fact, they helped him recover from an extreme drinking binge over the following two years. The turn happened somewhere around the end of 2007, then Mochomo's fall and the war began. This is a man who dominated the narco-scene headlines for, ostensibly, two years. Bad move, that.