Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

San Diego quietly prosecutin­g top members of cartel

Judge sentences two associates of drug lord ‘El Mencho,’ leader of ultra-violent CJNG.

- By Alex Riggins Riggins writes for the Associated Press.

SAN DIEGO — For the better part of a decade, federal prosecutio­ns of Mexican drug cartel leaders carried out in San Diego have focused largely on the Sinaloa Cartel and, before that, the Arellano Félix Organizati­on — groups that have historical­ly dominated the lucrative Tijuana-San Diego smuggling route.

But last month, a federal judge sentenced two former high-ranking members of the Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, part of an ongoing prosecutio­n against at least 12 people charged with drug traffickin­g and moneylaund­ering crimes.

The case may be one of the first local prosecutio­ns to target prominent members of the CJNG, one of Mexico’s most ruthless cartels, which has grown in influence over the last dozen years.

While the indictment relates to criminal conduct carried out several years ago, the prosecutio­n reflects the CJNG’s continued rise to power across Mexico and, specifical­ly, in Baja California.

Prosecutor­s have played the case close to the vest, keeping most details out of public court records.

“My guess is there have been some prosecutio­ns [of top CJNG leaders] ... but [authoritie­s] are keeping the cases more low-profile,” said Laura Calderón, program director for the University of San Diego’s Justice in Mexico project. “They know how volatile ‘El Mencho’ is, how extreme his measures of violence are.”

El Mencho is CJNG leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, one of the world’s most-wanted drug lords and the subject of a $10-million bounty from the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

According to a Justice in Mexico report, since about 2012, El Mencho has been the top leader of the cartel that years earlier broke away from the Sinaloa Cartel of Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán and Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada.

“This could be an increasing trend,” Calderón said of targeting top CJNG members. The cartel “was kind of underrated for a while. No one thought they would overcome Sinaloa. And while everyone was focused on getting Chapo and Mayo, [few were] paying attention to them.”

The two CJNG leaders sentenced last month were Víctor Zapién Venegas, alias “Domingo,” and Juan Padilla Vizcarra, known as “El Cherri” or “El Cherry.”

Media reports at the time of his extraditio­n described

Zapién as a “close collaborat­or” of El Mencho. Padilla was described in Mexican media reports as one of El Mencho’s lieutenant­s.

They were prosecuted as part of a 2016 indictment that charged at least a dozen people with drug traffickin­g and money laundering.

So far, only Zapién, Padilla and two other defendants have been identified, while the other eight or so names from the indictment — including those of the top four defendants — have remained sealed.

A federal grand jury handed down that indictment around the same time the CJNG was expanding into Baja California, fueling a wave of violence and murders in the state.

USD’s Calderón said the CJNG, which pioneered the traffickin­g of synthetic drugs such as methamphet­amine and fentanyl, “likes to brag, to take credit and to broadcast its violence.”

Not only do the group’s members hang bodies from bridges, scatter severed heads in public places and write signs taking ownership of murders and attacks, they also livestream deadly clashes with government forces or rival cartels.

“They’re proud of the violence they use,” Calderón said. “They just love showcasing what they can do.”

The bravado helps them rule by fear and intimidati­on.

Calderón said CJNG soldiers have filmed themselves driving military-style armored vehicles into towns previously controlled by rival groups and claiming them as their own.

“They’re saying, ‘We’re here — now you know who’s the boss; respect us because El Mencho’s here,’ ” Calderón said.

The group is suspected of being behind attacks this summer involving dozens of burning vehicles that essentiall­y shut down Tijuana and other Mexican cities over the course of several days.

The group made internatio­nal headlines again last week when Mexican soldiers and federal agents captured El Mencho’s older brother, Antonio Oseguera Cervantes, alias “Tony Montana.” His responsibi­lities allegedly included manufactur­ing the group’s armored vehicles.

That arrest in Jalisco was unrelated to the recent sentencing here of Zapién and Padilla, according to Zapién’s attorney.

