Mexican cartel violence in Houston

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http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/6299436.html

Mexican cartels infiltrate Houston


The order was clear: Kill the guy in the Astros jersey.

But in a case of mistaken identity, Jose Perez ended up dead. The intended target — the Houston-based head of a Mexican drug cartel cell pumping millions of dollars of cocaine into the city — walked away.

Perez, 27, was just a working guy, out getting dinner late on a Friday with his wife and young children at Chilos, a seafood restaurant on the Gulf Freeway.

His murder and the assassination gone awry point to the perilous presence of Mexican organized crime and how cartel violence has seeped into the city.

Arrests came in December when police and federal agents got a break in the 2006 shooting as they charted the relationship and rivalries between at least five cartel cells operating in Houston. A rogue’s gallery of about 100 names and mug shots taken at Texas jails and morgues offers a blueprint for Mexican organized crime.

Houston has long been a major staging ground for importing illegal drugs from Mexico and shipping them to the rest of the United States, but a recent Department of Justice report notes it is one of 230 cities where cartels maintain distribution networks and supply lines.

At Chilos, the real crime boss was sitting at another table, as were two spotters. The hitman waited in the parking lot for Perez to leave the restaurant.

“I just remember that guy coming up to us and he started shooting and shooting and shooting and never stopped,” said Norma Gonzalez, Perez’s widow. He was hit twice.

“I know they will pay for what they have done, maybe in the next life,” she said of Perez’s killers. “I don’t know what is going to happen to them in this life.”

Problem ‘far-reaching’

The gangster — captured on surveillance video — blended in with other customers as they gawked at the aftermath. A few months later, he was dead too, gunned down two miles from the restaurant.

“It is here and it has been here, but people don’t want to listen,” Rick Moreno, a Houston police homicide investigator working with the Drug Enforcement Administration and FBI, said of the cartels’ presence in Houston. "It is so far-reaching>"

Washington is taking notice, even if the toll on U.S. streets is nowhere near as pervasive as in Mexico, where cartels are locked in a war against one another and with the government.

“International drug trafficking organizations pose a sustained, serious threat to the safety and security of our communities,” U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said. “We can provide our communities the safety and the security that they deserve only by confronting these dangerous cartels head-on without reservation,” he said.

When it comes to tearing into the cartels in Houston, an investigation later code-named Operation Three Stars got quietly under way three years ago, as an undercover DEA agent stood in line at a McDonald’s in north Houston. He listened to a drug trafficker using a two-way radio to set up delivery of $750,000; the man was with his wife and kids, ordering Happy Meals while making the deal.

Shifting alliances

Since then, more than 70 people in Houston have been prosecuted as a result of the ongoing operation and more than $5 million has been seized, as well as about 3,000 pounds of cocaine, according to court documents and law enforcement officers.

How many people are involved in cartel business is unknown, authorities said. Alliances shift quickly, as can the need to shut down to evade the law. Federal agents concede that numbers garnered by the operation pale compared to the cash and drugs pumped through Houston, but contend they’ve headed off countless crimes.

“The public never gets the full picture, they don’t understand these murders, these kidnappings, these violent crimes are directly tied to these organizations,” said Vio*let Szeleczky, spokeswoman for the DEA regional office in Houston. “A lot of these guys are just real dirtbags.”

Hard to spot connections

In the murky underworld, it takes time and luck to connect dots.

The accused mastermind of the Chilos attack, Jaime Zamora, 38, is charged with capital murder. He lived modestly, worked for Houston’s Parks and Recreation Department and was a Little League volunteer. State prosecutor Colleen Barnett said in court that such a profile was how he avoided detection.

Paul Looney, Zamora’s lawyer, contends the government can’t prove his client has ever touched drugs or drug money, or that he is a crime boss. He added that Zamora had never before been arrested.

“I don’t think there is a chance in hell (the prosecutor) is right about her theory of the case,” Looney said.

Court documents indicate Steven Torres, 26, one of the men charged with helping Zamora with the 2006 killing, confessed “his part involving arranging the murder.” In 2002, he was sentenced to 10 years probation after being convicted of a murder he committed when he was 16.

