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Tag: Cartel

  • Reporter killed in restaurant she owns hours after journalist shot dead in separate attack in Mexico

    Reporter killed in restaurant she owns hours after journalist shot dead in separate attack in Mexico

    The U.N. human rights office in Mexico said Wednesday journalists in Mexico need more protection, after gunmen killed a journalist whose Facebook news page covered the violent western Mexico state of Michoacan. Then less than 24 hours later an entertainment reporter in the western city of Colima was killed inside a restaurant she owned.

    Journalist Mauricio Solís of the news page Minuto por Minuto was shot to death late Tuesday just moments after he conducted a sidewalk interview with the mayor of the city of Uruapan. State prosecutors said a second person was wounded in the shooting.

    Solís had just finished an interview on the street outside city hall with Mayor Carlos Manzo. Manzo told local media he had walked away and “two minutes later, I think, and just a matter of meters away, we heard gunshots, four or five gunshots.”

    “We sought cover because we thought the attack was aimed at us,” Manzo said. “After a few minutes we found out that Mauricio was the one they attacked.”

    Manzo said he could not rule out a connection between the interview and the killing.

    Mexico Journalist Killed
    Relative and friends of slain journalist Mauricio Solis carry his coffin during his wake in Uruapan, Mexico, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2024.

    Armando Solis / AP


    The radio station where Solis worked mourned his killing in a statement published on social media.

    “Mauricio was more than a colleague, he was an unconditional friend, a source of inspiration and a tireless voice in the service of our community,” the station said.

    The U.N. rights office said Solís was at least the fifth journalist killed in Mexico this year. It said he had previously reported security problems related to his work. His Facebook page reported on community events and the drug cartel violence that has wracked the city.

    “His killing is a wake-up call to defend the right to information and freedom of expression in Mexico,” the office wrote.

    An increasing number of the journalists killed in Mexico have been self-employed and reported for local Facebook and online news sites.

    Uruapan is the nearest large city to Michoacan’s avocado-growing region, and it has been the scene of drug cartel extortions and turf battles between gangs. The cartels demand protection money from local avocado and lime orchards, cattle ranches and almost any other business.

    Solís was reporting on a suspicious fire at a local market just before the shooting. Gangs have sometimes burned businesses that refuse to pay extortion demands.

    Then on Wednesday afternoon, entertainment reporter Patricia Ramírez González was found with serious injuries inside her Colima restaurant and died at the scene, according to the Colima state prosecutor’s office.

    Local media said Ramírez, who was better known as Paty Bunbury, published a blog on local entertainment and was a contributor to a Colima newspaper.

    The U.S.-based Committee to Protect Journalists condemned both killings and called for transparent investigations.

    Wracked by violence related to drug trafficking, Mexico is one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists, news advocacy groups say.

    Reporters Without Borders says more than 150 newspeople have been killed in Mexico since 1994 — and 2022 was one of the deadliest years ever for journalists in Mexico, with at least 15 killed.

    Media workers are regularly targeted in Mexico, often in direct reprisal for their work covering topics like corruption and the country’s notoriously violent drug traffickers.

    In August, a Mexican journalist who covered one of the country’s most dangerous crime beats was killed by gunmen, and two of his government-assigned bodyguards were wounded.

    In April, Roberto Figueroa, who covered local politics and gained a social media following through satirical videos, was found dead inside a car in his hometown of Huitzilac in Morelos, a state south of Mexico City where drug-fueled violence runs rampant.

    All but a handful of the killings and abductions remain unsolved.

    “Impunity is the norm in crimes against the press,” the the Committee to Protect Journalists said in a report on Mexico in March.

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  • Italian mafia fugitive arrested in Colombia after 4 years on the run is seen visiting Pablo Escobar’s grave

    Italian mafia fugitive arrested in Colombia after 4 years on the run is seen visiting Pablo Escobar’s grave

    More than 200 sentenced in Italy mafia trial


    More than 200 people sentenced in Italy mafia trial

    04:04

    Italian police announced on Friday the arrest in  Colombia of a dangerous fugitive accused of being the intermediary between the Latin American country’s drug cartels and the Naples mafia.

    Luigi Belvedere has been sentenced to almost 19 years in jail for international drug trafficking but has been on the run since December 2020.

    He was captured in the Colombian city of Medellin overnight.

    In announcing his arrest, Italian police released a photo of Belvedere visiting the grave of Pablo Escobar, the founder and boss of the Medellin cartel, who was killed by police in 1993.

    luigi-belvedere-screenshot-2024-10-25-064346.jpg
    Luigi Belvedere in an undated photo.

    Polizia di Stato


    Belvedere, a broker from Caserta, north of Naples, “specialized in the illegal importation of cocaine (and) acted as an intermediary between Colombia cartels and some of the clans of the Casalesi,” the  Italian interior ministry said in a statement,

    The Casalesi are a notorious branch of the Camorra mafia. Naples has been the traditional base for the mafia-type Camorra syndicate, an umbrella for many different clans.

    Investigators located him in Columbia, where they said he was “active in the organization of drug shipments from South America to Europe”, in part because of his use of a “well-known messaging system,” police said.

    Belvedere, believed to be around 32 years old and who was on the Italian interior ministry’s list of dangerous fugitives, was tracked down with the support of Columbian investigators and European Union policing body Europol.

    The arrest comes about three months after a Norwegian man accused of leading a crime ring that trafficked cocaine from South America to Europe on sailboats was captured in Colombia. Pazooki Farhad — dubbed “The Profesor” — was detained at El Dorado airport, while his alleged right-hand man and fellow Norwegian Bernsten Bjarte was captured in the Caribbean coastal city of Barranquilla, police said.

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  • 19 suspected members of powerful Sinaloa cartel killed in shootout with troops in Mexico

    19 suspected members of powerful Sinaloa cartel killed in shootout with troops in Mexico

    Mexican troops shot dead 19 suspected members of the Sinaloa cartel after they came under attack in the northwestern state, the ministry of defense said Tuesday.

    Military personnel were attacked on Monday by more than 30 people near the state capital Culiacan, and the ensuing firefight left 19 cartel members dead, the ministry said in a statement.

    Sinaloa has seen a surge in violence since the July arrest of the cartel’s co-founder Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada in the United States.

    Zambada’s arrest triggered a war between his relatives and the sons of drug trafficker Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, who co-founded the cartel.

    The ministry of defense said the cartel members killed on Monday were presumed to be linked to Zambada’s faction.

    MEXICO-POLITICS-VIOLENCE-NEWSPAPER-EL DEBATE
    National Guard troops patrol a street after bullets hit the El Debate newspaper building received a gang fight in Culiacan, Sinaloa State, Mexico, on October 18, 2024. 

    IVAN MEDINA/AFP via Getty Images


    Zambada, 76, was arrested on July 25 in the southern United States, where he landed with Joaquin Guzman Lopez, one of “El Chapo’s” sons, who led a faction of the cartel known as the “Chapitos.” The veteran drug trafficker has accused Lopez of kidnapping him and handing him over to US law enforcement.

