Tuesday, May 18, 2010


Police stand near a stolen tractor-trailer that was used as a barricade by gunmen in March in the San Nicolas area on the outskirts of Monterrey. Drug traffickers have sown panic among the city's residents. (Associated Press / March 18, 2010)

Monterrey, Mexico, finally feeling the effects of the drug war

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."

latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-monterrey-20100517,0,1395935.story
latimes.com
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE
Monterrey, Mexico, finally feeling the effects of the drug war
The wealthy city is perhaps paying the price for tolerating the presence of drug traffickers for so many years. Now, 'security is collapsing,' an official says.
By Tracy Wilkinson, Los Angeles Times
10:04 PM PDT, May 16, 2010
Reporting from Monterrey, Mexico


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With its superhighways, gleaming skyscrapers, fancy art museums and leafy plazas, Monterrey has always been safe — so safe, in fact, that drug lords chose to park their families here.

Life in Monterrey represented another Mexico, cozily above the national fray of violence and disintegration.

No scruffy border city or remote, drug-infested outpost, Monterrey is Mexico's wealthiest city, its economic engine, the center of textile, food-processing, beer and construction industries — a modern, sophisticated metropolis where per-capita GDP is twice the national average.

The drug lords' families took advantage of the country's best schools and top-of-the-line hospitals, the establishment turned a blind eye, and the wealth made it an easy place to launder money.

Now, however, as drug-trafficking syndicates expand their reach across Mexico, they have brought even Monterrey to its knees.

And as authorities lose control, the business elite is worried, ordinary residents panicked.

"The tradition of a tranquil Monterrey has ended," said Gilberto Marcos, a textile manufacturer who belongs to a citizens board that advises the state on security issues.

"And if Monterrey is lost, everything is lost."

Monterrey is perhaps paying the price for tolerating the presence of traffickers for so many years, allowing them to fester and grow amid the shared wealth.

"For two decades, our deliberate ignorance and our indolence have made us de facto collaborators" with organized crime, said Father Rogelio Narvaez, head priest in the struggling Our Lady of the Rosary parish. "Legality and the social fabric are in crisis.... It is easier to get guns than a scholarship."

In the space of a few weeks in recent months, drug gangs repeatedly blocked off city streets, snarling traffic and preventing police and soldiers from patrolling. Regular gun battles in and around Monterrey had claimed 164 lives this year as of May 7, almost the same number as in the two previous years combined. The dead included two popular engineering students caught, apparently, in crossfire at the gates of their prestigious university.

On April 21, 50 gunmen overran the downtown Holiday Inn, a high-end hotel popular with business travelers, forced the receptionist to ID guests and yanked four men and a woman from their fifth-floor rooms. A clerk from another hotel across the street, thought to be an informant, was also seized. They have not been seen since.

Authorities later arrested seven police officers accused of helping the gunmen, who are believed to be members of a notorious drug gang known as the Zetas.

On May 2, a single gunshot at a fairgrounds during an annual cattle festival triggered a panicked stampede of people in attendance. Five people were killed and dozens injured.

Business leaders say extortion and forced payment of "protection money" to gangsters are now routine. U.S. universities have canceled exchange programs with Monterrey institutions. Foreign investment fell by 50% last year; unemployment has risen sharply.

"Security is collapsing," Chamber of Commerce President Juan Ernesto Sandoval said. "The authorities are overwhelmed."

Several business leaders stormed into the governor's office the other day to demand immediate action after traffickers blocked streets in 20 locations on a single day. It was "unpardonable" that they could stage the blockades for hours with impunity, the businessmen told the governor's top security official.

But they came away with nothing but platitudes, one participant recalled.

For all its wealth, Monterrey is also home to circles of poor and out-of-work people whom traffickers have effectively exploited. As The Times reported last year, the Zetas began moving into the rough, neglected barrio of Independencia that slopes haphazardly up from the Santa Catarina riverbed. There they recruited young men as dealers, mules, spies and disciples.

Today, the Zetas have launched a bloody battle to challenge the longtime dominance of their former patron, the Gulf cartel. It is being waged most ferociously in the northeastern state of Tamaulipas that borders Texas, in towns such as Reynosa and Nuevo Laredo, and has spilled 100 miles southward to engulf Monterrey.

The city's mayor, Fernando Larrazabal, said traffickers have managed to sow panic among residents and believes their ultimate goal is to provoke citizen demands that the army be withdrawn.

"We have to regain control of Monterrey's streets and neighborhoods and restore peace," Larrazabal, who took office six months ago, said in an interview. "In recent weeks we've seen unprecedented actions in defiance of government at local, state and federal levels."

Larrazabal said he inherited a police department rife with corruption and deeply infiltrated by drug cartels. More than 20% of officers have been sacked, with a number facing criminal prosecution, he said. But experts say it would take years to clean up the statewide police force.

He said the army has begun to reinforce Nuevo Leon state's border with Tamaulipas in a bid to stop spillover violence. He acknowledged that the mayhem has hurt the local economy and stalled business recovery.

"Businesses are afraid to invest, and that is putting a brake on employment," he said. "Unemployment is going down a bit, but the rhythm of economic recovery should be greater and faster, and it's not."

Larrazabal spoke at City Hall, where hundreds of people were signing up for welfare benefits and unemployed demonstrators waved signs demanding work.

