Drug Cartels make good on their word.

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Somebody posted a thread here a couple of weeks back about a cartel warning people about posting on a certain website.

Making good on their gruesome warning of targeting "internet snitches," members of Mexico's Zetas drug cartel decapitated a woman who was a frequent poster to a website where citizens could post information about drug gang violence.

The victim, Marisol Macias Castaneda, was a newsroom manager for Primera Hora, a newspaper for the border city of Nuevo Laredo. But it was her activity on the site Nuevo Laredo en Vivo, or Nuevo Laredo Live, that seemed to be the source of her murder. The site "prominently features tip hotlines for the Mexican army, navy and police," the AP reports, and "includes a section for reporting the location of drug gang lookouts and drug sales points."

Castaneda used an alias, but the Zetas seemed to have tracked her down. Her body was discovered on a major road, with her head placed on a large stone nearby. Next to her body was a handwritten message that referred to her commenting handle, "La Nena de Laredo," or "Laredo Girl."

http://gawker.com/5843711/mexican-drug-lords-decapitate-internet-commenter
 
Scarface-movie-02.jpg


she was a ****in' ****'a'roach

B@
 
[FnG]magnolia;20158884 said:
I don't see how Mexico will ever rid itself of its drug problem. It just seems unstoppable given the number and ferocity of the people involved.

when the people selling the drugs have more money than those policing them then it is always a losing battle; this is true the world over

B@
 
Drug Cartels in Central America are basically private Armies funded by narcotics. They have vested interests in both the Governments and Security forces of the countries in which they operate and given the authorities reluctance to tender for foreign help the problem will only grow until the United States in particular decides to bypass politics and simply deal with problem directly.
 
Legalise and regulate drugs. Drive the cartels out of business. Profit

People are going to ruin themselves somehow anyway
 
We should invade the boards and post comments against them. I'd like to see them get us in the UK :p.

Tefal you go first, then we wait 1 month to test the water.




If you die I get your PC.
 
Let's hope she didn't simply fail to adequately secure her wifi and it was actually someone else posting :eek:

Drug Cartels have a long history of leverageing technology and of course bribing their way to information so it is no surprise she was unmasked. Mind you in this case hidemyass.com would have proved effective!

Here is a story from showing what the cartels were getting up to in 1994. God knows what they are up to these days.

On a rainy night eight years ago [1994] in the Colombian city of Cali, crack counter-narcotics troops swarmed over the first floor of a low-rise condominium complex in an upscale neighborhood. They found no drugs or guns. But what they did find sent shudders through law enforcement and intelligence circles around the world.

The building was owned by a front man for Cali cocaine cartel leader José Santacruz Londono. Inside was a computer center, manned in shifts around the clock by four to six technicians. The central feature of the facility was a $1.5 million IBM AS400 mainframe, the kind once used by banks, networked with half a dozen terminals and monitors. The next day, Colombia's attorney general secretly granted permission for U.S. agents to fly the mainframe immediately back to the United States, where it was subjected to an exhaustive analysis by experts from the Drug Enforcement Administration and various intelligence agencies. The so-called Santacruz computer was never returned to Colombian authorities, and the DEA's report about it is highly classified. But Business 2.0 has ferreted out many of its details. They make it clear why the U.S. government wants the Santacruz case kept quiet.

According to former and current DEA, military, and State Department officials, the cartel had assembled a database that contained both the office and residential telephone numbers of U.S. diplomats and agents based in Colombia, along with the entire call log for the phone company in Cali, which was leaked by employees of the utility. The mainframe was loaded with custom-written data-mining software. It cross-referenced the Cali phone exchange's traffic with the phone numbers of American personnel and Colombian intelligence and law enforcement officials. The computer was essentially conducting a perpetual internal mole-hunt of the cartel's organizational chart. "They could correlate phone numbers, personalities, locations -- any way you want to cut it," says the former director of a law enforcement agency. "Santacruz could see if any of his lieutenants were spilling the beans."

They were. A top Colombian narcotics security adviser says the system fingered at least a dozen informants -- and that they were swiftly assassinated by the cartel. A high-level DEA official would go only this far: "It is very reasonable to assume that people were killed as a result of this capability. Potential sources of information were compromised by the system."

The discovery of the Santacruz computer gave law enforcement officials a chilling glimpse into the cartels' rapidly evolving technological sophistication. But here's what is truly frightening: Since the discovery of the Santacruz system in 1994, the cartels' technological mastery has only grown. And it is enabling them to smuggle more dope than ever before.
[written in 2002]
http://cocaine.org/cokecrime/index.html
 
No evidence of that at all. In fact the first article you posted points the finger at proxy selling by smugglers near the border.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&biw=1592&bih=1014&q=gunwalker

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&biw=1592&bih=1014&tbm=nws&q=fast+and+furious+atf

The 90% number is total B.S. however the ATF did supply weapons to them (to try and make that number seem more legit).

The ATF basically gave the cartels hundreds of assault rifles. Some of which were later used to kill their own agent. The politics behind it looks like they wanted to purposefully make the situation WORSE, so they would have an excuse to enact more gun control laws in the USA.

The head of the ATF was forced to quit over the scandal.
 
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Grow the drugs in South America, sell them in North America. Transport them through Central America. The simple geography of the matter suggests the problem is not going away any time soon.
 
People wanting recreational drugs will never go away, from lawyers/celebrities/unemployed/min wage workers, all walks of life use drugs and fund the massive trade in it.
 
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