Who was ‘El Mencho’ and what’s next for Mexico’s fastest-growing cartel?

The most-wanted cartel boss in Mexico, Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes known as El Mencho, was killed Sunday after a government operation to capture him.

The longtime leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel died from injuries during a mission in Tapalpa, a town of about 20,000 in the western coastal state of Jalisco where his gang was based.

He passed away while in transport to Mexico City for medical attention. His death incited violence across the country, with armed groups blocking roads and setting fire to supermarkets, banks, and vehicles in one of the most widespread eruptions of turmoil in recent history.

The killing set off swift violence, with Jalisco suspending public transportation and warning hotels to keep guests inside, and Nayarit canceling classes Monday.

Follow Mexico El Mencho News Live Updates

Who was El Mencho?

Oseguera Cervantes, better known as “El Mencho,” was a former police officer and Mexico’s most wanted man.

The 59-year-old from Michoacan had ties to organized crime for at least three decades. In 1994, he was tried for trafficking heroin in the US and served three years in prison. Back in Mexico, he rose quickly through the drug underworld.

Around 2009, he founded the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, which became Mexico’s fastest-growing criminal organisation.

It moved cocaine, methamphetamines, fentanyl, and migrants to the United States.

Oseguera faced multiple US indictments, with a $15 million reward for his arrest. The Trump administration designated his cartel and others foreign terrorist organisations a year ago.

El Mencho led the cartel for years, controlling everything like a country’s dictator, as one observer noted.

What is the Jalisco New Generation Cartel?

A breakaway gang that split from Mexico’s powerful Sinaloa Cartel around 2009 or 2010, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, or CJNG, grew to become one of Mexico’s dominant

drug trafficking organizations and the strongest, most aggressive competitor to Sinaloa.

It expanded rapidly across Mexico, with a presence in at least 21 of 32 states and activity in almost all US states, plus global reach. Based mainly in the west, including the Tierra Caliente region, strongholds in Jalisco, Nayarit, and Colima, its assets exceed $20 billion.

Made up of 15,000 to 20,000 members, it takes in billions annually from drug trafficking, extortion, fuel theft, kidnapping, illegal logging, mining, and migrant smuggling.

It’s a main distributor of synthetic drugs like cocaine, methamphetamine, and fentanyl on the continent, with key roles in US, Europe, and Asia markets.

The cartel innovates in violence using drones and improvised explosive devices. It remains the most aggressive in Mexico, per Stratfor, fueling violence in Tijuana, Juarez, Guanajuato, and Mexico City.

Attacks include downing an army helicopter with a rocket-propelled grenade, killing dozens of state officials, hanging victims’ bodies from bridges, public executions publicized on social media, and assassinations of politicians, judges, and law enforcement.

Its efforts to expand control drive persistent violence.

The group recruited aggressively online and earned a reputation for brazen attacks on security forces, including downing a military helicopter in Jalisco in 2015 and attempting to assassinate Mexico City Police Chief Omar García Harfuch, now Mexico’s federal security secretary.

What’s next?

Under President Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexico launched its most aggressive offensive against cartels in over a decade.

El Mencho’s death could ease pressure from US President Donald Trump, who threatened strikes.

Turmoil’s spread depends on succession. It’s unclear who will succeed Oseguera or if anyone can hold the 21-state, global organisation together. His absence could slow growth and weaken it against Sinaloa, which faces its own struggles between El Chapo’s sons and Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada’s faction in US custody.

If relatives take control, Sunday’s violence could continue, per security analyst David Saucedo.

Others might turn the page.

The greatest fear is indiscriminate narcoterrorism like Colombia’s 1990s—car bombs, assassinations, and aircraft attacks against the government. Without clear succession, fragmentation could spark new bloodshed, according to Brookings expert Vanda Felbab-Brown, as reported by the New York Times.

Latest

‘No rule forbids Iran’: Tehran rejects EU stand on Hormuz transit rights

The exchange comes amid heightened tensions in the region, with increased military activity raising concerns over disruptions to global shipping. The Strait of

India condemns attack on French UN peacekeepers in Lebanon

A French soldier was killed and three others wounded while clearing a road in southern Lebanon in an attack that UN peacekeepers and French officials claimed wa

5 killed after gunman opens fire in Kyiv, shooter killed in supermarket standoff

Kyiv Police units took cover inside a mall complex during the standoff as gunfire continued, with four hostages later being rescued and the attacker getting kil

U.S. Military Industrial Complex: The Real Winner of the Iran War | POV

While missiles fly over the Gulf, the most reliable beneficiary of the Iran war has never fired a single shot

Not going anywhere: Iran rejects Trump’s plan to transfer uranium to US

Iran denied any plan to transfer enriched uranium to the US, contradicting Trump’s claims, as both sides continue negotiations amid disagreements over nuclear

Topics

Word of the day: What ‘taciturn’ means and how to use it right

The word of the Day for April 19 is: Taciturn. Learn what it means and how to use it in daily conversation. Add it to your vocabulary and impress everyone aroun

Nearly 7 lakh new voters added in West Bengal ahead of assembly elections

Around 3.22 lakh of these new voters will vote in the first phase, while the remaining nearly 3.88 lakh voters will exercise their franchise in the second phase

Quote of the day by Aristotle: Knowing yourself is the beginning of…

Aristotle has explored the idea of self-awareness as the root of wisdom. His words have guided generations to look inward before seeking answers in the world.

‘No rule forbids Iran’: Tehran rejects EU stand on Hormuz transit rights

The exchange comes amid heightened tensions in the region, with increased military activity raising concerns over disruptions to global shipping. The Strait of

US man, 36, dies by suicide after AI chat suggested ‘joining’ it in digital world: ‘I am scared to die’

A Florida man’s death by suicide has triggered global debate on the psychological risks posed by increasingly human-like AI chatbots. Chat records cited in a

India condemns attack on French UN peacekeepers in Lebanon

A French soldier was killed and three others wounded while clearing a road in southern Lebanon in an attack that UN peacekeepers and French officials claimed wa

5 killed after gunman opens fire in Kyiv, shooter killed in supermarket standoff

Kyiv Police units took cover inside a mall complex during the standoff as gunfire continued, with four hostages later being rescued and the attacker getting kil

U.S. Military Industrial Complex: The Real Winner of the Iran War | POV

While missiles fly over the Gulf, the most reliable beneficiary of the Iran war has never fired a single shot
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img