Sunday, September 15, 2024

PART 2: SAN FERNANDO, THE MATRIX OF MASS MURDER IN TAMAULIPAS

By Claudio Lomnitz
New York Times Book Review
Part 2

As the fighting grew more intense, the bodies of Gulf and Zeta soldiers began to pile up. According to one of Marcela Turati’s informants, as many as two hundred were killed in one major battle. The mode and targets of violence were also changing. “They initially respected children and women,” another source told Turati, “but then they stopped. They started capturing each other’s wives.”

On March 31, 2010, the Zetas staged a final assault on San Fernando, attacking the Gulf-controlled police headquarters. The police fled, the Gulf cartel was ousted, and the entire municipality fell into their hands: the Zetas created a new municipal police force under their direct control, and the military checkpoints on Highway 180 never challenged them. 

Neither, for that matter, do they seem to have met with any resistance from San Fernando’s municipal president or any other official from the state capital .The victors celebrated by looting the boutique of a Gulf cartel boss. They kidnapped a woman who had been a lover of one of the Gulf members in front of her children and later decapitated her.

They looted a stationery store and raffled off its merchandise. They dragged a woman off by the hair for being a Gulf informer; she was never heard from again. They burned down a restaurant with its owner, her son, and an employee locked inside because they had refused to pay for protection during the war.

The entire municipality—almost 60,000 people—was subjected to military discipline. A curfew was set for 6:00 PM. All local businesses, no matter how small or large, had to pay tribute. The Zetas abducted people to serve as workers, including a woman whose street food they liked, along with her husband and child. Practically anyone thought to have any connections to the Gulf cartel was disappeared. A visiting reporter recalled that a body was rotting in the street outside a local cybercafe where he was working. No one was allowed to bury it. An owner of a funeral home told Turati that “there were decapitations and dismembered bodies strewn about. At first it was horrifying, but you get used to it, as if they were dead animals.”

Local girls became the new overlords’ girlfriends. They could report on you to the Zetas if they didn’t like you. Many of those girls, too, ended up dead. On a popular Facebook page, Frontera al Rojo Vivo, people informed on one another or asked the Zetas outright to get rid of their rivals. People whose names appeared there usually fled; when they did, their houses were sacked.

The Zetas forced eleven- and twelve-year-old boys to watch while they butchered people. If they withstood the experience, they were recruited. “Many boys wanted to have guns, to have girlfriends, to be like ‘them,’” a San Fernando parent told Turati. “Schoolchildren sometimes threatened to disappear their teachers if they flunked them.” Another resident remembered that “many families that had money” were ruined: “In one case that I know, the mother is now a servant; others have had to prostitute themselves.” The town was teeming with orphaned children. Even its complicit and indolent municipal president complained to state authorities about that.

To understand the Zetas’ local governance strategies, Turati also interviewed people who supported them. One resident of La Ribereña, a low-income neighborhood, told her: “They wouldn’t hurt us…. In fact, they pampered us. They paid for our Children’s Day and Mothers’ Day festivities, and brought Triple A Federation Wrestling matches to La Ribereña.” When the Zetas killed a truck driver from the SuKarne meat company, “they distributed meat in the whole town,” the same source said. “You had to take that meat, and if you didn’t, you fell from their graces.” 

They organized bingo nights at which local attendants won loot taken from victims’ homes. After a few months the city settled into a stable dictatorship. By then, a local official told Turati, around 30 percent of the town had left.

All of this happened with no intervention from the federal or state government. No prosecutor was investigating active case files, the military was never sent in to pacify the town, and on the whole the media was silent. Then in 2010 an Ecuadorian migrant managed to reach a military checkpoint near the border and reported a massacre in the El Huizache ranch in the city of San Fernando. Investigating authorities found seventy-two Central American migrants murdered there, and San Fernando became infamous.

It is still not clear whether this mass atrocity was carried out as part of the Zetas’ murderous competition with the Gulf cartel or to terrorize the US-based families of Central American migrants in the hope of increasing revenue from human trafficking. T

he one surviving witness said that the Zetas had forced their captives to fight and kill one another, gladiator-style. That claim was generally kept quiet and circulated principally as rumor, though the practice has since been documented in other cases, including as recently as last August, in Lagos de Moreno, where the Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel filmed such an event and posted the footage online.5

The torture and murder of so many foreign nationals created an international scandal. The case put the spotlight on the cartels’ turn toward extorting migrants passing through Mexico.6 It also contributed to diplomatic tension between Mexico and Central America over migrant protection. But the Zetas held their grip on San Fernando. To prove they could still intimidate law enforcement officials, they murdered the local prosecutor and chief of public security. A car bomb went off outside the local offices of Televisa at Ciudad Victoria, the state capital, because they had aired a story on the migrants, but a reporter who covered the assassination of the two local officials told Turati that Zeta operatives had, in that case, ordered the press to take photos of the corpses:

"The guy who called us was a policeman, and his instructions were clear: “All reporters should go and take pictures of the son of a whore prosecutor and Public Security Chief, because we’ve disemboweled them. And if there’s one reporter who doesn’t go, I want to know about it.”

