Shawn Ryan Show - #212 Katarina Szulc - Inside the Cartels' Secret Smuggling Operation in Port of Vancouver
Episode Date: June 26, 2025Katarina Szulc is an investigative journalist and the host of Borderland: Dispatches, a show delivering raw, on-the-ground reporting from the front lines of Mexico’s cartel war. With a sharp lens on... organized crime, corruption, and cross-border conflict, she brings listeners real-time snapshots of a rapidly evolving crisis that’s reshaping both Mexico and the United States. Reporting from across North America—Mexico, the U.S., and Canada—she’s known for her fearless fieldwork, unflinching interviews, and a relentless drive to uncover the stories that others won’t touch. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://www.americanfinancing.net/srs nmls 182334, nmlsconsumeraccess.org https://www.tryarmra.com/srs https://www.betterhelp.com/srs This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp — give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/srs and get on your way to being your best self. https://www.shawnlikesgold.com https://www.drinkhoist.com - USE CODE SRS https://www.patriotmobile.com/srs https://www.rocketmoney.com/srs Katarina Szulc Links: X - https://x.com/KatarinaSzulc IG - https://www.instagram.com/katarinaszulc Substack - https://katarinaszulc.substack.com/ YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@katarinaszulc Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Katarina Schultz.
Sean Ryan. Welcome to the show.
Thank you for having me.
Man, you are getting some amazing content down there with the cartels and reporting on all that
stuff. So I can't remember how I found you. I think
it was my producer Jeremy.
I'm curious to know what it was that sparked your guys' interest.
Yeah, I think my producer found you. And so anyways, we've been tracking you probably
for six months maybe.
Wow.
But love your work.
Thank you.
How do you get, before we get into the interview, how do you get that much access? Everyone, this is my most asked question and there are a few things that I can attribute it to.
First, I nerd out about this. I've always been interested since a kid and we'll get into that, in organized crime and international conflict.
And so I try to know about it as much as I can. And I think people recognize that.
Second, I don't judge. So I have my own, you know, morals and ethics and personal values,
but I never let that come across with the people I'm speaking to,
whether they're the good guys, the bad guys, or
somewhere in between or undecided.
And I just want to hear everyone's story.
I just want to know what's going on.
Um, I want to give people a voice.
I feel like they don't have one.
And then also, uh, I'm a 24 year old girl from Canada.
You're only 24?
Yeah.
Oh my gosh.
I didn't know that.
I know, I look a lot older.
But I'm a 24 year old girl from Canada who wants to talk about what was your reaction
to Trump saying that you and your colleagues are terrorists.
I'm just curious to know.
And a lot of these guys will open up, keep in mind, I'm typically
always and only working with men.
So organized crime is dominated by men.
And so when I go in, uh, it's very unalarming.
I mean, I don't give off the vibe
that I'm going to kill you or rat on you
or have some sort of hidden agenda.
I just like to hear the stories.
I'm genuinely interested in,
I like to tell them in the most unbiased way possible,
the most honest way.
And so that has allowed me to gain the trust
of a lot of people who have a lot of high-level information and are
willing to share it with me. And I've, you know, I've put my work in for that because I've spoken
to quite a few people over the course of my career who took a risk in sharing information with me,
reaching out to me or speaking to me or meeting with me. And I never have ever let their identities been known or given that
information to someone who could put their situation at risk.
So that's how I think I get access and I'm a pusher.
I attack.
I mean, where did you start though?
Why do you think they give you access?
There's a lot of people that'll go down there and listen to what they have to say.
And plus all those journalists are getting killed down there.
I don't know if they're still getting killed, but a couple years ago they were murdering
journalists left and right.
Mexico actually is like one of the top countries for the most murdered journalists and female
journalists.
There you go.
Just check the box. Why me?
I mean, I push for it.
I'm like, let me talk to you.
And if they say no, I go and ask someone else or I ask differently.
I don't really take no for an answer.
And I convince them why I'm the right person that they can share this information with
or take me along, whether that's law enforcement or it's organized crime people.
Why do you think they want to get any of the information out to begin with? information with or take me along, whether that's law enforcement or it's organized crime people.
Why do you think they want to get any of the information out to begin with?
It's a way to flaunt their power, flex their muscles, show people, look, I'm doing
all of this crime. I basically run Mexico. I run the drug trade and I'm committing violent acts in broad daylight, gruesomely.
And I'm giving this information to the press and catch me if you can.
Interesting.
That's certainly what it is.
I think it's an ego thing.
It's a flex.
It's a flex, 100%.
For some people, it's also kind of like media relations. They put this message out there,
an adversary hears or sees it, and they're sending a message.
Got you.
Yeah.
Got you. Well, let's get into the interview. Here we go. So, Katarina Schultz, a fearless
investigative journalist who's gone where few dare, diving
headfirst into the heart of Mexico's cartel strongholds like Sinaloa and Jalisco.
To expose the brutality reality, excuse me, to expose the brutal reality of organized
crime.
A bilingual boots on the ground reporter tracking the cartel empire and its influence on North America
Former traditional journalist who realized you needed to get out of the newsroom to find out what's really happening
And you're the author of your popular substat to keep people informed on all things
Cartel related so thank you for coming in here and
We got a whole slew of topics to cover.
But you had mentioned something, you had mentioned you had went down, I don't know if it was
really happened, but you said you went down to the cartels, some of the cartel members
and asked what they thought about Trump-led aluminum terrorist organizations.
What was their response to that? Yeah, so I went to a border region
where some members of organized crime spoke with me
and they're responsible for a significant amount
of the trafficking and human smuggling operations.
And this was right after Trump had officially declared them
FTOs because there was a lot of rhetoric around this previously, and even Texas Governor Greg Abbott had previously declared them FTOs.
But now this was real. had assumed was going to invoke a lot of fear, especially when it came to the financial pipelines,
because that's what this act really attacks, is the cartels' finances.
And that's so much worse than putting a bounty on their family members or stopping the flow
of drugs.
Like for them, it's the money freezing financial assets, shutting down their shell companies,
whatever it is.
And so I wanted to know because we were seeing so many headlines of how crazy this is and
politicians reacting.
Okay, but the guys who are really going to face the brunt of this, what's going on?
And so I asked them, you know, what do you think about Trump calling you and the people you work with in your networks terrorists?
And how is this going to impact you?
And it's so funny because I had anticipated that this reaction, but I didn't think that actually, we don't care.
We're just going to wait four years.
It's not that deep.
Wow.
Wow.
We're not going to wait four years. It's not that deep. Wow. Wow.
We're not going to fight them on it.
We'll give them what they want to see.
And we are not terrorists because there is a demand for our product.
There are drug addicts all across the United States who want what we have to sell.
How are we terrorizing them?
We're not literally, they're telling me like, we're not like ISIS or the Taliban bombing innocent people. We just supply a product that there
is a demand for. And if this designation means that we have to hold off for a little while
in order to protect our networks, that's exactly what we will do.
Interesting. So what do you think So what is the plan then?
Are they just going to stop running fentanyl across the border?
I mean, fentanyl numbers have been going down, but I don't think that's the plan.
The plan is to move operations, and I've been reporting on this extensively.
It's all happening in Canada now.
No one else is clocking it, and it's so obvious.
It started during Trump's first administration when he first started cracking down on the
southern border.
Cartels knew they could go into Canada and they didn't need a visa like they needed to
get into the US.
