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CONFIRMED: The DEA Struck A Deal With Mexico's Most Notorious Drug Cartel

trichrider

Kiss My Ring
Veteran
CONFIRMED: The DEA Struck A Deal With Mexico's Most Notorious Drug Cartel

Michael KelleyJan 14 2014, 1:33 PM12007
Suspected Mexican drug trafficker Vicente Zambada Niebla is presented to the media in Mexico City March 19, 2009.
An investigation by El Universal has found that between 2000 and 2012, the U.S. government had an agreement with Mexico’s Sinaloa drug cartel that allowed the organisation to smuggle billions of dollars of drugs in exchange for information on rival cartels.
Sinaloa, led by Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, supplies 80% of the drugs entering the Chicago area and has a presence in cities across the U.S.
There have long been allegations that Guzman, considered the “world’s most powerful drug trafficker,” coordinates with American authorities.
But the El Universal investigation is the first to publish court documents that include corroborating testimony from a DEA agent and a Justice Department official.
The written statements were made to the U.S. District Court in Chicago in relation to the arrest of Jesus Vicente Zambada-Niebla, the son of Sinaloa leader Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada and allegedly the Sinaloa cartel’s “logistics coordinator.”
Here’s what DEA agent Manuel Castanon told the Chicago court:
“On March 17, 2009, I met for approximately 30 minutes in a hotel room in Mexico City with Vincente Zambada-Niebla and two other individuals — DEA agent David Herrod and a cooperating source [Sinaloa lawyer Loya Castro] with whom I had worked since 2005. … I did all of the talking on behalf of DEA.”
A few hours later, Mexican Marines arrested Zambada-Niebla on charges of trafficking more than a billion dollars in cocaine and heroin. Castanon and three other agents then visited Zambada-Niebla in prison, where the Sinaloa officer “reiterated his desire to cooperate.”
El Universal, citing court documents, reports that DEA agents met with high level Sinaloa officials more than 50 times since 2000.
Then-Justice Department prosecutor Patrick Hearn told the Chicago court that, according to DEA special agent Steve Fraga, Castro “provided information leading to a 23 ton cocaine seizure, other seizures related to” various drug trafficking organisations, and that “El Mayo” Zambada wanted his son to cooperate with the U.S.
A screenshot from the documents published by El Universal.
“The DEA agents met with members of the cartel, in Mexico, to obtain information about their rivals and simultaneously built a network of informants who sign drug cooperation agreements, subject to results, to enable them to obtain future benefits, including cancellation of charges in the U.S.,” reports El Universal, which also interviewed more than one hundred active and retired police officers as well as prisoners and experts.
Zambada-Niebla’s lawyer says that in the late 1990s, Castro struck a deal with U.S. agents in which Sinaloa would provide information about rival drug trafficking organisations while the U.S. would dismiss its case against the Sinaloa lawyer and refrain from interfering with Sinaloa drug trafficking activities or actively prosecute Sinaloa leadership.
“The agents stated that this arrangement had been approved by high-ranking officials and federal prosecutors,” the lawyer wrote.
After being extradited to Chicago in February 2010, Zambada-Niebla argued that he was also “immune from arrest or prosecution” because he actively provided information to U.S. federal agents.
Zambada-Niebla also alleged that Operation Fast and Furious was part of an agreement to finance and arm the cartel in exchange for information used to take down its rivals. (If true, that re-raises the issue regarding what Attorney General Eric Holder’s knew about the gun-running arrangements.)
A Mexican foreign service officer told Stratfor in April 2010 that the U.S. seemed to have sided with the Sinaloa cartel in an attempt to limit the violence in Mexico.
El Universal said that the coordination between the U.S. and Sinaloa peaked between 2006 and 2012, which is when drug cartels consolidated their grip on Mexico. The report ends by saying that it is unclear whether the arrangements continue.
The DEA declined to comment to El Universal.

http://www.businessinsider.com.au/the-us-government-and-the-sinaloa-cartel-2014-1
 

TheCleanGame

Active member
Veteran
Doesn't surprise me one bit and actually clears up a few areas of confusion.

Thanks for posting.

Not going well for gub'mint alphabet agencies these days...

Keep it Clean! :D
 

HidingInTheHaze

Active member
Veteran
Not surprising, sometimes I think the US might be the biggest cartel of them all. They've spent 12 years in Afghanistan "attempting" to eradicate opium poppy farming, but I just heard on the nightly lies yesterday that opium production is at an all time high and up 50% since last year.

