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Thursday 16 December 2010

Go-Jamaica :: Man killed, two injured in St Catherine :: News

Go-Jamaica :: Man killed, two injured in St Catherine :: News: "The Ferry police are now investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of a labourer who was shot and killed at his home this morning.

He has been identified as 28-year-old Garfield Whyte of Glades district, St. Catherine.

The names of the injured men are being withheld.

The police say Whyte and the two other men were at his home around 1 a.m., when unknown assailants approached them and opened fire hitting them, before escaping in the area."

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Monday 13 December 2010

Ten wounded in Vancouver shooting - The Globe and Mail

Ten wounded in Vancouver shooting - The Globe and Mail: "Ten people were injured and several others were taken into custody after what Vancouver police are calling “an outrageous display of gang violence”.
Shots rang out at approximately 2 a.m. near Oak Street and 22nd Avenue West, an area that’s home to both apartment buildings and businesses.
Photos
Pictures from the crime scene Six men and three women were treated for gunshot wounds and two of the victims were in critical condition. A tenth victim refused treatment and was taken to police headquarters for questioning.
Police spokeswoman Constable Jana McGuinness said she couldn’t recall a shooting incident that had quite so many victims."

Saturday 11 December 2010

Criminal Groups Mexico

Criminal Groups Mexico: "The Zetas, once the military wing of the Gulf Cartel, is now among one of the most violent groups in Mexico. The Zetas started out as an enforcer gang for the Gulf Cartel, taking their name from the radio code used for top-level officers in the Mexican army. Not only are they highly organized, but their use of brutality and shock tactics – petrol bombs, beheadings, and roadblocks – has led the United States Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to describe them as perhaps “the most technologically advanced, sophisticated and violent of these paramilitary enforcement groups.”"

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The Zetas, once the military wing of the Gulf Cartel, is now among one of the most violent groups in Mexico.

The Zetas, once the military wing of the Gulf Cartel, is now among one of the most violent groups in Mexico. The Zetas started out as an enforcer gang for the Gulf Cartel, taking their name from the radio code used for top-level officers in the Mexican army. Not only are they highly organized, but their use of brutality and shock tactics – petrol bombs, beheadings, and roadblocks – has led the United States Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to describe them as perhaps “the most technologically advanced, sophisticated and violent of these paramilitary enforcement groups.”"

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The Familia Michoacana a is a strange mixture of drug traffickers and former vigilantes

The Familia’s brutal tactics, strong base of operations and pseudo-religious ideology make it a formidable operation and a center of fascination for outsiders. The group draws on its strategic location, access to one of the country's most important ports and a sophisticated modus operandi to give authorities fits in several countries. The Familia also understands and uses a perverse and self-serving ideology to keep recruits coming. The Familia Michoacana a is a strange mixture of drug traffickers and former vigilantes that emerged in the early 2000s with the assistance of the Zetas, the armed wing of the Gulf Cartel that has since split and formed its own organization."

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Led by the Beltrán Leyva brothers, this Mexican drug cartel used to work as security detail for the Sinaloa and Juárez Cartel

Led by the Beltrán Leyva brothers, this Mexican drug cartel used to work as security detail for the Sinaloa and Juárez Cartel, until the Beltrán Leyva family seceded in 2008. After a series of arrests and deaths at the hands of rivals and government authorities, the Beltrán Leyva Organization (BLO), once one of Mexico’s bloodiest and most powerful criminal organizations, is facing extinction. It is currently run by Héctor Beltrán Leyva, alias 'El H,' the middle sibling in a family that managed the Sinaloa Cartel’s hitmen networks for years and controlled the state of Sonora and the lucrative port entry in Acapulco. The arrest of Alfredo Beltrán Leyva, alias 'El Mochomo,' in 2008, sparked a battle with the family’s long-time allies, the Sinaloa Cartel, and its precipitous fall."

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The Juárez Cartel is responsible for smuggling tons of narcotics from Mexico into the United States

The Juárez Cartel is responsible for smuggling tons of narcotics from Mexico into the United States throughout its long and turbulent history, and the group’s intense rivalry with the Sinaloa Cartel helped turn Juárez into one of the most violent places in the world. Despite recent news reports, the Juárez Cartel remains one of the most powerful criminal organizations in Mexico and the region. Small cells carry out different types of operations ranging from transportation and distribution of drugs; gangs, mostly in the north, act as the enforcement wing and are involved in human trafficking and kidnapping operations."

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The Gulf Cartel is one of the oldest and most powerful of Mexico’s criminal groups

The Gulf Cartel is one of the oldest and most powerful of Mexico’s criminal groups but has lost territory and influence in recent years to its rivals, including its former enforcer wing, the Zetas. The Gulf Cartel is one of Mexico’s most storied, wealthy and established operations. Working with Colombian suppliers, this group moves drugs north from its stronghold in Tamaulipas, and is known to outsource other activities, especially those related to human trafficking, to local “enforcer” gangs. Its one-time boss, Osiel Cárdenas Guillén, was considered the country’s most powerful underworld leader at one point, and its enforcers, the Zetas, Mexico’s most feared gang."

