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Mexico: New Generation Drug Gang Kills 32 In Veracruz, Officials Say

Mexico Drug Cartels

First Posted: 10/07/11 11:30 AM ET Updated: 12/07/11 05:12 AM ET

MEXICO CITY — A relatively new drug gang is responsible for killing at least 67 people whose bodies were found over the course of a couple of weeks in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz, Mexican authorities said Friday.

Marines arrested eight members of the Jalisco New Generation drug gang Thursday, navy spokesman Jose Luis Vergara told a news conference. The suspects later led authorities to 32 bodies left in three houses in Veracruz, a port city that carries the state's name.

Vergara said the gang is also responsible for dumping 35 bound, tortured bodies on a busy boulevard in a suburb of Veracruz on Sept. 20.

The navy appeared eager to dampen speculation that the New Generation gang, believed to be allied with Mexico's Sinaloa drug cartel, is some sort of paramilitary group aimed at eliminating the hyper-violent Zetas cartel.

New Generation members have dubbed themselves "Mata Zetas," or "Zetas Killers," and many of their victims appear to be from that cartel.

Authorities would have ample reason to want to eliminate the Zetas, who have been blamed for the kidnap-murders of three marines so far this year in Veracruz.

Vergara insisted no paramilitaries were involved.

"We stress that this is just another organized crime gang that opposes the Zetas, with whom they are fighting for control of illicit income and criminal activities in Veracruz," he said.

Marines also arrested 12 alleged Zetas on Thursday, including Aquiles Amaranto Cruz Hurtano, allegedly the group's new operations leader in Veracruz, Vergara said.

He said the suspects "presumably were assigned to kill relatives of their enemies" and carry out other criminal activities.

All 20 of the detainees were paraded before the news media Friday before being turned over to federal prosecutors pending charges. While some appeared hardened and weathered, a few appeared to be in their teens.

Sinaloa and the Zetas have emerged as Mexico's dominant drug cartels and appear locked in a nationwide battle for territory. The New Generation gang emerged in the western state of Jalisco in 2010, following the death of Sinaloa capo Ignacio "Nacho" Coronel that same year.

In recent months, the "Mata Zetas" have released videos in which armed, masked men claim to be fighting to free Veracruz from the Zetas' reign of killings, kidnappings and extortion – even though the Sinaloa cartel is implicated in many of the same activities.

Despite the propaganda videos – which had led some local news media to begin calling the gang "paramilitaries" – Vergara stressed that "no criminal propaganda will force the government to step back from its efforts against criminals."

The arrests capped a flurry of rumors on social networks Thursday that multiple bodies had been found in Veracruz. The state government first said it had no information on the killings, then later confirmed them.

The navy said that when marines reached the first of the three safe house, where 20 bodies were found, state police officers were already there. Marines found 11 bodies at the second house and one at a third.

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MEXICO CITY — A relatively new drug gang is responsible for killing at least 67 people whose bodies were found over the course of a couple of weeks in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz, Mexican autho...
MEXICO CITY — A relatively new drug gang is responsible for killing at least 67 people whose bodies were found over the course of a couple of weeks in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz, Mexican autho...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NiccoloM
11:17 PM on 10/08/2011
I am not entirely against aiding Mexico's armed forces. I loathe seeing what is happening to those people there and it might mitigate illegal immigration here "slightly". I am also for decriminalizing drugs here and legalizing marijuana. I don't think you can simply be rid of them by legalizing any or every drug. It is quite absurd and where heroin and coke are concerned, bad policy. But marijuana should probably not be illegal anyway.
04:15 PM on 10/18/2011
Here is the rub: If you keep any popularly requested drug illegal, you give the cartels a chance to sell it cheap to expand the markets. If they made cocaine and or heroin so cheap that a dose could be bought by...a schoolkid on limited income, and certainly adults at any income level , no doubt more people would try and use it...some will abuse it, and those will be the backbone customers for the future.

You cannot keep ANY drug illegal and still regulate and control any aspect of it. Sad fact.
Imagine a system where you have a drug store, literally, where weed, alcohol, heroin or cocaine could be bought in small personal use amounts with appropriate warnings and purity as well as info on healthy choices and emergency numbers, etc. as well as overdose instructions . You would see virtually no deaths, harm reduction would be the policy, and freedom would be more than a concept from the past.

Most people will NOT try anything new just because it was legal..the people already predisposed to using will anyway regardless of the law, and marijuana users should be left the hell alone because it has no addictive properties and cannot cause death in any amount.

