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Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cartels

Could this be a turning point :dunno: Let's hope so :clap:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/wor...ails-capture-major-victory-crime-cartels.html


Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cartels


Mexican marines have arrested one of the country's most wanted drugs traffickers.

Sergio Villarreal, dubbed 'El Grande', is suspected of being a leading member of the Beltran Leyva cartel and did not resist capture when dozens of marines using armoured vehicles cornered him at a safe house in the central Mexican city of Puebla.

The raid yesterday afternoon involved 30 Navy marines, five vehicles and a helicopter. Villarreal has appeared on the attorney general's list of Mexico's most wanted and had a bounty of more than $2million on his head.

He is listed as one of the top remaining leaders of the Beltran Leyva cartel following the death of Arturo, who was known as the 'Boss of Bosses', and the arrest of bitter rival 'La Barbie', a former Beltran Leyva hitman a few weeks ago.

article-1311492-0B28E7D4000005DC-460_634x450.jpg

Marines arrest alleged drug kingpin Sergio Villarreal Barragan, alias 'El Grande', in Puebla, Mexico.. His capture comes soon after the arrest two weeks ago of bitter rival 'La Barbie', or Edgar Valdez, believed to be one of Mexico's most ruthless drug traffickers


article-1311492-0B1D0ECF000005DC-662_634x423.jpg

Edgar Valdez Villarreal, alias 'the Barbie' because of his fair complexion, is presented to the press in Mexico City shortly after his arrest. He faces charges in three U.S. states for allegedly trucking in tons of cocaine and is blamed in Mexico for a brutal turf war for control of the divided Beltran Leyva cartel


Villarreal offered no resistance when he was arrested, along with two suspected accomplices. He faces at least seven investigations for alleged drug trafficking and organised crime.

'The capture of Sergio Villarreal ... is another of the federal government's continuing strikes against a highly dangerous criminal organization which is today badly weakened,' said Alejandro Poire, the government's national security spokesman.

Mr Poire said the Beltran Leyvas 'had constituted one of the groups with the largest presence in the country', conducting operations in 32 Mexican states, including the capital.

Villarreal offered no resistance when he was arrested mid-afternoon, along with two suspected accomplices.

Mr Poire said the Beltran Leyvas 'had constituted one of the groups with the largest presence in the country', conducting operations in 32 Mexican states, including the capital.

The capture will strengthen the position of President Felipe Calderon who has faced growing unease that his campaign against the cartels is having little effect.

More than 28,000 people have died since he launched his crackdown on drug cartels in 2006.

Villarreal's capture is the fourth major blow delivered to drug cartels by the government in the past year.

First came the death of Arturo Beltran Leyva, the top leader of Beltran Leyva cartel, in a raid outside Mexico City on Dec. 16, 2009. Then soldiers killed the Sinaloa cartel's No. 3 capo, Ignacio "Nacho" Coronel, on July 29.

And on Aug. 30 federal police announced the capture of Edgar Valdez Villarreal, alias "La Barbie." The two men are not related.

While the security forces can boast of these recent successes several other drug cartels are firmly rooted around the country and use violence to control their smuggling routes.

Suspected drug hitmen killed 25 people late last week in the U.S.-Mexico border city of Ciudad Juarez in what was the bloodiest day in almost three years for a major manufacturing hub gripped by an escalating drug war.

In the central state of Morelos, police discovered nine bodies in clandestine graves Saturday in the same area where four more were recently found.

The Public Safety Department said in a statement that all 13 victims were believed to have been killed on the orders of 'La Barbie' in his battle for control of the cartel.

On Sunday, the military announced that it filed charges against four troops for the killings last week of a man and his 15-year-old son along the highway linking the northern city of Monterrey to Laredo, Texas.

Authorities have said soldiers opened fire on the family vehicle when it failed to stop at a checkpoint, though relatives who were also in the car say they were shot at after they passed a military convoy.

The mother and wife of the two victims was also wounded in the shooting.

A captain, a corporal and two infantrymen are in custody in military prison and have been charged with homicide, the Defense Department said in a statement.

Mexico's military was already under scrutiny for this year's killings of two brothers, ages five and nine, on a highway in Tamaulipas, a state bordering Nuevo Leon.

article-1311492-0B29EA16000005DC-708_634x357.jpg

This graphic shows the areas controlled by drug cartels in Mexico. The Beltran Leyva organisation operates along the Pacific coast close to the U.S. border. The fringes of these regions are in a constant state of flux as rivals try to muscle in on each other's territory


The National Human Rights Commission has accused soldiers of shooting the children and altering the scene to try to pin the deaths on drug cartel gunmen.

The army denies the allegations and says the boys were killed in the crossfire of a shootout between soldiers and suspected traffickers.

The scandal renewed demands from activists that civilian authorities, not the army, investigate human rights cases involving the military.

More recently, soldiers killed a U.S. citizen Aug. 22 outside the Pacific coast resort city of Acapulco.