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The Juárez Cartel is responsible for smuggling tons of narcotics from Mexico into the United States

The Juárez Cartel is responsible for smuggling tons of narcotics from Mexico into the United States throughout its long and turbulent history, and the group’s intense rivalry with the Sinaloa Cartel helped turn Juárez into one of the most violent places in the world. Despite recent news reports, the Juárez Cartel remains one of the most powerful criminal organizations in Mexico and the region. Small cells carry out different types of operations ranging from transportation and distribution of drugs; gangs, mostly in the north, act as the enforcement wing and are involved in human trafficking and kidnapping operations."

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The Tijuana Cartel is based in one of the most strategically important border towns in Mexico

The Tijuana Cartel is based in one of the most strategically important border towns in Mexico, and continues to export drugs even after being weakened from a brutal internal war during 2009. Due to infighting, arrests and deaths of some of its top members, the Tijuana Cartel is a shell of what it was in the 1990s and early 2000s when it was considered one of the most potent and violent criminal organizations in Mexico. After the arrest or assassination of its founding members, the Arellano Félix clan, the cartel is now headed by Fernando Sánchez Arellano, a nephew of the Arellano Félix brothers who once bloodied Mexico and southern California with their brutish and authoritarian style. With the powerful Sinaloa Cartel moving into Tijuana in force, Sánchez Arellano is struggling to keep a grip on this lucrative drug and human trafficking corridor."

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The Sinaloa Cartel, often described as the largest and most powerful drug trafficking organization in the Western Hemisphere

The Sinaloa Cartel, often described as the largest and most powerful drug trafficking organization in the Western Hemisphere, is an alliance of some of Mexico’s top drug traffickers. The Sinaloa Cartel is a coalition of Mexico’s most powerful drug traffickers that operates in concert to protect themselves and more loosely to keep their businesses going smoothly. It relies on connections at the highest levels, corrupting portions of the federal police and military to maintain an upper hand on its rivals."

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Guanabee | Los Zetas Execution Video: Narco Member Tortured and Executed By Vigilantes

One of the reasons, children should be monitored while on internet! The video is brutal execution of a man by a Mexican group called “Los Zetas”. The rumors are that the group in some way is connected with the Mexican Army; however I do not believe such claims at all. Any military in the world won’t allow such barbarian act to be filmed and distributed. Moreover watching the video and the environment it is filmed in seems to be work of some drug cartel named Los Zetas.
As the video starts a plump man is seen tied to a steel chair with his arms and hands firmly gripped with a white colored rope. Man is wearing short boxers only. Word Z is prominently written across his chest and at forehead. I do not think any military group would do that. As a matter of fact many words are written over all of his body in Spanish.
The man is seen talking to his captivators which seem to be an interview or confession statement. During the interview a man wearing rubber gloves hits his neck and face many times.
As the interview ends a rope is put in his neck. A man standing behind him inserts some strong rod in the rope. The neck is broken by wounding the rope with the help of the rod. Just as we suspect the man has vomited blood, the video ends abruptly.
The news circling has it that the man was a murderer. Even if that be the case, he should have been tried in the court of law.
Guanabee Los Zetas Execution Video: Narco Member Tortured and Executed By Vigilantes: "twisted video has surfaced showing an alleged member of the narco group, Los Zetas, being interrogated and then decapitated by vigilantes. Los Zetas, the armed wing of the Gulf Cartel, is a group founded by former members of the Mexican army, and is now comprised of ex-federal police officers, as well as ex-Kaibiles from Guatemala. The video starts off by claiming the events about to take place are completely real, unlike what the Zetas upload online. The captured man, seen wearing only a pair of underwear and covered in markings referencing the narco group, appears bruised and confesses to a hit he was involved in the Mexican city of Acapulco, Guerrero, where a lawyer, a secretary, and several children were executed. He talks about how the order for the execution came from above, given out by Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano, the leader of Los Zetas, and then relayed to them by several of their immediate leaders. The man gives out the names of his accomplices, 'El Chilango' and 'El Borracho', but claims he himself did not murder anyone, stating that they were the ones who took the victims into a room and executed them. When forcefully pressed by the interrogator, whose face we do not see, he states that he became a member of Los Zetas after this same group murdered his family and forced him to join. Please note that due to its graphic and violent nature, we have omitted the end of the video."

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Mexico Police Break Morelia Drug Gang Blockade

Mexico Police Break Morelia Drug Gang Blockade: "Mexican police have been involved in fierce gun battles with suspected drug traffickers blockading the main roads into Morelia, the capital of Michoacan state.

There has also been fighting in the nearby city of Apatzingan.

At least three people were killed, including an eight-month-old baby apparently caught in the crossfire.

