2011年8月3日水曜日

メキシコ麻薬カーテルのモンテロさんこと"El Koreano" さん逮捕!

有名メキシコしゃぶしゃぶ屋のMoisés Montero Alvarez(通名:El Koreano、The Korean)さんですか・・・(爆w


Knights Templarのサルガドさんも逮捕されちゃってたと・・・

















福岡産男児の麻生さん・・・(爆w

、、、(w

おまけ





以下メモ(英語です)



AUGUST 3, 2011
Mexican Police Catch Alleged Cartel Boss
Suspect's Arrest Sparks Rivals' Battle for Turf in Acapulco

Before reporters in Mexico City, Federal Police presented Moisés Montero Alvarez, nicknamed "El Koreano" or "The Korean," who they said had led Acapulco's so-called Independent Cartel.

Police linked Mr. Montero to the slaughter of a busload of Mexican visitors whose bodies were found in a mass grave last year, and to an attack on a popular market in the center of Acapulco.

It was the third big arrest in recent days. Authorities announced on Monday the capture of Nery Salgado, a leader of the Knights Templar cartel who headed up methamphetamine trafficking.

Last week they captured José Antonio Acosta Hernández, who was believed to have led La Línea, the main gang associated with the vicious Juárez Cartel.

Mr. Acosta is accused of some 1,500 killings in Juárez, including the killing in March 2010 of three people associated with the U.S. Consulate and a massacre of 15 young people that year. He also is believed to be behind a graffiti campaign threatening the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

While Mexico has made big gains this year in capturing top drug lords and their regional lieutenants, the arrests have been followed by explosions of violence in areas that were once stable, as potential successors elbow each other to seize control within the new power vacuum.

This was apparent this week in Acapulco. As rumors of Mr. Montero's capture spread through the city late Monday and early Tuesday, a rival gang entered the resort side of town and began a killing binge to try to wipe out their weakened rival, police said.

On Tuesday morning, officials said they found a dead man wrapped in a plastic bag which also contained his head, and found another young man dead with gunshot wounds. Both bodies were found with messages from drug runners.

On Monday, the bodies of three people were found—chopped up into pieces in three bags—on one of the city's main overpasses.

Elsewhere in town, two men were killed after hitmen boarded a public bus, and two women were found dead in the morning, thrown beside a road. Police said at least nine people were killed that day.

The fighting has taken a toll on the resort town, which was once a popular getaway for Americans and is still popular among Mexicans from the capital. Attacks, which rarely occurred near tourist areas, now take place within sight of the beach.

Mr. Montero's cartel, whose acronym, CIDA, is a play on the Spanish acronym for AIDS, leapt onto the scene this year with some of Mexico's most violent acts. Its hitmen are known for flaying the faces off their victims and putting them on the seats of cars which are left at various points throughout the city.

The cartel's emergence also underlined the rapid decentralization of control in Mexico's illegal drug trade. Acapulco was once part of a vast fief known as the Beltrán-Leyva Cartel, whose control extended nearly from the Mexican capital to the coast.

But security forces killed the group's leader, Arturo Beltrán-Leyva, in a firefight in December 2009. His successor, American born kingpin Edgar Valdez Villarreal, was arrested in August last year after a fight for control with Mr. Beltran-Leyva's brother Hector.

Residents and local journalists say Mr. Villarreal tried to appoint a successor, but those in Acapulco broke off into the group CIDA. Within weeks, that group, too, had split, and the two sides began a bloody conflict which has been blamed for more than 500 homicides in Acapulco this year.

Most taxi companies must pay weekly extortion money to the CIDA and can't take clients into territory controlled by its rival or risk being shot, cab drivers say

Many local shops have closed their doors, unable to pay similar extortion demands, or fearing that their owners may be kidnapped for ransom.

9 件のコメント:

匿名 さんのコメント...

エイベックス 麻生太郎 二十一世紀倶楽部 後藤組

匿名 さんのコメント...

キムチストコリアン→麻薬@中南米→パパ&クイーンだから
フランシスコさんはキツいよなw

匿名 さんのコメント...

血は争えないってこういう時に言うんですね(爆w

tedbroiler さんのコメント...

何という、ユナイテッドですね。

匿名 さんのコメント...

本家本元のコリアーノさんが摘発されるなんてないだろうな。
お巡りさんの仰るには、日本に入ってくる覚醒剤の約七割はサウス・コリアーノ製。
当然の事だが、他の密売ルートは中々シェアを奪えないでいる。
確かこれは19世紀末に日本人が開発したモルヒネの一種で、原料のお花畑がなくても科学的に幾らでも作れる。

トンデモな怨返しw

匿名 さんのコメント...

お隣には、地下経済収益がGDP比14%超ってモーレツなKoreanoさんがいるらしいけど。
かなり前のデータなので今年辺りは10兆円超えも夢じゃない。
国策でやってんだからタイーホもクソもないだろうが。w

匿名 さんのコメント...

そもそもお隣の上下テロ犯罪国家は
日本の裏金で生かされてるようなものですからw

匿名 さんのコメント...

メキシコで韓国大企業職員、暴漢の銃乱射で死亡

韓国大企業職員がメキシコ首都ど真ん中で暴漢らから無差別銃乱射を受けて命を失った。

5日、現地関係者たちによれば4日午後6時40分~8時頃、(中略)韓国大企業のD社に
勤めるA(35)氏が暴漢が撃った銃弾13発中6発を頭と全身に浴びて現場で亡くなった。

A氏はこの日会社から車両を走らせて退勤して薬局に立ち寄った後、家から複数ブロック
離れたところで被害に遭った。(中略)

銃撃が無差別的に行われたことから見て単純強盗よりも怨恨関係にともなう標的殺害の
可能性に重きを置いて調査が行われていると分かった。

だが、D社の現地法人長は「A氏は7年目勤めてきた誠実な職員だった」として怨恨関係に
よる被害の可能性を否認した。(以下略)

2011-08-06 03:00(メキシコシティ=聯合ニュース)

匿名 さんのコメント...

mexico us border underground tunnel elevator