It was just a regular tourist visa.
They didn't need to apply for anything or pay for anything.
They could just go get their tourist visa, like have a regular tourist visa the way I come to the United States, set up shop, negotiate and network with pre-existing organized crime groups in Canada,
whether that be the Hells Angels, a big one, or Brothers Keepers, or Red Scorpion, or the United Nations gang,
and say, hey look, you guys have incredible access, okay, over 5,000 miles of practically unprotected border into the United States.
We can produce this product here and traffic it.
Not to mention, a lot of these pre-existing gangs have a large Asian populations.
And what do we have in Vancouver?
The Port of Vancouver.
And where are the fentanyl precursors coming in? From China. So you move these precursors,
the movement is now, is no longer coming into Mexico. It's coming into Canada. You set up
shop, you increase profit, you tell all these guys that are already there, hey, look, if
you let us, Sinaloa or Jalisco in to work with you guys. We're going to quadruple profits.
So wait, you're saying that no more, are you saying in addition to Mexico,
produce fentanyl or it's all moved to Canada?
I think the majority is moved to Canada.
The majority of it's moved to Canada.
Yes. I am 99% sure about that because you can never be a hundred percent sure,
but I am so sure about that.
Last summer, I wanted to crack down on this story because I had an individual
reach out to me who was an operative for the Sinaloa Curtel working in Canada,
running these labs.
And he showed me the labs that the Sinaloa cartel is operating with.
Physically?
Yeah.
Where are they putting them?
They're putting them in suburban sort of, so in, they're particularly in the West Coast
in BC and in Alberta, which is like a prairie province.
And so there's a lot of farmland and it's residential.
And prior to them, prior to this, it was meth labs that they had running out there.
And there would always be like a random meth lab explosion in Abbotsford or, you
know, this is like a smaller city.
And then these turned into fentanyl labs that were completely under the radar
because we also didn't have Canadian law enforcement, like patrolling these areas
to an extent that they would patrol like a large city like Vancouver or Toronto.
So you're bringing in precursors from the port of Vancouver easily because
let less than 1% of cargo that comes into the port of Vancouver is actually
inspected by authorities or... Less than how much?
Less than 1%.
Less than 1%?
That is an official number, yes.
So the majority of the cargo that's coming into the Port of Vancouver is unmonitored.
And you have longshoremen that are on organized crime payroll
or turning a blind eye.
These precursors are being brought to labs throughout the lower mainland and they are
producing fentanyl there.
And it started off as distributing this product
throughout Canada, because just like the United
States, there has been
this insatiable appetite for fentanyl in Canada.
Um, during the pandemic, more people at one point were dying of
fentanyl overdose deaths than from COVID.
So that was a major health crisis.
And then there's this major crackdown at the southern border.
You already have cartel operatives established in the north.
You have five, over 5,000 miles of practically unprotected border.
You know, it's Greenland and you can fly across, you can drive your boat across,
you can drive your dirt bike across.
And that just left it as open field for these members of organized crime to
start to bring their operations to the next level by trafficking everything
into the United States.
to the next level by trafficking everything into the United States. And it's important to keep in mind that Canadian law enforcement knows this is happening, very
aware, has been aware since around 2017.
Oh, this has been happening since 2017.
It's been happening, yes, since Trump's first, so 2016.
Wow.
It's, this has been, I would say for the past 10 years exactly, is when cartel operatives
from Mexico started to move operations into Canada.
And law enforcement knows this is happening, but Canadian law enforcement does not have
the resources to crack down on this.
How many precursors are there?
Do you know?
No, I don't.
I don't know how to make fentanyl.
But it's fairly simple.
How big are these labs?
I mean, when you say a meth lab, that's usually what, like a trailer out the middle of a field?
A lot of these are just small, like single occupancy homes.
Okay.
So a farmhouse. Yes, exactly.
Are they buying the farmland?
Yeah, or they're renting it from...
So a lot of the farmland is owned by certain families and
they will rent out these plots of land or whatever little house is already on this land.
A way that the Canadian authorities crack down on members of organized crime is not
through directly charging them with producing or conspiracy to traffic.
They will crack down on their ownership of a home.
And then they no longer have a place to run operations.
So that home gets taken away.
It's that particular real estate is under investigation,
along with the people,
but it operates a little bit differently
and it hinders the way that they're able to work.
But mentioning the law enforcement is even though they know that this is going on, the
resources just are not there.
And I have a really good source who is with the RCMP, that's Canada's National Police
Force and he specializes in organized crime. who is with the RCMP, that's Canada's National Police Force,
and he specializes in organized crime.
And we talk about that 1% offentional number very frequently because he says,
neither my colleagues nor myself believe that number because we have seen so many operations go under the radar, especially when they're working
undercover. And I said, well, why isn't there a crackdown then? Why aren't they stopping it?
And why is the Canadian government only implementing a fentanyl czar when Trump is telling them to crack
down, not when thousands of people are dying on a monthly basis from fentanyl use.
And he explicitly tells me it's because they just don't have the means to do it.
They haven't even been able to crack down on local gang land.
How are they now supposed to focus on transnational crime organizations?
The head of RCMP was asked just recently, how many organized crime groups, individual
organized crime groups, do you think are operating in Canada right now?
And he responds, it's on video.
I don't have a number off the top of my head.
I think 4,000.
And so the question is clarified. There are four thousand organized crime groups operating in Canada with their own individual
leadership and networks and the head of the RCMP said, yes, I would say so, around four
thousand.
Who do you think the key players are putting these labs in up there?
Sinaloa cartel?
It's Sinaloa NCG&G.
But let me just finish that point about the 4,000, because this goes to show the disconnect
between Canadian law enforcement in Canada, because it's actually 668 individual organized
crime groups.
That's according to CSIS, Canadian version of CIA.
So imagine if you have this disconnect where our national police force is just pulling
out a random number, how are you even supposed to crack down on these people and these groups?
But yes, it's mostly Sinaloa and CJ&G that are in Canada.
I would say now it's likely probably just CJ&G simply due to the fact
that Sinaloa does not have the power or the numbers to maintain their stronghold.
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Interesting they made an alliance with them. I think it's a proxy alliance. See er the chapitos were
Pretty obviously losing the fight in this
Faction war that's been going on in the Sinaloa cartel since El Mayo was brought to the United States and
So I think CJ and G saw this as an opportunity to say, we will back you up, but we gain control
over everything.
And they are the first cartel in history to have control over every single Mexican state.
Interesting.
Interesting.
You know, back to, my head's jumping around a lot, sorry.
Sorry, I do that too.
Back to declaring them terrorist organizations and they're saying,
I totally understand what they're saying. You know, well, we'll just wait four years
and everything will be finished. But I mean, there's another aspect too. There's, you know,
there's always a potential that we send in SOCOM and JSOC units.
I mean, do they have any fear of that?
I asked them about that.
And they said that if American special forces lay their feet on Mexican soil, they will fight
till the death because they will have nothing to lose.
They will put up a fight.
Will they win that fight?
No.
But they won't go down without a fight.
Because that's really, that's all they have.
And so if their entire livelihood and their entire business is being attacked,
especially by US uniform operators who have every means to just completely squash it,
they won't go down like a bitch.
I mean, down to what level though?
You know what I mean?
I mean, to the very bottom.
To the very bottom.
Oh, even, even the local drug dealer.
Yes.
The guy who's a lookout who's making pennies.
