In barely four years, a little-known criminal gang has grown to challenge the world’s most notorious drug lord, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, for domination of Mexico’s narco underworld, unleashing a new tide of violence.
Once underlings in Guzman’s Sinaloa Cartel, traffickers of the Jalisco New Generation cartel (CJNG) have turned on their former masters, seizing territory and buying off thousands of corrupt police.
Led by former policeman Nemesio Oseguera, aka “El Mencho,” the gang has carved out an empire at the expense of weaker rivals.
The speed of its ascent shows how quickly power can shift in Mexico’s multibillion-dollar drug trade.
After the death of Ignacio Coronel, a regional trafficker who worked with Guzmán’s Sinaloa cartel, in 2010, two factions of a regional cartel based in southwest Mexico clashed over control of trafficking in Jalisco state.
The group that won out eventually became what is now the CJNG, assuming control drug operations in the area.
Juggling interests from China to North Africa and eastern Europe, the CJNG’s bloody advance has helped push homicides to their highest levels under President Enrique Peña Nieto, who vowed to restore law and order when he took office in late 2012.
All but four in a 2009 list of Mexico’s 37 most wanted capos are now dead or in jail, according to Reuters, and the outset of Peña Nieto’s term did see a reduction in violence, particularly of homicides.
But a resurgence that led to 3,800 murders between July and August highlights the government’s failure to beat down cartels without new ones springing up in their place.
Peña Nieto recently sought to allay security concerns by announcing a plan to step up crime prevention in the worst-hit areas. He did not set out the details of his plan, but urged states to speed up efforts to put local police under unified statewide command.
Intimidating, paying off, or eliminating police, CJNG leaders have ruthlessly applied lessons learned during their apprenticeship under Guzmán’s cartel to muscle in on battered rivals and snatch trafficking routes, security experts say.
Interviews by Reuters with over a dozen serving and former officials underlined how collusion between gang members and law enforcement in the CJNG’s stronghold, the western state of Jalisco, laid the foundation for the gang’s advance.
“People stopped trusting the police. People believed the police in the state were working for a criminal gang,” said Jalisco’s attorney general, Eduardo Almaguer.
Bearing the brunt of the chaos are the ports, trafficking centers, and border crossings that light up the multibillion-dollar trail of crystal methamphetamine from Mexico to the US, the CJNG’s main source of revenue.
Both savage — one gang hitman videoed blowing up victims he had strapped with dynamite — and shrewd, the CJNG is flanked by a white-collar financial arm known as “Los Cuinis.”
“They’re the entrepreneurs. They’ve made big investments in property, in restaurants, car leasing,” Almaguer told Reuters. “They’re the ones who know how to do business and corrupt authorities.”
Almaguer has fired dozens of state officials suspected of corruption since becoming attorney general in July 2015. But it is municipal police that pose the biggest liability in Jalisco, the home of Mexico’s second biggest city, Guadalajara.
Roughly one in five actively collaborate with gangs and about 70% “do not act” against them, Almaguer said.
As of September, 1,733 serving police in Jalisco, or nearly 16% of the municipal force, had failed evaluations known as “loyalty tests” aimed at rooting out corruption, according to data compiled by Causa en Comun, a transparency group.
The worst performer was Sinaloa, home state of the now captured Guzmán, where half the active police flunked the test.
Police in cartel’s pocket
A captured CJNG gang member claimed it the group had over half of Jalisco’s municipal police on its payroll, said a former official from the state government who interviewed him.
Depending on their role, the police were paid between 1,000 pesos and 50,000 pesos ($53 to $2,635) a month or more by the CJNG, the official said, requesting anonymity: “Otherwise they would kill me.”
Mexican police earn as little as $500 a month in some areas, meaning many are tempted to take the traffickers’ money.
CJNG suspicions that local police were buckling to pressure from the Sinaloa cartel to betray them and change sides was one of the reasons the gang lashed out against security forces in 2015, four current and former Jalisco officials said.
In six weeks, the CJNG killed over two dozen police in an onslaught culminating in the shooting down of an army helicopter on May 1, 2015, during a botched attempt to capture Oseguera.
Since October 2015, when the leftist opposition took control of the Guadalajara municipality, around 10% of its 2,600-strong police force have been or are in the process of being dismissed, said Salvador Caro, the police chief.
Most were suspected of having links to organized crime, and of those, most for ties to the CJNG, Caro said.
It is not the only gang with the law on its payroll.
Documents recovered by local officials and reviewed by Reuters showed the Knights Templar gang, once the main local rival of the CJNG, got copies of intelligence files to compile dossiers on suspected CJNG members, including police.
The dossiers included addresses, car-license details, tax and social-security data, voter registrations, and phone numbers. The data could only have leaked from law-enforcement sources, a federal-security official said.
Police are not the only problem, said Jalisco attorney general Almaguer, who also wants to make judges in the state take loyalty tests to stop collusion with gangsters.
“We’ve had rulings where it’s obvious some bad members of the justice system tried to protect gang members,” he said.
A spokeswoman for Jalisco’s Supreme Court declined to comment.
Crystal ‘superpower’
The CJNG steadily became more independent from the Sinaloa cartel after the 2010 death of Ignacio Coronel, Guzmán’s top lieutenant in Jalisco and reportedly the uncle of Guzmán’s current wife. Still, a US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) map in January 2012 showing the territorial influence of Mexico’s main cartels did not feature the gang at all.
It was not until after Guzman’s capture in February 2014 — he would break out of prison in July 2015 and was recaptured this January — that the split degenerated into war.
By April 2015, another DEA map showed the CJNG dominant in most or parts of 10 states, with a growing or significant presence in four others.
Since then, the CJNG surge has sparked record murder levels around the Pacific ports that feed the gang’s demand for precursor chemicals from China used to make crystal meth.
Competition over the valuable port of Manzanillo in the tiny Pacific-coast state of Colima has driven the homicide rate in that state to 52.47 homicides per 100,000 people — the highest in the country.
Violent competition between the CJNG and Sinaloa cartels, as well as other criminal groups, has also become widespread in the southwest state of Guerrero, where extensive opium-cultivation areas and trafficking routes make the state a hot property for cartels.
Violence has also stricken the city of Acapulco, a once idyllic resort city that has since earned the title “Guerrero’s Iraq.” Guerrero’s homicide rate in August reached 41.36 per 100,000 people, nearly four times the national rate of 10.81 per 100,000.
The gang’s power grab has also fueled violence in the port of Veracruz on the Gulf of Mexico, the main gateway for crystal-meth exports to Europe and North Africa.
Veracruz saw the most homicides in Mexico in August, with 229 victims, ahead of second-place Guerrero’s 217.
In Tijuana, a major border crossing into the lucrative US market, jockeying between the CJNG and Sinaloa cartel’s through their allies in the area have helped push the violence in the city up, putting it on track to have its most violent year since 2010.
Some experts believe the CJNG is already the main supplier of crystal meth to the US, and seizures of the drug along the US-Mexico border have grown considerably since 2011.
Mike Vigil, a former DEA chief of international operations, believes the split is still about 60-40 in favor of the Sinaloa Cartel in a market the two utterly dominate.
Estimating sales of the drug were worth about 25% to 30% of a $60 billion US illegal narcotics trade, Vigil said the CJNG’s power base and absorption of local expertise meant it had the potential to become the new “superpower” in crystal meth.
“They have a Ph.D. in drug trafficking thanks to the education provided by the Sinaloa cartel and other cartels,” Vigil told Reuters.
(Reporting for Reuters by Dave Graham; editing by Simon Gardner and Kieran Murray)
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