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Latest mass grave in Jalisco could yield over 25 bodies

December 4, 2013

Just days after Mexican authorities exhumed the last of 67 bodies near the town of La Barca, at least another five corpses have been found at another mass grave in the state of Jalisco.

Agents of the Jalisco Prosecutor General’s Office (FGE) discovered the bodies of five men in the municipality of Zapopan on Tuesday. They were unearthed on the Mesita hill between the villages of Santa Lucia and Palo Gordo, about 10 kilometers from the town of Tesistan. The excavation continued on Wednesday, with NoticiasMVS reporting that the body count had risen to 15.

The discovery of the graves followed the arrest of three alleged members of the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion (CJNG) accused of shooting a man to death in Zapopan last Thursday. The suspects told the authorities that at least 25 bodies were buried on the Mesita hill, according to local media outlet TraficoZMG.

The CJNG is also suspected of being responsible for the 67 bodies buried near La Barca on the border with Michoacan, with many of the victims believed to have been members of rival gang the Knights Templar.

Edit (December 6): The authorities had exhumed 17 bodies at the grave in Zapopan at the end of the fourth day of digging on Friday.

Body count rises to 67 in La Barca, Jalisco

December 2, 2013

Mexican authorities have reportedly concluded excavating the clandestine graves in the town of La Barca, Jalisco, where 67 corpses have been uncovered in the last three weeks.

The mass graves were the worst discovered in Mexico since 193 bodies were found in San Fernando, Tamaulipas in June 2011.

The dead are thought to be victims of the ongoing turf war between the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion (CJNG) and the Knights Templar based in neighboring Michoacan. At least two women and a minor were among the dead and Mexican daily Milenio reported that many of the bodies were marked with tattoos of a red cross, a symbol used by the Knights Templar.

Located beside the Rio Lerma near the border with Michoacan, the graves were first discovered on November 9 as the federal Attorney General’s Office (PGR) searched for two federal police officers who had disappeared six days earlier and have yet to be found. This investigation led to the arrest of three civilians and 22 municipal police officers in nearby Vista Hermosa on November 7.

Edit (December 3): At pains to avoid any suggestion that this atrocity occurred under his watch, Jalisco Governor Aristoteles Sandoval said on Tuesday that the victims were from Michoacan and that their remains were buried in Jalisco over a year ago, before he took up office.

“Municipal police in Michoacan arrested them there, they deprived these people of their liberty there, and then they just crossed the river and dumped them in Jalisco,” Sandoval said.

Serafin, son of ‘El Mayo’ Zambada, arrested in Nogales

November 22, 2013

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Serafin Zambada, the son of Sinaloa Cartel kingpin Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada Garcia, was arrested on the U.S.-Mexican border by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) on Wednesday.

Zambada was detained as he tried to cross from Nogales, Sonora into Arizona. He was accompanied by his wife Yameli Torres, who was not arrested.

Zamabada faces federal drug trafficking charges in California and is being held at a medium-security prison in Tucson, where he is due to be presented before a judge next Monday.

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Serafin’s father Ismael runs the Sinaloa Cartel alongside Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman and is considered one of Mexico’s powerful drug traffickers. Another of his sons, Vicente Zambada Niebla, was arrested in Mexico City in March 2009 and extradited to Chicago, where he is currently on trial for drug trafficking.

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Despite the fact that his father is one of the world’s most wanted criminals, Serafin Zambada was not shy of flaunting his wealth or status, regularly using his personal Twitter account (@ZambadaSerafin) to post images of enormous stacks of cash, gold-plated AK-47s, bags of marijuana, expensive cars and exotic pets, such as lions, tigers, leopards and cheetahs.

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