When I was in Sinaloa covering this fighting in the fall, the money flow was interrupted
for all levels of people working for the cartels.
And so main people who, it's like that necessary job that makes no money are the punteros,
the lookouts, the guys on their dirt bikes who watch if Mexican forces are coming, you know, they keep the eyes out for whatever's going
on. Those guys make the least amount of money. They're making around $500 a month. And when the
infighting began, and all of this money and resources had to go to, we
need to maintain our stronghold and we need to buy arms and stockpile, these punteros
were the ones losing out.
And so when I was there, once it got dark, I couldn't order Uber Eats to my hotel because
these guys were stealing the food from the delivery men because they didn't
even have enough money to eat.
But they were still working for the cartels.
They wouldn't say, okay, you know what, fuck this, I'm going to go and work in a Walmart
where I'm at least going to make a steady income.
It's not great, but I have something to pay for my basic needs.
Because at that point, it's not just about the money, it's indoctrination.
It's about being a part of something, feeling powerful, feeling like you've been validated
and accepted by the very people who are responsible for thousands of deaths and the war on drugs.
They're on the FBI's most wanted posters and I work for that guy.
Hmm.
I guess it makes sense.
I mean- It makes sense to them. We don't have to understand it makes sense. I mean...
It makes sense to them. We don't have to understand it.
Yeah. Wow. I thought there would be at least a little fear, but doesn't sound like they care at all.
I don't think they do. And based on what I've been told, whether that's what I was told at the border,
whether I go and ask in Sinaloa or Jalisco or Michoacán or Guerrero, the consensus remains the same.
And the people in charge are treated like gods.
They are absolutely praised as if they are the one and only.
I mean, that's why we see all the songs about el Mencho, el Chapo, el Mayo.
I mean, that's why we see all the songs about el mencho, el chapo, el mayo. And you can literally go to Sinaloa and buy narco merch.
You know, you got the hat with whoever's face on it.
You can even buy like religious regalia that is paying homage to narco leaders.
Yes.
And so, the people who work for them, praise them. People who don't work for them,
praise them and want to work for them. So if you're telling this 17-year-old kid who
has always wanted to be in this lifestyle, you're going to die for me and American forces
are coming in. He'll stand up. He'll probably shit his pants, but he'll do it.
He'll put on face.
How many of these labs do you think have been set up in Canada?
Do you have any estimation on that?
I think, I don't know exactly how many labs are operating in Canada, but the majority of the labs that
are in Canada, which is significant because there is certainly a supply.
There is no lack of drugs in Canada or the United States, right?
And especially in Northern States too, where a lot of these drugs are coming into.
I think the majority of them are being run by the cartels.
And the interesting thing is you won't really see it in the numbers or in police investigations
or press releases because they don't keep track of which criminal organizations are
operating what, like which labs. So for example, you will, uh, someone will be arrested or three, three men will be
arrested for trafficking arms and drugs.
They were arrested in a Surrey home in British Columbia and we found X amount
of drugs, X amount of arms with this amount of street value.
They won't say, Oh, you know, they were operating on behalf of
the Sinaloa cartel.
They will say, we found messages in our investigation that they
were operating with Mexican associates.
And some people will then subsequently be charged and
they'll be Mexican nationals living in Canada.
Those guys are working
for the cartels.
But Canadian authority doesn't keep track,
or at least not publicly, of who is working with
exactly which criminal organization.
And I think that that also does play a role in
allowing the cartels to flourish over there
because they can operate so entirely under the radar.
I mean, here in the U, for the first time a few weeks ago, a woman in El Paso was arrested
for particularly working as a straw buyer for CJ&G.
And this was the first case of someone in the US with material to be charged as an FTO.
In Canada, that wouldn't be the case. You wouldn't hear that, oh, she was directly working as an associate
with the new generation cartel.
But when you bring light to that, especially in a border place like
El Paso, then everyone who's doing it is kind of on edge.
And then they say, okay, look, hey,
we're under a spotlight.
But if that's not happening, you continue to operate like, there's no spotlight on us, we don't need to worry
because there isn't.
Do Canadians know this is happening?
Well, if they read my reporting, they know now.
I mean, Cash Patel, director of the FBI, is now saying
it publicly. He just said that they're coming in through the Port of Vancouver, they're
producing fentanyl, the fentanyl is coming from Canada because they haven't secured the
northern border. And when I initially started reporting on this, and I was reaching out
to RCMP and reaching out to CSIS and putting out my contact, everyone was telling me, no, you're wrong, this can't be.
And RCMP was telling me, we have no evidence to show that local criminal organizations
are working directly with cartels.
But I met with cartel associates in Canada showing me the production, telling me how
they're
doing it.
And it goes back to what you asked me, why are they telling me this?
Because they want to show you exactly how they're operating under the radar.
They're so tough.
And, oh yeah, you secured our southern border?
Fuck you.
We moved to Canada.
How much is one of these labs producing?
Do you know that?
Yeah, like, okay, so one batch will be like $150,000 worth of fentanyl pills.
And they're producing...
And how many pills is that?
Any idea?
It depends, because it depends on the size of the pills.
It depends on the strength of what they're... the strength of fentanyl in each pill. I'm just trying to get an estimation of how much shit is coming through, you know,
the northern U.S.-Canadian border.
But and then how fast do you think this is spreading?
I mean, it sounds like right now it's pretty localized in Vancouver.
But when's it going to go more towards the other coast?
It is in the East Coast.
It's not at the same level, but it certainly is in the East Coast.
What I know what's happening for sure in the East Coast is a lot of people are being
contracted by the cartels to, and not Mexican people, Canadian nationals are being contracted
by the cartels to operate as enforcers. A lot of people in Quebec and Ontario.
What do you mean enforcer?
What does that mean?
Uh, it's like a hockey player.
It's like, uh, it protects the hockey team, right?
They're protecting the operations.
How so?
What are they doing?
Taking out hits, threatening people, um, ensuring that the right individuals are being paid off, whether that
be enforcement at the border so that guns can get across into Canada from the US or
fentanyl can go the other way.
How are they getting their people up there?
Are they coming up through the US?
Yeah.
Just keep going north or are they flying them in?
So prior to Canada re-implementing the visa requirement, a lot of the Mexican nationals
were flying directly into Canada. They completely would bypass the US. It was much easier that
way because they wouldn't need a visa. Now it's a little bit different. Now some of the operatives who were already based in the US are moving into Canada.
Okay.
And it's interesting because when I was, I gained access to a few group chats that were
run by the cartels on WhatsApp, Telegram. WhatsApp is like the starting point just because of the way the encryption is set up.
They don't want to talk about too much, but because it is so accessible, it's a great
way to hire people, recruit people.
And so I gained access to a group chat where they were basically recruiting people
to work as enforcers for them, sicarios, you know, managing certain logistics of the business,
whether that's paying off authority, finding out who's who,
getting the arms, finding the dealers, contracting straw buyers, whatever it may be.
When I was in this group chat,
the first thing that stood out to me was two of the phone numbers were Canadian area codes.
One was Alberta and one was Toronto.
And one of the individuals was directly asked if he could take out a hit if need be.
He would be paid $55,000 Canadian.
He would have to buy a Glock with three, three mags, I think it was. I
have this screenshot. And there could be no kids around. And if he goes to the house,
make sure that no family is around of the individual that needs to be killed. And so
for a lot of these people, money was put on the table right away.
