Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman: Most-wanted drug lord suspected dead in shootout

Loud Still Coolin

Suppose be a IT cert like you coli nikkaz
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Certz Up ..... Hoezzzz down .....
i posted this months ago they not catching the homie.

whether he working with goverments or not dude is gonna vanish hes too advanced

his potna in the chi might even beat trial


WHERE THE fukk IS EL CHAPO TRAPGOD GUZMAN AT

BILLIONAIRE BOSSS FOREAL .....fukk A MOB :snooze: boring!!!! ... GUZMAN FOUGHT IN DOZENS OF WARS AND HAS NO RAP ALBUM OUT AND STILL SURIVED AND STILL GOT MORE MONEY THEN DIDDY BIRDMAN MASTER P 50 CENT COMBINED!!!!!!! THE JEFE RUNNIN shyt NOW BREHS... TRAPPIN DEAD????? I BET HE BUSS HIS GUN BEFORE HE GO OUT
nikkaS SAYIN HIS TIME COMIN BUT IT BEEN 10 YEARS !!!!!
PUT ON FOR THE CHI !!!!


el-chapo.jpg

fukk A MOB

zhenli-ye-gon-money.jpg



hello-kitty-cocaine.jpg


I AINT SAYIN nikka COULD WIN A WAR BUT HE CAN GO TO WAR :ufdup:
:evil:
 

CASHAPP

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In 2005 on a Saturday evening, Guzmán reportedly strolled into a restaurant in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, with several of his bodyguards. After he took his seat, his henchmen locked the doors of the restaurant, collected the cell phones of approximately 30 diners and instructed them to not be alarmed.[25] The gangsters then ate their meal and left – paying for everyone else in the restaurant.[26]
Culiacán appearance
Later that year, Guzmán was reportedly seen in Culiacán, Sinaloa, repeating the same exploit at a restaurant.[27] According to a witness, in November 2005 Guzmán entered the restaurant in Culiacán with 15 of his bodyguards, all of them carrying AK-47s.[28] The restaurant was known as "Las Palmas", a lime-green eatery with an ersatz tile roof on a busy street.[29] A man in the restaurant told those present the following:


"Gentlemen, please. Give me a moment of your time. A man is going to come in, the boss. We will ask you to remain in your seats; the doors will be closed and nobody is allowed to leave. You will also not be allowed to use your cellulars. Do not worry; if you do everything that is asked of you, nothing will happen. Continue eating and don't ask for your check. The boss will pay. Thank you."[28]

The diners reportedly sat still and frightened, as El Chapo walked in through the front door of the restaurant. He walked among the tables, greeting each person there. "Hello, nice to meet you. How are you? I'm Joaquín Guzmán Loera. A pleasure. At your service," he said to all of the diners, as he shook their hands.[28]


:wow:
 