Michoacan, in western Mexico, is a stronghold of a powerful drugs cartel known as La Familia Michoacana.

The five main roads leading in and out of Morelia were blocked by burning cars and buses, police said.

Gunmen fired into the air to force drivers and passengers out of their vehicles before setting them ablaze.

Schools kept children inside their classrooms for their protection, and the city's university was closed, the Mexican newspaper El Universal reported.

Fighting broke out as police moved in to clear the blockades.

The upsurge in violence in Michoacan began on Wednesday when federal police went into the city of Apatzingan to search for suspected La Familia gang members, police said.

They quickly came under fire with automatic weapons, and police reinforcements were also attacked as they drove to assist their colleagues.

Army troops and helicopters were also brought in, and the cartel gunmen retreated, blocking the road behind them with burning vehicles.

One police officer was killed along with two civilians - a baby and a young woman.

Mexico's public security ministry denied local media reports that a police helicopter was shot down during the fighting."

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Matt Schrader Arrested on Gun and Drug Charges - The Real Scoop

Matt Schrader Arrested on Gun and Drug Charges - The Real Scoop: "Matt Schrader seems to associate with many involved in gangs and the drug trade. Numerous photos of him show up on the web, like the one where he is partying in Mexico with the late UN gangster Taco Castaneda or others where he is cruising around in a speedboat packed with tattooed associates.
The Abbotsford, turned Kelowna, resident has not faced many criminal charges until this week. He was arrested Wednesday after the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit raided his house and seized a gun and ammunition among other things.
Schrader got bail. Here is one of those photos, right, with Schrader pictured on the left in the cap."

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Tuesday 7 December 2010

Banks Financing Mexico Gangs Admitted in Wells Fargo Deal - warnthepeople.org

Banks Financing Mexico Gangs Admitted in Wells Fargo Deal - warnthepeople.org: "Just before sunset on April 10, 2006, a DC-9 jet landed at the international airport in the port city of Ciudad del Carmen, 500 miles east of Mexico City. As soldiers on the ground approached the plane, the crew tried to shoo them away, saying there was a dangerous oil leak. So the troops grew suspicious and searched the jet.

They found 128 black suitcases, packed with 5.7 tons of cocaine, valued at $100 million. The stash was supposed to have been delivered from Caracas to drug traffickers in Toluca, near Mexico City, Mexican prosecutors later found. Law enforcement officials also discovered something else.

The smugglers had bought the DC-9 with laundered funds they transferred through two of the biggest banks in the U.S.: Wachovia Corp. and Bank of America Corp., Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its August 2010 issue."

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More Die as Drug Gangs Battle in Mexico - World - CBN News - Christian News 24-7 - CBN.com

More Die as Drug Gangs Battle in Mexico - World - CBN News - Christian News 24-7 - CBN.com: "violent drug war in Mexico is escalating following an attack, Saturday, in Ciudad Juarez that killed 16 people.
Four police officers died when their car was ambushed. Stray bullets also hit two bystanders -- one a 10-year-old girl.
A day later, armed commandos attacked two drug rehabilitation centers in the city, leaving four dead and five wounded.
Gangs have attacked dozens of drug rehab clinics across Mexico, including nine last summer.
Drug cartel leaders sometimes operate the centers themselves in order to recruit addicts -- subjecting the clinics to attacks from rival gangs."

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Mexico detains alleged Zetas drug gang boss -  MSN ZA News

Mexico detains alleged Zetas drug gang boss - MSN ZA News: "Mexican federal police say they have detained a regional leader of the Zetas drug gang who trafficked drugs from the Dominican Republic and Panama to the United States."

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Thirteen men accused of torturing, raping, then murdering two members of a rival bootlegging gang will learn their fate Trial date is set in bootleg murders

Trial date is set in bootleg murders: "Thirteen men accused of torturing, raping, then murdering two members of a rival bootlegging gang will learn their fate on January 3.
Yesterday, their lawyer offered their defence, saying the arresting officers failed to properly identify the defendants.
The men are accused of killing Abu Baker Nujila and another unidentified man after kidnapping them on January 1, 2009. They allegedly beat the victims with metal bars, pipes, sticks, swords, machetes and knives before raping them and placing them in sand-covered, makeshift graves, prosecutors say.
Five of the defendants were charged with rape; all were charged with murder.
The 12 Indians and one Pakistani all denied the charges when they first appeared in court on February 15.
The lawyer Abdel Rahman al Baloushi asked the court for acquittal or leniency, and said the failure of identification should be grounds to dismiss the officers' testimony to prosecutors.
According to prosecution records, the men were arrested on January 25 last year. An investigating officer told prosecutors that information came to them that the bodies of two men had been found buried in Jebel Ali.
'Our investigations led us to the first defendant, who was found in Jebel Ali with the rest of the gang members,' said investigating officer MA.
A police team scoured the Jebel Ali Industrial area and found the other defendants carrying swords, machetes and pipes."

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