You get into this group chat, whether that means you're going to be moving fentanyl pills into the US,
whether that means you may have to take out a hit or pay someone off, conduct any sort of logistics,
it was, this is how much you'll make. Take it or leave it.
And that was, for a lot of people that first incentive.
Now for a lot of other folks, it was,
I'm gonna be a part of the cartel.
For a lot of these people, they're kind of outcasts
and they feel like power, they're like an aggressive person.
And a lot of those type of guys who kind of had like
a violent past, boxers, were being hired as sicarios.
And the way they would be recruited into these group chats
was either through social media.
So a lot of fake postings or postings on Facebook
or TikTok that would allude to what they could become a part of, but also just through knowing
someone.
Word of mouth.
Interesting.
Hey, my niece is dating this guy.
He's been here for Mexico for around six years.
He's making a ton of money.
I know you're strapped for cash.
Would you, if you get a package
and you just have to drive it across the border,
go to the Sears or Walmart parking lot,
someone's gonna pick it up.
Don't look inside and you're gonna to get paid $70,000.
Just go and come back.
People will do it.
Damn.
And Canada is not doing, you actually on the outline, I saw that they are also recruiting from the Balkans.
Yeah.
Did I see that?
Yeah.
Balkan States, like Armenian guys too.
A lot of ex gang members from over there and in Australia too.
I mean, at this point-
They're recruiting from Australia?
Yeah.
Really?
Yeah.
Australia, England, like it seems like there's like this thing with the
Commonwealth places is like-
Why are they going to the, I mean, why are the, it sounds like there's no
shortage of people that want to join the cartels.
There isn't.
And that's what's...
So why are they recruiting out of the Balkans?
Because they need an international stronghold.
And so when you have people who don't look like you, don't talk like you, and come from
different training backgrounds, they can fly under the radar a lot better.
And they have access to different areas that certain Mexican operatives do not.
So say for example, uh, not that long ago, there was a blatant daylight shooting in, in, uh,
Vancouver, a guy was killed and he was, he was
shot by a Canadian man from Quebec, super French name.
This individual had spent years trying to get by a Canadian man from Quebec, super French name.
This individual had spent years in Mexico and Columbia and was said to eventually work for the cartel,
go to Canada and take out this hit.
Now, how much better is it that you have
a Canadian national taking out a hit?
He knows where to go.
He knows how law enforcement operates.
He's from this place.
He has access.
The chances that there's going to be a fuck up are a lot less.
And also, if you know that Canadian law enforcement is not directly attacking the cartels when
an associate who's not Mexican is operating for them, of course, you're going to have
a foreign person, a Canadian or an Australian or someone from England, take out the hit
or commit the crime. Hmm.
Yeah. Are they, are they trying to spread into Europe and
Armenia and Australia as well?
I mean, could that be another reason?
Yeah.
Is there making connections?
Yeah.
And there are already Interpol reports of particularly CG&G having activity,
having strongholds in Australia, in Western Europe,
in Kenya. There was a, people think I'm crazy when I talk about this, but they found a cG&G
linked lab in Kenya, in Africa.
Wow. What the hell are they doing over there?
Producing and trafficking. It's an international operation.
And to me, it makes sense that they are moving everywhere.
Because it's like what I said, they catch me if you can.
Yeah.
I mean, it makes sense to me.
I mean, I guess it would...
In Kenya, I mean, I don't know how many people would be able to afford fentanyl, you know,
but... But it's not about domestic distribution.
It's about that production there and being so far removed from where the Hawkeye View is,
which is Canada, US and Mexico, and being able to move the product outwards from there.
You know, the other thing is, I'm not saying you're wrong by any means, but...
It's okay.
You can.
It doesn't make sense why they would pay a Canadian $55,000 Canadian dollars to put
a hit out to assassinate somebody or fly somebody in from the Balkans or Australia when we do
know they don't give a shit about their people dying, you know
I mean we've seen that for years the you know
They give them five minutes of trading and send them off to their work
Yeah, but you know, and so it's just it's not very cost-effective for them to
To have to pay that price when they can just send somebody, you know from a little Pueblo that has nothing
into Mexico and into Canada,
US, anywhere they want, you know.
It's certainly not cost effective, but I think logistically, it works for them.
You have a Canadian who's willing to commit these crimes for you on their soil.
You completely avoid detection of that being the cartel.
Yeah, because it would keep your footprint down.
It does.
Until those people get interrogated and, I mean, it does make it.
And they say they've been working for the cartels.
And then in the RCMP information, they're saying, well, yeah, this person had connections
with Mexican criminals. But Canadian authority isn't going after those criminals who put out the hit.
Man, is there anything that Canada has been doing to combat this at all or they're just
trying to sweep it under the rug?
I think they're sweeping it under the rug.
I think since Trump tried to say, you know, we got a crackdown on the Northern border and Cash Patel has been putting a lot of pressure.
Um, they've been doing these sort of public things like, you know, the
appointing of fentanyls are, um, amping up the amount of border
patrol at the Northern border.
But in terms of really getting to the root of the problem, it's being swept
under the rug and a lot of folks that I've spoken to in Canadian law
enforcement agree with that notion.
Interesting.
And if I speak to any of my sources that are, you know, part
of associates with the cartel operating in Canada, they feel
like it's business as usual.
Are they infiltrating?
I mean, how big are they getting into Canada?
I mean, like in the US, we know they're starting to get involved in politics, local police
departments, a lot of them are joining the military to get the training and then get
out.
I don't think that's happening yet.
Because I don't think it's necessary.
I think that the way that they've set up shop is working for them.
And they're not going to fix something that isn't broken and risk losing what they have.
Okay.
Okay.
And it's also important to keep in mind that there is evidence and there's all these reports
that come out from CSIS about Chinese intervention in Canadian politics and elections.
And if the Mexican cartels are already directly working with the Chinese
there's no need for them to to go above them and
Try to get involved with Canadian politics
That's being done for them
Interesting. All right. Let's take a quick break when we come back
I know I want to talk about some of the other businesses that the cartels are starting to set up outside of fentanyl
talk about some of the other businesses that the cartels are starting to set up outside of fentanyl.
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Alright, we're back from the break. We're getting ready to dive into the first diversification of all of the different cartel
businesses.
So I've talked about this a couple of times before.
I think it's been about two years though since I've covered this topic.
But last I heard they were getting into the avocado trade.
What else are they diving into? Okay, crude oil
avocado and agriculture is the big the biggest ones so
After human smuggling and drug trafficking the second most profitable
Form of revenue for the cartels is what she called the crude oil theft
This has been going on for forever
And we have seen a lot of mass tragedies due to this,
even though it's not, you know, an illicit substance like fentanyl.
The way they tap into these pipelines in a lot of unsecured areas and smaller towns where
these pipelines run through, if they tap into it wrong or if they do it time and time again, it leads to a mass explosion.
And these headline in Mexico all the time and have been for decades.
Now what's happening now is actually just a few weeks ago, three C.G.N.G. operatives
were sanctioned by the U.S. for trafficking stolen crude oil from Mexico into the US and certain
smaller American oil companies were buying this oil and they were bringing it into the
US labeled as waste oil.
So it was going completely undetected.
A lot of it was going into the port of Brownsville in Texas.
And this for them is a billion dollar business.
Waste oil? What the hell is waste oil?
They were calling it waste oil.