Why do you say marijuana " should probably not be illegal"? Why any doubt? Not probably, but definitely!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alexey Braguine
Author of Kingmaker, a novel
10:13 AM on 10/08/2011
The main problem and cause of the mayhem is the 600 billion dollars a year US drug consumer market. Recently, in Argentina, former Mexican president Vicente Fox accused the US of doing nothing to reduce this consummer demand.

http://alexeybraguine.wordpress.com/2011/09/27/to-legalize-drugs-or-not/
09:07 AM on 10/09/2011
President Fox was 100% right on this one. You need to see why' Why is that drug cartel is doing so much killing? It is because it is not legal to buy or sell drugs!! What took place in prohibition? KILLING and KILLINGs. Because it was illegal to buy or sell!!! Now alcohol is one of the best business to be in. This is a no brainer!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Trymore MacVivo
11:27 PM on 10/07/2011
I suppose, Mexico, with drug kingpins controlling whole swathes of the country, teetering on being a failed state. One radical line of thinking i have heard in recent weeks urges the US govt to send 150000 troops into Mexico to eradicate drug lords.....
08:52 PM on 10/08/2011
Sure, send the marines, what could possible go wrong?

You can eliminate all the "lords" you want, by the way: while the demand continues, offer will pop up somewhere else.
09:13 AM on 10/09/2011
This is a joke to send troops to mexico. I guess it it a job security'' Mexico or all the 3rd world countries all they really need is for America to legalize drugs. NO MORE DRUG KINGPINS!!! KILLING WILL STOP!! LOOK AT ALCOHOL? IT IS THE BEST MARKET. No one is killing to sell it out on the dark streets!!!
03:44 PM on 10/07/2011
Ok, lets leave the flag on the side, we know the author failed, But what about this new group? There should be a Group much larger than all of them together, of victims of this violence wave killing Mexico litle by litle, and a fight like that its called a revolution, they are not only mass murdering inocent mexican citizens, also devaluating the country much more than it already is, Mexico would be 3 times richer, and influential if this kind of crimes werent around. We need to stand up against drug consuption, take down the little guys who sell them, with out workers and consumers, drug cartels are nothing, what Mexico needs to start with its on Making laws more severe to offenders, I cant believe that the Death row doesnt exist in Mexico? if it did, can you people imagine on how much room there would be at prisons? and how much money they would save on them to use on enforcing the law? Illegal immigrants from Mexico woulndt be an issue to the States! I Swear if God would grant me the power to Start a REAL war against Cartels, I would give my life to get rid of them!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arturo Ramrez
12:11 PM on 10/08/2011
Thankfully, he hasn't. Have you heard of fascism?
12:22 AM on 10/10/2011
I have, and have you heard of patriotism?
09:15 AM on 10/09/2011
I blame Washington. For there policy on drugs!!! PROHIBITION?? Have we for got? Washington is the problemmmmmm. The END!!!!
02:05 PM on 10/07/2011
and the next group and the next group and the next group...this will not stop until the black market for drugs is eliminated. Legalize, decriminalize and lets move on. This is NO different than what happend in NY and Chicago during the 1920's. People need to wake up and get a clue!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alexey Braguine
Author of Kingmaker, a novel
10:22 AM on 10/08/2011
You are right on target.

http://alexeybraguine.wordpress.com/2011/09/27/to-legalize-drugs-or-not/
09:19 AM on 10/09/2011
A man!! You are 100% right my friend.. It is the policy in drugs that is killing all this people. It is Washington that is responsible for all the killings!!! Look at Alcohol. Best job market in the world. No one is killing people out in the streets to control the sells!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arturo Ramrez
02:04 PM on 10/07/2011
Ok, huffpost changed the picture. But an apology for making these seemingly "innocent" mistakes over and over again would be appreciated.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mando1
01:05 PM on 10/07/2011
Jeez....it's a Colombian flag. I love how much American journalists know about Mexico...not suprising that American's know so very little about mexican's and mexico.
12:47 PM on 10/07/2011
Y esa bandera que?
12:13 PM on 10/07/2011
Mexico is next door and neighbor beware!
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Marcus047
inter arma enim silent leges
11:20 AM on 10/07/2011
What in the world does that picture, showing the Colombian flag, have to do with this story?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arturo Ramrez
11:52 AM on 10/07/2011
Probably it's a metaphor about Mexico's future? Beats me.
11:57 AM on 10/07/2011
Colombian cartel?

I'm surprised anybody here recognized it, instead of going off about illegals.
11:04 AM on 10/07/2011
Would it kill you to have apicture of soldiers with THE mexicna flag, looks like the one from Italy but with an eagle in the center.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wendy Stewart
10:57 AM on 10/07/2011
Many others just take their place. How they will ever stop this is a mystery.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
arachne646
Loving # Growing # Knitting
11:24 AM on 10/08/2011
Legalize marijuana--treat it like wine. Decriminalize other drugs, that takes the profit out of the business for the gangs, here, in Mexico, in Colombia, wherever. It worked in Portugal. Taxes from legal marijuana can be a great source of revenue.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Druuna
Half & half - legal immigrant in a strange land
10:50 AM on 10/07/2011
And what has Colombia (flag in the image) to do with this article? So many Mexicans in the US and you still don't know their flag? Or is it some sort of 'hidden message'?
10:43 AM on 10/07/2011
Who was the genius who put a Colombian flag when presenting a mexican news story?
apduncan
My micro-bio is empty
11:04 AM on 10/07/2011
An American without a clue ... ignorance is bliss hereabouts.

1st Fan.