ReportWire

Local travelers stranded in Mexico amid unrest over death of cartel leader, top Chicago DEA fugitive

CHICAGO (WLS) — The Mexican army killed the leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, “El Mencho,” on Sunday, decapitating what had become Mexico’s most powerful drug cartel and thrusting swaths of the nation into chaos.

As the ABC7 I-Team first reported in 2018, “El Mencho” was the largest target for the DEA and was considered within law enforcement ranks to be Chicago’s most-wanted fugitive and it’s “Public Enemy Number One.”

No U.S. troops were on the ground for the operation that killed the infamous cartel boss, but ABC News learned Sunday night U.S. forces provided intelligence support, but what that was is not yet known.

ABC7 heard from Chicago-area travelers currently in Mexico, and there’s a lot of uncertainty on the ground as clashes erupt throughout parts of the country.

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Images of multiple dark plumes of smoke were seen Sunday among what normally is the picturesque western coast of Mexico. Burned-out buses were abandoned on roadways as helicopters hovered over the popular tourist destination of Puerto Vallarta.

“There’s blockages, there’s cars on fires, there’s busses blocking the roads. So nobody can take an Uber, can take a taxi, can take a bus. Everything is blocked,” said David Miranda from Pilsen.

Miranda, his cousin and friends were vacationing in Puerto Vallarta. They are now stranded following violent clashes that erupted after the cartel leader’s death.

“It’s a way of showing their presence or their power,” said Dr. Emilio Kouri, director of the Katz Center of Mexican Studies at the University of Chicago. “And most of all, I think their defiance in a moment that is quite perilous in terms of not knowing what may come next.”

Miranda says as he and his group waited for a ride share that never came, they heard from nearby hotel employee.

“She says, if you love yourself and you love your life, do not try to even make it to the airport,” Miranda said.

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Jim Murphy from Joliet, also stranded in Puerto Vallarta, shared an image of a building that burned just block away from where’s he’s sheltering in place.

“The United States State Department has issued a shelter in place warning to all U.S. citizens in Mexico right now,” Murphy said. “The governor of the state of Jalisco has done the same as has the mayor of Puerto Vallarta.”

International airlines have cancelled flights in Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajara, temporarily stranding tourists like Miranda.

“We don’t know how we’re going to get food, because it’s Airbnbs,” Miranda said. “So everything is closed, the corner stores, everything is closed.”

Dr. Kouri says “El Mencho’s” death could shake up one of Mexico’s most violent cartels and is significant for the country and U.S.-Mexico relations.

“This is something that is already being warmly welcomed by the U.S. government and that will help strengthen the idea that Mexico’s government is active in trying to limit the power of these organizations,” Dr. Kouri said.

Several airlines continued to suspend services as of Sunday night, and there was no official timeline on when normal flight operations would resume.

It’s a waiting game for people, including the Chicago-area travelers, to get home, safely.

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Cate Cauguiran

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