So the US is just letting people import waste oil to dump?
Apparently, because they were bringing this in in trucks and it was being taken to
smaller refineries where then it was known that it
was not waste oil.
It was actually raw crude oil and that was giving them around $3 billion a year at one
point.
How much money are they making off of this?
Like billions of dollars, like three billion dollars a year.
Three billion dollars. $3 billion a year. There's like 17,000 tankers worth of oil that are being stolen per day
in Mexico.
Are you serious?
Yeah.
17,000 tankers a day?
That's what Pemex numbers show, which is the Mexican oil company. It has a monopoly, Pemex.
Wow. Do you think they'll just try to take control of the pipeline itself?
They do.
That's exactly what they do.
And a lot of national guard and local police are on the cartel payroll so that they can
go and tap into these pipelines and no one's going to say anything.
Actually, just to-
Are you talking about actually tapping into the pipeline?
Yes.
Or are you, I'm talking about just taking control of the entire pipeline and piping
it to where it needs to be.
Oh, okay.
Probably not.
Okay.
That's a whole, I mean, it could be happening, but I haven't done any reporting on that.
I mean, from what I know and what I've seen is them physically going and tapping into
the pipeline and stealing it and putting it into the tanker and driving that across.
And just a few days ago, 11 members of the National Guard were arrested because they
were caught red-handed at a pipeline, stealing the oil.
And they're just getting this through the US border?
Yep.
Just driving it across.
17,000 tankers a day are coming across the US border.
I don't know if 17,000 tankers are moving across the border a day, but that's how much
is being stolen per day.
So it's obviously going somewhere at a certain point in time.
And this is major profits for the cartel, especially with this crackdown at the southern
border on fentanyl and human smuggling, which is, you know, major financial pipeline for
them.
Let's, let's go make money off
a different pipeline.
I mean, do we import?
Do we don't import any gas from Mexico, do we?
Legally?
Legally, yeah.
So a lot of the crude oil from Mexico goes to the US and is refined in the US and Mexico
buys it back.
So this is relatively easy operation to bust into.
Mexico doesn't have the refinery,
doesn't have the infrastructure to do it.
They buy the gas back.
Okay, so we buy the gas or we refine the gas
and then pipe it back into Mexico.
Yeah.
Interesting.
And so that's one that I talk about a lot
because the problem with this is they can do it so under the radar
and they're experts at it at this point because it's been going on for so long.
And there's so much impunity around incorruption.
So many people, the right people are paid off.
The right people, whether that's politicians, national guard, police, are profiting off of this trade.
And so, the way to crack down on this is so murky
because it's not, you know, you don't have this fentanyl pill
that's going to kill someone and that's a controlled substance.
It's oil and it's something that everybody needs.
And if the way to get this oil is by going into these undetected regions where it's just
a small town and law enforcement knows what's going on, it's very easy to access for them.
Do you think that this will, I mean, oil and gas is a big business.
Exactly.
And some of the most powerful people in the world are in, the most powerful people in
the world are in, you know, oil and gas.
And so I guess what I'm asking is, I mean, do they, do your sources believe that the oil and gas sector, their cartel business, will overtake
fentanyl and drug trafficking?
If push comes to shove and they really have to rely on something that isn't drugs, they
could certainly move all of their operations to oil.
Why wouldn't they just want to anyways?
Because money.
It seems so much, you think the drug trade is more than the gas trade?
It's more profitable for them right now. Yes, or ten years down the road. I don't know
It's very hard to say and it depends where and how they want to distribute their resources
If they want to fully focus on that they could make it their number one earner
I mean because the only reason I'm asking is from an American aspect.
I mean, that doesn't really affect us.
That affects oil and gas industry in Mexico.
Exactly.
That only enhances US refining.
Which is why I thought it was interesting when these three CG&G members were sanctioned
for importing this stolen crude oil, none of the US refineries faced any sanctions or
legal action.
Yeah.
And of course, investigators certainly knew or know which refineries and companies were
buying this stolen oil.
But nothing happened there on that front.
Why?
Because this is not killing Americans.
Mm-hmm.
I mean, it's legitimately just not our problem.
No.
That's the Mexican government could take care of that.
Exactly.
It's not like the drugs.
What else are they diving into?
Agriculture.
Agriculture has been huge and more than ever before.
I mean, the three major points of agriculture where all
avocados that you guys eat here and limes that you guys use is coming from Michoacan, Jalisco, Nayarit and
those are CGNG strongholds.
So what's been happening for the longest time and particularly now as they're trying to
diversify their revenue streams.
Cartel operatives are going in to these ranches, these orchards, and telling the farmers who have
had these orchards in their families for generations because I don't know if you know, but you know,
raising one avocado tree, if it's successful, which is also just difficult within itself can take up to 15 years
So this takes a lot of dedication to be an avocado farmer and it's a very profitable fruit
They call it green gold for something
And cartels are going in armed men will show up and say listen
You're either going to pay me
X percentage of whatever you're
profiting off of your avocado exports, or this becomes ours. And a lot of these farmers,
they're doing well for themselves, you know, in terms of earning potential in Mexico generally, right? They're making an honest income, they're working their asses off,
the whole family is part of this business, they're employing people from their town,
and they're making good money to support themselves.
So then you have our men come in and say, either get out or pay me an amount that they typically
cannot afford because it's not that much money.
And you're saying now give me 80% of your earnings.
How are you supposed to maintain your orchards
if you're losing more than half of your income
to organize crime?
So a lot of these people have to abandon their farms.
There are, this has hundreds of avocado orchards, particularly in Michoacan, have been abandoned
by their rightful owner and cartels are now working those orchards. Or the very people
who own these places are now being employed by the cartel to go and farm the land, work the land.
farm the land, work the land. And there are certain produce companies in the US who are knowingly,
some not knowingly, but others knowingly, purchasing avocados from cartel-run avocado orchards in Mexico. And I reached out to these, I actually had a really significant produce person, someone who worked for the US government as
an inspector before.
So the US sends inspectors to these regions to make sure, you know, for pesticide control,
pest control, whatever the case may be, and even for ethics.
So is organized crime operating here. And I got in contact with someone who did this job and I got a list of produce company
names that were knowingly, are knowingly importing avocados and limes from farms that are now
run by the cartels blatantly.
And when I reached out to them and said, you know, what is your guys' due process to ensure that you aren't supporting organized crime? No comment. We
don't talk about this. Of course you won't. But wouldn't you want to clear your name?
Wouldn't you want to show to the American avocado consumer that those avocados aren't
blood fruit?
Yeah. I mean, it sounds,
what you're describing sounds really very similar
to the diamond trade.
Of course.
But, I mean, with that being said, it's,
I mean, how many legitimate avocado farms
are there left in Mexico?
Not a lot. The only reason I'm asking is
Luis Chaparro, I've had him on several times here and he he talked about the
avocado trade with the cartels and how Super Bowl sit-ins and they'll create a
shortage despite the prices and all that kind of stuff but I mean so I mean do
these companies do these US based fruit companies do they have I mean, do these US-based food companies, do they have, I mean, do they even have anywhere
else to buy this stuff from?
Or is it just cartels?
At this point, it's likely just cartels.
And the cartels manipulated that because it got to a point when the US agricultural inspectors
were going to Mexico to inspect
these farms, then they were being threatened.
And so then the U.S. stopped sending inspectors to these regions, which meant it was a free-for-all
for the cartels to take over every single orchard that existed there.
