Cancun mayor is arrested on drug charges

Angelhair

Senior Member
Aug 22, 2009
2,597
152
48
MEXICO CITY - The arrest of Cancun's mayor on suspicion of protecting two violent drug gangs as he campaigned for governor has heightened fears that cartels are muscling their way into Mexican politics. There are also worries the gangs are tightening control over the country's most important tourist resort.

Gregorio Sanchez faces drug-trafficking and money-laundering charges a year after his police chief and other close collaborators were arrested for allegedly protecting cartels, said Ricardo Najera, a spokesman for the federal Attorney General's Office.

Sanchez is suspected of tipping off and protecting the Beltran Leyva and Zetas drug cartels - gangs known for brutal tactics including beheading rivals. He had taken a leave of absence as Cancun mayor to run for governor of Quintana Roo state, known for turquoise Caribbean waters and white-sand beaches marketed as the Mayan Riviera.

The mayor is the first candidate in the July 4 elections formally linked to cartels, but fears have been rising that drug gangs are infiltrating the vote in several states through intimidation and bribes.

On May 13, gunmen killed a mayoral candidate in a town near the border with Texas after he ignored warnings to quit the race. Several other candidates have received threats, and in some towns near the U.S. border, some parties couldn't find anyone to run for mayor.

High-level corruption remains one of the biggest impediments in the fight against drug trafficking in Western Hemisphere countries that have become key smuggling corridors. In Jamaica, security forces are fighting supporters of a major drug-trafficking suspect who has ties to the ruling party and is resisting extradition to the U.S. In Guatemala, the national anti-drug czar and police chief are under arrest in a case involving cocaine and slain police.

The Sanchez case will be another tough test for Mexico's judicial system and its ability to successfully prosecute high-profile drug and corruption cases.

The last effort largely fizzled: A year ago Wednesday, 10 mayors from the western state of Michoacan were arrested in an unprecedented sweep against elected officials accused of protecting drug gangs.

All but two have been released for lack of evidence.

"Mexico is very much infiltrated by these gangs, and they reach very high levels," said Peter Hakim, president emeritus of the Washington-based Inter-American Dialogue.

"(President Felipe) Calderón has shown extraordinary bravery, but the question is whether he succeeds. ... Eventually, the government has to demonstrate that it can exercise authority."

Border


And this is a surprise?? This is the reason why Mexico and Calderon will NEVER beat the drug lords. They are deeply embedded in corruption and holding high office plus being the 'authority'. The war against crime in Mexico has been lost and now the inmates are in control of the asylum.
 
Cancun gettin' to be a murder hotspot...
:eek:
6 strangled, 1 decapitated in Cancun, Mexico
Monday, April 15, 2013, The mass killings on Sunday were the latest to strike the city in the last few weeks.
Six people were strangled to death and one decapitated in the southern Mexican tourist resort of Cancun on Sunday, the state's deputy attorney general said, in the latest mass killing to strike the city in the last few weeks.

Police found the bodies of the five men and two women in a shack in the outskirts of Cancun, a major tourist destination on Mexico's Caribbean coast, that has largely escaped the drug-related violence that has racked Acapulco, a faded tourist destination on the Pacific coast. "It looks like the victims were independent drug dealers without any links to any specific cartel," said Juan Ignacio Hernandez, deputy attorney general of Quintana Roo state.

mexico-crime-cancun.jpg

Police officers with seven men accused in the killing of six people strangled to death and one decapitated in Cancun Sunday.

Last month six people died and five were injured after two men opened fire in a bar on the outskirts of Cancun. In a separate incident, police on Sunday found the body of another man in Cancun who had been gagged, bound and wrapped in sheets.

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto has promised to put an end to the violence that exploded after his predecessor, Felipe Calderon, launched a military-led attack on the warring cartels. More than 70,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence in Mexico since 2007.