    According to an indictment released by the U.S. Justice Department last year, the “Chapitos” and their cartel associates used corkscrews, electrocution and hot chiles to torture their rivals while some of their victims were “fed dead or alive to tigers.” El Chapo’s sons were among 28 Sinaloa cartel members charged in a massive fentanyl-trafficking investigation announced in April 2023.

    El Chapo is serving a life sentence in a maximum security prison in Colorado after being convicted in 2019 on charges including drug trafficking, money laundering and weapons-related offenses.

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  • 12 bodies bearing signs of torture found with cartel messages in Mexico, authorities say

    12 bodies bearing signs of torture found with cartel messages in Mexico, authorities say

    Twelve bodies — all bearing signs of torture and left with messages by cartels — were found on Thursday in the central Mexican state of Guanajuato, local authorities said, attributing the killings to disputes between organized crime groups.

    Guanajuato, a thriving industrial center that is also home to popular tourist destinations, is currently Mexico’s most violent state, according to official homicide statistics.

    The 12 bodies were found within two hours in five locations in the city of Salamanca, according to the state prosecutor’s office, which is investigating the crime.

    The victims — three women and nine men — were found on roads, bridges and avenues, their bodies bearing gunshot wounds and signs of torture, while one was dismembered, officials said.  

    The state prosecutor’s office also said the perpetrators left messages in which a cartel claimed responsibility.

    Messages are often left on victims’ bodies by drug cartels seeking to threaten their rivals or punish behavior they claim violates their rules.

    The bodies were found less than 24 hours after gunmen attacked a residential center for people suffering from addictions in the same municipality, killing four.

    MEXICO-CRIME-VIOLENCE
    A National Guard investigator waits outside a rehabilitation center where, according to officials, unknown gunmen killed four people and injured five in Salamanca, Guanajuato state, Mexico on October 2, 2024.

    MARIO ARMAS/AFP via Getty Images


    “This month of October has started with very high crime rates here. That makes 16 people (murdered) so far,” Salamanca Mayor Cesar Prieto told reporters.

    But he said the violence affecting the city was “a temporary issue” that flares up “when one group decides to attack another.”

    In Guanajuato, two cartels, the Santa Rosa de Lima and the powerful Jalisco New Generation, are currently at war. 

    Police, politicians and civilians have all been targeted in Guanajuato. In June, a baby and a toddler were among six members of the same family murdered in Guanajuato. In April, a mayoral candidate was shot dead in the street in Guanajuato just as she began campaigning.

    Last December, 11 people were killed and another dozen were wounded in an attack on a pre-Christmas party in the state. Just days before that, the bodies of five university students were found stuffed in a vehicle on a dirt road Guanajuato.

    The U.S. State Department urges American to reconsider traveling to Guanajuato. “Of particular concern is the high number of murders in the southern region of the state associated with cartel-related violence,” the department says in a travel advisory.

    Hit by spiraling violence linked to organized crime, Mexico has recorded more than 450,000 murders since December 2006, when a controversial military anti-drug operation was launched.

    New President Claudia Sheinbaum announced that she will present her national security plan next Tuesday.

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  • At least 10 murders in Mexico appear linked to arrests of cartel leaders in U.S.

    At least 10 murders in Mexico appear linked to arrests of cartel leaders in U.S.

    The murders of at least 10 people in the northern Mexican state of Sinaloa appear to be linked to infighting in the dominant drug smuggling cartel there, confirming fears of repercussions from the July 25 detention of two top cartel leaders.

    Last month, Joaquín Guzmán López, a capo from one faction of the Sinaloa cartel – the Chapitos or “Little Chapos,” the sons of imprisoned cartel leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán – turned himself in to U.S. authorities. However, he allegedly abducted the leader of the rival faction, Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, forcing him on to the same flight to El Paso and turning him in.

    Mexican authorities are caught in the middle of the coming storm: they weren’t involved in the July 25 capture, but they are unwilling to use the opportunity to crack down on the Sinaloa cartel. The cartel is splintering, and what’s at stake is who will take over Zambada’s faction now that he is in a U.S. jail.

    To paraphrase a famous Mexican corrido song, “Smuggling and Betrayal,” the mixture of the two always leads to murder.

    Analysts say the government doesn’t want to get involved, because both sides in the Sinaloa cartel’s internal dispute have damaging information on officials they could release at any time. So they have limited themselves to increasingly desperate appeals to both sides not to fight among themselves.

    On Monday, Sinaloa state Gov. Rubén Rocha acknowledged that four killings on Friday and six murders on Saturday were related to the dispute between warring factions of the cartel.

    “These are related to the drug cartels … and they can be linked to the situation that arose after the detentions of July 25,” said Gov. Rocha. “What I want is peace, and I have to ask for that from whomever, from the violent ones.”

    US Mexico Sinaloa Cartel
    This combo of images provided by the U.S. Department of State show Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, a historic leader of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, left, and Joaquín Guzmán López, a son of another infamous cartel leader, after they were arrested by U.S. authorities in Texas, the U.S. Justice Department said Thursday, July 25, 2024.

    / AP


    That echoed a statement earlier in the day from President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who acknowledged that two more killings were linked to the dispute.

    “We don’t want the situation in Sinaloa to take a turn for the worse,” López Obrador said. “It has been stable as far as violence is concerned. That doesn’t mean there wasn’t violence, but there wasn’t confrontation, fighting between groups.”

    “Public opinion bombs”  

    That kind of peace – where drug cartels go about their business of smuggling, dealing and extortion, but don’t cause too much violence – is something the president has praised in the past. Rooting out the cartels, he says, is a policy imposed upon Mexico in the past by the United States, and is something he does not agree with.

    But Mexican security analyst David Saucedo said authorities seem loathe to intervene for another reason. Zambada, the captured drug lord, appears to be willing to use the damaging insider knowledge he has about corrupt Mexican politicians to pressure them.

    Zambada has already shown he is willing to do that. In a jailhouse letter, Zambada gave a version of the killing of Hector Cuén – a political rival of Gov. Rocha who was killed the same day Zambada was kidnapped – and blamed it on the Chapitos faction.

    Rocha and state prosecutors claimed Cuén was killed in a random, unrelated gas station robbery, and published security camera footage they said backed that up. But federal prosecutors later said the governor’s version didn’t add up and was probably a fake.

    Zambada apparently has more information he can release if things get too hot in Sinaloa, and if his sons are prevented from taking over his part of the business: the names of politicians, police and military officers he has paid off.

    “It seems to me that Mayo Zambada’s media strategy is focused on assuring an orderly transition in the organization he commands,” said Saucedo. “With these (media) hand grenades, these public opinion bombs, Zambada is trying to assure that federal authorities don’t try to interfere in the leadership succession in his organization.”

    If that’s the goal – keep things orderly in Sinaloa so drug leadership can pass from one generation to another, and politicians don’t get publicly exposed for cooperating with drug cartels – then the most recent killings don’t bode well for the strategy.

    At least two of the men killed last week – they were tortured, shot and found with their heads wrapped in duct tape – were close associates of Zambada.

    The Chapitos and their cartel associates used corkscrews, electrocution and hot chiles to torture their rivals while some of their victims were “fed dead or alive to tigers,” according to an indictment released by the U.S. Justice Department.