Mm-hmm.
Well, I mean, an inspector isn't going to stop that.
No.
But...
No, that's not even his job.
That's not their job.
So is the Mexican government doing anything about this at all? that. No. But. No, that's not even his job. That's not their job. So is the Mexican government doing anything about this?
Nothing.
At all?
OK.
They sent in, when this, a bunch of farmers
banded together, because they will do that.
They're tough.
They're hardworking.
And they banded together and said,
we can't take this anymore.
The cartels are taking over our livelihoods.
They're taking over our businesses.
So Mexican government sent in a couple thousand troops
to these regions to try and protect them, but those very troops were getting paid off by the
cartel too. They were also being threatened. There were shootouts at these farms. And typically,
when that happens in Mexico, unfortunately, government backs down.
How about the water trade?
Government backs down.
How about the water trade?
That's another thing, especially in these same regions, because it's very important for farmers, you know, for the irrigation, but also just for the people living in
these regions, they've monopolized water, they monopolized wifi, even-
Wifi.
Wifi, yeah, they put up their own wifi wires in certain towns towns in these regions so you can only purchase from the cartel provider.
No shit.
They cut the cords from there's other Wi-Fi providers in Mexico like Izzy and there's other ones, right?
Legitimate. And those wires are being cut.
The infrastructure is being destroyed.
Cartel puts up their own infrastructure.
Now you have to only get your Wi-Fi from us.
Wow.
So they have communications, they have agriculture, they have oil and gas.
I mean, it's every single aspect of basic life, every necessity.
I mean, how is the relationship with, what is the relationship like with the Chinese
that are piping in all of the precursors to make fentanyl?
You had mentioned a lot of them are going to Canada now, but I mean, seems, just interviewed
Tom Homan, you know, the borders are, and he said that the I believe After reference the interview, but I believe he said that that the southern border is
96.8%
Secured do you do you agree with that?
It's a very high number and I do believe that the southern border is a lot more secured than it was
Six months ago
certainly six months ago, certainly. Uh, the price of being smuggled across the border has gone up.
Like if you want to pay for a coyote to take you across, the less coyotes are
operating because of just the sheer amount of vigilance at the Southern border.
And U S and Mexico numbers both show that fentanyl trafficking has gone down at the southern border. Mm-hmm. And U.S. and Mexico numbers both show that fentanyl trafficking
has gone down at the southern border.
96% is very high.
To say it's 96% secured, I mean, how do you even quantify
how secure a border is?
But in terms of...
I think you do it by the number of people coming across.
The number of people coming across, right? But, of course, you don't it by the number of people coming across. The number of people coming across, right?
But of course, you don't track every single person that's coming across.
Has it gone down? Certainly.
And numbers on both sides of the border show that.
And if you just go to that border, it looks so different than it did six months ago.
I mean, you have tons of CBP, helicopter patrol constantly, Mexico deployed an additional, I think, 12,000
National Guard to secure their side of the border. And the threat of tariffs and US intervention in
Mexico really did push Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum to act on the southern border because she didn't want to see a Mexico where there was American intervention.
She wanted to maintain autonomy.
Fair enough.
Why don't you think she wants any intervention?
Because she wants Mexico to stay Mexico.
She doesn't want to see American forces coming in.
She doesn't want Mexican people to feel like their own government can't deal with it by themselves.
And... Don't they already feel like their own government can't deal with it by themselves.
And... Don't they already feel like that?
A hundred percent.
But...
You can't admit a loss.
Another point to that is...
To protect people who are in her administration who have narco-ties.
Does she have narco-ties?
One hundred percent.
One hundred percent?
I believe she definitely has narco ties.
What makes you believe that?
She's with the Morena Party.
So many
political figures in this
party have now, just recently,
been sanctioned by the US,
had their visas revoked by the US,
have been tied to shell companies
in the US that are cleaning money for
the cartels.
This was the most violent Mexican election in the history of Mexican elections.
Why were people dying at the polls?
Why were armed men showing up to voting stations and destroying the ballots and the ballot boxes? And then prior to her,
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the previous
president of Mexico, who basically took she and Baum and put her up and said,
everyone who voted for me vote for her. And she won by a landslide. No one has ever voted by that
margin in a Mexican federal election ever before. He had been reported to have received a significant
he had been reported to have received a significant multimillion dollar payout from the Sinaloa cartel. Wow.
So if you have this party that just has so many rotten apples, you're telling me it's not spoiling the bunch and that the main figurehead of this party,
the president of Mexico who could, if she really wanted to, say, fuck the cartels, we're
ending them.
Everyone is suffering on both sides of the border and globally.
Okay, we are going to crack down.
And that's not really happening.
It's a soft stance.
It's certainly not as soft as her predecessor.
His, his moral or his slogan was, abrazos no balazos, hugs not bullets.
She didn't take that on, which I think was great because what do you mean?
You're going to, you know, it just didn't, it was, it made no sense.
Uh, but do I think she has narcotized?
Yeah.
And people come for me a lot when I say that because they say, I would like,
you're just shitting on a president who cares about the Mexican people.
I think if she really cared about the Mexican people, the cartel crackdown would be to the
next level.
I think if she really cared about the Mexican people, it would be a positive to get the
US in there to help solve this problem.
And then the US has this watch list of narco politicians.
I had a source from your government actually gave me a few names.
I published that list and then exactly a month later, one of the people that I had on that list,
which was the governor of Baja California, Marina del Pilar, her US tourist visa and
her husband's were revoked.
And there was no reason given as to why, but there's certainly an investigation going.
She's also part of the Morena party.
And then the governor of Sinaloa, Ruben Rocha Moya, who, you know, a lot of people have,
a lot of people who seek the truth have beefed with him because he has been a part of a lot of shady dealings.
And how is your state going to erupt into this war zone where the cartels basically
control every aspect of politics, law enforcement, and daily life for the citizens, and yet you're
sitting high and mighty
as if nothing is happening.
Everything is okay, everything is okay.
And the US names him and the president of Mexico
goes up in public in her morning press conferences
and defends him.
Says, no, no, no, he's doing his job.
And honestly.
Wow, wow.
And look, people can say all they want, well, maybe she doesn't directly have ties with
narcos.
Okay, but if she's defending the very people who do, who are under her administration,
does that not make you just as guilty?
I mean, tell me about your integrity and your responsibility to protect the citizens of
the country and ensure that they have a solid quality of life while protecting the very
people who are ruining that.
Have you heard of... I've heard a lot of rumors that former SOCOM and JSOC special operators are going down
and training cartel.
Have you veterans, have you heard that?
Like not part of the Green Beret program?
Because there is a program, the US does train Mexican military and then they kind of form
their own.
Yeah.
No, I'm talking about guys that have separated from the military
that are going down there.
And directly training cartels.
Yes.
Yes.
How much of that is going on?
If you go to Tamaulipas right now, it borders Texas and Mexico.
right now, it borders Texas and Mexico.
There are cartel operatives who can expertly show you how to arm,
you know, put together arm and put a minigun on top of a vehicle and use it like an expert.
And that isn't common knowledge and that isn't something that,
you know, like guerrilla warfare teaches you.
These people are directly being taught by US ex-military, I've heard, and we're talking about this on the way here, Israelis, people who know how to use high level arms and know
use high level arms and know a fair bit about high level warfare tactics.
If the cartels weren't trained by these very people, they would not be able to function at the level that they are.