"There is a lot of anguish and people are afraid," Jorge Mirelos, a Monterrey resident who recently lost his job at a truck factory, said of the climate of insecurity. "How far is this going to go? Guns for everybody so we can defend ourselves?"

And so, as in so many other parts of Mexico, the citizens of Monterrey are changing the way they live. They don't go out at night as much. The frequent shopping trips to McAllen, Texas, have been curtailed; they drive the now-dangerous highway only at certain high-noon hours. They look over their shoulders, viewing one another with suspicion.

"Our way of being has changed," said Marcos, the textile manufacturer. "We saw this from afar — in Guadalajara, Tijuana, Sinaloa — and now the problem is catching up to us."

wilkinson@latimes.com
Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

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Mario Ernesto Villanueva Madrid in 2007, when he was arrested in Almoloya de Juarez, Mexico. (Mario Vazquez de la Torre, Associated Press / June 21, 2007)

Ex-Cancun mayor extradited to U.S. on drug charges

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-cartel-20100511,0,3240207,print.story

latimes.com
Ex-Cancun mayor extradited to U.S. on drug charges
He is accused of taking millions of dollars in bribes to help a cartel ferry cocaine across the border.
By Richard A. Serrano, Tribune Washington Bureau
May 11, 2010
Reporting from Washington

The former mayor and governor of the popular Mexican resort area of Cancun was extradited to the United States to stand trial on allegations of pocketing millions of dollars in bribes to help a notorious drug cartel move more than 200 tons of cocaine across the border, Justice Department officials announced Monday.

Mario Ernesto Villanueva Madrid, dressed in a drab khaki jacket and slacks, was flown late Sunday night aboard a Drug Enforcement Administration jet to New York, where he also is charged with laundering millions of dollars through the now-bankrupt Lehman Bros. investment firm.

His arrest and transfer to the United States marks a major catch for U.S. law enforcement officials, who in the last two years have convicted 12 top Mexican cartel leaders brought to this country. The Villanueva Madrid case is especially significant because it targets the political corruption system in Mexico that for decades has worked arm in arm with the cartels.

This time, U.S. authorities are prosecuting a top government leader who officials say had his own police and state government workers help the Juarez cartel push cocaine into the United States.

"Today, the former governor of Quintana Roo [state] finally faces justice in an American courtroom," said U.S. Atty. Preet Bharara in New York.

John P. Gilbride, special agent-in-charge of the DEA in New York, said Villanueva Madrid "abused the trust placed in him by the citizens of Quintana Roo when he facilitated drug trafficking and money laundering across international borders."

Villanueva Madrid, who appeared Monday afternoon in federal court in Manhattan, once held sway along the fabled Riviera Maya, long popular with American tourists who flock to beach resorts such as Cancun and Cozumel.

He was charged with accepting $19 million in bribes, or up to $500,000 for each time he had his police and government staff allow cartel smugglers to move Colombian cocaine on speedboats and tanker trucks from the beach ports north into the United States, the indictment said.

He pleaded not guilty and was being held without bail.

The Juarez cartel has for two decades been one of Mexico's most violent drug smuggling organizations, specializing in Colombian cocaine.

Villanueva Madrid, 61, became mayor of Cancun in 1990 and was elected governor of the state on the Yucatan peninsula in 1993. A year later, the cartel began establishing operations there, using speedboats and armed guards to ferry drugs along the Central American and Mexican coastlines. According to U.S. prosecutors, the boats usually were loaded with up to 3 tons of cocaine, and in the beginning ranged at night along the high seas to elude the U.S. Coast Guard and the Mexican navy.

But according to the documents filed in court, things changed once Villanueva Madrid was elevated to governor, and "the Juarez cartel paid Villanueva Madrid millions of dollars in narcotics proceeds. In return, Villanueva Madrid placed the police and state government infrastructure of Quintana Roo at the disposal of the cartel."

The indictment said police officers provided armed protection for the cartel boat crews as they unloaded cocaine from speedboats, and then helped escort the shipments hidden inside tanker trucks. In addition, state airplane hangars were opened to the cartel for storing other shipments that came into the Cancun area by plane. Some cartel members were even given police identification cards and gun permits, the documents say.

The charges state that the governor then started transferring millions of dollars into bank and brokerage accounts in the U.S., Switzerland and elsewhere. Some of the money ended up in Lehman accounts, and U.S. prosecutors charged Villanueva Madrid with using that firm to launder his proceeds.

According to U.S. prosecutors, Mexican authorities suspected that Villanueva Madrid was working for the cartel. But they said that under Mexican law, he was immune from prosecution as long as he remained in public office. In March 1999, his term expired and he fled, remaining a fugitive for two years.

By May 2001, he was located and arrested by Mexican officials. His hair had grown out to his shoulders, and he sported a long beard. He had been in hiding in remote areas in the Yucatan, protected by "a network of criminal associates and former aides," prosecutors said.

Villanueva Madrid was convicted of organized crime and corruption offenses in Mexico, but eventually could have been paroled there. The new charges in New York carry a potential maximum sentence of life in prison without parole.

Bharara said a true life sentence would send a signal to Mexican government officials that the United States is serious about clamping down on political corruption that helps the cartels.

"The seeds of today's violent turmoil in Mexico were first sown over a decade ago by alleged criminals like Mario Villanueva Madrid," Bharara said.

richard.serrano@latimes.com
Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

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