Macabre drug cartel messages in Mexico
Some of the communications intended for rivals, officials and the public have accompanied severed heads and been written on bodies.
By Ken Ellingwood, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
June 11, 2008
MEXICO CITY -- In case decapitating their victims and dumping the heads in picnic coolers didn't make the point, the killers left a note.
"This is a warning," it said, listing an alphabet soup of Mexican police agencies and the noms de guerre of several well-known drug figures. "You get what you deserve."
The message, scrawled on a poster in black ink, accompanied four severed human heads that Mexican authorities recently found on a highway in the northern state of Durango.
The same day, police in neighboring Chihuahua state came upon five swaddled bodies accompanied by a hand- lettered placard.
"This is what happens to stupid traitors who take sides with Chapo Guzman," said the message found in Ciudad Juarez, referring to Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, the supposed leader of the main drug gang in adjacent Sinaloa state.
The killers closed with incongruous propriety: "Yours truly," they signed off, "La Linea."
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Often, government forces are the target audience. A recent poster mocked army troops on patrol, calling them "little lead soldiers."
In the border cities of Nuevo Laredo and Reynosa, in the state of Tamaulipas, neatly painted banners appeared this spring advertising jobs in the Zetas, one of the country's most fearsome crime groups.
The banners, addressed to "soldiers or ex-soldiers," offered "good wages, food and help for your family."
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Ciudad Juarez residents have reason to take anonymous warnings seriously. In January, someone threatened city police by posting the names of 17 officers on a monument to fallen officers. Three of those listed were already dead.
By mid-May, about half of those listed had been killed, including the city's No. 2 police official, who was peppered with automatic-weapons fire one night as he returned home.
The messages keep on coming. Late last month, two hand-scrawled banners appeared in the Chihuahua state capital, also called Chihuahua. Signed by a group calling itself Gente Nueva, or New People, the banners listed the names of 21 state police officers.
The threat needed no elaboration.
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