In court filings, Assistant U.S. Attorney Kyle Martin recommende­d seven-year terms, several years less than what federal sentencing guidelines suggest.

“I believe my client was treated fairly by the court, he accepted responsibi­lity for what he did, and he at no point did, or will ever, cooperate,” Zapién attorney Jason Conforti said.

Padilla’s attorney declined to comment.

Prosecutio­ns of highrankin­g CJNG members in San Diego federal court have been rare, though there have been some.

In 2018, the Department of Justice announced 15 indictment­s nationwide aimed at taking down CJNG leaders, including one case unsealed in the Southern District of California. It was a two-count drug conspiracy indictment charging Juan José Pérez Vargas, known as “El Piolín,” who was believed to be the leader of CJNG’s operations in Tijuana.

Pérez Vargas was described in Mexican news reports as a former Sinaloa Cartel operative who was born in San Diego.

At the time of the indictment, he was in Mexican custody following his 2017 capture in Guadalajar­a. He was expected to be extradited to San Diego but died in May 2019 in a Mexican prison under unclear circumstan­ces.

An indictment unsealed last year pinned a wave of murders in Tijuana on a criminal cell known as Los

Cabos, who allegedly acted as a violent enforcemen­t arm of the CJNG as the group battled the Sinaloa Cartel for control of the Tijuana-San Diego smuggling corridor.

The U.S. attorney’s office has kept the prosecutio­n against Zapién, Padilla and their unnamed co-defendants mostly under wraps and did not respond to requests for comment. Neither the government nor defense attorneys for Zapién or Padilla filed sentencing memorandum­s that typically spell out the details of the criminal conduct.

That has left much of the case shrouded in mystery.

Court records show that a judge issued arrest warrants for both men in March 2016. Authoritie­s arrested Padilla sometime that year, according to Mexican media. Zapién was arrested in September 2016 in Playas del Rosarito in Baja California.

Both were extradited to San Diego within the last two years.

According to the initial indictment, both men were part of a conspiracy to traffic cocaine, heroin, cannabis and methamphet­amine into the U.S.; they were also part of a conspiracy to launder the drug proceeds. Both ultimately pleaded guilty to one count each for a cocainetra­fficking conspiracy.

Zapién admitted in his plea agreement to coordinati­ng at least three shipments of cocaine into the U.S. in 2014. Padilla admitted to at least four separate incidents

in 2014 and 2015 in which he coordinate­d cocaine shipments into the United States.

Both men admitted that the shipments of cocaine they coordinate­d totaled more than 330 pounds but less than 990 pounds.

Another defendant named in the indictment, Hugo Rosalio Lugo Inda, alias “Wero,” pleaded guilty in 2018 to a money-laundering charge, admitting that the cash value of the drug proceeds he laundered between 2014 and 2016 exceeded $1.5 million. He was sentenced to two years and four months in prison.

His attorney wrote in a brief sentencing memorandum that Lugo had been running the financial side of several businesses when, through his children’s school, he met and started doing business with several men who “eventually ... had Mr. Lugo laundering drug money for them.”

The attorney wrote that it was the first time his then-44-year-old client had been in trouble with the law, and “Lugo withdrew from the illegal activity over a year before his arrest.”

In October, a fourth defendant was arrested in Texas — or possibly extradited there from Mexico — then transferre­d last month to San Diego, where he pleaded not guilty to a traffickin­g count from the indictment.

‘They’re proud of the violence they use. They just love showcasing what they can do.’ — Laura Calderón, program director for the University of San Diego’s Justice in Mexico project, of Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, or CJNG

 ?? K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune ?? PHOTOS of Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación leader Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes and methamphet­amine confiscate­d in a local operation are displayed during a 2020 news conference at the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion’s San Diego office.
K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune PHOTOS of Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación leader Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes and methamphet­amine confiscate­d in a local operation are displayed during a 2020 news conference at the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion’s San Diego office.

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