re'up

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On or about November 15, 2008, Pedro Flores recorded two phone conversations with Guzman-Loera. The first conversation was as follows:
JGL: Hello. PF: Hello.
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Case: 1:09-cr-00383 Document #: 137 Filed: 11/10/11 Page 46 of 63 PageID #:852
JGL: My friend!
PF: What’s up, how are you?
JGL: Good, good. Nice talking to you. How’s your brother?
PF: Everyone is fine. I’s too bad I wasn’t able to see you the other day [Pedro was not present at the October 2008 mountaintop meeting attended by Margarito Flores].
JGL: Oh....
PF: It was my brother [Margarito Flores].
JGL: Oh, but I’m here at your service, you know that.
PF: Yes, everything is fine. Nice talking to you. Hey look, I’m bothering you because of what I picked up the other day from over there. I have the check ready, I’m not sure if... .I want to ask you for a favor.
JGL: Ask me.
PF: Do you think that we can work something out where you can deduct five pesos [lower the price $5,000 per kilogram of heroin]?
JGL: What did we agree on?
PF: You’re giving them to me for 55 [$55,000 per kilogram of heroin]. JGL: How much are you going to pay for it?
PF: Well, if you do me the favor I’ll pay 50 for them, I have the check ready [if the price is lowered to $50,000 per kilo, the Flores brothers can make payment immediately].
JGL: Do you have the money?
PF: If you give them to me with a difference of 5, I can pay you right away. And if you want to send me more, well like...
JGL: All right then...how much, how much did they give you? PF: They gave me 20 [20 kilograms of heroin].
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JGL: How much?
PF: 20.
JGL: All right then, I’ll pick the money up tomorrow. That’s fine. PF: Yes?
JGL: That price is fine.
PF: Okay then, I really appreciate it. It’s because the...the other man had given me something that didn’t turn out good and I have to even it out [Zambada- Garcia also provided heroin, which was of poor quality, requiring the Flores brothers to mix the heroin together to improve the quality].
JGL: Hey! Do you have a way of bringing that money over here [make payment in Mexico]?
PF: Over here? Y es, of course.
JGL: Yeah. So you’ll give it to me here then?
PF: Yeah, give me... .if you’ll give me a couple days and. . . .I have it here. Better yet, I have a check that is coming. If you want as soon as I get it I can advance you something. . . . when I get it. I had like 400 [$400,000].
JGL: Look, look, hold on. I’m going to talk to someone right now. There might be someone that can pick that money up over there [pick up the money for the heroin in the United States].
PF: Yes.
JGL: I’ll call you back. Hold on.
PF: Okay, okay.
JGL: I’ll call you.
In a separate phone call a short while later between Pedro Flores and Guzman-Loera,
Guzman-Loera handed the phone to an associate who provided Flores with a contact name and number of a person who would take receipt of the payment for the 20 kilograms of heroin. Guzman-
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Case: 1:09-cr-00383 Document #: 137 Filed: 11/10/11 Page 48 of 63 PageID #:854
Loera then got back on the phone, leading to the following conversation between Guzman-Loera and Flores:
JGL: My friend.
PF: Excuse me, but I just wanted to ask you. I just have 3 left [3 kilos of heroin remaining from the 20-kilo shipment]. When do you think we can receive again?
JGL: What the fukk? I thought that you can only get rid of a little bit.
PF: The truth is these resulted fukking good. Why should I lie.
JGL: How much can you get rid of in a month?
PF: If, if you want. . . .if they are the same, around 40 [the Flores brothers can distribute 40 kilos of heroin per month].
JGL: Oh, that’s good. Hey, has anyone else sent you? Because this guy told me that they were going to send you [Zambada-Garcia told Guzman-Loera that he had also sent heroin to the Flores brothers].
PF: Yes, but what they sent was not good. It doesn’t compare to what you had [Zambada heroin was of inferior quality to Guzman-Loera heroin].
JGL: All right, I’ll send it then [begin supplying the Flores brothers with 40 kilos of heroin per month]. So then uh. . .
PF: But do you think they have like another seven there that they can give me [seven more kilos of heroin available for immediate pickup in Chicago]?
JGL: Uh. . . .I’ll send you from this week to the next. PF: Okay, please. Thanks a lot.
JGL: That’s fine.
PF: If anything. Okay, that’s fine.


Transcript of recorded conversation between Pedro Flores, (snitch) and Chapo Guzman.

LOL at 'What the fukk I thought you could only get rid of a little?'
 

Dr.HannibalLecter

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They captured Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, leader of Los Zetas. El Chapo is probably like :win:


Miguel Angel Trevino Morales Captured: Leader Of Mexico's Zetas Drug Cartel Captured, Says U.S. Federal Official

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Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, the notoriously brutal leader of the feared Zetas drug cartel, was captured before dawn Monday in the first major blow against an organized crime leader by a Mexican administration struggling to drive down persistently high levels of violence, officials announced.

Trevino Morales, 40, was captured by Mexican Marines who intercepted a pickup truck with $2 million in cash on a dirt road in the countryside outside the border city of Nuevo Laredo, which has long served as the Zetas' base of operations. The truck was halted by a Marine helicopter and Trevino Morales was taken into custody along with a bodyguard and an accountant and eight guns, government spokesman Eduardo Sanchez told reporters.

Sanchez said the Marines had been watching rural roads between the Texas border states of Coahuila, Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas for signs of Trevino Morales, who is charged with murder, torture, kidnapping and other crimes.

The Zetas leader and his alleged accomplices were flown to Mexico City, where they are expected to eventually be tried in a closed system that usually takes years to prosecute cases, particularly high-profile ones.

Trevino Morales, known as "Z-40," is uniformly described as one of the two most powerful cartel heads in Mexico, the leader of a corps of special forces defectors who went to work for drug traffickers, splintered off into their own cartel in 2010 and metastasized across Mexico, expanding from drug dealing into extortion, kidnapping and human trafficking.

Along the way, the Zetas authored some of the worst atrocities of Mexico's drug war, leaving hundreds of bodies beheaded on roadsides or hanging from bridges, earning a reputation as perhaps the most terrifying of the country's numerous ruthless cartels.

On Trevino Morales' watch, 72 Central and South American migrants were slaughtered by the Zetas in the northern town of San Fernando in 2010, authorities said. By the following year, federal officials announced finding 193 bodies buried in San Fernando, most belonging to migrants kidnapped off buses and killed by the Zetas for various reasons, including their refusal to work as drug mules.

Trevino Morales is charged with ordering the kidnapping and killing of the 265 migrants, Sanchez said.

President Enrique Pena Nieto came into office promising to drive down levels of homicide, extortion and kidnapping but has struggled to make a credible dent in crime figures. And his pledge to focus on citizen safety over other crimes has sparked worries among U.S. authorities that he would ease back on predecessor Felipe Calderon's U.S.-backed strategy aimed above all at decapitating drug cartels.

