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Zetas Drug Cartel Reportedly Murders Internet Chat Room Users

Zetas Internet Murder

By MARK STEVENSON   11/10/11 05:41 PM ET   AP

MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's hyperviolent Zetas drug cartel appears to be launching what may be one of the first campaigns by an organized crime group to silence commentary on the Internet.

The cartel has already attacked rivals, journalists and other perceived enemies. Now, the target is an online chat room, Nuevo Laredo en Vivo, that allows users to comment on the activities of the Zetas and others in the city on the border with Texas.

Already, three apparent site users have been slain, and a fourth victim may have been discovered Wednesday, when a man's decapitated body was found with what residents said was a banner suggesting he was killed for posting on the site. Chat room users said they could not immediately confirm the victim's identity, because people all post under aliases.

Despite such precautions, users are highly vulnerable, and the Zetas could be tracking them from clues they leave online, experts said Thursday.

A female chat room user was found decapitated in September with a similar message as the one found Wednesday and at the exact same spot, with a message signed with the letter "Z," which refers to the Zetas. Residents couldn't fully read the latest message, because the dead man's body was laid on top of it, in what appeared to be a more hurried execution.

"I don't know of anything like this having happened anywhere else in the world," said Jorge Chabat, an expert in safety and drug trafficking at the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics in Mexico. "It is certainly new and worrisome ... it is a frontal confrontation against the public; it is not just a confrontation with the government anymore."

Drug cartels in Mexico have frequently attacked traditional print newspapers, by tossing explosives at their offices or killing, kidnapping or threatening reporters. Violence against journalists in Tamaulipas state, where Nuevo Laredo is located, has led local media to censor themselves, leaving residents on their own to separate fact from pervasive rumors spread on social networks.

Juan Carlos Romero, who helps lead the press freedom group Article 19, said local newspapers have often stopped publishing crime reports out of fear, leading residents to turn more to the Internet for information like that posted Thursday on Nuevo Laredo en Vivo: where gunshots have been heard, where vehicles suspected of carrying cartel lookouts have been seen, which streets are safe to travel.

"What are people doing in the face of the lack of information, the kind of information you need to make decisions: Where can I drive? Can I leave the house?" said Romero. "People are forging new channels of communication on the Internet, social networks, Twitter, blogs, Facebook."

Drug cartels appear to have learned that such Internet sites reach far more readers than northeastern Mexico's small regional newspapers and have adjusted their attacks accordingly.

"We are witnessing a new behavior of criminal forces in the country," said Erick Fernandez, a communications professor at the IberoAmerican University in Mexico City. "We are in a new phase."

Romero agreed. "It appears to me that organized crime is trying to get common citizens to stop real-time coverage of violence," he said, saying that "the intimidation is having a multiplier effect."

Some of the site users vowed to forge on despite the two decapitations and the September slayings of two other people whose bodies were found hanging from an overpass in Nuevo Laredo with a message threatening: "This is what will happen" to trouble-making Internet users. That message was also signed with a "Z."

"I am ready to lay down my life for the cause, if the soldiers take heed of my reports ... (if) the risk (serves) for something," said one user who posted under the tag "Anon5182."

Despite heightened security awareness among the site's users Thursday, with warnings not to share personal information with anyone, they remain tremendously vulnerable, said Matt Harrigan, chief executive of the San Diego, California-based security firm Critical Assets.

A trail of information like cookies, server addresses, login and account information was easy visible for some users.

"I know enough about (one user) that I'm uncomfortable with how much I know about (him) just from visiting the site," said Harrigan. "Just from having looked up information about him, the number of things I know about the guy is pretty staggering."

Harrigan said it would be relatively easy, with the money the Zetas have from running drugs, to track down posters.

"If you're a Mexican cartel with hundreds of millions of dollars, there certainly are security experts in Mexico or former hackers, or whoever they are, that I'm certain they're for hire," he said.

