Monday, January 2, 2012

Texas gangs have evolving relationship with cartels

Authorities have only in recent years found closer ties in S. Texas.


 
  • Jorge Gomez (left) was identified in a 2009 trial as a Zetas operative; police believe that he is dead. Juan Manuel Marquez Rodriguez was sentenced to prison in connection with two murders tied to the cartel. / SA
    Jorge Gomez (left) was identified in a 2009 trial as a Zetas operative; police believe that he is dead. Juan Manuel Marquez Rodriguez was sentenced to prison in connection with two murders tied to the cartel.
    / SA

When the Gulf Cartel was looking for tons of marijuana that went missing north of the border in October, it turned to the experts.

The cartel needed people who knew their way around Hidalgo County, where the pot was stolen, and were familiar with local drug dealers. So they contracted members of Partido Revolucionario Mexicano, a U.S. prison gang based in the Rio Grande Valley that was started by Mexican citizens incarcerated in Texas.

The gang members made purchases from people they thought had the cartel's weed, then kidnapped them and ordered the dealers to reveal where the main stash was.

But on the way to the stash house, something went awry. Sheriff's deputies stopped the gang members and a shootout ensued. One deputy was injured and a gang member was killed. It was a rare instance of spillover violence in the area, Sheriff Lupe Treviño said.

 

The confrontation was the result of what state police say is an evolving relationship between Mexican drug traffickers and the prison gangs that long have had a hand in U.S. street-level drug distribution.

In the recently published Texas Gang Threat Assessment 2011, analysts for the Texas Department of Public Safety report that some of the state's most powerful gangs have formed strong ties with Mexican cartels.

Those gangs include the San Antonio-based Mexican Mafia as well as the Texas Syndicate and Tango Blast, sometimes called Orejones in San Antonio, both of which have a presence here.

“From the perspective of the gangs and cartels, the benefits of these relationships are fairly obvious,” the analysts wrote. “From a public safety perspective, the danger of these relationships is equally obvious. The gangs increase their power and acquire wholesale quantities of drugs at reasonable prices, while the cartels extend their network of connections deeper into the United States.”

The relationship between prison gangs and the cartels is fairly new in South Texas, DPS Director Steven McCraw said.

In West Texas, the El Paso-based Barrio Azteca prison gang has for decades been associated with the Juárez Cartel and even has set up operations in Mexico. Members act as traffickers and enforcers.

In South Texas, Mexican cartels and Texas prison gangs long have done business together. But law enforcement first became aware of close ties between the groups about five years ago, McCraw said.

“The gangs are connected with the cartels really as a part of the transnational criminal enterprise,” he said.

“That's the simple way to put it: It's business. Texas-based gangs provide the cartels two things: revenue and resources.”

As business relationships between the organizations have grown, the cartels have relied more and more on the Texas gangs for muscle to help them smuggle drugs and people north and guns south, McCraw said. The number of prison gangs that work with the cartels has grown too, he said.

In 2007, members of the Texas Syndicate in Laredo were contracted to carry out violent acts for the Zetas Cartel. An attempted kidnapping gone wrong and a contract killing resulted in murder charges against almost a dozen Syndicate members and associates. Among the evidence presented at trial was a picture of a Zeta operative posing with Syndicatos.

This fall, Laredo police arrested a group of people they say worked for the Zetas, identifying targets and hiring a member of the Hermandad Pistoleros Latinos prison gang to carry out killings. Police say the Zetas used the prison gang three times in 2010 to take out rivals.

In both cases, the collaboration was based on the personal relationships between cartel and gang members, police said.

High-ranking Zetas didn't meet with the prison gang bosses. Rather, Zetas who knew the prison gang members personally — sometimes since they were children — organized the hits at a fairly low level, said investigator Joe Baeza, a Laredo police spokesman.

A single park ranger making a traffic stop is one of the most intense situations rangers face while working at Mount Rainier National Park.“You never know who you are going to deal with,” said John Wilcox, a former ranger who worked at the park for 28 years, including as a law enforcement ranger.“You’re all alone, miles from any kind of backup. It would take a long time for any backup to reach you. Your only connection is that person in the communication center.”Wilcox, who retired in 2000, talked about the situations faced by the park’s small cadre of law enforcement rangers after Sunday’s shooting death of law enforcement ranger Margaret Anderson. “It just shocks,” he said of the killing. “I’m just having trouble understanding this.”

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2012/01/01/1966291/law-enforcement-rangers-serve.html#storylink=cpy

A single park ranger making a traffic stop is one of the most intense situations rangers face while working at Mount Rainier National Park.“You never know who you are going to deal with,” said John Wilcox, a former ranger who worked at the park for 28 years, including as a law enforcement ranger.“You’re all alone, miles from any kind of backup. It would take a long time for any backup to reach you. Your only connection is that person in the communication center.”Wilcox, who retired in 2000, talked about the situations faced by the park’s small cadre of law enforcement rangers after Sunday’s shooting death of law enforcement ranger Margaret Anderson. “It just shocks,” he said of the killing. “I’m just having trouble understanding this.”

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2012/01/01/1966291/law-enforcement-rangers-serve.html#storylink=cpy
A single park ranger making a traffic stop is one of the most intense situations rangers face while working at Mount Rainier National Park.“You never know who you are going to deal with,” said John Wilcox, a former ranger who worked at the park for 28 years, including as a law enforcement ranger.“You’re all alone, miles from any kind of backup. It would take a long time for any backup to reach you. Your only connection is that person in the communication center.”Wilcox, who retired in 2000, talked about the situations faced by the park’s small cadre of law enforcement rangers after Sunday’s shooting death of law enforcement ranger Margaret Anderson. “It just shocks,” he said of the killing. “I’m just having trouble understanding this.”

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2012/01/01/1966291/law-enforcement-rangers-serve.html#storylink=cpy
 My San Antonio
A single park ranger making a traffic stop is one of the most intense situations rangers face while working at Mount Rainier National Park.“You never know who you are going to deal with,” said John Wilcox, a former ranger who worked at the park for 28 years, including as a law enforcement ranger.“You’re all alone, miles from any kind of backup. It would take a long time for any backup to reach you. Your only connection is that person in the communication center.”Wilcox, who retired in 2000, talked about the situations faced by the park’s small cadre of law enforcement rangers after Sunday’s shooting death of law enforcement ranger Margaret Anderson. “It just shocks,” he said of the killing. “I’m just having trouble understanding this.”

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2012/01/01/1966291/law-enforcement-rangers-serve.html#storylink=cpy