    TOPSHOT-MEXICO-CRIME-VIOLENCE-ARMY
    Mexican army soldiers aboard military vehicles patrol a highway as part of a military operation to reinforce security following a wave of violence in recent days in the city of Culiacan, Sinaloa State, Mexico, on August 19, 2024.

    IVAN MEDINA/AFP via Getty Images


    But as usual, it’s hard to decipher which killing or act of violence was committed by which cartel faction, and why.

    For example, somebody started to methodically destroy the lavish family tomb of a prominent Sinaloa cartel clan a couple of days after July 25 arrests of the two capos. They used bulldozers and backhoes to break open the walls of the mausoleum and dig up the crypts.

    The clan whose grandfather’s and uncle’s bodies lay in the tomb – both corpses were stolen – had had violent brushes with both the Chapitos and Zambada factions in the past.

    In his jailhouse letter, Zambada called on the governments of the United States and Mexico to be “transparent” about his abduction, subsequent disappearances, and death.

    “I also call on the people of Sinaloa to use restraint and maintain peace in our State,” Zambada wrote. “Nothing can be solved by violence. We have been down that road before, and everyone loses.”

    If there is any clear victim to be laid to rest in the conflict, it’s the idea that the Sinaloa cartel was ever a monolithic, hierarchal gang with one leader at the top. As the war of lavish tombs in Culiacán, the state capital, shows, the cartel has always been made up of a loose alliance of drug trafficking clans who try to one-up each other, even in death.

    El Chapo, the Sinaloa cartel’s founder, is serving a life sentence in a maximum security prison in Colorado after being convicted in 2019 on charges including drug trafficking, money laundering and weapons-related offenses.

    Last year, El Chapo sent an “SOS” message to Mexico’s President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, alleging that he has been subjected to “psychological torment” in prison.

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  • Man dubbed “The Professor,” accused leader of world’s largest “narco sailboat” crime ring, is captured in Colombia

    Man dubbed “The Professor,” accused leader of world’s largest “narco sailboat” crime ring, is captured in Colombia

    Largest-ever “narco sub” found off Colombia


    Largest-ever “narco sub” intercepted off Colombia

    00:45

    A Norwegian man dubbed “The Profesor” who is accused of leading a crime ring that trafficked cocaine from South America to Europe on sailboats was captured in Bogota, Colombian police said Tuesday.

    Pazooki Farhad was detained at El Dorado airport, while his alleged right-hand man and fellow Norwegian Bernsten Bjarte was captured in the Caribbean coastal city of Barranquilla, a police statement said.

    “According to investigations by various international agencies, the captured citizen (Pazooki Farhad) had criminal links with the so-called Clan del Golfo (the largest Colombian cartel) and Mexican cartels such as Sinaloa and Jalisco Nueva Generacion,” police said.

    The Bogota mayor’s office released video showing the detained Farhad, who is accused of leading the largest “narco sailboat” organization in the world. 

    the-professor-capturado-en-bogota-cabecilla-de-organizacion-mundial-de-narcoveleros-0.jpg
    Pazooki Farhad was detained at El Dorado airport, while his alleged right-hand man and fellow Norwegian Bernsten Bjarte was captured in the Caribbean coastal city of Barranquilla, a police statement said.

    Bogota mayor’s office


    Earlier this month, Spanish police reported the arrest of 50 people allegedly linked to Farhad in Spain and in seven other countries, as well as the seizure of 1.5 tons of cocaine and eight “drug-shipping sailboats.” Europol released a video showing authorities opening bricks of cocaine on one of the ships as well as officers raiding properties and making arrests.

    Europol said it had previously designated Farhad as a “high value target.” He has had “more than 20 years” in the business, winning him the “full confidence of the Colombian and Mexican drug cartels” with whom he coordinated the shipments, it added.

    Farhad’s arrest comes just days after authorities announced the extradition of another international drug trafficker with a colorful nickname. Earlier this week, U.S. authorities announced a Montenegro citizen dubbed the “Pirate of the Unknown” was extradited to New York City from Italy to face charges connected to an alleged international drug ring that transported tons of cocaine aboard ships around the world. 

    Colombia remains the world’s leading producer of cocaine, despite decades of war against the cartels.

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  • Business leader shot to death after complaining about drug cartel extortion in Mexican TV interviews

    Business leader shot to death after complaining about drug cartel extortion in Mexican TV interviews

    The head of a Mexican business chambers’ federation in Tamaulipas state, across the border from Texas, was killed Tuesday, hours after giving television interviews complaining about drug cartel extortion in the state, officials said.

    Julio Almanza was shot to death outside his offices in the city of Matamoros, across from Brownsville, Texas.

    “We are hostages to extortion demands, we are hostages of criminal groups,” Almanza said in one of his last interviews. “Charging extortion payments has practically become the national sport in Tamaulipas.”

    Even Mexico’s largest corporations are now being hit by demands from drug cartels, and gangs are increasingly trying to control the sale, distribution and pricing of certain goods.

    The problem came to a head when the Femsa corporation, which operates Oxxo, Mexico’s largest chain of convenience stores, announced late last week that it was closing all of its 191 stores and seven gas stations in another border city, Nuevo Laredo, because of gang problems.

    The company said it had long had to deal with cartel demands that its gas stations buy their fuel from certain distributors. But the straw that broke the camel’s back came in recent weeks when gang members abducted two store employees, demanding they act as lookouts or provide information to the gang.

    Since convenience stores are used by most people in Mexico, the gangs see them as good points to keep tabs on the movements of police, soldiers and rivals.

    “We had incidents in stores that consisted of them (gangs) demanding we give them certain information, and they even abducted two colleagues to enforce this demand,” said Roberto Campa, Femsa’s director of corporate affairs.

    In a statement Monday, Femsa said its stores in Nuevo Laredo remain closed this week “due to acts of violence that put our colleagues’ safety at risk.”

    In a social media post, the Tamaulipas attorney general’s office acknowledged Almanza’s death.  “We send our condolences to his family members and friends,” the office said.

    Earlier this month, a Mexican fisheries industry leader who complained of drug cartel extortion and illegal fishing was shot to death in the northern border state of Baja California. Minerva Pérez had complained that drug cartels were extorting protection payments from fishing boats, distributors, truck drivers and even restaurants.

    Cartel violence in Mexico has long been focused on smaller businesses, where owners often visit their shops and are easily abducted or approached by gang members to demand extortion payments. But Femsa is the largest soft drink bottler in Latin America and is listed on the Mexican stock exchange.

    Nuevo Laredo has long been dominated by the Northeast Cartel – an offshoot of the old Zetas cartel – but the problem is starting to hit larger companies nationwide. Sectors ranging from agriculture, fishing and mining to consumer goods have been plagued by cartels trying to essentially take over their industries.

    “Organized crime has taken partial control”

    This week, the American Chamber of Commerce, whose members tend to be larger Mexican, American or multinational corporations, released a survey of its members in which 12% of respondents said that “organized crime has taken partial control of the sales, distribution and/or pricing of their goods.”

    That means drug cartels are distorting parts of Mexico’s economy, deciding who gets to sell a product and at what price – and in return they are apparently demanding sellers pass a percentage of sales revenue back to the cartel.

    In the past, cartels have carried out violent attacks, arson and even killings of those found selling goods that had not been “authorized” by them or bought from distributors they control.

