"taken the head off the snake"

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  • floridaorange
    I'm merely a humble butler
    • Dec 2005
    • 29116

    "taken the head off the snake"




    Colombian drug cartels would pay shipping charges to the Arellano Felix cartel as well as pass along 50 percent of their load. In exchange, the Mexican cartel would set up and maintain airstrips to allow transportation of the wholesale drugs into Mexico, arrange for the drugs to cross into the lucrative U.S. marketplace and establish a distribution network there, Speziale said.





    Organization (AFO), often referred to as the Tijuana Cartel, is one of the
    most powerful and aggressive drug trafficking organizations operating from Mexico; it is undeniably the most violent. More than any other major trafficking organization from Mexico, this organization extends its tentacles directly from high-echelon figures in the law enforcement and judicial systems in Mexico to street-level individuals in United States cities. The AFO is responsible for the transportation, importation and distribution of multi-ton quantities of cocaine, marijuana, as well as large quantities of heroin and methamphetamine, into the United States from Mexico. The AFO operates primarily in the Mexican states of Sinaloa (their birth place), Jalisco, Michoacan, Chiapas, and Baja California South and North. From Baja, the drugs enter California, the primary point of embarkation into the United States distribution network.


    The ARELLANO family, composed of seven brothers and four sisters, inherited the organization from Miguel Angel FELIX-Gallardo upon his incarceration in Mexico in 1989 for his complicity in the murder of DEA Special Agent Enrique Camarena. Alberto Benjamin ARELLANO-Felix assumed leadership of the family structured criminal enterprise and provides a businessman's approach to the management of drug trafficking operations.

    Ramon Eduardo ARELLANO-Felix, considered the most violent brother, organizes and coordinates protection details over which he exerts absolute control. The AFO maintains well armed and well-trained security forces, described by Mexican enforcement officials as paramilitary in nature, which include international mercenaries as advisors, trainers and members. Ramon ARELLANO's responsibilities consist of the planning of murders of rival drug leaders and those Mexican law enforcement officials not on their payroll. Also targeted for assassination are those AFO members who fall out of favor with the AFO leadership or simply are suspected of collaborating with law enforcement officials. He oversees and directs the recruitment of enforcers and hit teams. Enforcers are often hired from violent street gangs in cities and towns in both Mexico and the United States in the belief that these gang members are expendable. They are dispatched to assassinate targeted individuals and to send a clear message to those who attempt to utilize the Mexicali/Tijuana corridor without paying the area transit tax demanded by the AFO trafficking domain.

    The AFO also maintains complex communications centers in several major cities in Mexico to conduct electronic espionage and counter surveillance measures against law enforcement entities. The organization employs radio scanners and equipment capable of intercepting both hard line and cellular phones to ensure the security of AFO operations. In addition to technical equipment, the AFO maintains caches of sophisticated automatic weaponry secured from a variety of international sources.
    In May 1993, according to Mexican authorities, the group attempted to assassinate a rival trafficker, Joaquin GUZMAN-Loera, at the Guadalajara Airport. During the ensuing gun battle, Cardinal Posadas Ocampo was accidentally murdered as he rode through the airport in a vehicle similar to that of the intended target. As many as six gang members involved in the shoot-out were Mexican Americans from a San Diego street gang called "Logan Calle 30," which had been recruited as bodyguards for the ARELLANO-Felix hierarchy. Another example of the group's violence occurred in June 1994 when they set off a bomb at the Camino Real Hotel in Guadalajara. The intended target was a rival trafficker who was hosting a party for his 15-year-old daughter. Two men were killed and 15 others wounded. More recently, on September 14, 1996 MFJP Comandante Ernesto IBARRA-Santes and two Tijuana based MFJP Agents were shot and killed in Mexico City. Comandante IBARRA had recently assumed the duties of Subdelegado of the Procuraduria General De La Republica in Tijuana, Baja California/Norte.

    A Joint Task Force composed of the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Federal Bureau of Investigation has been established in San Diego, California to target the AFO; the Task Force is investigating AFO operations in southern California and related regional investigations which track drug transportation, distribution and money laundering activities of the AFO throughout the United States. The ARELLANO-Felix organization is based in Tijuana and controls the smuggling of cocaine, marijuana and, more recently, methamphetamine across the border to California. One brother, Francisco, is in jail while two other brothers, Benjamin and Ramon, continue to operate. Ramon is wanted on drug and weapons charges in Mexico.

    Last edited by floridaorange; August 17, 2006, 04:22:02 PM.

    It was fun while it lasted...
  • KinKyJ
    Platinum Poser
    • Jun 2004
    • 13438

    #2
    Re: "taken the head off the snake"

    Chop off the head of the snake and it will grow a new one. Sad but true.

