Pubdate: Mon, 08 Feb 2010
Source: El Paso Times (TX)
Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times
Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/formnewsroom
Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829
Author: Daniel Borunda

CHAPO CELL: TEENS PART OF SINALOA DRUG CARTEL EFFORT TO SMUGGLE, KILL

For about $40 a week, teenagers and young men watched roads in the 
Valley of Juarez looking out for police, the Mexican army or 
unfamiliar vehicles from a rival drug cartel.

For the same pay, they also carried out kidnappings and murders.

Members of the group, ages 14 to 34, were arrested by the Mexican 
army last week, accused of belonging to a cell of the Sinaloa drug 
cartel in the Valley of Juarez.

The case offers an insight into the Juarez drug war where life is 
cheap and killings are another day at work.

The cell operations were detailed in interviews of 10 suspects 
arrested that were included in a detailed 16-page account provided to 
the press by the Chihuahua state attorney general's office. Five of 
the 10 were age 17 or younger.

"It didn't matter what jale (job) we did. The pay was the same for 
sicarios (hit men) and campanas (lookouts)," Javier Gonzalez "El 
Happy" Oropeza, 29, told investigators, according to the authorities.

The attorney general's office and Mexican federal authorities said 
the cell worked for Sinaloa drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman and 
is suspected in the deaths of three unidentified men found in a mass grave.

The Sinaloa cartel is at war with the Juarez drug cartel, also known 
as La Linea, for control of drug trafficking in the region.

The cell was based in the village of San Isidro in the agricultural 
valley east of Juarez, across the Rio Grande from the Fabens area.

The valley is a prime smuggling corridor and a key battleground in 
the war between cartels, U.S. law enforcement officials have said.

A year ago, the U.S. Consulate in Juarez issued a warning for U.S. 
citizens to stay out of the Valley of Juarez because of drug-related violence.

Mexican authorities allege Fernando "El Popeye" Gonzalez Ordaz, who 
was among those arrested, ran the San Isidro cell. Gonzalez 
supposedly worked for Gabino Salas Valenciano, alias "El Ingeniero" 
(the engineer), officials said. It is unclear if Salas is in custody.

Gonzalez was paid 10,000 pesos (about $800) a week to run a crew in 
charge of watching for law enforcement and rivals on the 
Juarez-Porvenir highway, the main route through the valley.

Gonzalez, according to other cell members, had a dangerous 
reputation, sold cocaine, traveled in a recent model SUV or pickup 
and was always armed, stated cell members in interviews in documents 
from the attorney general's office. Mexican authorities said Gonzalez 
lived in El Paso in 1992.

A 16-year-old boy told investigators Gonzalez was reputed to have 
personally beheaded victims because he was "el mas loco," the 
craziest one. The boy himself allegedly took part in at least eight 
homicides, authorities said.

It is El Paso Times policy not to publish the names of juveniles 
accused of a crime.

In one incident, the crew kidnapped and killed three members of the 
rival Aztecas gang for selling drugs in the village of San Ignacio.

Other cell members had different duties.

Edgar Alonso "El Mandis" Valades Rojas allegedly was in charge of 
storing a cache of assault rifles and handguns used by the group.

"The last time I took care of the weapons was three weeks ago," 
Valades, 34, reportedly told investigators. "And when they asked me 
for them it was because they were killing or executing people three 
times a week."

Most of the teens were lookouts.

A 14-year-old boy told investigators he was given a talk-radio code 
to report any soldiers, convoys or suspicious vehicles entering the village.

A 16-year-old boy claimed that he was forced to start working as a 
lookout three weeks ago by Jorge "El Funerario," an alleged cell 
member nicknamed the undertaker.

"Jorge 'El Funerario' told me he works for the Sinaloa cartel," the 
boy claimed. "and he threatened to kill me if I didn't work for them."

Soldiers arrested three of the teen drug cell members after a weapon 
was allegedly found in one of their vehicles. Officials did not say 
if that led to the other arrests.

Last week in the desert off a dirt road south of San Isidro, 
investigators found the bodies of three men in a "narco-fosa," or narco-grave.

The men had their hands tied behind their backs and had been 
allegedly killed by the drug cell. "Juaritos" is tattooed in 
old-style letters across the back of one of the victims. They have 
not been identified.
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