Tuesday, September 12, 2023

DEA WIRETAPS SHOW MEXICAN MILITARY-DRUG CARTEL COLLUSION IN THE CASE OF 43 STUDENTS KIDNAPPED IN 2014

(The Mexican police, military officers and others secretly colluded with a cartel that kidnapped 43 students, a case unsolved after nearly a decade. Wiretaps show just how much the authorities helped the cartel behind the mass abduction, and what led to it.)

By Natalie Kitroeff and  Ronen Bergman
The New York Times

It is perhaps Mexico’s most notorious cold case – 43 college students shot at by the police, forced into patrol cars, handed over to a drug cartel and never seen again.

The mystery has haunted the nation for nearly a decade. How could a relatively unknown gang pull off one of the worst atrocities in Mexico’s recent history, with the help of the police and the military watching the mass abduction unfold in real time?

A vast trove of about 23,000 unpublished text messages, witness testimony and investigative files obtained by The New York Times point to an answer: Just about every arm of government in that part of southern Mexico had been secretly working for the criminal group for months, putting the machinery of the state in the cartel’s hands and flattening any obstacle that got in its way.

The police commanders whose officers snatched many of the students that night in 2014 had been taking direct orders from the drug traffickers, the text messages show. One of the commanders gave guns to cartel members, while another hunted down their rivals on command.

The military, which closely monitored the abduction but never came to the students’ aid, had been showered with cartel bribes, too. In the text messages, which were caught on wiretaps, traffickers and their collaborators griped about the soldiers’ endless greed, calling them “whores” whom they had “in the bag.”

One lieutenant even armed gunmen connected to the cartel and, a witness said, helped the police try to cover up their role in the crime after the students were kidnapped and killed.

It has long been known that police officers and an assortment of government officials either helped the cartel abduct the students, or watched the crime happen and did nothing to stop it.

But the text messages have been a breakthrough for investigators – offering the clearest picture yet of a possible motive for the collusion between the authorities and the killers.

Fewer than two dozen of the exchanges have ever been made public. What the thousands of others reveal is staggering: Far beyond buying individual favors, the cartel, known as Guerreros Unidos, had effectively turned public officials into full-blown employees.

The government’s subservience is what made the mass killing of 43 college students possible, investigators say. And the loyalty ran deep.

One of the emergency responders who rushed to the scene of the mass abduction that night had an unofficial second job – gathering intelligence for the cartel. For months, the wiretaps capture him sending minute-by-minute updates on law enforcement’s every move to a Guerreros Unidos leader he called “boss.”

A coroner also did the cartel’s bidding, sending photos of corpses and evidence at crime scenes, the messages show.

After killing some of the students, the traffickers incinerated the bodies in a crematory owned by the coroner’s family, investigators say. In unpublished testimony, one cartel member told the authorities that the ovens were routinely used “to make people disappear without a trace.”

he text messages may also help answer another open question in the case: Why did Guerreros Unidos execute a group of 43 students who were training to be teachers and had nothing to do with organized crime?

In the months and weeks before the abduction, the wiretaps show, the cartel had grown increasingly paranoid, beset by deadly infighting and scrambling to defend its territory as rivals pushed in.

So, when dozens of young men swept into the city of Iguala on passenger buses — not unlike the ones the cartel used to smuggle drugs into the United States — the traffickers mistook their convoy for an intrusion by enemies and gave the order to attack, prosecutors now say.

Nine years after the students vanished, no one has been convicted of the crime, turning the case into a symbol of a broken system that cannot solve even the most brazen acts of brutality. The previous government was accused of orchestrating a sweeping cover-up to hide the involvement of federal forces in the abduction, especially the all-powerful military.

Now the investigation is at a critical juncture. Under President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the authorities have ordered the arrest of 20 Mexican soldiers in connection with the kidnappings, including more than a dozen in June. The unpublished wiretaps have been crucial to building the case.

The cartel’s conversations were intercepted by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in 2014 while investigating the cartel for trafficking drugs into suburban Chicago. Mexico sought the text messages for years, but American officials handed over the 23,000 only last year, in part because of a lingering distrust of the Mexican government, an investigator said. The D.E.A. declined to comment.