Read more: 6 strangled, 1 decapitated in Cancun, Mexico * - NY Daily News
 
Mexican troops tryin' to take back Michoacan state...
:clap2:
Mexico deploys thousands of troops to crime-torn state
Wed, May 22, 2013 - Mexico deployed thousands of extra troops to the western state of Michoacan on Monday in a bid to tamp down drug cartel violence amid the emergence of vigilante groups, officials said.
About 2,000 army soldiers, 2,000 marines and 1,000 police officers were sent to the crime-wracked state, sources close to the defense ministry and federal police said. The government had already deployed 1,000 police and named an army brigadier general last week to take charge of public security in Michoacan, one of the country’s poorest states and home to traditional drug running routes. Michoacan was the first state to see troops when former Mexican president Felipe Calderon decided to deploy tens of thousands of soldiers across the country to crack down on drug cartels in 2006. By the time he left office last year, an estimated 70,000 people had been killed in gang turf wars nationwide.

His successor, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, is shifting the strategy toward crime prevention and reducing murders, but says troops will remain in the streets until violence comes down. The new deployment will focus on the southeastern edge of the state known as Tierra Caliente, where businesses and residents endure extortion, kidnappings and murders committed by gangs. The dominant cartel in the region is the Knights Templar, a religion-inspired offshoot of the crime syndicate La Familia. In February, armed vigilante groups emerged in the towns of Buenavista and Tepalcatepec to fend off gangsters, compounding the state’s security challenge.

Mexican Interior Minister Miguel Angel Osorio Chong was to visit the state of 4.3 million people yesterday to hold a meeting on security with local authorities. “Today, you can see in the state that federal forces are already coordinating with state forces in municipalities,” Osorio Chong said. Dozens of residents of Coalcoman, a town in Tierra Caliente, took to the streets on Monday to demand the delivery of basic goods after several firms stopped distributing products to the area due to crime. Interim Michoacan Governor Jesus Reyna told Milenio television that the state was going through tough times, but that it did not need to be rescued.

Mexico deploys thousands of troops to crime-torn state - Taipei Times

See also:

Mexico cartel dominates, torches western state
May 22,`13 -- Michoacan is burning. A drug cartel that takes its name from an ancient monastic order has set fire to lumber yards, packing plants and passenger buses in a medieval-like reign of terror.
The Knights Templar cartel is extorting protection payments from cattlemen, lime growers and businesses such as butchers, prompting a backlash in the western agricultural state, where some communities are fighting back, taking up arms in vigilante patrols. Lime picker Alejandro Ayala chose to seek help from the law instead. After the cartel forced him out of work by shutting down fruit warehouses, he and several dozen co-workers, escorted by Federal Police, met on April 10 with then-state Interior Secretary Jesus Reyna, now the acting governor.

The 41-year-old father of two only wanted to get back to work, said his wife, Martha Elena Murguia Morales. But, as often, the cartel responded before the government did. On the way back, his convoy was ambushed, twice. Ayala and nine others were killed. "I called him after the first one, and he said `They shot at us, but I'm OK,' " Murguia Morales said. "Then I called him again, and he didn't answer."

Help finally arrived on Sunday when thousands of federal troops rolled in to restore order. The government of President Enrique Pena Nieto says the will stay in Michoacan until every citizen lives in peace. But the offensive, headed by Secretary of Defense Salvador Cienfuegos, looks a lot like failed operations launched by previous President Felipe Calderon, who started his first assault on organized crime in Michoacan shortly after taking office in 2006. Calderon was trying to stop drug cartels from morphing into mafias controlling all segments of society. But that's exactly what has happened, as they control everything from roads to commerce.

In the Tierra Caliente, a remote agricultural region, fire has been a favored weapon of the cartel. On the highway between Coalcoman and La Ruana, the ruins of three sawmills torched by the cartel still smoldered this week. The owners reportedly had failed to pay protection fees of 120 pesos (about $10) for every cubic meter of wood they sold, the equivalent of about 10 cents for every two-by-four board. The Knights Templar also demand that avocado growers pay 2,000 pesos (about $160) per hectare of trees. Avocado warehouses were set afire this month by armed men.

MORE
 
Last edited:
I went there 2 years ago for spring break. Most fun I've ever had. You could have a ridiculously awesome day with party boats, buffets, and mayan temples for $40. Don't think I saw a sober person the whole time I was there. It's a shame the drug wars have made it there. It used to be such a magical place :lol:

Also Montezuma's revenge is very real :razz:
 
I never had a hankering to go to mexico although I heard it has some beautiful beaches and places to see. I thought about Cancun at one time but changed my mind and went to Maui instead even though I have been there many many times. The known is sometimes better than the unknown.
 

Forum List

Back
Top