    About half of the 218 companies in the American Chamber survey said that trucks carrying their products had suffered attacks, and 45% of the companies said they had received extortion demands for protection payments.

    Of the companies that reported how much they had to spend on security measures, 58% said they spent between 2% and 10% of their total budgets on security; 4% spent at least a tenth of their total outlays on security measures.

    On Tuesday, Femsa said in a statement that it was making progress in talks with authorities that might provide guarantees for the safety of its employees and allow the chain to reopen its stores in Nuevo Laredo.

    Mexico’s powerful drug cartels have expanded their income sources by both extorting money from companies and even taking over legitimate businesses.

    In 2014, authorities confirmed the Knights Templar cartel had essentially taken over exports of iron ore from the western state of Michoacan, and the ore trade with China had become perhaps its biggest single sources of income.

    Cartels have also been accused of controlling production and manipulating domestic prices for crops like avocados and limes.

    And late last year, authorities in Michoacan confirmed one cartel had set up its own makeshift internet system and told locals they had to pay to use its Wi-Fi service or they would be killed.

    Dubbed “narco-antennas” by local media, the cartel’s system involved internet antennas set up in various towns built with stolen equipment. The group charged approximately 5,000 people elevated prices between 400 and 500 pesos ($25 to $30) a month.

    Cartels also targeting Americans

    Sometimes, the victims are Americans. Earlier this month, the U.S. imposed sanctions on a group of Mexican accountants and firms allegedly linked to a timeshare fraud ring run by the Jalisco New Generation drug cartel in a multi-million dollar scheme targeting Americans.

    In November, U.S. authorities said the cartel was so bold in operating timeshare frauds that the gang’s operators posed as U.S. Treasury Department officials.

    The scam was described by the department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC. The agency has been chasing fraudsters using call centers controlled by the Jalisco drug cartel to promote fake offers to buy Americans’ timeshare properties. They have scammed at least 600 Americans out of about $40 million, officials said.

    But they also began contacting people claiming to be employees of OFAC itself, and offering to free up funds purportedly frozen by the U.S. agency, which combats illicit funds and money laundering.

    Officials have said the scam focused on Puerto Vallarta, in Jalisco state. In an alert issued in March, the FBI said sellers were contacted via email by scammers who said they had a buyer lined up, but the seller needed to pay taxes or other fees before the deal could go through.

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  • Major cocaine network — led by smuggler known as

    Major cocaine network — led by smuggler known as

    Spanish police on Friday announced the takedown of a major network transporting Latin American cocaine into Europe by boat in an international operation involving 50 arrests across eight countries.  

    The investigation was started by police in Spain and Britain in June 2020 but quickly expanded, drawing in forces from 11 different countries and backed by Europol, Europe’s policing agency, a Spanish police statement said.

    In total, they confiscated 1.5 tons of cocaine and seized eight vessels used for shifting their product from Latin American and Caribbean nations to Spain. Europol released a video showing authorities opening bricks of cocaine one of the ships as well as officers raiding properties, making arrests, and finding drugs, cash and firearms.

    The narcotics were shipped from loading points in Brazil, Colombia, Guayana, Trinidad and Tobago, Santa Lucia, Barbados and Panama to Spanish ports in the Canary Islands, the southern region of Andalusia and the eastern city of Valencia

    The leader, who was arrested in Norway, is a veteran drug smuggler known as “The Professor,” the statement said. Europol said Friday it had previously designated the leader as a “high value target.”

    He has had “more than 20 years” in the business, winning him the “full confidence of the Colombian and Mexican drug cartels” with whom he coordinated the shipments, it added.

    The network also included members of the so-called “Balkans’ cartel” who were “living the high life” in Spain’s southern Costa del Sol, the statement said.

    But there was also a spiritual element, police said.

    “The criminal organization would appeal to a santero (witchdoctor) to receive his blessing and for the success of its cocaine transportation operations between Latin America and Europe,” it said.

    Seeking a santero’s blessing is a key element of Santeria, an Afro-Cuban belief system that fuses African religions with Catholicism and which is very popular in Latin America.

    Of the detainees, 26 were arrested in Spain, among them 16 Norwegians — one of whom was a former bank robber, who also targeted armored cash-in-transit vehicles and had spent 15 years behind bars for violence.

    spain-capture.jpg
    Spanish police announced the takedown of a major network transporting Latin American cocaine into Europe by boat in an international operation involving 50 arrests across eight countries.

    Europol


    The other 24 suspected gang members were arrested in Bulgaria, Colombia, Norway, Panama, Portugal, Trinidad and Tobago, and the UK.

    Most of the arrests took place on June 24, Europol said.

    In Spain, one of the main gateways into Europe for Latin American cocaine, police regularly raid drug smugglers, with the last major raid in June involving eight tons of cocaine with 40 arrests. After that sting, Europol released a nearly 10-minute video, showing K-9 dogs and officers finding bags of suspected drugs as well as multiple suspects being detained.

    The new bust followed other major drug seizures this week, involving cocaine shipments headed for Europe. On Tuesday ,authorities in Paraguay announced Tuesday the largest cocaine seizure in the country’s history, after officials were surprised to find more than 4 tons of the drug stashed inside a shipment of sugar bound for Belgium. 

    The day before that, authorities in Ecuador said they found more than six tons of cocaine hidden in a banana shipment headed to Germany. 

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  • Brickbat: You’re Making Us Look Bad

    Brickbat: You’re Making Us Look Bad

    Mexican officials are once again criticizing Ceci Flores, who searches for the bodies of people who have disappeared and are presumed to have been kidnapped and murdered. She typically searches in areas known to be places where drug cartels dump bodies. The problem is that she is too successful in finding those bodies, undercutting the government’s claims to be searching for them and its efforts to downplay the scope of violence and kidnapping in the country. After her latest find, prosecutors initially claimed she’d found dog bones before admitting she’d found human remains, but they then accused her of breaking the chain of evidence.

    The post Brickbat: You're Making Us Look Bad appeared first on Reason.com.

    Charles Oliver

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  • Baby and toddler among 6 family members shot dead at home in Mexican state plagued by cartel violence

    Baby and toddler among 6 family members shot dead at home in Mexican state plagued by cartel violence

    A baby and a toddler were among six members of the same family murdered in a central Mexican state plagued by cartel-related violence, a local official said Monday.

    Authorities say armed attackers burst into a home in the city of Leon in Guanajuato on Sunday night and opened fire at the family.

    “Unfortunately two children and four women died,” state governor Diego Sinhue Rodriguez told reporters.

    Two men survived because they saw the attackers coming and hid on the roof, he said.

    MEXICO-MURDER-CRIME
    Members of the Guanajuato Ministerial Crime Investigation Police Unit arrive at the scene where six members of a family, including an eight-month-old baby and a two-year-old boy, were murdered Sunday night in Leon, Guanajuato State, Mexico, on June 10, 2024. 

    MARIO ARMAS/AFP via Getty Images


    Guanajuato is one of Mexico’s most violent states due to turf wars between rival cartels involved in drug trafficking, fuel theft and other crimes. In Guanajuato, with its population just over 6 million, more police were shot to death in 2023 – about 60 – than in all of the United States.