The arrest of Trevino, a man widely blamed for both massive northbound drug trafficking and the deaths of untold scores of Mexicans and Central American migrants, will almost certainly earn praise from Pena Nieto's U.S. and Mexican critics alike.

Trevino Morales' capture adds to the long list of Zetas' leaders who have been arrested or killed in recent years, including Zeta head Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano, whose fatal shooting by authorities last year left Trevino Morales in charge.

"There continues to be the perception that capturing this type of individual has a strategic value and the logic persists that it's preferable to fragment criminal groups and reduce them in size. On this point there isn't much change," said Alejandro Hope, a former member of Mexico's domestic intelligence service.

The debilitation of the Zetas has been widely seen as strengthening the country's most-wanted man, Sinaloa cartel head Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who has overseen a vicious turf war with the Zetas from hideouts believed to lie in rugged western Mexico.

"El Chapo is greatly strengthened because he will now have access to the crown jewel of narco-trafficking, Nuevo Laredo," said George Grayson, an expert on the Zetas and professor of government at the College of William & Mary.

Trevino Morales is expected to be succeeded by his brother, Omar, a former low-ranking turf boss seen as far weaker than his older brother.

Miguel Angel Trevino Morales began his career as a teenage gofer for the Los Tejas gang, which controlled most crime in his hometown across the border from Laredo, Texas. He soon graduated from washing cars and running errands to running drugs across the border, and was recruited into the Matamoros-based Gulf cartel.

Trevino Morales' brother, sister and mother lived in Dallas but he had many relatives around Nuevo Laredo and, while moving frequently to avoid authorities, he was believed to often return to his hometown, the U.S. official said.

Trevino Morales joined the Zetas, a group of Mexican special forces deserters who defected to work as hit men and bodyguards for the Gulf cartel in the late 1990s.

Stories about the brutality of "El Cuarenta," or "40" as Trevino Morales became known, quickly become well-known among his men, his rivals and Nuevo Laredo citizens terrified of incurring his anger.

One technique favored by Trevino Morales was the "guiso," or stew, in which enemies would be placed in 55-gallon drums and burned alive, said a U.S. law-enforcement official in Mexico City, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic. Others who crossed the commander who be beaten with wooden planks, the official said.

Around 2005, Trevino Morales was promoted to boss of the Nuevo Laredo territory, or "plaza" and given responsibility for fighting off the Sinaloa cartel's attempt to seize control of its drug-smuggling routes, according to U.S. and Mexican officials. He orchestrated a series of killings on the U.S. side of the border, several by a group of young U.S. citizens who gunned down their victims on the streets of the American city.

In 2006, the Gulf Cartel and the Zetas defeated the Sinaloa cartel in Nuevo Laredo, a victory that emboldened them as they began spreading south to towns and cities that had never before seen extensive organized crime. They set up criminal networks to control transit routes for drugs, migrants, extortion, kidnapping, contraband of pirated DVDs and CDs and countless other criminal activities, intimidating local residents and committing gruesome murders as an example to the uncooperative.

According to the U.S. official, Trevino Morales was in charge of Nuevo Leon, Piedras Negras and other areas until March 2007, when he was sent to the city of Veracruz following the death of a leading Zeta in a gunbattle there.

That same year, Trevino Morales and Lazcano began pushing for independence from the Gulf cartel after cartel head Osielo Cardenas Guillen's extradition to the U.S.

The Zetas split from the Gulf cartel and by 2008 had operations in 28 major Mexican cities, according to an analysis by Grupo Savant, a Washington-based security think tank.

In February 2008, Lazcano sent Trevino Morales to Guatemala, where he was responsible for eliminating local competitors and establish Zetas control of smuggling routes. Trevino Morales was then named by Lazcano as national commander of the Zetas across Mexico despite his lack of military background, earning him the resentment of some of the original ex-military members of the Zetas, the official said.

The promotion involved Trevino Morales in virtually every decision by the Zetas, the official said.

Trevino rose to the top of the Zetas last year after leader Lazcano died in a shootout with Mexican marines in Coahuila state.

Trevino Morales was indicted on drug trafficking and weapons charges in New York in 2009 and Washington in 2010, and the U.S. government issued a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest.

According to the indictments, Trevino Morales coordinated the shipment of hundreds of pounds of cocaine and marijuana each week from Mexico into the U.S., much of which had passed through Guatemala. He also moved bulk shipments of dollar bills back into Mexico, the documents say.
 

Danie84

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The Zetas were originally special task shooters used as muscle for the cartel. Until they wanted all the

way in, and formed there own cartel. They hang bodies like Xmas ornaments on bridges and roll cut off heads down Mexican blocks like nothing :lawd:
 

CASHAPP

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The Zetas were originally special task shooters used as muscle for the cartel. Until they wanted all the

way in, and formed there own cartel. They hang bodies like Xmas ornaments on bridges and roll cut off heads down Mexican blocks like nothing :lawd:

Your confirming more and more that you are not a female.....

that is all
 
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