Tag Archives: Eduardo Sanchez

Zetas leader captured in precision operation

Mexico’s most brutal drug cartel leader built a business empire stretching from the Southwest United States to Central America, but Miguel Angel Trevino Morales’ final days of freedom were spent lying low in the hinterlands of Tamaulipas state, traveling only at night over back roads as Mexican marines closed in on his trail.

The last of the Zetas drug cartel’s old-guard leaders saw fate swoop in on him in the pre-dawn hours Monday when a military helicopter flew low over his pickup truck, then almost touching the ground, faced down the vehicle with its guns, Mexico Federal Security spokesman Eduardo Sanchez said.

The vehicle stopped, and three men emerged. Two hit the ground while the third tried to run. All were captured by marine ground forces who had been watching the movements of 40-year-old Trevino Morales, Sanchez told The Associated Press Tuesday. Not a single shot was fired.

Time was clearly running out for the cartel leader better known — and feared — by his nickname, “Z-40,” a play on police radio code for a commander. Mexico’s navy, which has brought down a number of top drug lords, “found out that he had been traveling in the early morning hours on dirt roads. They had been corralling him in little by little,” Sanchez said.

Trevino Morales had $2 million in cash and eight rifles with him when marines caught him outside the border city of Nuevo Laredo, long the Zetas’ base of operations. He was taken to Mexico City for questioning, but unlike the days of former President Felipe Calderon, there was no perp walk by a handcuffed suspect or piles of cash and guns put on display for the TV cameras.

Instead, the government released a single video of a rumpled-looking, un-handcuffed Trevino Morales walking through prosecutors’ headquarters, saying it wanted to avoid glamorizing drug traffickers or risk rights violations that could lead to a dismissal of charges. Authorities didn’t even refer to his nickname, Z-40.

The Zetas are Mexico’s most violent, if not richest, cartel, with the largest turf. A New York indictment against Trevino Morales estimates he received $10 million per month in income from cocaine sales alone, not to mention the money brought in by the cartel’s myriad other illicit activities, including kidnapping, extortion, migrant trafficking, weapons trafficking, even theft of oil from state pipelines.

His arrest was particularly pleasing for the United States. Trevino Morales allegedly orchestrated a series of killings …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

With Zetas arrest, Mexico deals blow to vicious cartel

With the daring nighttime capture of the Zetas drug cartel leader, the Mexican government has delivered a major blow to the country’s most vicious gang, known for beheadings and massacres of migrants.

Capturing Miguel Angel Trevino was the biggest anti-cartel victory for the administration of President Enrique Pena Nieto since he took office in December with his pledge to reduce a wave of drug-related murders that has left 70,000 people dead since 2006.

With this high-profile catch, Pena Nieto provides a rebuttal to fears that his new security strategy focused too much on crime prevention instead of putting kingpins in handcuffs.

But the arrest of Trevino, a drug kingpin who authorities say would “stew” his victims in burning oil, could set off an internal war of succession marked by more strife in the cartel’s northeastern territories, analyst say.

Sinaloa drug cartel kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, whose dominion covers the Pacific coast, could also see Trevino’s demise as the perfect opportunity to raid the regions dominated by the Zetas.

Interior ministry spokesman Eduardo Sanchez said authorities were on “alert” for any rise in violence following Trevino’s arrest.

“There are two scenarios,” Raul Benitez Manaut, security expert at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), told AFP. “The positive one is that the cartel is weakening, and the negative is that there could be a war between subordinates and much violence.”

Trevino, alias “Z-40,” was intercepted by marines before dawn on Monday after a helicopter swooped down in front of his pick-up truck as he traveled with two associates on a dirt road near Nuevo Laredo, a northeastern city in the state of Tamaulipas, which borders Texas.

The Mexican and US governments have not said whether the United States helped catch Trevino. His arrest came days after the head of the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) visited Mexico and amid a visit by the Mexican military chiefs in the United States.

Trevino’s arrest came eight months after Mexican troops killed his predecessor, Heriberto Lazcano, in a gunfight in the northern state of Coahuila, only for the capo’s body to be stolen by gunmen hours later in a funeral home.

Lazcano’s death was not followed by internal bloodshed for his job, but analysts say it remains to be seen if Trevino’s capture will lead to an orderly succession or a fight.

His brother Omar “Z-42” Trevino is considered a potential heir, but it is unclear how high up he ranks within the organization. The Zetas were formed by former elite soldiers and its leaders had been ex-troops until Trevino, a civilian, took over last year.