    In April, a mayoral candidate was shot dead in the street in Guanajuato just as she began campaigning. In December, 11 people were killed and another dozen were wounded in an attack on a pre-Christmas party in Guanajuato. Just days before that, the bodies of five university students were found stuffed in a vehicle on a dirt road in the state.

    For years, the Santa Rosa de Lima cartel has fought a bloody turf war with the Jalisco cartel for control of Guanajuato.

    Mexico has recorded more than 450,000 murders since 2006, when the government deployed the military to fight drug trafficking, most of them blamed on criminal gangs.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • 18 bodies found in Mexico state plagued by cartel violence, including 9 left with messages attached

    18 bodies found in Mexico state plagued by cartel violence, including 9 left with messages attached

    Nine bodies were found Wednesday in a northern Mexican state reeling from a wave of drug cartel-related violence, authorities said, in the second such discovery in as many days.  A homicide investigation was launched after the bodies of nine men were found in the city of Morelos in Zacatecas, the state prosecutor’s office said.

    It came just one day after nine bodies were found on an avenue in the city of Fresnillo, also in Zacatecas state. Messages addressed to a criminal group were found with those remains, authorities said. The bodies were dumped near a market two days after gang members blocked roads and burned vehicles in response to the capture of 13 suspected criminals. A pickup truck was being examined for evidence, officials said.

    The state prosecutor’s office said five of the victims in Fresnillo had been identified and their bodies handed over to relatives.

    MEXICO-CRIME-VIOLENCE
    Members of the investigative police stand next to bodies wrapped in blankets and covered with duct tape left by unknown persons on a street in Fresnillo, Zacatecas, Mexico, May 7, 2024.

    JESUS ENRIQUEZ/AFP/Getty


    Fresnillo is considered by its residents to be the most dangerous city in Mexico. 

    Around 450,000 people have been murdered across the country since 2006, when the government launched a controversial anti-drug offensive involving the military, according to official figures.

    Cartel activity and violence in Zacatecas

    Zacatecas, which has one of the highest per-capita homicide rates of any Mexican state, is a key transit point for drugs, especially the powerful synthetic painkiller fentanyl, moving north to the U.S. border. 

    Zacatecas has been the scene of bloody turf battles between the Jalisco and Sinaloa drug cartels. The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration told CBS News in 2022 that the two cartels were behind the influx of fentanyl that’s killing tens of thousands of Americans.  

    Last September, a search team looking for seven kidnapped youths in Zacatecas found six bodies and one survivor in a remote area.

    Authorities in Zacatecas confirmed that a U.S. resident was among four people killed in the state around Christmas 2022. Earlier that year the bodies of five men and one woman were found dumped on a roadside in Zacatecas, and the bodies of eight men and two women were found crammed into a pickup truck left near a Christmas tree in the main plaza of the state capital.

    The U.S. State Department has issued a “do not travel” advisory for Zacatecas, warning Americans to avoid the state due to the threat of crime. 

    “Violent crime, extortion, and gang activity are widespread in Zacatecas state,” the advisory says.

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  • Authorities find

    Authorities find

    Mexican authorities said Thursday they have found tents and questioned three people in the case of two Australians and an American who went missing over the weekend in the Pacific coast state of Baja California, a popular tourist destination that is also plagued by cartel violence.

    Australian brothers Jake and Callum Robinson and their American friend have not been seen since April 27, officials said.

    María Elena Andrade Ramírez, the state’s chief prosecutor, would not say whether the three people questioned were considered possible suspects or witnesses in the case. She said only that some were tied directly to the case, and others indirectly.

    But Andrade Ramírez said evidence found along with the abandoned tents was somehow linked to the three. The three foreigners were believed to have been surfing and camping along the Baja coast near the coastal city of Ensenada, but did not show up at their planned accommodations over the weekend.

    Mexico Missing Foreigners
    In this image made from video, Mexican security forces frisk men at a checkpoint in Ensenada, Mexico, Thursday, May 2, 2024. Mexican authorities said Thursday they have found tents and questioned a few people in the case of two Australians and an American who went missing over the weekend.

    / AP


    “A working team (of investigators) is at the site where they were last seen, where tents and other evidence was found that could be linked to these three people we have under investigation,” Andrade Ramírez said. “There is a lot of important information that we can’t make public.”

    “We do not know what condition they are in,” she added. While drug cartels are active in the area, she said “all lines of investigation are open at this time. We cannot rule anything out until we find them.”

    On Wednesday, the missing Australians’ mother, Debra Robinson, posted on a local community Facebook page an appeal for helping in finding her sons. Robinson said her son had not been heard from since Saturday April 27. They had booked accommodations in the nearby city of Rosarito, Baja California.

    Robinson said one of her sons, Callum, is diabetic. She also mentioned that the American who was with them was named Jack Carter Rhoad, but the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City did not immediately confirm that. The U.S. State Department said it was aware of reports a U.S. citizen missing in Baja, but gave no further details.

    Andrade Ramírez said her office was in contact with Australian and U.S. officials. But she suggested that the time that had passed might make it harder to find them.

    “Unfortunately, it wasn’t until the last few days that they were reported missing. So, that meant that important hours or time was lost,” she said.

    The investigation was being coordinated with the FBI and the Australian and U.S. consulates, the prosecutor’s office added.

    Baja California, known for its inviting beaches, is also one of Mexico’s most violent states thanks to organized crime groups.

    In December, cartel leaders went on a killing rampage to hunt down corrupt police officers who stole a drug shipment in Tijuana, which is located in Baja California.

    In 2015, two Australian surfers, Adam Coleman and Dean Lucas, were killed in western Sinaloa state, across the Gulf of California – also known as the Sea of Cortez- from the Baja peninsula. Authorities say they were victims of highway bandits. Three suspects were arrested in that case.

    AFP contributed to this report.

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  • 12 cartel members sentenced for trafficking of drugs from Mexico to Dallas

    12 cartel members sentenced for trafficking of drugs from Mexico to Dallas

    Twelve cartel members received prison sentenced ranging from four to 40 years on drug trafficking charges, according to U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas Leigha Simonton.

    Twelve cartel members received prison sentenced ranging from four to 40 years on drug trafficking charges, according to U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas Leigha Simonton.

    File photo

    Twelve defendants tied to a Mexican drug cartel were sentenced to prison terms ranging from four to 40 years on drug charges, Leigha Simonton, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District, announced in a news release Tuesday.

    Francisco Javier Rodriguez Arreola, a top source of supply charged in the case, was sentenced to 40 years on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute methamphetamine. Arreola, 45, of Michoacan, was arrested in 2021 in Del Rio while illegally entering the U.S. from Mexico after having been previously deported.

    Rodriguez Arreola admitted he helped coordinate a shipment containing 199.97 kilograms of liquid methamphetamine — worth a street value of $9.9 million — from Mexico to Dallas, according to plea papers.

    Wiretaps caught Rodriguez Arreola communicating with co-defendants in code about the movement and sale of controlled substances, the investigation found.

    Rodriguez Arreola previously served time in federal prison and was deported to Mexico in April 2020, according to the release. Less than a month after being deported, he was back in the drug trade.