Do you have any sources that have told you that former soft guys are heading down there to train?
Yeah, particularly in Mexican state suborder, Texas.
There are cartel operatives in Tamaulipas who will blatantly say,
the gringo taught us this.
Or do it the way the gringos do it.
Well, that's terrifying.
And that has to do not only like with the miniguns, but the IEDs that they have.
They are, their IEDs now are just next level.
Um, drone operations.
They're using drones that now, initially they were attaching bombs, IEDs to the
drones, flying them in, and then the whole contraption
would blow up.
Now they're doing it in a way where the drone goes in, it drops the IED, and then the drone
goes back out, and they're saving a lot of technology by doing this, right?
And it's making it, it's fast tracking the operation.
They were taught by Americans.
They were taught by Americans how to do that too.
Yeah. And with the anti-drone technology.
That came from overseas, well that came from abroad.
They have anti-drone technology?
Yes.
What kind of anti-drone technology?
They have, so I actually, I wish I could show you the video of it.
They have like the big drone blockers, so if there is a drone flying in the area, they can completely disable that drone and make it, have it cease to function.
Wow, what other kind of tech are that? That's what I wanted to lead into.
Okay.
You know, warfare is changing in a astronomical phase.
They're at a point in their warfare where it's, they've never had this level of access before and expertise.
They have technology that you would never have imagined cartels have. I mean
with the amount of money and access they have to certain people and expertise
certainly they can do this. They can learn how to operate anti drone
technology, how to use drones multiple times and drop IEDs, how to set up a minigun.
But they're also, you know, they're using technology that it's not typical warfare technology.
So even in certain regions, they have like cell phone blockers, but just set up throughout the town too.
So you walk in and all of a sudden, either your phone doesn't work or it's immediately
tapped.
Even the way they're putting Pegasus on people's phones.
They're putting Pegasus on people's phones?
Oh, Mexico and particularly Mexican journalists, it's like you are the number one victim of
having Pegasus on your phone.
No kidding.
Yeah.
They got Pegasus from Israel.
You want to talk about Pegasus real quick?
Yeah, we can talk about, yeah, Pegasus, it's like the number one phone hacking technology
and it doesn't take anything at all.
It's literally, I get a message on WhatsApp, if I just press on that contact that sent
me the message, Pegasus is now in my phone and they have access to everything, all of
the data, even the metadata that's in my phone and they have access to everything, all of the data, even the metadata
that's in my phone and can track me, can listen in to me, everything.
And just recently, actually, the Mexican president's phone was hacked.
It was a phone that she said she never used and it was just like a personal phone. But if you're able to hack the president's phone,
anyone is at risk.
And Mexico is a main consumer of,
or user of Pegasus technology.
Who are they deploying all this stuff against?
Is it cartel on cartel for the most part?
No, it's anyone that threatens their operations. So of course, yes, they're cartel on cartel for the most part? No. It's anyone that threatens their operations.
So of course, yes, they're cartel adversaries,
but politicians, law enforcement, journalists,
um...
Even sometimes people who are working for them,
their own straw buyers,
people who they feel like they can't fully trust.
Stay Frosty put some Pegasus on his phone.
What about the drones?
What about the drones?
Who are they deploying that on?
They're deploying the drones against Mexican forces.
If there is an operation that's going down, they know Mexican forces are going to be in
this area.
They will even trap them.
So lead Mexican forces. This happened not in this area. They will even trap them.
So lead Mexican forces, this happened not so long ago, an example of this, lead Mexican
forces to believe that a key figure is here or a key lab is here and they will arm that
location with IEDs and have drones ready to go in there.
Mexican forces will get there and they get exploded.
Okay, so they hit them with IEDs and then do a drone swarm. How big are the drone swarms?
Any idea?
It really depends on which cartel is operating this, but for the most part, they're not that
large. They have just like, even just like regular drones they're using like even like the the DJI drones or they're getting the drones from China that are like a knockoff version and
Attaching bombs to it and just dropping those in
Mm-hmm, and you'll even see videos of when they're flying. They're kind of weighed down a bit. So nothing like a
Hundred drones coming all at once like some no, it's not to that extent
At least not yet. How far out do you think we are before that starts happening?
It depends if the US puts boots on the ground in Mexico.
Because I don't think Mexican forces will ever push it to a point where cartels feel
like that's how hard they need to hit them.
You don't?
No.
You don't think so?
No.
There's too much at risk and there's too much for them to lose.
I think, you know, something that really stood out to me.
What's the risk?
What do you mean there's too much for them to lose?
For Mexican Special Forces to be at risk of danger.
I was going to say when I was in Sinaloa, they had just, the day that I got there, we went to the base and they had
just brought in reinforcements for National Guard. And a lot of the people were very young
and they were literally coming into a place where they were ready to face the cartels
head on. I mean, every night it was just like, you would just see the fireworks, the shootouts.
In the morning, there would be dead bodies lining major highways with notes, sending messages.
And so these guys were coming in knowing that they had to take on a very desperate cartel head on
and try to stop some extreme level of violence
with very little experience. They were very young and some of them looked so
nervous and even fearful to be there. And if there is that level of fear then when
you ask me are these guys going to go in and take them head on to a point where the cartels will
completely amp up and you have a hundred drones going in there and just taking out Mexican
forces?
No, because I don't think the Mexican forces would get to that level.
I mean, Hugs Not Bullets was a policy for so long that now to switch that up and go
have the pendulum swing to the exact opposite where it's like, no, we are going to take
them on.
I don't think the people who are in the forces, you know, I don't want to undermine it.
And I don't mean it like this, but I don't think the training and the morale is even
there to be like, I'm going in to die for this.
We're taking these guys out.
So no, Mexican cartels won't likely, unless US forces come into Mexico, get to a level
where they believe they have to completely amp up operations where it's like Ukraine-Russia
style simply due to the fact that Mexican forces aren't going to push them to that level.
So you don't think that they're proactive enough to start to stock up on drones,
start getting 3D printers and printing their own drones and all of these things?
Proactive, yes.
Or if US forces do come in?
100%.
You don't think they'll deploy them though unless...
Unless US steps in.
Interesting.
Because they won't have a need to.
But are they proactively stocking up?
100% yes, and I've been told about this from the very people in charge of ensuring that
they are armed.
Do they have strategic locations where they're stocking up?
I mean, since you're saying that they are proactive, do they have strategic locations
where they're stocking up on tech,
weapons, all this kind of stuff? Do they think they might know what it might look like, where
the fight's going to begin?
Yes. Okay. First and foremost, there are safe houses throughout all of Mexico where they're
stocking up on this, and particularly, surprisingly surprisingly enough in a lot of tourist destinations because it's easy access. A lot of these places have water access.
It goes under the radar. So Puerto Vallarta, Acapulco, these are cities that the cartel is
using to their advantage to stock up and because they already have a lot
of operations going on there.
And because they know that that won't, those areas
won't be hit as a war zone because they're
tourist hotspots.
So Mexico will never want to scare away the
tourism sector.
So if they have a safe house in a place like
Puerto Vallarta, which is also the
CJNG stronghold, filled with arms, filled with tech, drones, 3D printers, you name it,
they can get there, they can get the access, they can get someone to bring it out to them,
and it won't be a problem. Now, in terms of the places that would be hit, like say,
US operators stepped into Mexico.
Again, it won't be those particular regions.