Then came “San Fernando 2.” By the start of 2011 the war between the two cartels was creating shortages of soldiers, to which the warring parties would respond by increasing recruitment, importing gang members from abroad, or accepting soldiers from allied cartels. To curb the meteoric rise of the Zetas, both the Sinaloa and the Familia Michoacana cartels supported the Gulf cartel with soldiers. Heriberto Lazcano, the Zetas’ supreme leader, decided to take advantage of his organization’s choke hold on San Fernando to stop these reinforcements from reaching their allies in Reynosa and Matamoros. He ordered his men to round up all the working-class men passing through San Fernando on the northbound bus route and treat them as enemy combatants.

While the Zetas had carried out the previous massacre in a single day, this second mass killing was drawn out over a series of murders in February and March. The crimes followed a general pattern. Long-distance buses traveling toward the border from the south were systematically stopped in San Fernando, either by local police or directly by the Zetas. The young men riding on those buses were told to get off, loaded onto pickup trucks, taken to a ranch outside San Fernando called La Joya, and killed. Here, too, the executions were carried out with extreme cruelty. One Zeta commander known as El Kilo was a street-fighting aficionado. “He’d give each [captive] a sledgehammer,” a former Zeta told Turati, “and say: ‘"You want freedom? Whoever survives this fight will work for us.’” When Turati inspected photographs of the corpses taken to the morgue in Matamoros, 120 had had their heads bashed in.

Around 94 percent of all major crimes in Mexico go unreported, and those investigations that do take place tend to be perfunctory. Even so, at least some paperwork is inevitably shuffled between various
government offices. 

In the process, sometimes deliberately and sometimes due to incompetence or insufficient resources, murder victims who might conceivably have been identified and returned to their families often end up buried anonymously in potters’ graves without forensic identification—an alarmingly frequent practice known as administrative disappearance. 

Many Mexican states have just one or two state morgues, and most homicide victims are handled by private funeral homes, which are said to often have deals with the state attorney general’s office. Collusion between the cartels and state forensic services has enabled administrative disappearances, as have governmental efforts to diffuse public scandal.

Turati offers numerous examples of such cases. When a media scandal started unfolding outside the Matamoros morgue, for instance, the government simply stopped digging up more bodies in San Fernando. “During the time of the scandal,” Turati tells us, "forty-seven mass graves were opened [at La Joya] and 193 bodies were dug out. But subsequent news stories and the versions of people from San Fernando estimate that there were over five hundred bodies buried there.

She offers testimonies to this effect. “I don’t know why they didn’t reveal the real number [of the dead],” one witness of local interments said:

"I deduce that it was to diminish terror. It’s not the same when you say “this week they found fifteen bodies” than when you say “they found seventy-five bodies,” and then again to say next week that they found “another seventy-five.” Imagine. My sense is that they [didn’t publicize the findings] in order to calm things down but, yes, many more were killed."

Of the corpses that were disinterred, the majority were sent to a morgue in Mexico City. A great many were tagged as “Identity Unknown” and buried in common graves, leaving the victims’ families to search for them indefinitely. 

Many of the young men who were abducted from the buses had left luggage behind, but for four years, Turati writes, it was “abandoned in boxes and stacked in a warehouse.” When she was at last “allowed to inspect the photos of the objects that were in the suitcases” in 2022, she came across “clues that would have allowed for the identification of some of the unidentified bodies. In several cases I, and the Attorney General’s office before me, knew exactly who those individuals were.”

It was a testament both to the state’s criminal negligence and to a society’s indifference to the suffering of the victims’ families. Turati resolved to seek out as many of those families as she could, visiting some in their native states of Michoacán and Guanajuato and others in Central America. In some cases she was the first to confirm for a family that their relative had been killed in San Fernando years earlier, ending their long night of uncertainty and making it possible for them to mourn their loss.

After 2011 federal forces drastically increased their presence in San Fernando and built a new military barracks outside the city. The army successfully hunted down a few crucial Zeta bosses and reduced the cartel’s presence, even as the Gulf cartel worked stealthily to recover lost ground. These forces have managed to bring a modicum of peace but not to fully remove the cartels from local economic life. During the pandemic cartels monopolized the sale of beer and cigarettes; gasoline theft continues unabated.

There are rumors of occasional armed confrontations (encontronazos) between competing cartels—which now include organizations like the Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel and competing fragments of the Zetas—over control of villages along the Gulf Coast or access to the municipality’s gasoline pipelines.