In a statement to police, an army lieutenant claimed that Joseph Proctor, who had lived Mexico for several years, shot first at the military convoy on a highway between Acapulco and Zihuatanejo.

The Defense Department says it is investigating the claim, which Proctor's father, William Proctor, says he found hard to believe.


Shoot-outs, beheadings: The desperate battle for power

The Beltran Leyva cartel was founded by four brothers Marcos Arturo, Carlos, Alfredo and Héctor. Trouble for the organisation began when Alfredo Beltran Leyva was arrested in 2008.

Then the death of his brother Arturo the following year splintered the cartel, launching a brutal war for control of the gang, involving mass executions and beheadings in once-peaceful parts of central Mexico. Carlos Beltran Leyva was arrested a few days after Arturo's death.

The fight for the remains of the cartel pitted Hector Beltran Leyva and Villarreal against a faction led by "La Barbie."

In July the decapitated bodies of four men were hung from a bridge in Cuernavaca, a favourite weekend retreat for the capital's wealthy. Alongside was hung a message threatening allies of "La Barbie" and signed by the gang led by Hector Beltran Leyva. Hector is the last Beltran Leyva brother at large.

The Beltran Leyva brothers once formed a part of the Sinaloa cartel, but broke away following a dispute.

An indication of the problems they face is that three of the four main blows dealt to drug gangs in the past year involve Beltran Leyva leaders or operatives.



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/wor...ails-capture-major-victory-crime-cartels.html
 
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

The more Spurs fans in prison the better.

Hey I'm a Spurs fan :mad: You do mean English Premiership Football (Soccer) Team Tottenham Hotspur don't you?
 
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

They'll get off because witnesses tend to disappear.
 
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

I hope they catch 'el-mexi-melt', notorious diarrhea kingpin
 

Facetious

Moderated
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

bummer! this will put a damper on me moth amp-fetamine supply!
I was wondering why Diego never showed :(

:D
 

Spleen

Banned?
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

I laughed at "Le Grande", and then I saw the other guy was called "Le Barbie"...
 

LukeEl

I am a failure to the Korean side of my family
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

Yes but can they catch the nefarious "El Guapotito"?!

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Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

Great, is reefer gonna cost more now?...:facepalm:
 
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

The turning point will be when they capture El Chapo, the head of the Sinaloa cartel.
 
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

Could this be a turning point :dunno: Let's hope so :clap:

I very much doubt it. Someone else will be sucked into the power vacuum and the entire escapade with start all over again. So long as there are people out there willing to pay for what these people offer, there will always be a need for these so called "kingpins" to exist.

The "War on Drugs," eh? Ain't it a thing of beauty...
 
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

I very much doubt it. Someone else will be sucked into the power vacuum and the entire escapade with start all over again. So long as there are people out there willing to pay for what these people offer, there will always be a need for these so called "kingpins" to exist.

The "War on Drugs," eh? Ain't it a thing of beauty...

Add to that the fact that the President basically insinuated last week the only way to beat the Cartels was to legalize all drugs.
 
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

No matter how many heads you cut off this snake, it will remain a powerful creature.
 

ForumModeregulator

Believer In GregCentauro
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

there is no way these people are going to drop a multi BILLION dollar industry simply because it is "illegal". I think its nonsense to believe that if the industry became "legitimate" that the violence would end.
 
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

there is no way these people are going to drop a multi BILLION dollar industry simply because it is "illegal". I think its nonsense to believe that if the industry became "legitimate" that the violence would end.

Of course it's too simplistic for me to say that. But with proper regulation and with the addition of proper social programs put in place for users both casual and addicted; instead of looking upon them as criminals which has already overloaded our prison system massively and is destroying vast areas of the inner cities we can hope to begin to change the environment upon which the flow of illegal drugs has effected peoples lives and their communities. Now of course to say that there will not be those who garner such huge profits off of this fighting for their very survival in order to hang onto their business would be ignorant, but the theory is that you would hope that those who have to deal with these kinds of people would see how in not dealing with them in order to get their fix is better for their own safety, security and health and better for the communities in which they live.

This is a very complicated issue and it of course cannot be addressed entirely within the space of one paragraph. But I can only see legalisation as the only real way of combating this multi-billion dollar "drug war" that has proven to have been a complete and utter failure.
 
Re: Mexico hails arrest of second drug kingpin 'El Grande' as major victory over cart

I would have no problem if they legalised it all. Let people take what they want but if they get sick and want medical help either refuse it or make them pay for it from their own pockets. People are educated enough to know the dangers of drugs as well as excessive drinking/smoking so why should the state (via the taxpayer) pay for them to get treatment if/when they fall ill? Legalising everything will take out the whole criminal element and stop all the robberies, murders and gang formations and it will then be personal choice whether you buy drugs or not, plus the government could also tax it and have more money to spend on social services etc. :)
 
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