    Comment

    • labmonkey
      Addiction started
      • Apr 2005
      • 352

      #3
      Re: "taken the head off the snake"

      sadly there's so much more people involved in this, and by taking out his guy, It only makes it so much easy for the next one, because no one knows who's the next big one, this a huge problem in my country and now the bloodshed will come, all this diffrerent parties fighting over the control of the business, a little win for the American justice but a lot of problems for the rest of us......

      indeed very sad.....
      "Nothing is True, Everything is Permitted"

      Comment

      • floridaorange
        I'm merely a humble butler
        • Dec 2005
        • 29116

        #4
        Re: "taken the head off the snake"


        Latest:
        Snipers Watch Over Accused Drug Kingpin's Arrival

        Mystery surrounded Arellano-Felix's arrival in San Diego. Reporters were not allowed on the Coast Guard station, and a no-fly zone was declared over a 3-mile radius surrounding the station at about 6 a.m. Two cutters moored at the station's pier shortly before 8 a.m., and a large escort brought Arellano-Felix to the dock 15 minutes later. He was quickly loaded into a dark, unmarked Chevy Suburban while snipers watched from atop a nearby hanger.
        A motorcade left the station a short time later and headed down Harbor Drive.

        Arellano-Felix, 36, was scheduled to be arraigned in San Diego later Thursday on charges of money laundering, racketeering conspiracy and conspiracy to import and distribute controlled substances. He was captured by the U.S. Coast Guard early Monday off the coast of La Paz, Mexico, aboard the U.S.-registered sport boat Dock Holiday.


        Seven other men aboard the boat were arrested and taken to the United States, including Arturo Villarreal Heredia, whom U.S. authorities said was likely the second highest-ranking person in the Tijuana-based Arellano-Felix cartel.

        "There is no discernible leader left to fill the void," said John Fernandes, special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration's San Diego office. "I don't consider this organization disrupted. I consider this organization defunct."






        This VIDEO is increadible:


        Arellano-Felix's son was among three children -- ages 5 to 11 -- on the 43-foot yacht, said Carol Lam, the U.S. attorney in San Diego. One was apparently a nephew; the third child's identity was unclear.

        The children were taken to the United States and will be returned to Mexico, Fernandes said at a news conference.

        Coast Guard Rear Adm. Jody Breckinridge said Mexican authorities did not participate in the arrest in international waters and Arellano-Felix showed little resistance. She declined to elaborate on the capture.

        In Mexico, Attorney General Daniel Cabeza de Vaca said Thursday that the arrest "totally devastated" the cartel, disputing the opinion of some experts who said it would not mean much either to the organization or to the larger fight against drug trafficking in Mexico.


        Cabeza de Vaca also said Mexico would seek Arellano-Felix's extradition to Mexico, but perhaps not until he had been tried and sentenced for crimes in the United States.

        Arellano-Felix was among 11 individuals charged in 2003 with 10 counts of conspiracy and racketeering. He allegedly conspired to assassinate Roman Catholic Cardinal Juan Jesus Posadas Ocampo in 1993 at the airport in Guadalajara, U.S. officials said.

        The indictment alleges that Arellano-Felix and others moved tons of Colombian cocaine and Mexican marijuana to the United States along the California-Mexico border. The Arellano-Felix gang is believed to be responsible for massive border drug tunnels discovered last January.

        They are also accused of kidnapping, torturing and killing rivals and bribing Mexican officials. The indictment links Arellano-Felix to a 1996 killing in Coronado and a 1992 shootout at a disco in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.


        The Arellano-Felix gang emerged as a drug powerhouse in the 1980s in Tijuana. It recently ceded control of Mexicali, an important drug corridor about 120 miles east of Tijuana, said John Kirby, a former federal prosecutor in San Diego who worked on the 2003 indictment.


        Kirby said Arellano-Felix led the Tijuana clan almost by default in 2002 when the gang lost two of his older brothers: Benjamin was jailed and Ramon was killed.

        "He was the little brother thug," Kirby said. "He did not handle finances as far as I'm aware. He was Benjamin's and Ramon's younger brother who was learning the business and ordering killings."


        The State Department had offered $5 million rewards for the capture of Arellano-Felix or his brother Eduardo. Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty said there was no indication whether anyone would receive the award for Arellano-Felix's capture.

        Federal drug agents began preparing for the latest operation 14 months ago after learning that Arellano-Felix was planning to go fishing. The agents enlisted the Coast Guard's help and were helped throughout by Mexican law enforcement officers.

        U.S. authorities identified others arrested on the boat as Marco Villanueva Fernandez, Edgar Omar Osorio, Luis Raul Jiminez Toledo, Francisco Javier Mesa Castro, Ernesto Gonzales Fimbles and Jose Luis Betancourt Espinoza

        Fernandes of the DEA said the arrest will likely lead to increased violence in Tijuana as other members of the Arellano Felix gang and rival groups seek to fill a vacuum.

        Some observers in Mexico said the cartel will survive -- even thrive.


        Jesus Blancornelas, co-founder of Zeta newspaper in Tijuana, said others in the family -- brother Eduardo and sister Enedina -- overshadowed Francisco Javier.

        "Francisco Javier was a sort of playboy," said Blancornelas. "He likes to spend money and enjoy his fame. He drives around in luxury cars."
        Last edited by floridaorange; August 17, 2006, 10:56:07 PM.

        It was fun while it lasted...

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