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Mexico captures most wanted drug kingpin, 'La Tuta'

neversickanymore

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Mexico captures most wanted drug kingpin, 'La Tuta'
BY ANAHI RAMA AND LIZBETH DIAZ
MEXICO CITY Fri Feb 27, 2015

28_latuta_w.jpg

(Reuters) - Mexico has captured the most wanted drug lord in the country, Servando "La Tuta" Gomez, police said on Friday, delivering a boost to a government battered by gang violence.

The 49-year-old former teacher was the prime target of President Enrique Pena Nieto's effort to regain control of Michoacan, a western state wracked by clashes between Gomez's Knights Templar cartel and armed vigilantes trying to oust them.

The early morning arrest comes as Pena Nieto seeks to quell public outrage in Mexico after the late September abduction and apparent massacre of 43 trainee teachers by corrupt police in league with gang members.

That incident triggered Pena Nieto's deepest crisis. Attorney General Jesus Murillo, under fire for months over his handling of that investigation, will step down, a senior government official said on Friday.

An announcement about the change would probably come later on Friday, said another official, from Murillo's office.

After months of intelligence work, federal police captured Gomez and some people with him at a house in the Michoacan state capital of Morelia, police said. No shots were fired.

"He will be brought to Mexico City in the coming hours to make a declaration," a police spokesman said.

Last week, police seized many properties in the area and arrested a handful of people connected to Gomez. Local media reported that those busts had led to his arrest.

A father of at least seven, Gomez is wanted by the United States for trafficking methamphetamine and cocaine. The Justice Department said he was also involved in the 2009 murder of 12 Mexican federal police officers.

Mexican authorities had placed a bounty of 30 million pesos ($2 million) on his head.

Antonio Mazzitelli, Mexico's representative to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, said that although Gomez became less powerful after the capture of many of his lieutenants, the arrest was still welcome news.

"He was a fugitive, living in the jungle," Mazzitelli said. "But it's an important step in terms of (Pena Nieto's) credibility."

Since the Mexican government began a military crackdown in 2007 on drug cartels, more than 100,000 people have been killed in gang-related violence.

IN THE PUBLIC EYE

During the bloodshed, no kingpin sought the limelight as often as Gomez.

Whether railing against political corruption on YouTube or talking to the media from hideouts, Gomez relentlessly baited the government, accusing it of colluding with rival gangs while defending his Knights Templar as a "necessary evil."

"Our only function is to help the people, preserve our state and preserve our country from people causing terror," Gomez said in a video posted online in 2012 as he sat in front of images of Ernesto "Che" Guevara and other revolutionary icons.

Gomez said the cartel followed a strict ethical code. As time passed, though, he became more open about the criminal side of a gang that in 2013 held much of the impoverished, mountainous terrain of Michoacan in a firm grip.

During their ascendancy, the government says, the Knights Templar extorted a broad sweep of businesses, controlled politicians and diversified from drug trafficking into myriad other operations, including the export of iron ore.

Gomez became the front man of the Knights Templar after a split within drug cartel La Familia Michoacana, a pseudo-religious gang in which he was also a leading figure.

continued here http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/02/27/us-mexico-drugs-idUSKBN0LV1B620150227
 
Before someone jumps in and says "it doesn't matter drugs will still come to America" yes, that's true, but these guys kill a LOT of people. it's a good thing for them to go down.
 
I can't help but think that there are still more than enough folks to continue killing (and torturing, kidnapping, etc. etc.) in pretty much exactly the same ways though.
 
I can't help but think that there are still more than enough folks to continue killing (and torturing, kidnapping, etc. etc.) in pretty much exactly the same ways though.

Does that mean they shouldn't have gone after this guy tho?
That's like saying "we shouldn't track down a serial killer because there's just gonna be more of them anyway"
 
yeah, although an avid drug enthusiast, even I would prefer if the cartels went down.

im all about that china white anyways lol
 
Does that mean they shouldn't have gone after this guy tho?
That's like saying "we shouldn't track down a serial killer because there's just gonna be more of them anyway"

I think what toothpastedog is trying to say is that its a revolving door, that will possibly never end, if not be the cause of the end of humanity.
 
I think what toothpastedog is trying to say is that its a revolving door, that will possibly never end, if not be the cause of the end of humanity.

Yeah but try telling that line of logic to the families of the 12 officers his cartel murdered...

This guy was really dangerous, read about all of the shit his cartel did...
Just because more will take his place doesn't mean he shouldn't go down for his actions.
 
Killing or imprisoning top criminal leaders actually creates a spike in levels of violence. This is because it creates a power vacuum, and now multiple sub groups battle to see who gets to step in and fill that vacuum. When one group consolidates their power and rules over an area uncontested, you actually have the lowest levels of violence and relative peace. See the declining murder rate in Juarez after Sinaloa finally pushed back los Zetas for example. So arresting this guy will probably actually make things worse for the time being.
 
The government decides when and who to arrest, the whole country is propped up by rivaling cartels and they own everyone from the top down (or bottom up depending on perspective)

The war on drugs in Mexico is a fucking joke, the cartels own the government and switch for top spot every few years to keep things interesting with tacit support from US intelligence.
 
Before someone jumps in and says "it doesn't matter drugs will still come to America" yes, that's true, but these guys kill a LOT of people. it's a good thing for them to go down.
nothing will stop the violence, certainly not a power vacuum.
 
legalizing it would. TRUE
even if you legalize it, there will still be an underground market that will host the violent nutjobs employed by cartels.

legalization will severely curtail the violence, the the point where innocent collateral damage would be practically unheard of.
 
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legalizing it would probably lessen the amount, but not stop it at all. People get killed over anything with value, add an addiction factor to that item, and violence will surely occur. I support legalization, but criminals will always commit crime, whether over drugs, or something else.

d-nihl said:
im all about that china white anyways lol
18,000 Chinese died in the first opium war. Granted the circumstances were slightly different, but the analogy holds its ground. I still agree with you though, these people have got to go, simply for the sake of the Mexican nation/population that has to suffer because of it.
 
"These people" run the entire country and economy, sad as it is without the narcos holding the balance Mexico would deteriorate into civil war within weeks if not days. How is it that Carlos Slim became the richest man in the world while nobody was watching...oh yeah telecoms...lots and lots of telecoms
 
even if you legalize it, there will still be an underground market that will host the violent nutjobs employed by cartels.

legalization will severely curtail the violence, the the point where innocent collateral damage would be practically unheard of.

The only time is see illegal underground booz is on some shit channel on TV.. such a real problem?
 
The only time is see illegal underground booz is on some shit channel on TV.. such a real problem?

there are people in the hills runnin' illegal distilleries in shacks in certain parts of the USA (dirty south)

in Canada shine exists, and is sold cheaper than the taxed booze

in areas where alcohol is heavily taxed or it is rather expensive, there is always a junky or a crackhead who makes a sidehustle selling stolen booze

When the economics support underground markets, they typically will exist.

it is real, i know for a fact.
 
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