    At a Tuesday hearing, prosecutors presented evidence that showed Rodriguez Arreola also coordinated multiple deliveries of meth from Mexico to the U.S. on behalf of the cartel.

    Testimony also showed that he was a broker of meth and had ties to cartel leadership, according to the release. Rodriguez Arreola’s role included finding drivers and people who could transport and distribute meth, planning routes, confirming deliveries, loss prevention, and finding locations to receive, store, and transfer shipments containing meth, the release says.

    The hearing further revealed Rodriguez Arreola had access to counterintelligence information provided by the cartel because he told a co-defendant that they needed drivers that were U.S. residents to transport the drugs because no drivers with visas could cross the border with shipments, according to the release.

    Other defendants sentenced included:

    • Ricardo Hernandez Zarate, sentenced to 480 months in prison on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance and 240 months in prison on a money laundering charge, to be served concurrently
    • Pedro Hernandez Zarate, sentenced to 360 months on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    • Uriel Marin Gaona, sentenced to 120 months on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    • Benito Diaz Hernandez, sentenced to 210 months on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    • Marcos Garcia Reyes, sentenced to 87 months on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    • Heleodoro Rosales Ramirez, sentenced to 168 months on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    • Rafael Diaz, sentenced to 60 months on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    • Jose Alberto Plascencia Torres, sentenced to 292 months on charges of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance and possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    • Elmer Gardea Tello, sentenced to 55 months on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    • Walter Daniel Chapa Marty, sentenced to 121 months on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    • Salvador Antonio Martinez, sentenced to 151 months on charges of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance and possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance

    During the investigation, authorities seized about 650 kilograms of meth, 17 firearms, $220,922, and $12,200 in real and personal property.

    Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Nicole Lopez is a breaking news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She graduated from the University of Texas at El Paso, where she studied multimedia journalism. She also does freelance writing.

    Nicole Lopez

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  • Cartels, mafias and gangs in Europe are using fruit companies, hotels and other legal businesses as fronts, Europol says

    Cartels, mafias and gangs in Europe are using fruit companies, hotels and other legal businesses as fronts, Europol says

    Criminal networks in the European Union are penetrating legal businesses across the 27-nation bloc and rely heavily on corruption to develop their activities. That’s the bleak picture emerging from a report published Friday by the EU crime agency.

    Europol has identified 821 particularly threatening criminal networks with more than 25,000 members in the bloc.

    According to the agency, 86% of those networks are able to infiltrate the legal economy to hide their activities and launder their criminal profits.

    Europol cited the example of a gang leader identified as an Italian businessman of Argentinian origin residing in Marbella, Spain. The individual specialized in drug trafficking and money laundering and manages several companies, including one that imports bananas from Ecuador to the EU. He also owns sports centers in Marbella, commercial centers in Granada and multiple bars and restaurants, it said.

    “An Albanian accomplice, based in Ecuador, takes care of the import of cocaine from Colombia to Ecuador and the subsequent distribution to the EU. Ecuadorian fruit companies are used as a front for these criminal activities,” the report said.

    Massive hauls of drugs have been hidden in banana shipments throughout Europe in recent months. In February, British authorities said they had found more than 12,500 pounds of cocaine hidden in a shipment of bananas, shattering the record for the biggest single seizure of hard drugs in the country. Last August, customs agents in the Netherlands seized 17,600 pounds of cocaine found hidden inside crates of bananas in Rotterdam’s port. Three months before that, a police dog sniffed out 3 tons of cocaine stashed in a case of bananas in the Italian port of Gioia Tauro.

    Italy Cocaine Bananas
    In this image taken from a video provided by the Italian Finance Police, an Italian finance police officer indicates to his dog where to search for cocaine among a load of bananas, at the port of Gioia Tauro, southern Italy, Tuesday, May 16, 2023. The finance police say they have seized a shipment of more than 2,700 kilos (about 3 tons) of cocaine hidden under some 70 tons of bananas in two containers shipped by sea from Ecuador, that could have brought traffickers a potential value of more than 800 million euros ($900 million) in street sales. (Guardia di Finanza via AP)

    / AP


    Europol also cites families from Italy’s ‘Ndrangheta organized crime syndicate, one of the world’s most powerful, extensive and wealthy drug-trafficking groups. Their profits from drug and arms trafficking as well as tax defrauding are invested throughout Europe in real estate, supermarkets, hotels and other commercial activities, it said.

    Another characteristic of these networks is the borderless nature of their structure, with 112 nationalities represented among their members, the report said.

    “However, looking at the locations of their core activities, the vast majority maintain a strong geographical focus and do not extend their core activities too broadly,” Europol said.

    As for their activities, drug trafficking and corruption are the main concern for EU officials.

    As record amounts of cocaine are being seized in Europe and drug-related violent crime is becoming increasingly visible in many EU countries such as Belgium and France, drug trafficking is standing out as the key activity, the report said. Half of the most threatening criminal networks are involved in drug trafficking, either as a standalone activity or as part of a portfolio.

    In addition, more than 70% of networks engage in corruption “to facilitate criminal activity or obstruct law enforcement or judicial proceedings. 68% of networks use violence and intimidation as an inherent feature of their modus operandi,” the report said.

    In Belgium, with Antwerp the main gateway for Latin American cocaine cartels into the continent, gang violence has been rife in the port city for years. In January, Belgian authorities said they seized a record amount of cocaine at the port of Antwerp last year, the BBC reported.

    With drug use on the rise across the whole country, federal authorities say trafficking is rapidly penetrating society.

    “Organized crime is one of the biggest threats we face today, threatening society with corruption and extreme violence,” said the European commissioner for Home Affairs, Ylva Johansson.

    Europol said the data will be shared with law enforcement agencies in EU member countries, which should help better target criminals.

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  • Russian woman kidnapped near U.S. border in Mexico is freed, officials say

    Russian woman kidnapped near U.S. border in Mexico is freed, officials say

    A Russian woman who was kidnapped in northeastern Mexico has been released, Russian embassy and Tamaulipas state officials said Sunday.

    The woman, whose identity has not been revealed, was released without paying the ransom kidnappers sought and was taken to a police station in Reynosa, Tamaulipas state, near the U.S. border, diplomats said on social media.

    She was rescued “in good health” late Saturday by a state anti-kidnapping unit, police said. They provided no details on how the rescue took place, who the captors were and whether they had been arrested or killed.

    The woman was believed to have been abducted while traveling with Mexican acquaintances between Monterrey, in Nuevo Leon state, and Reynosa.

    In March last year, people believed to be with a criminal group known as the Gulf Cartel kidnapped four Americans in Tamaulipas in an incident that left two of them dead.

    Americans Zindell Brown and Shaeed Woodard died in the attack; Eric Williams and Latavia McGee survived. A Mexican woman, Areli Pablo Servando, 33, was also killed, apparently by a stray bullet.

    Mexico Missing Americans
    A Mexican army soldier guards the Tamaulipas State Prosecutor’s headquarters in Matamoros, Mexico, Wednesday, March 8, 2023.

    STR / AP


    The Gulf drug cartel turned over five men to police soon after the abduction. A letter claiming to be from the Scorpions faction of the Gulf cartel condemned the violence and said the gang had turned over to authorities its own members who were responsible. 