Beginnings
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In the late 1990s, about 40 soldiers deserted the Mexican army special forces to work as muscle for the Gulf Cartel. After the cartel's leader was arrested, they branched out into their own, independent operation.
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MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's hyperviolent Zetas drug cartel appears to be launching what may be one of the first campaigns by an organized crime group to silence commentary on the Internet. The cartel has...
MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's hyperviolent Zetas drug cartel appears to be launching what may be one of the first campaigns by an organized crime group to silence commentary on the Internet. The cartel has...
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11:04 PM on 11/19/2011
This government is a joke. We should be using the NSA to track down the IP addresses of the narco-terrorists and hunt them down with SEAL Team 6 instead.
10:31 PM on 12/09/2011
Yo soy pedro escobedo y todos me la pelan. Tengo me chevrolet SS azul y niden me ase nada. Nomas me la jalan. Orita mismo voy a mexico como si nada. Paso por Oxinaga el 10. Y si algiun quere decirme algo que me escriban. Mi coreo electronico is pedroescobedo41@yahoomail.com
05:51 AM on 11/15/2011
The US should take the money and armed forces that we have around the world bring eveything back to the US. Then just lodge a campaign against mexico and the drug cartels and in the end just put the US flag on that land and that could solve alot of problems.
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Ystorm
dumb people make me angry.
07:39 PM on 11/15/2011
am liking your idea tmcavoy :D
07:43 PM on 11/14/2011
I used to think a lot about Mexico's Police & Corruption problems but not anymore. That's because I have found America has its own very deadly internal corruption problems even within its federal police & law enforcement agencies. The kind of corruption that would kill a police officer unarmed & in cold blood. Stop when I lie FBI. American Justice or FBI cover-up? http://www.change.org/petitions/american-justice-or-fbi-cover-up# America must demand integrity in its law enforcement & criminal justice system that at this point in time it is dearly lacking. Veteran's lives nor the ones who protect them should suffer what my family & I have suffered at the hands of US Government Official Acts of Corruption & well documented. These are not allegations these are facts as the FBI well knows. Stop when I lie FBI. The real problem is the US & National Media seems to be willfully deft & blind to all the evidence? I challenge the FBI to publicly refute the facts stated in the petition concerning Veterans Affairs. One day Veterans and federal cops alike will know what the VA did to a good cop.
12:03 AM on 11/14/2011
I say send the US military in there to kick the drug cartels rear ends and if the Mexican government doesn't like it kick their butts too, and set up a new Mexican government that is friendly to the Mexican people. I have never understood how the rich mexicans don't invest in their own people. They could create factories and businesses that could compete with the world economy and bring the people out of poverty. With all their revolutions all they have done is create more poverty, because it has never been about the people.
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TommyObama
Abuse of power comes as no surprise.
12:40 AM on 11/14/2011
Mexico's ruling elite families are perhaps some of the greediest and most aristocratic people on the planet, and racist, too. They control ALL the political parties. Mexico badly needs a French Revolution, but instead for opposition they have the PAN and PRD, which aren't even good substitutes. The US, of course, would quickly squelch that needed revolution anyway, were it to begin.
jessdog
Occupiers Are Not Victims.
02:17 PM on 11/14/2011
I agree and it's funny how some in the U.S want to turn our economic system just like mexico with the 1 percent owning 99 percent of the wealth I'm referring to the tea party
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Ystorm
dumb people make me angry.
07:40 PM on 11/15/2011
maybe some of the un inspired 99%'s could get off their lazy rear ends and get jobs OR create something that is useful and make some money off it, then they would be 1%'ers too, and then they will stop their useless whining that no one wants to hear about anymore.
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ur2nutty4me
12:03 AM on 11/14/2011
We can travel around the world to liberate people from there awful repressive tyrants but we can't go 10 miles across our border. I guess there's no oil at the end of that rainbow..........
12:30 AM on 11/15/2011
lol....Doesnt make sense, does it?.....I think there more behind it then we know.... Actually,Im certain there is......
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southparkrepublican
Fighting dominionism one stakeburning at a time!
11:15 PM on 11/13/2011
Hey mexican people: I've got an idea, if the mexican military isn't working out for you (corrupted) and the mexican police aren't doing well (corrupted/weakened), then how about you pool your money together and purchase yourselves some mercs?

I've always wondered why they haven't done that yet. I mean seriously, I read these articles and I wonder why one of these companies just don't offer their services and start hanging bodies from lamps. After you decapitate someone for posting something on the internet, well, you lose your "human" status and become an animal (at least in my eyes).

