Mexico took down another high-profile cartel leader, and the backlash may already have started

Advertisement
Mexico took down another high-profile cartel leader, and the backlash may already have started

Mexican marines soldiers matamoros tamaulipas

(AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)

Mexican marines patrol downtown Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, March 22, 2017, across the border from Brownsville, Texas.

Advertisement
  • A top Gulf cartel leader was captured at a home near the US-Mexico border early on Monday morning.
  • Less than a day later, residents in the area reported gunfire and other violent scenes.
  • The complex criminal environment in Mexico makes it hard to tell where things are going, but such disruptions in leadership have sparked violence in the past.


Mexican marines captured a top leader in the Gulf cartel in northeast Mexico on Monday, just a few weeks after a high-level member of the rival Zetas cartel was captured in Mexico City.

Jose Alfredo Cardenas, nicknamed "the Nephew" and "the Accountant," was arrested in Matamoros early on Monday. Officials said no shots were fired in the raid that also seized two military-grade weapons, ammunition, and some cocaine and marijuana. A group of armed men reportedly fled the scene.

Mexican authorities tracked down Cardenas using wire intercepts, Mike Vigil, former chief of international operations for the US Drug Enforcement Administration, told Business Insider. Cardenas was captured along with two other men while entering a house, added Vigil, who said additional weapons and documents were also seized.

37-year-old Cardenas is the nephew of Osiel Cardenas Guillen, the Gulf cartel boss who was arrested in 2003, extradited to the US in 2007, and sentenced to 25 years in prison in 2010. The younger Cardenas became a cartel leader after Guillen's capture, and, according to the DEA's 2017 National Drug Threat Assessment, he is one of two main leaders in a cartel that has seen "rapid turnover in leadership."

Advertisement

Mexican federal officials said that Cardenas - one of the country's most wanted criminals - moved between Matamoros, the nearby city of Brownsville in Texas, and Mexico state in central Mexico.

Osiel Cardenas Guillen arrest Mexico Houston federal court

(AP Photo/Pat Sullivan)

Osiel Cardenas-Guillen leaves the federal courthouse in Houston after pleading not guilty to charges connected to running a cartel that at its height smuggled 4 to 6 tons of cocaine a month into the country, February 9, 2007.

The Gulf cartel has fragmented, with several factions now vying for influence in Tamaulipas, the cartel's traditional stronghold. The state is an important smuggling route for narcotics, migrants, and other illicit goods, and criminal groups there have expanded into kidnapping, extortion, resource theft, and other activities. Homicides in the state have risen each of the past three years, hitting 1,053 in 2017.

"What has happened in Tamaulipas is we have had two big groups of organized crime that have fragmented, and now we have more than 20," Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, a professor at George Mason University, told Business Insider at the end of January.

"It's difficult to identify the number of cells that survive right now in the state and are still occupying or controlling different criminal activities," Correa-Cabrera, author of "Los Zetas Inc," said at the time. There are "different factions of the Gulf cartel and some factions of the Zetas" in other cities around the state.

Advertisement

gulf cartel arrest

Mexican Government

Gulf cartel leader Jorge Eduardo Costilla Sanchez, aka "El Coss," in Mexico City after his capture, in September 2012.

Cardenas reportedly took control of a Gulf cartel faction in the area after the April 2017 killing of Juan Manuel Loisa Salinas, known as "Comandante Toro," in Reynosa, a border city west of Matamoros. Mexican government sources also identified him as the Gulf cartel boss in Matamoros.

A statement issued by the Mexican navy after Cardenas' arrested said, "presumably he was the leader of a criminal organization in the region."

He was reportedly competing for control of the cartel with a rival group in the nearby Mexican city of Rio Bravo.

By early Tuesday morning - less than 24 hours after Cardenas' capture - Matamoros residents were using social media to report gun battles in several areas of the city. "Matamoros under shootouts" and "precaution" were messages circulating with video recordings of the gunfire that appeared on social media.

Advertisement

Some cars were reportedly left stranded after their tires punctured by spikes left on roads.

Correa-Cabrera said that while it was too early to say definitively what provoked the clashes, they did appear related to Cardenas' arrest.

Reynosa Matamoros Tamaulipas Mexico homicides

Christopher Woody/Business Insider

After the mayorship was transferred from the conservative National Action Party and the center-right Institutional Revolutionary Party in late 2016, the situation in Matamoros appeared more coherent, and the Gulf cartel leader's capture may have disrupted some kind of pact that had been agreed upon, Correa-Cabrera told Business Insider on Tuesday.

"I am not sure why they arrested Cardenas," she added. "It is interesting. We need to wait and see."

Advertisement

Violence also broke out in Reynosa in the hours after the killing of Comandante Toro in April last year. Armed gunmen shut down parts of the city with road blockades, and the federal attorney general's office there came under fire several times. The months afterward also saw sustained, elevated violence.

However, Correa-Cabrera stressed that the criminal dynamics in Reynosa and Tamaulipas are distinct, making it hard to predict what the fallout will be.

"We are not dealing here with a pure 'kingpin strategy effect,' understood in the most traditional sense" as a fight between malefactors for control of the territory, Correa-Cabrera told Business Insider.

Rather, a variety of actors with overlapping and sometimes shared interests are in Reynosa, she said, including federal forces, state authorities, and factions of different criminal groups. Paramilitary groups, made up of criminal and government forces acting in concert, may also be present. (There are at least 18 regional cartel leaders operating in northeast Mexico, according to El Universal.)

Criminal elements and members of the local, municipal, and state governments in Tamaulipas have often developed symbiotic relationships. Changes in political power and shifts in cartel leadership have in some instances disrupted those ties, leading to more violence.

Advertisement

"The situation in Reynosa is much more complex," Correa-Cabrera said. "The whole state is very complex."