His lawyer could not be reached.

Authorities, saying it’s tough to spot cartel connections because the gangsters work in several jurisdictions, point to at least seven homicides in the Houston area since 2006, as well as nine home invasions and five kidnappings tied to cartels. They believe there are many more.

Among the unsolved local killings is the death of Pedro Cardenas Guillen, 36, whose last name is considered trafficking royalty. He was shot in the head and left in a ditch off Madden Road, near Fort Bend County.

His uncle is Osiel Cardenas Guillen, reputed head of the powerful Gulf Cartel. He was extradited from Mexico and awaits trial in Houston on charges of drug trafficking, money laundering and threatening to kill federal agents.

Third attempt succeeded

Other victims of what authorities believe are cartel-related murders include a husband and wife who were tortured and shot in the head on Easingwold Drive, in northwest Houston. About 220 pounds of cocaine were later found in their attic.

Some victims were in the drug business and may have owed money; others could be relatives of criminals or innocent victims, authorities say. Santiago “Chago” Salinas, 28, the crime boss who escaped death at Chilos, was killed six months later.

High on cocaine as he answered the door of a room at the Baymont Inn on the Gulf Freeway, he was shot three times in the head.

It was the third and final attempt on the life of the man who’d once been shot in the neck and left for dead in Mexico. His killing may have been the latest payback between rivals slugging it out.

Chago’s brother-in-law was killed in Mexico, as was Zamora’s younger brother, who was known as “Danny Boy” and who was a lieutenant in a trafficking organization, according to authorities. Danny Boy’s boss, a major player in the Sinaloa cartel, also was murdered in Mexico.

Survivors remember

Those who survive the wrath of cartel gangsters don’t forget.

“I thought I was going to die for sure,” recalled David DeLeon, a used-car dealer who was kidnapped on Airline Drive and severely beaten while being held for ransom, also in 2006. He was rescued by Houston police, but not before he was punched, kicked and thrown across a room so much that his face was unrecognizable.

Authorities say the kidnappers were low-ranking thugs working for a cartel cell.

In another instance, men armed with assault rifles attacked a Houston home. The resident used a handgun to kill one and wound another before the survivors left.

Norma Gonzalez, whose husband was killed at Chilos, said she believes he used his body to shield his 4-year-old daughter and infant son. Leaning over her husband in the parking lot, she whispered, “Everything is going to be OK.”

He died minutes later.
 
just read this on the chron bundle today. Yep, the more reason to carry and arm yourself.
 
I've been barking for the past two years to anybody that's willing to listen that there is a war going on 420 miles south of Dallas. A war that slowly keeps growing like a cancer along the US side of the border and it is gradually reaching other cities further north.
 
In another instance, men armed with assault rifles attacked a Houston home. The resident used a handgun to kill one and wound another before the survivors left.

Hmm. Isn't that interesting you anti-gun freakshows!!! (not you guys, just a rant). =)

I didn't know you could use guns to defend yourself. I thought they were dangerous tools that kill people indiscriminately without human input. Huh, Silly me.
 
This is from another article (http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/world/03/08/09/mexican-drug-war-spilling-us)

Men hired by the Sinaloa drug cartel -- the most active in Arizona -- wearing body armor and tactical gear identical to American SWAT teams kick in doors, zip-cuff the inhabitants, then kill them.

The cartel weapons of choice are Belgian FN rifles, although they are also armed with South Korean rocket-propelled grenades, American AR-15 rifles, and armor-piercing bullets, authorities say.

This is certainly ramping up at a time when US supplies are tight as D!RTY H@RRY pointed out AND when our own officials are trying to use the Mexican violence as a smoke screen to ban our ownership of guns...


EDIT:

For instructional purposes I thought it wise to post the surviellance link of the "hit".

http://www.chron.com/content/chronicle/special/07/templates/listpop.html?mcVideo=15000043001

Notice how the shooter was using his phone as a prop / camouflage / coms, once the vic's back was turned he was walking away, the ruse worked, the shooter used the suburban as cover closed and shot the vic several times, fled.

Be aware.
 
