Juárez Drug Cartel is now in the Philippines (Filipinas)
Founding location Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico
Years active
1970–present
Territory Mexico:
Chihuahua.
United States:
Texas,
Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico
Ethnicity Mexican
Criminal activities Drug
trafficking, people smuggling, money laundering, extortion, kidnapping,
racketeering,
murder, arms trafficking, bribery.
Allies La Linea (armed
wing)
Rivals Sinaloa Cartel
The Juárez Cartel (Spanish: Cártel de Juárez), also known as the Vicente
Carrillo Fuentes Organization, is a Mexican drug cartel based in Ciudad Juárez,
Chihuahua, Mexico, across the border from El Paso, Texas.
The cartel is one of several ruthless drug trafficking organization that has
been known to decapitate their rivals,mutilate their corpses and dump them in
public places to instill fear not only to the general public, but to locallaw
enforcement and their rivals, the Sinaloa Cartel. The Juárez Cartel has an armed
wing known as La Línea, a Juarez street gang that usually performs the
executions.
The Juárez Cartel was the dominant player in the center of the country,
controlling a large percentage of the cocaine traffic from Mexico into the
United States. The death of Amado Carrillo Fuentes in 1997, however, was the
beginning of the decline of the Juárez cartel, as Carrillo relied on ties to
Mexico’s top-ranking drug interdiction officer, division general Jesús Gutiérrez
Rebollo.
In September 2011, the Mexican Federal Police informed that the cartel is now
known as “Nuevo Cartel de Juárez” (New Juárez Cartel). It is alleged that the
‘New Juárez Cartel’ is responsible of recent executions in Ciudad Juárez and
Chihuahua.
History
The cartel was founded in the 1970s by Rafael Aguilar Guajardo and
handed down to Amado Carrillo Fuentes in 1993 under the tutelage of his uncle.
Amado brought his brothers in and later his son into the business. After Amado
died in 1997 following complications from plastic surgery, a brief turf war
erupted over the control of the cartel, where Amado’s brother —Vicente Carrillo
Fuentes— emerged as leader after defeating the Muñoz Talavera brothers.
Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, who remains in control of the cartel, then formed a
partnership with Juan José Esparragoza Moreno, his brother Rodolfo Carrillo
Fuentes, his nephew Vicente Carrillo Leyva,Ricardo Garcia Urquiza, and formed an
alliance with other drug lords such as Ismael “Mayo” Zambada in Sinaloa and Baja
California, the Beltrán Leyva brothers in Monterrey, and Joaquín “El Chapo”
Guzmán in Nayarit, Sinaloa and Tamaulipas.
When Vicente took control of the cartel, the organization was in flux. The
death of Amado created a large power vacuum in the Mexican underworld. The
Carrillo Fuentes brothers became the most powerful organization during the 1990s
while Vicente was able to avoid direct conflict and increase the strength of the
Juárez Cartel. The relationship between the Carrillo Fuentes clan and the other
members of the organization grew unstable towards the end of the 1990s and into
the 2000s. During the 1990s and early 2000s, drug lords from contiguous Mexican
states forged an alliance that became known as ‘The Golden Triangle Alliance’ or
‘La Alianza Triángulo de Oro’ because of its three-state area of influence:
Chihuahua, south of the U.S. state of Texas, Durango and Sinaloa. However, this
alliance was broken[when?] after the Sinaloa Cartel drug lord, Joaquín Guzmán
Loera (aka: Shorty), refused to pay to the Juarez Cartel for the right to use
some smuggling routes into the U.S.
In 2001 after Joaquín Guzmán Loera ‘El Chapo’ escaped from prison, many
Juárez Cartel members defected to Guzmán Loera’s Sinaloa Cartel. In 2004,
Vicente’s brother was killed allegedly by order of Guzmán Loera. Carrillo
Fuentes retaliated by assassinating Guzmán’s brother in prison. This ignited a
turf war between the two cartels, which was more or less put on hold from
2005-2006 because of the Sinaloa Cartel’s war against the Gulf Cartel.
After the organization collapsed, some elements of it were absorbed into the
Sinaloa Cartel, an aggressive organization that has gobbled up much of the
Juárez Cartel’s former territory. The Juárez Cartel has been able to either
corrupt or intimidate high ranking officials in order to obtain information on
law enforcement operatives and acquire protection from the police and judicial
systems.
The Juárez cartel has been found to operate in 21 Mexican states and its
principal bases are Culiacán, Monterrey, Ciudad Juárez, Ojinaga, Mexico City,
Guadalajara, Cuernavaca and Cancún. Vicente Carrillo Fuentes remains the leader
of the cartel. Members of the cartel were implicated in the serial murder site
in Ciudad Juárez that wasdiscovered in 2004 and has been dubbed the House of
Death.[15] The Juárez Cartel was featured battling the rival Tijuana Cartel in
the 2000 motion picture Traffic. The Australian ABC documentary La Frontera
(2010) described social impact of the cartel in the region.
Since 2007, the Juárez Cartel has been locked in a vicious battle with its
former partner, the Sinaloa Cartel, for control of Juárez. The fighting between
them has left thousands dead in Chihuahua state. The Juárez Cartel relies on two
enforcement gangs to exercise control over both sides of the border: La Linea, a
group of corrupt (current and former) Chihuahua police officers, is prevalent on
the Mexican side, while the Barrio Azteca street gang operates in Mexico and in
Texan cities such as El Paso, Dallas and Austin, as well as in New Mexico and
Arizona. On July 15, 2010, the Juarez Cartel escalated violence to a new level
by using a car bomb to target federal police officers.
In September 2011 banners were displayed, publicing the return of the extinct
cartel. They were signed by Cesar “El Gato” Carrillo Leyva, who appears to be
the son or a close relative of the late drug lord Amado Carrillo Fuentes.
Prior to 2012, the Juárez Cartel controlled one of the primary transportation
routes for billions of dollars worth of illegal drug shipments annually entering
the United States from Mexico. Since then, however, control of these areas has
shifted to the Sinaloa Cartel.
Current alliances
Since March 2010, the major cartels have aligned in two factions, one
integrated by the Juárez Cartel, Tijuana Cartel, Los Zetas and the Beltrán-Leyva
Cartel; the other faction integrated by the Gulf Cartel, Sinaloa Cartel and La
Familia Cartel.
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