 The army even failed to permanently stop criminal groups from kidnapping migrants from buses: in March 2019 gunmen forced forty migrants off two buses on the San Fernando highway that leads to Reynosa. Last December another thirty-one were kidnapped from another bus passing through the area (they were later released). There is, in short, a kind of new normal, more peaceful but with no lasting guarantee of calm.

The persistence of the old political class is a symptom of the shallowness of the current peace. Tomás Gloria Requena, San Fernando’s municipal president at the time of the atrocities, has spent the past decade hopping from one political party to another, climbing the bureaucratic ladder rung by rung. From the Industrial Revolutionary Party (PRI) he moved first to Mexico’s notoriously corrupt Green Party, then to the current governing party, Morena. He is now undersecretary of government for the state of Tamaulipas.

At one point Turati asks Gloria Requena whether he had been aware of the atrocities unfolding while he was in office. He responds that everyone knew about them, but as the municipal authority he was tasked with prosecuting the cases that were brought to him, and no cases had been put forward. Turati then points out that San Fernando’s municipal police force took an active part in kidnapping busloads of passengers every day for two months at a bus station just a few blocks away from the municipal building. 

Seventeen of his thirty-six policemen had been arrested after the discovery of the mass graves, Gloria Requena tells her, but they were later acquitted, and it was not his job, after all, to second-guess the judge’s work. Finally Turati asked Gloria Requena whether he didn’t feel guilty for not having done more to intervene as the butchery unfolded. “I informed my superiors at the proper time and through the proper channels,” he answers.

Meanwhile, back in San Fernando, many unidentified bodies were left to be buried locally, a task that fell to San Fernando’s eighty-four-year-old gravedigger, nicknamed Capullo (“Bud” or “Button”), who has gone out to the cemetery daily for decades in the company of his dog. (Two dogs were shot dead, he laconically remarks to Turati.) He explains how he arranged the bodies of the unidentified victims in neat rows, insisting that each grave be marked with a cross to provide each person with at least divine recognition. For the government, on the other hand, it is secrecy that is sacred:


"More than a hundred bodies were buried here in a common grave. I can’t tell you whether they were men, women or children. Their families were looking for them, but the bodies were brought to me in tied-up bags, and you can’t open those…. I have a lost son and I couldn’t even see who I was burying."

Capullo kept a register for each burial, but the Zetas compelled him to hand it over to them. With the logbook went the evidence of Capullo’s twenty years of service in the municipal graveyard. Despite their inefficacy, bureaucrats can be punctilious about other people’s records. Without that ledger, Capullo is no longer eligible to collect his pension. Now that the whole of San Fernando is a graveyard, its gravedigger has been condemned to remain on the job for life.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

Chale, this scary. It's like a Halloween horror story.

Anonymous said...

I balled a cleaning lady at a San Fernando hotel. She was chubby but could really take me. Deep throat, Baby.

Anonymous said...

Nobody I know cares about this at all. Those people can kill each other off all they want!!!

Anonymous said...

all of those en el posa would have already been us citizens, made gringos a favor... are the zetas in cahoots with los gringos, feria makes enemies buddy buddies!

Anonymous said...

Total lawlessness!! Drug cartels and criminality have taken over Mexico. And unfortunately its elected officials are in bed with these characters. It will never end and sadly, this will always be the way of life in Mexico. Ni modo Mas triste

Anonymous said...

The only story out there is: where can I get some Browntown pussy?

Anonymous said...

Texas Longhorns rise to #1 in college rankings, Dallas Cowboys suck the Big Dick in pro ball.

Anonymous said...

Another FAKE assassination attempt on the Orange Blob. That's two....

Anonymous said...

Very informative piece. Read them both. Mexicans are resilient and
resourceful. I am confident that they will take back their country one day. ✌️

Anonymous said...

Controladito el estado de Tejas. No vayan a Mexico por que hay Carteles!! hay Zetas!!! Ah pero que tal los gringos con sus miles y miles de millones de billetitos de $100.00 dolares para guerra a Israel, para Afghanistan, para Ukraine?? Disfrazado de ayuda?? El pinche gobierno de Estados Unidos quiere matar disfrazado. Aviones, Jets, Helicopteros, Misiles, Tanques, Soldados. Aid and Assistance?? Si si si claro, no somos pendejos. Asi o mas asesinos. Por lo menos hay un rio y un muro y frontera por que si no, Brownsville seria un desmadre, balas y tiroteos en cuadras y colonias entre CACA PD y gente de Tamaulipas.

Anonymous said...

Ask your mother. Last I heard when she was young and in her prime she loved the gang bang. Does this explain your shamelessness. Sinverguenza.

Anonymous said...

all of them were about to cross el rio and work here and pay taxes what a waste, but, but, if they did not work, you and I would have to pay more property taxes. future snap participants what a waste, or is it???

Anonymous said...

I just finished reading this article it took me a week and sum days to finish and I got an A in reading class. WOW! what's it about?

rita