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Ugh, this is disturbing. I get more and more worried about this war. People in the rest of the US don't seem to pay any mind to it as it doesn't affect them. While thankfully I have not been involved in any of it, I am always somewhat worried (even if not directly thinking about it) that some jerk with a rifle might start shooting at the guy next to me because he has some affiliation with a cartel, good or bad.

I have been slowly stocking up on ammo for a few years. Not much, just an extra box of .45 here and there as well as a few boxes of buck shot. I tell you, my real concern, is in the case of being in a situation where I am forced into a situation where a man is getting shot to death and I take action to save his life and possibly mine (how do I know he won't stop with person X). Next thing I know I just shot and killed a cartel member, now I am in danger.

Highly unlikely and extremely improbable situation that is beyond 1 in a million I know. It's still a scary thought. I don't know what the solution to this is... at least, a solution that doesn't involve a legal recourse of action by our government.

Thanks for posting the above video.
 
Notice how the shooter was using his phone as a prop / camouflage / coms, once the vic's back was turned he was walking away, the ruse worked, the shooter used the suburban as cover closed and shot the vic several times, fled.

Be aware.

Actually, the shooter is using the suburban as concealment, not cover. As often happens with assassinations, they are carried out as ambush-type attacks. It is very hard to defend against ambushes, especially those of extremely short duration.

All in all, protecting against an assassination where you are the misidentified target is going to be that much harder. It is hard enough for people who know they are apt to be assassinated to protect against assassination, even more so for those who don't know.

This was apparently a single attacker episode. If the intended victim had been more aware, a new tactic would be used whereby some sort of distraction would be used to draw the intended victim's attention away from the threat.
 
We as Americans are in mortal danger. The time for debating with the mindless is over. We need to be very loud and very aggressive in our demands that the government's so called "drug war" be brought to an end. Our safety and the safety of our children are dependent on ending government's war on citizens possessing certain drugs (the true name of the drug war). We can't be afraid to demand immediate re-legalization of plants/substances. We can't afford to forget that it's RE-legalization and not "legalization." Everyone knows that re-legalization will end the cartels/turf wars/etc almost overnight, just like after prohibition part I ended. The fact that people intentionally ignore/forget history like that is our biggest obstacle, but again, the time for debating with the mindless people is over. Our free society has been destroyed by government's drug war. Our peace has been destroyed by government's drug war.

I've possibly done more to actually solve this nightmare than anyone in this thread because I donate to mpp.org. Talking in a thread doesn't solve anything. You and your kids are in real danger of being killed by the cartels or in an accidental raid by the "good guys" unless this war is ended.
 
Okay, then why is the shooter using the vehicle for cover? He didn't draw his gun before moving behind the vehicle and so that target does not realize he is a threat. The shooter does not attempt to fire from behind the vehicle. In fact, he moves from the vehicle to fire. So how is he using it as cover? In other words, he doesn't appear to use the vehicle as protection, hence he is not using it as cover. He moves behind the vehicle to be out of sight so that he can change direction and move toward the target instead of away. It is then that he draws his gun and from which to start his charge where by he leaves his concealed location to start his attack.

Nowhere in the shooter's behavior does he appear to use the vehicle for cover. Like his cell phone, he appears to use it as part of his plan to dupe the victim by making it look like he is doing something else, in this case, going in a different direction, such as to another vehicle, and in now way threatening the target. He used it for concealment, not cover.
 
The order was clear: Kill the guy in the Astros jersey.

In Houston, a guy wearing an Astros jersey:confused: Only about 50,000 guys might fit that description.

Tuckerdog1
 
Nowhere in the shooter's behavior does he appear to use the vehicle for cover. Like his cell phone, he appears to use it as part of his plan to dupe the victim by making it look like he is doing something else, in this case, going in a different direction, such as to another vehicle, and in now way threatening the target. He used it for concealment, not cover.

I think he's using "cover" to mean a "ruse," as it appears in "blown cover," "cover story," and whatnot.
 
So how is he using it as cover?

Are you blind? He crouches behind the car while moving toward the target and uses the car to COVER his movement, that is to CAMOUFLAGE / hide / disguise / conceal / his movement.
 
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