Where do you think all of that opium ends up? :thinking:

American pharmaceuticals my guess.

Meanwhile; it's like a zombie apocalypse with all of these cracked out pill heads running around these days.
 

Hank Hemp

Active member
Veteran
The Taliban was the only govt. over there that stopped opium growing. They would cutoff the hands of the farmer. DEA has always been corrupt.
 
Not surprising, sometimes I think the US might be the biggest cartel of them all. They've spent 12 years in Afghanistan "attempting" to eradicate opium poppy farming, but I just heard on the nightly lies yesterday that opium production is at an all time high and up 50% since last year.

Where do you think all of that opium ends up? :thinking:

American pharmaceuticals my guess.

Meanwhile; it's like a zombie apocalypse with all of these cracked out pill heads running around these days.

hiding that has been my theory since i stopped being a firefighter and went to the industry in Denver you are the only person who ive heard say that as well
 

HidingInTheHaze

Active member
Veteran
hiding that has been my theory since i stopped being a firefighter and went to the industry in Denver you are the only person who ive heard say that as well


Yeah, I don't think the endless war in Afghanistan has as much to do with the bad guys as it does the resources. Afghanistan is the number one producer of opium and also and it also holds huge deposits of minerals.
 
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Sam_Skunkman

"RESIN BREEDER"
Moderator
Veteran
I agree that all the US agencies are corrupt, I do not think all the opium ends up in American pharmaceuticals, please name one US company that gets or uses Afghan opiates? Come on, it ends up in the hands of traffickers world wide. That is how the Taliban helps support themselves.
-SamS


Not surprising, sometimes I think the US might be the biggest cartel of them all. They've spent 12 years in Afghanistan "attempting" to eradicate opium poppy farming, but I just heard on the nightly lies yesterday that opium production is at an all time high and up 50% since last year.

Where do you think all of that opium ends up? :thinking:

American pharmaceuticals my guess.

Meanwhile; it's like a zombie apocalypse with all of these cracked out pill heads running around these days.
 

Bmac1

Well-known member
Veteran
Without the cartels there would be no DEA so its no surprise to hear they are in bed together.
 

mack 10

Resin Herder
Veteran
^^anyone know how it does work? say you had a medical Co and wanted to make an Opium based/derived pain killer, who would you go to? or would you need some medical licence or ? the Opium base has to come from somewhere.
Infact I saw a news programme (on Russian news) showing fields full of poppies,
growing in the UK, due to a world shortage, they said.
 

HidingInTheHaze

Active member
Veteran
I agree that all the US agencies are corrupt, I do not think all the opium ends up in American pharmaceuticals, please name one US company that gets or uses Afghan opiates? Come on, it ends up in the hands of traffickers world wide. That is how the Taliban helps support themselves.
-SamS

How am I supposed to know where it comes from?

It comes from somewhere and Afghanistan produces a lot, it if not most of the world supply. Record volumes this year.
 

Preacher

Member
Old facts, new information about the Sinaloas. As usual, the US government doesn't even try to hide the bullshit. They simply need not call attention to it, spin whatever, and the average citizen will be complacent, having been absolved from looking for the truth in the slightest.

At above: ask your dealer. If he can't point you to the source of the weed, find a new dealer.
 

Sam_Skunkman

"RESIN BREEDER"
Moderator
Veteran
How am I supposed to know where it comes from?

It comes from somewhere and Afghanistan produces a lot, it if not most of the world supply. Record volumes this year.

Southeast asia produces upto 20% of the world heroin market and Mexico and Columbia are also producers.
As far as I know all legal western opiates are made from poppy straw not directly from opium.
-SamS
 

LEF

Active member
Veteran
from wiki... afghanistan is the biggest producer

Besides Afghanistan, smaller quantities of opium are produced in Pakistan, the Golden Triangle region of Southeast Asia (particularly Burma), Colombia and Mexico.
they say in approx 2000 the taliban outlawed poppy production in afgh. but when the country was invaded people started growing it again


one thing I learned about afghanistan

in comparison to morrocco, ( a less poor country ), who keeps it's best hash inside the country and exports lower quality

afghanistan is so poor it exports the best, and keeps the shit for itself
 

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