“Omar could step in and take power relatively quickly. Or someone within the Zetas could see this as an opportunity to step in and there could be infighting,” said Sylvia Longmire, a former US Air Force special agent and author of “Cartel: The Coming Invasion of Mexico’s Drug Wars.”

But she said Trevino’s arrest may not affect the cartel’s day-to-day operations because the Zetas work like a franchise, with each cell overseeing its own turf. At the same time, …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Capture of Zetas leader unlikely to quell violence

The capture of the notoriously brutal Zetas leader Miguel Angel Trevino Morales is a serious blow to Mexico’s most feared drug cartel but experts cautioned that taking down the group’s command structure is unlikely to diminish violence in the border states where it dominates through terror.

Trevino Morales, 40, was captured before dawn Monday by Mexican Marines who intercepted a pickup truck with $2 million in cash on a dirt road in the countryside outside the border city of Nuevo Laredo, which has long served as the Zetas’ base of operations. The truck was halted by a Marine helicopter and Trevino Morales was taken into custody along with a bodyguard and an accountant and eight guns, government spokesman Eduardo Sanchez told reporters.

It was the first major blow against an organized crime leader by a Mexican administration struggling to drive down persistently high levels of violence. Experts on the Zetas said that the arrest, at least the eighth capture or killing of a high-ranking Zeta since 2011, could leave behind a series of cells scattered across northern Mexico without a central command but with the same appetite for kidnapping, extortion and other crimes against innocent people.

“It’s another link in the destruction of the Zetas as a coherent, identifiable organization,” said Alejandro Hope, a former member of Mexico’s domestic intelligence service. “There will still be people who call themselves Zetas, bands of individuals who maintain the same modus operandi. There will be fights over illegal networks.”

The Zetas remain active in Nuevo Laredo, the nearby border state of Coahuila, the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz, parts of north central Mexico and Central America, although Trevino Morales’ arrest means the gang has become “a franchise operation not a vertical organization,” said George Grayson, an expert on the Zetas and professor of government at the College of William & Mary.

The Zetas leader and his alleged accomplices were flown to Mexico City, where they are expected to eventually be tried in a closed system that usually takes years to prosecute cases, particularly high-profile ones.

Trevino Morales, known as “Z-40,” is uniformly described as one of the two most powerful cartel heads in Mexico, the leader of a corps of special forces defectors who went to work for drug traffickers, splintered off into their own cartel in 2010 and metastasized across Mexico, expanding from drug dealing into extortion, kidnapping and human trafficking.

Along the way, the Zetas authored some of the worst …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Today in History for 3rd April 2013

Historical Events

1721 – Robert Walpole becomes England‘s 1st Lord of the Treasury
1962 – Lt General Marshall S Carter, USA, becomes deputy director of CIA
1966 – Luna 10 orbits Moon
1969 – Vietnam War: U.S. Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird announces that the United States will start to “Vietnamize” the war effort.
1983 – 12th Nabisco Dinah Shore Golf Championship won by Amy Alcott
1985 – Players’ Association agrees to expand LCS from 5 to 7 games

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1715 – William Watson, English physician and scientist (d. 1787)
1812 – Louisa Maria, Queen of the Belgians (1832-50/wife of Leopold I)
1874 – Eduardo Sanchez de Fuentes, composer
1903 – Peter Huchel, writer
1937 – William Gaunt, Leeds England, actor (Champions)
1942 – Billy Joe Royal, Valdosta Ga, country singer (Down in the Boondocks)

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1691 – Jean Petitot, Swiss enamel painter (b. 1608)
1882 – Jesse James, outlaw, shot dead at 34, in St Joseph Mo by Robert Ford
1950 – Kurt Julian Weill, German composer (Dreigroschenoper), dies at 50
1966 – Russel Crouse, US stagewriter (Life with Father), dies at 73
1987 – Tom Sestak, American football player (b. 1936)
1993 – Eduardo Cabellero Calderon, Colombian writer/diplomat, dies at 83

More Famous Deaths »

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Mexican suspects to get Miranda-style warnings

Reading suspects their rights is something most Mexicans have only seen in American movies.

But authorities say they are starting a program to require police to read suspects their rights or risk letting them go free.

The assistant secretary of the interior says all federal police will have to advise detainees of their right to remain silent and the right to a lawyer.

Eduardo Sanchez says the warning will also advise foreigners they have a right to consular assistance and Indians that they can have translators.

The Interior Department said Friday that suspects could appeal to win their release if they are not read their rights, but that would not necessarily void the charges against them.

The United States has required so-called “Miranda Rights” warnings since the 1960s.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News