The messages obtained by The Times do not cover the night of the disappearance, and key details of what happened to the students are still unknown.

What’s clear is that the horror started on Sept. 26, 2014, when dozens of students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College traveled to Iguala, in the state of Guerrero. They commandeered several buses to go to a march in Mexico City, a tradition the authorities had tolerated in the past.

This time, they never made it past the city limits.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

During the 1500’s there was an estimated 25 million indigenous inhabitants in Mexico (Indians) by the time Spains conquest was finished over a million was standing. That’s also the time Aztecs were doing human sacrifices. When Cortez landed that guy played a major role. Freaking brutal. You did an article about military invading the drug traffickers. Bobby w said black ops were planted already and waiting for orders. I say fuck it. There needs to be another conquest. Thin the fucking herd.

Anonymous said...

In 1571 the battle of Lepanto. The freaking carnage. History has its way of repeating itself. That’s just the 1500’s what helped Spain (cortez) some dumbass was infected with smallpox and spread killing the population.

Anonymous said...

Sounds more like the local elected officials here the only difference is that they can't kill citizens. If they could, they would. Las RATAS aqui do the same, rob, steal and get elected again and again. HOW???? familia? friends? raqueta? mochis? maybe the DEA knows or the FBI or the DA. money buys silence and here silence means rich and famous.

Y LINDA NADA NADA Y NADA...

PERDER IS TRADITION AQUI. CUANDO CUANDO CUANDO? EL CIELO SE CIERRA

ONE WOULD THINK LOS DE SAN JOSE A CHURCH SCHOOL WOULD HELP AND STOP THE CORRUPTION, NAAAAA THEY JOIN IN

Anonymous said...

What is new about the Mexican government and military been with the cartel? Look at Cameron County and especially Brownsville. All of the elected officials are under the take too. TSC, BISD, PUB, COB, BND, STISD, CC, are all living on the hog.

Anonymous said...


Smallpox also wiped out abouf 90% of the native population of Hawaii.

That was about 130 years ago.

And their Queen was removed.

Dole was appointed the leader of Hawaii.

Not sure exactly about the history.



Anonymous said...

September 12, 2023 at 7:42 AM

now conquests start with raising property taxes. Taxes is like declaring war on the population. Its easy, fast and clean. The rich and famous don't get their hands dirty.

I used to buy a piece of meat at HEB for seven bucks now its 17.99 same piece of carne. Taxes taxes and more taxes. verdad toni????

He needs another trial but here not corpus.

Anonymous said...

Democrat corruption at its best!

Anonymous said...



The mayor of Iguala Guerrero sent the police/soldiers to stop the students from demonstrating when his wife was speaking at a conference. The wife wanted to be respected and she contacted the husband and told him to do something to stop the students. The mayor talked to the police/soldiers and well in the State of Guerrero, the students are seen as troublemakers and they killed the 43 students.

Anonymous said...

Taxes, smashexs . Fuck it all the same. Can you imagine the testosterone levels on these guys in 1500’s. Shit now we Admiral Rachel L. Levine serves as the 17th Assistant Secretary for Health for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Just google that shit. Here are some funny things in history, cortez loved to play good cop bad cop and play both sides. So as he advanced through the jungle and win battles he would fuck with Chieftains to gain favoritism. This guy who was married, would get daughters of chieftain tribes as a gift, but would say no no, I can’t I’m a Christian but if we baptize them and he did. Haha then he did what he wanted. This fucker had a Herium of women by the time this shit ended. But but he was noble. So when he left he needed notoriety back in the society of the sophisticated.

Yah we are fucked. We have normie-norms who don’t pay attention to local politics. We had a good run. You up there complaining about meat prices. Our economy was humming along until Covid. Then the commies could help them selves. That’s another whole conversation. Now we have a president who shit himself in front of the pope. These pussys need testosterone supplements. Just saying!! Look at John Cowen , Pedro and current line up. You get what you deserve,

Anonymous said...

Folks this is not something new it has been going on for many years or decades, finally some one found out about it? Really

Anonymous said...

September 12, 2023 at 10:18 PM
all communicable diseases came from cocroach europe by los cucarachos blancos. ALL

Anonymous said...

Mexico Lindo y Querido. Hay voy. No, no es por eso que me fui.

rita