Put some heads on stakes, hang em from the lamps, you want to go medieval? We can go medieval...
12:43 AM on 11/14/2011
That's what we call "classic escalation." Besides, many people in that country are struggling to feed their families. Good thing they have extra pocket change for independent contractors. Dumbest idea I've heard all day.
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mumi009
"The truth will set you free"
04:29 AM on 11/14/2011
Yeah, right. The "Three Amigos" maybe?
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10:28 PM on 11/13/2011
Clearly acts of people that have no consciences, sociopaths, psychopaths, people with antisocial personality disorder - for which there is no cure. And it wouldn't matter if we legalized drugs, they would still engage in acts of violence against others. The perpetrators of these atrocities need to be hunted down and prosecuted to the full extent of the law, although I would prefer that they resist arrest and require the use of lethal force against them... I believe that our global society would be better off without them.
10:13 PM on 11/13/2011
they will be in the USA nexts
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10:37 PM on 11/13/2011
They already are...
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Ystorm
dumb people make me angry.
07:35 PM on 11/15/2011
They already are.... :/
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07:38 PM on 11/13/2011
And the Mexican authorities haven't totallyfuckedup the Zeta's why?
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10:35 PM on 11/13/2011
I can think of three possible reasons... They haven't found them yet, they have been paid off, and/or they are afraid of them...
10:52 AM on 11/14/2011
Because they get millions of reasons to look the other way.
Wupta
Parent
06:36 PM on 11/13/2011
Legalize drugs.
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10:36 PM on 11/13/2011
Won't stop the violence.
10:56 AM on 11/14/2011
I don't see managers of Walgreens vs Osco decapitating each other in the streets,
and liquor store owners aren't hanging bodies from bridges.
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Jeremy Echols
12:39 AM on 11/15/2011
Read about alcohol prohibition some time.
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Jonathan Eltgroth
11:57 PM on 11/13/2011
Cartels probably fund anti-drug legislation. They make more money when drugs are illegal.
04:14 PM on 11/13/2011
The Mexican people will be the ones to solve the problems in Mexico. It is easy to blame someone else but the corrupt police, military and politicians are all Mexican. This is a Mexican problem and it will take a Mexican solution. The next generation of leaders of Mexico will need to stand up and demand an end to the bribery and corruption that has been all too common in Mexico for decades.
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Tunghoy
My other car is a TARDIS
01:35 PM on 11/13/2011
For those who keep saying that legalizing drugs is a panacea that will make drug crime go away: I agree with legalization, but it will NOT make crime go away. Here's why:

* The U.S. isn't the only country with drug laws. We are not their only customers.
* Cigarettes, alcohol and gambling are legal, and there are crime syndicates involved in selling those.
* Even with legalization, the cartels would still try to control the trade, intimidating anyone else who grows, manufactures, sells and ships the products.
* The cartels want money and power. They don't care if it's drugs, coffee, oranges or fish. And if they don't get enough money and power from one legal industry, they'll just try to corner other ones.
03:20 PM on 11/13/2011
* We are their major "customer", by far. * False equivalency argument. * If they were legalized and produced under supervision here in the US, the illegal cartel's control would dissapear. * So, let them look for other business. What else does Mexico have that they might want? Nothing that I can think of.
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07:39 PM on 11/13/2011
Hey - there's a hot trade in donkeys and maracas...
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planetjeffy
On the other hand, you have different fingers.
08:47 PM on 11/13/2011
how many gang shoot outs and gang deaths occur over alcohol?
12:11 PM on 11/13/2011
Rather than put these guys out of business, this administration is encouraging their business with continued Prohibition. Furthermore, Operation Fast & Furious appears to be neither ill-conceived nor botched, but rather a concerted effort by the US DOJ to deliver guns and grenades to take sides with one cartel against the others.
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tjconkster
Occupy the Voting Booth 2014
11:54 AM on 11/13/2011
If the Kochs start funding this in the U.S.....watch out for the Di..ck Armey (formerly the tea party) to start carrying out the Koch's wishes...
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Ystorm
dumb people make me angry.
07:37 PM on 11/15/2011
you guys that are hating on the koch family. be apprised of the fact that if it wasn't for the koch institute, none of the vaccines or cures for syphilis would exist, also diptheria would be rampant, and also other horrible illnesses. it is because of the koch institute in germany that we have the remedies we have for those and other diseases. so cut it out.
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grizzly bear55
King of the forest
11:30 AM on 11/13/2011
Talking about censorship.