    In January, Mexican marines detained one of the top leaders of the Gulf cartel.

    Tamaulipas is among the states hardest-hit by violence linked to organized crime such as drug trafficking and kidnapping. The state is also a busy route for undocumented migrants hoping to cross into the United States.

    Last month, Mexican troops on patrol killed 12 gunmen in a clash near the U.S. border in Tamaulipas.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Arizona sues apartment landlords for ‘immoral’ rent price-fixing scheme

    Arizona sues apartment landlords for ‘immoral’ rent price-fixing scheme

    Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes filed a lawsuit Wednesday against software company RealPage and nine residential landlords, alleging they engaged in a massive conspiracy to price gouge at least 100,000 renters in Phoenix and Tucson.

    RealPage sets prices for apartment units based on an algorithm that maximizes profit, according to the lawsuit filed in Maricopa County Superior Court. Some 70% of multifamily apartment units listed in the Valley are owned, operated or managed by companies that have contracted with RealPage. In Tucson, it’s about 50% of units.

    “Renters are not dealing with a competitive market,” Mayes told Phoenix New Times at a press conference on Wednesday. “They are dealing with a monopoly that is engaged in anti-competitive price fixing.”

    With the use of RealPage software becoming widespread, the free market ceases to be free, fair or transparent, and landlords can effectively conspire to raise prices through the software’s algorithm, the lawsuit argues.

    Landlords using RealPage software charged 12% more compared with landlords who didn’t use it, Mayes’ office estimated. She said that number, based on a sample of 30,000 units, is conservative.

    The lawsuit makes Arizona the first state in the country to sue RealPage, which Mayes suspects is engaging in the same activities across the country. The attorney general in Washington, D.C., also filed a lawsuit against RealPage and local landlords in November 2023.

    click to enlarge

    Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes highlighted the defendants accused of price fixing during a press conference on Wednesday.

    TJ L’Heureux

    ‘They knew what they were doing’

    The antitrust lawsuit comes as housing costs, evictions and homelessness have skyrocketed in Phoenix since landlord use of RealPage software became more common in 2016. Between 2016 and 2021, rent soared by 80%. Last year, rent increased by about 10%. In October 2023, evictions reached a high not seen since the Great Recession in 2008.

    Mayes also noted that RealPage profit maximization moves the landlords’ focus from occupancy and instead pushes for rent increases — even if that means leaving units vacant.

    “It used to be landlords would be worried about vacancy rates, and they would be worried about being able to compete against the landlord next door,” Mayes said. “Now they don’t have to worry about any of that, because they’re all charging the same high rent. And they aren’t deviating from it because RealPage tells them not to.”

    If you’ve been in an apartment building in the Valley, and it seemed strangely empty, the lawsuit might help explain why so many units are vacant while evictions and homelessness are at all-time highs. Mayes said the scheme works because landlords agree to outsource their pricing authority to RealPage — rather than competing with one another.

    “This is a case where the software and AI were being used in what can only be described as immoral,” Mayes told New Times. “They knew what they were doing. They knew they could use technology to jack up their profits at the expense of Arizonans, and that is absolutely not OK.”

    Mayes wants RealPage and the landlords named in the lawsuit to pay restitution to renters who have been harmed by the alleged conspiracy. The attorney general is also asking the court for an injunction requiring the defendants “to stop their anti-competitive practices.”

    “Every dollar of increased rent that the cartel illegally squeezes from renters is money they would not have otherwise paid in the absence of the conspiracy,” the lawsuit reads.

    While only nine corporate landlords are named in the lawsuit, Mayes said the number is likely to increase during the discovery process. The landlords named in the lawsuit are Apartment Management Consultants, Avenue5 Residential, BH Management Services, Camden Property Trust, Crow Holdings/Trammell Crow Residential, Greystar Management Services, HSL Properties, RPM Living and Weidner Property Management.

    RealPage could not be immediately reached for comment on Friday.

    Hiding a conspiracy from the public

    Mayes called RealPage and landlords who engaged with the company “insidious” for attempting to conceal the alleged price-fixing conspiracy from renters and the public.

    A damning passage in the lawsuit alleges that RealPage taught its landlords how to avoid detection of the conspiracy, creating training materials that encouraged landlords to avoid mentioning the software and instead say units were being “priced individually.”

    “RealPage encouraged concealment to avoid detection,” the lawsuit reads.

    The attorney general also claimed RealPage put significant pressure on participants to ensure they adopted its prices. According to Mayes, this is called “policing the conspiracy” to make sure no one sets prices lower than other landlords.

    Mayes claimed RealPage policed the conspiracy in four ways:

    • Employing pricing advisers whose job was to “monitor and report on weekly rents” and meet with landlords to ensure that properties were implementing the company’s set rates.
    • Chilling landlords’ employees by tracking the identity of employees who request a deviation from RealPages’ rates, which can lead to them being fired.
    • Threatening to drop landlords that reject RealPage’s set rates.
    • Encouraging landlords to automatically accept RealPage’s prices.

    Mayes said the alleged conspiracy violates the Arizona Uniform State Antitrust Act and the Arizona Consumer Fraud Act, which she called “two statutes that have not been used nearly enough in this state.”

    “What could be more unfair, what could be more deceptive, than landlords who were using software and an algorithm to jack up the price of rents without telling renters that they were doing it?” Mayes asked during the press conference. “That is unfair under the law.”

    Mayes said the soonest renters could see relief is if the court tells landlords that they must immediately cease using the software to keep prices higher than in competitive markets.

    In an era of dawning artificial intelligence, the lawsuit could bring about a landmark case that challenges certain uses of AI and algorithms.

    “Given the involvement of Wall Street, of algorithms, of AI now in this space, I think it’s fair to ask a lot of hard questions about what’s going on out there,” Mayes said. “I think it’s important to challenge the use of this technology in this way to harm Arizonans.”

    Mayes also said she will encourage attorneys general across the country, whether Democrats or Republicans, to investigate RealPage and file similar lawsuits.

    TJ L’Heureux

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  • Eye on America: Combatting cartel smuggling, addressing L.A.’s homelessness epidemic

    Eye on America: Combatting cartel smuggling, addressing L.A.’s homelessness epidemic

    Eye on America: Combatting cartel smuggling, addressing L.A.’s homelessness epidemic – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    In Arizona, we witness how smuggling at the border is leading to increasingly dangerous high-speed pursuits. Then in California, we speak with the mayor of Los Angeles to learn how her administration is addressing the city’s homelessness epidemic. Watch these stories and more on “Eye on America” with host Michelle Miller.

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  • 5 charred bodies found in remote Mexico town after reported clash between criminals

    5 charred bodies found in remote Mexico town after reported clash between criminals

    Funding Cartels: The Fentanyl Fight | CBS Reports


    Funding Cartels: Why America Is Losing the Fentanyl Fight | CBS Reports

    22:30

    Acapulco, Mexico — Five charred bodies were found Tuesday in a remote village in the southern Mexican state of Guerrero after reports of a confrontation between suspected criminals, local authorities said. The state prosecutor’s office said on social media that police, soldiers and forensic experts went to the mountain community of Las Tunas to verify the reports.

