Los Angeles Times

Cartel linked to vigilantes’ weapons

Mexico’s attorney general says a rival of the groups’ nemesis supplied some arms.

- By Richard Fausset and Cecilia Sanchez richard.fausset@latimes.com Sanchez is a news assistant in The Times’ Mexico City bureau.

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s attorney general said Thursday that he has proof that some of the arms being used by the vigilante “selfdefens­e” groups of Michoacan state were supplied by a drug cartel, the Jalisco New Generation, according to news reports.

The self-defense groups sprang up last February to take on a drug cartel called the Knights Templar. Many members are rural landowners and farmworker­s fed up with harassment and extortion by the Knights Templars.

But there has been wide speculatio­n that the groups had some connection to, or support from, the New Generation, a rival of the Knights Templar.

Jesus Murillo Karam, the attorney general, said during a news conference in Merida that the government had detained two members of the self-defense groups, who told authoritie­s that they had obtained weapons from the Jalisco New Generation. Murillo Karam said an investigat­ion was underway.

The self-defense groups went on the offensive this month, threatenin­g a potentiall­y bloody confrontat­ion with the Knights Templar in the city of Apatzingan, one of its key stronghold­s. The gov- ernment sent thousands of troops and federal police to keep the peace, but the vigilantes rejected government demands that they hand over their weapons.

To defuse that situation, the government this week declared that the vigilantes would be turned into temporary units of the Rural Defense Corps, volunteer patrol groups that answer to the Mexican military.

Murillo Karam’s statement raises the possibilit­y that at least some vigilantes are patrolling Michoacan with the imprimatur of the federal government — and weapons supplied by a drug gang.

The government also announced that it had arrested a man believed to be the Jalisco New Generation’s second in command. The suspect, Ruben Oseguera Gonzalez, 23, was apprehende­d Thursday morning along with four other men in Zapopan, a sprawling suburb of Guadalajar­a, in Jalisco state.

Also Thursday, a number of vehicles were hijacked, set on fire and left in the middle of some roads in greater Guadalajar­a, according to the U.S. Consulate office there. The roadblocks may have been set by Oseguera’s allies to protest his arrest.

 ?? Eduardo Verdugo
Associated Press ?? MEMBERS OF a self-defense group stand guard outside the town of Antunez, in Michoacan state. Such groups sprang up to take on the Knights Templar, a cartel.
Eduardo Verdugo Associated Press MEMBERS OF a self-defense group stand guard outside the town of Antunez, in Michoacan state. Such groups sprang up to take on the Knights Templar, a cartel.

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