Chicago Sun-Times

FORMER CARTEL LEADER ‘EL TOMATE’ ADMITS SMUGGLING DRUGS, CASH BETWEEN CHICAGO, MEXICO

Man led Guerreros Unidos group, which has been blamed for presumed 2014 massacre of more than 40 college students

- BY JON SEIDEL, FEDERAL COURTS REPORTER jseidel@suntimes.com | @seidelcont­ent Contributi­ng: Frank Main

A onetime leader of a drug cartel tied to the disappeara­nce of 43 students in Mexico nearly a decade ago admitted Friday that he smuggled heroin to Chicago by hiding it inside passenger buses and then had hundreds of thousands of dollars shipped back to him in Mexico.

Adan Casarrubia­s Salgado, who was once the head of the Guerreros Unidos drug cartel and was known as “El Tomate,” admitted his crimes to U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly, pleading guilty to drug conspiracy and money laundering.

Salgado, 55, who has been held in Chicago since 2022, admitted he shipped 52 kilograms of heroin to Chicago for sale in 2014 and had $600,000 smuggled back to him on a passenger bus.

The conspiracy charge carries a maximum life sentence, but Salgado struck a deal with prosecutor­s designed to put a lower cap on his potential punishment.

Prosecutor­s agreed with Salgado’s lawyers that he should get 10 to 20 years in prison on the conspiracy charge. It’s a deal Kennelly can either accept or reject at Salgado’s sentencing hearing, set for May 28.

There was no agreement, though, on the money-laundering charge, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. Kennelly could theoretica­lly order Salgado to serve back-to-back 20-year terms — imposing a 40-year sentence.

But prosecutor­s don’t plan to ask for consecutiv­e prison terms, Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Erskine told the judge. That means Salgado’s sentence likely won’t exceed 20 years if Kennelly accepts the deal.

Salgado and his brothers — Sidronio, Angel and Mario — were leaders of the Guerreros Unidos cartel. The late Mario Casarrubia­s Salgado, known as The Handsome Toad, started it around 2011, sources have said.

Adan and Mario Casarrubia­s were born in Mexico but lived for years in Chicago. They worked at Mama Luna’s pizzeria on Fullerton Avenue in Belmont Cragin on the Northwest Side.

Marco Vega Cuevas, who grew up in Aurora and drowned in a lake in Mexico in 2014, also was involved in running the cartel. His brother Pablo Vega Cuevas became a Chicago-area cell leader. He has been cooperatin­g with federal authoritie­s and was ordered released from jail and into house arrest last November. He pleaded guilty to drug conspiracy charges in 2021.

Guerreros Unidos has been blamed for the presumed massacre in Mexico of 43 college students in Iguala in the Mexican state of Guerrero. About 100 students from a teacher’s college there commandeer­ed several buses on Sept. 26, 2014, planning to use them to ride to a protest.

That night, police officers and other armed men in Iguala began firing at the students. Several were wounded. Dozens were taken away in police vehicles. By dawn, six people were dead, and 43 students had vanished.

What exactly happened remains unclear. Text messages intercepte­d by the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion and published in a report by internatio­nal investigat­ors suggest Guerreros Unidos might have believed an opposing group entered Iguala with the students.

 ?? MEXICO ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE ?? The Mexican government blacked out the eyes of Adan Casarrubia­s Salgado in this photo.
MEXICO ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE The Mexican government blacked out the eyes of Adan Casarrubia­s Salgado in this photo.

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