    “They located the bodies of five burned people,” the office said in a statement, noting the victims had not been identified. It said the bodies were transferred to the state forensic medical service.

    Local news outlets published images of a presumed confrontation between criminals that took place on Monday and left several dead.

    Given the difficulties in communication and accessing the area, the prosecutor’s office requested the support of federal forces in launching their investigation.

    Las Tunas is part of the municipality of San Miguel Totolapan, where in October 2020 an attack by a criminal group on the local city hall left 20 dead, including the mayor and his father.

    Mexico Violence
    Residents carry the coffin of Wilmer Rojas the day after he was killed in a mass shooting in San Miguel Totolapan, Mexico, Oct. 6, 2022.

    Eduardo Verdugo/AP


    Authorities said that massacre appeared to have been the work of a drug lord, who then used social media to try to blame it on a rival gang. 

    Guerrero, one of the most violent and impoverished states in the country, has recently seen several clashes between criminal cells involved in drug trafficking and production, kidnapping and extortion. 

    The situation has prompted Catholic priests and bishops in the area to call for the groups to negotiate an end to the violence, an initiative endorsed by President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

    Mexico has recorded more than 420,000 murders and tens of thousands of missing persons since the end of 2006, when then-president Felipe Calderon launched a controversial anti-drug military campaign.

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  • A massacre that killed 6 reveals the treacherous world of illegal pot in SoCal deserts – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news

    A massacre that killed 6 reveals the treacherous world of illegal pot in SoCal deserts – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news






    A massacre that killed 6 reveals the treacherous world of illegal pot in SoCal deserts – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news





























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  • “Spidermen” narcos use ropes in Ecuador’s biggest port to hide drugs on ships bound for the U.S. and Europe

    “Spidermen” narcos use ropes in Ecuador’s biggest port to hide drugs on ships bound for the U.S. and Europe

    At Guayaquil, Ecuador’s biggest port and export hub, drug gangs and the coast guard play a cat-and-mouse game, vying for supremacy of the river among the many hidden inlets and tangles of mangrove. One officer says that some of the drug traffickers are so adept at scaling ships and covertly planting drugs on them that they are like “spidermen.”

    The Guayas Estuary, with its 28 ports, is the heart of the violence-torn country’s economy.

    Excluding oil, 80 percent of Ecuador’s exports pass through here, including key products such as bananas and shrimp.

    It is also the main export channel for drugs.

    “Seventy percent of the cocaine that arrives in Europe comes from Ecuador, and 80 percent of this cocaine comes out of Guayaquil,” navy coast guard commander Fernando Alvarez, whose unit is at the forefront of the fight against trafficking, told AFP.

    According to Alvarez, Ecuador has become the main cocaine distributor in the world, with most of the drugs originating in neighbors Colombia and Peru — the world’s top producers of cocaine.

    ECUADOR-STATE OF EMERGENCY-SECURITY
    Members of the Coast Guard Command (COGUAR) of the Ecuadorian Navy prepares to go on a patrol along tributary channels of the Guayas River next to port terminals while participating in an anti-drug trafficking patrol in Guayaquil, Ecuador on January 14, 2024. 

    YURI CORTEZ/AFP via Getty Images


    Daily, Alvarez and his team patrol the Guayas River.

    To the right of them is a forest of mangroves shielding shrimp farms. To the left, miserable poverty-stricken neighborhoods in which gangs rule with an iron fist.

    And in the middle of the water lane, a massive container ship about six stories high — the perfect vessel for a hidden drug stash.

    “These criminals are real spidermen”

    The coast guards’ job is a complicated one.

    On the one hand, they have to look out for speed boats, semi-submersibles (also known as “narco subs”) and even submarines now employed by ever-wealthier drug traffickers along the nearly 46-mile channel that connects Guayaquil to the open sea.

    “The whole city is connected via canals. It is a very, very complicated task to control all this,” one officer told AFP on condition of anonymity for fear of being targeted.

    Another threat is criminals who bring drugs from ashore in canoes or small boats, use ropes or ladders to clamber up the sides of tankers and container ships bound for the United States or Europe, and hide the contraband there.

    “These criminals are real spidermen,” said the anonymous officer.

    “There are mangroves everywhere, it’s very easy to hide,” he added.

    The intruders, some of whom pose as fishermen, usually act under the cover of darkness, sometimes with the complicity of the crew, according to the coast guard.

    “If there is a risk of ‘contamination,’ we board with a tactical group to protect the ship,” said Alvarez.

    Shipping companies increasingly also rely on protection from private security escorts.

    Gangs “don’t hesitate to open fire”

    According to Alvarez, the gangs often follow the vessels carrying their illicit goods, and “do not hesitate to open fire” if they spot anyone on their tail.

    “They are ever more violent. They adapt constantly” — also trying to buy off members of the security forces.

    The gangs are in cahoots with three major transnational traffickers: Mexico’s Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation cartels — which are behind the influx of fentanyl into the U.S. that’s killing tens of thousands of Americans — as well as Albanian groups with ties to Italy’s notorious ‘Ndrangheta mafia.

    Alvarez said about 80 percent of crimes intercepted by his unit nowadays are related to drugs.

    The same patrols are also tasked with securing the waterway to the protected Galapagos archipelago from illegal Chinese and Spanish fishing fleets.

    And while the task is sometimes overwhelming, the state of emergency declared last week to put down a violent gang uprising “has changed things in our favor,” said Alvarez.

    “It has changed the rules on the use of force, and since these gangs are now considered fighting forces, this allows us to respond more robustly.”

    Ecuador government and drug cartels at war

    Once a bastion of peace, Ecuador has recently been plunged into crisis after years of expansion by transnational cartels.

    The latest violence was triggered by the escape from Guayaquil prison just over a week ago of one of the country’s most powerful narcotics gang bosses.

    The government declared a state of emergency and countrywide curfew, infuriating gangsters who declared war against civilians and security forces, launching several deadly attacks and taking dozens of hostages. Most have since been freed.

    By Sunday, Ecuador’s security forces said they had taken control of several prisons back from gangs and reported more than 1,300 arrests, 27 escaped inmates recaptured and eight gangsters, whom the government describes as “terrorists,” killed.

    Ecuadorian soldiers take control of the prison, in Cuenca
    Ecuadorian soldiers stand guard over inmates in the courtyard after taking control of the Ceunca prison, in Cuenca, Ecuador, in a handout picture made available on Jan. 14, 2024.

    Armed Forces of Ecuador/Handout/REUTERS


    For year, much of the violence has concentrated in prisons, where clashes between inmates have left more than 460 dead, many beheaded or burnt alive, since February 2021.

    Last week, hundreds of soldiers patrolled near-deserted streets in Ecuador’s capital after the government and drug mafias declared war on each other, leaving residents gripped with fear.

    The small South American country has been plunged into crisis after years of growing control by transnational cartels who use its ports to ship cocaine to the U.S. and Europe.

    President Daniel Noboa, 36, gave orders last week to “neutralize” criminal gangs after gunmen stormed and opened fire in a TV studio and bandits threatened random executions of civilians and security forces. Less than two months after taking office, he declared the country in a state of “internal armed conflict.”

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