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Mexican traffickers get help from US prison gangs


CHRISTOPHER SHERMAN, Associated Press Writer Christopher Sherman, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 32 mins ago
EL PASO, Texas – When Mexican drug traffickers need someone killed or kidnapped, or drugs distributed in the United States, they increasingly call on American subcontractors — U.S.-based prison gangs that run criminal enterprises from behind bars, sometimes even from solitary confinement.

Prison gangs have long controlled armies of street toughs on the outside. But in interviews with The Associated Press, authorities say the gangs' activity has expanded beyond street-level drug sales to establish a business alliance with Mexican cartels.

"They'll do the dirty work that, say, the cartels, they don't want to do" in the United States. "They don't want to get involved," said a former member of Barrio Azteca, a U.S. prison gang tied to Mexico's Juarez cartel.

The partnership benefits both sides: The gangs give drug traffickers a large pool of experienced criminals and established distribution networks in the U.S. And the cartels provide the prison gangs with discounted drugs and the logistical support of top criminal organizations.

To carry on their gang activity, imprisoned gang members resort to elaborate subterfuge: using sign language, sending letters through third parties, enlisting corrupt prison officials, holding conference calls using contraband cell phones. Some even conduct business in an ancient Aztec language to foil censors.

FBI special agent Samantha Mikeska spent nearly a decade investigating the Barrio Azteca. Last year, three leaders got life sentences, but she questioned the real value of sending them back to prison.

"I think I've made them stronger," she said.

The latest annual National Drug Threat Assessment, released in February by the Justice Department, said prison gangs were operating in all 50 states and were increasing their influence over drug trafficking along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Federal authorities have documented numerous links between most of the major U.S. prison gangs and Mexican drug trafficking organizations.

For instance, federal prosecutors in San Diego charged 36 people last year in a racketeering case that connected California's infamous Mexican Mafia prison gang to the Arellano Felix drug trafficking organization in Tijuana. Gang members and associates allegedly worked in drug-trafficking, kidnapping and attempted murder for the Mexican cartel.

Baldemar Rivera ran a large Texas' prison gang called Raza Unida for years while confined in isolation, which is common for gang members.

Rivera, who is known as "the Professor" and perpetuates the name with wire-rimmed glasses and calm demeanor, said he used sign language to discuss business with a subordinate who visited him in prison. When Rivera needed to communicate with gang members in other Texas prisons, he turned to his captains — who were also imprisoned — to write to the men.

"Within three or four days, everything was known," Rivera, 50, said recently from a medium-security facility near Cuero, where he is serving a 60-year murder sentence. He says he left gang life a decade ago after finishing the state's gang-renouncement program.

Rivera was running Raza Unida in the 1990s, when prisoners often used the mail to communicate with each other and the outside world. Now they have cell phones. Authorities confiscated 1,200 phones from Texas prisons last year.

Texas inmates can no longer mail letters directly to each other, but they now use third parties. For instance, a letter sent to a girlfriend is immediately readdressed and mailed to another gang member in prison.

Inmates also hold conference calls arranged by friends on the outside. To get around mail censors, some even communicate in Nahuatl, the language of the ancient Aztecs, which is still spoken by about 1.4 million people in parts of Mexico.

Gang members learn the language from books and use it mostly in written communications. Some leaders adopt Aztec names in Nahuatl.

The use of the language "is to honor their heritage but most importantly to conceal their messages to law enforcement," said FBI special agent Armando Ramos.

For rest of article see:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100502/ap_on_re_us/us_drug_war_prison_gangs


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Avatar universal
It again, in my opinion comes down to greed. This country has one God and his name is money. They can claim otherwise all they want to but the proof is in the pudding. Money and greed will be our downfall. Oh gosh! I know its Sunday but really did not mean to preach! Sorry! lol

Until we get back to caring about what is morally and ethically right, nothing will change, I fear it is only going to get worse.
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Avatar universal
What gets me is how can we catch terrorists, etc. if they can't stop this from within our own country?????

Gets you thinking, huh?  Who profits from this?????
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Avatar universal
If our people, who are called by our name did not give these thugs a market, they would not be here. So who do we blame? Do we blame the thugs on this side of the border for providing a market or the thugs on the other side of the border for delivering the goods?

Good Post Dazon
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