It will be Sinaloa, it will be Culiacan,
it will be Michoacan, it will be Guerrero,
it will be Tamaulipas, areas where Veracruz,
and there's a port in Veracruz.
You're saying that's where we would deploy?
Yes.
I think that's probably where we would deploy conventional guys if we did that.
But as far as strategic strikes, when you bring in tier one units, I mean, those guys
are going to go everywhere.
It doesn't matter.
I agree.
And I think that the cartels certainly know that.
They're bracing for it. A lot of them are worried that
that's going to happen. If it hasn't already, there's some level of American intervention in
Mexico. I mean, we've seen it with the CIA planes that are flying that they obviously have Mexican
permission to do that, but there's CIA planes flying across the Northern Mexican states.
The US is certainly gathering intel and they're working bilaterally with Mexico. How long will that last or how far is that going? Not
to the point that Mexico would like to see. But the US knows that they have to withhold
some information and a lot of intelligence in order for their operations not to fail.
Because the one wrong person finds out about it,
whether that's in government, whether that's in Mexican intelligence, and the
whole operation goes to shit. Even with El Chapo's family going into Tijuana or
going across the border and receiving sort of safe haven in the US, Mexico didn't know about that.
Mexico hasn't received information on that.
And the head of national security for Mexico made a point to say,
we aren't in the loop with this.
How do you think we defeat them?
I'm just curious.
Have you thought about that all?
Yeah, I think about that all the time.
And people ask me that all the time and people ask that because they want to see it happen.
But how does that happen?
It would be a multifaceted approach.
Like there's no silver bullet. We both know this.
And it's very complicated because they're so, they have their claws so enthralled in
every aspect.
You know, whether it's the ways that they're diversifying their revenue and oil and gas
and whatever it is, but also in politics and internationally. So, to defeat this Fortune 500 corporation that's armed to the max and is always a step ahead,
it would be a matter of cracking down on extreme intelligence gathering,
finding out where the main guys are, dismantling them and their local networks,
dismantling their online propaganda projects,
tackling the people particularly who are under the radar and in charge of laundering a lot of the money,
setting up the shell companies,
the remittance sites that are allowing these cartels ways to launder their money internationally.
The banks, it goes so deep.
It wouldn't just be a matter of go get the big guy like when they got El Mayo this summer.
You have to tackle the finances.
Yeah, I think a lot about this.
I mean, I don't think, you know, we just did that for 20 years in the war on terror, you
know, taking out leaders.
I think the number two had like a two week life expectancy, but every time you take one
out it's, you know, new ones in.
And so I don't think taking out just leadership would work.
What do you think needs to happen?
You know, I don't think taking out just the leadership would work. What do you think needs to happen? You know, I don't know.
I mean, if we infiltrated, it would be extremely bloody
just because of the amount of people
that are involved in the cartel.
It wouldn't work if you just took out the leadership.
You know, just from the years of covering this,
you know, here and there and throughout
with the different people that I've had on,
I think that the way to do it would be, and I don't know, like I said, it's been a minute
since I've talked about this, but I don't know how combative the cartels are towards
each other anymore, but I think what I would do is I would probably create some type of a psychological operation that pits the
cartels against each other and basically create a false narrative so that this cartel and
this cartel hate each other and they go to war with each other and then find ways to
intervene and you know what I mean?
Well that's basically what's happening in Sininaloa. Is that what's happening there? I mean, El Mayo was brought to the U.S. kidnapped allegedly and
now we're in real time watching watching the fall of the Sinaloa cartel. Just from pulling him? Yep.
Well then maybe El Chapo was gone, now El Mayo is gone and the infighting began and just like a house of cards, it's falling
in on itself.
But to the same point, CJ&G swoops in, says we will make an alliance, Chapitos and us,
which you know, how real can that alliance be when they've been sworn enemies?
And what's essentially going to happen
is CGNG is going to take over that faction and
take over Sinaloa.
So great.
What your suggestion was, work to completely
dismantle the Sinaloa cartel that has been
operating for forever and was at one point, one
of the largest cartels in Mexican history.
But now we have CGNG.
So what you do the same thing with them.
Yeah.
And it just keeps going on and on until they're done?
Well, I mean-
But the supply and demand for drugs?
I mean, how many cartel members were eliminated, you know, in that scuffle between those?
Oh, at this point? Hundreds. That we're operating with the Sinelua Crotel?
Mm-hmm. People of importance? Yeah. Dead men doesn't have to be people of importance.
I mean, there's also a psychological factor as well where maybe these weren't as brutal as they are now.
I mean, enough people were eliminated for this cartel to not be functioning basically at this
point. And for them to have to strike a deal with
an enemy cartel, an adversary.
How many big ones are there?
Cartels in Mexico? Yeah. How many big ones?
Okay.
Well.
Who are the three, the top three?
I would say the top three, CG&G, the Gulf cartel, Cartel del Noreste, and well,
Sinaloa, I'll keep it still there.
So.
And they're, and they're crumbling.
Sinaloa.
Sinaloa is crumbling.
Yeah.
That's why I didn't put it in top three, but it would certainly be in top three.
And I think the US designated eight of them, if I'm not mistaken, as foreign terrorist
organizations, which included all those I mentioned and a few more.
But for example, like, there were certain factions of cartels or fragmented versions
of cartels that were not on that list.
And when you have fragmented groups of a previously stronghold cartel still existing, those groups
end up attaching on to a larger cartel that's operating.
And it just makes them stronger because they gain more territory, they gain access to more
people, more guns.
What do you think happens if we go to China and we're able to stop the precursors from being shipped?
It doesn't matter because the Sinaloa cartel is now, it just came out a few months ago,
is taking chemistry students from universities in Sinaloa and having them
try to figure out how to make the precursors.
And is it working?
From scratch.
I don't know.
We'll have to wait and see.
I have a feeling that there's probably batches out on the streets or they're preparing batches
that have these homemade precursors now.
We'll see if it works.
It's just like what happened with Fentanyl.
You have to see what happens with the streets.
But from what I can tell and the people in Sinaloa that I've spoken to, they're still
yet to make those precursors tangible enough to actually make the fentanyl from them.
But they're already trying to cut out China.
They're trying to cut China out.
Yeah, by making the precursors. That's why they're doing it? They want to cut China. cut China out. Yeah, by making the precursors.
That's why they're doing it?
They want to cut China.
Cut China out.
Increase your profits, cut out that middleman, not even a middleman, because they're supplying
the necessary goods to produce this deadly drug.
But once the cartels figure out how to make the precursors, fentanyl will become more
accessible than ever before, more accessible than ever before,
more deadly than ever before.
And I think the US certainly knows that the cartels are trying to make the precursors,
which is definitely a big part of the reason of the crackdown.
I mean, it seems like they wouldn't want to cut China out.
Why not?
Because, just because, I mean, even though they don't have the same goals, I think the
cartel's money and China is the reverse opium war.
You know, I mean, they serve each other well, I guess is what I'm saying.
And so that's interesting that they want to cut them out.
I would think that they would want to align more, but.
I don't think it would be a, they would cut them out in a way where it ends on bad terms,
but rather it would just streamline the fentanyl production. Would they still probably bring in
some of the precursors? Yeah, supplement the supply, but it won't be to the same extent.
And it wouldn't end with a bad taste in anyone's mouth because certainly they leverage a good relationship with China.
Mm-hmm. Interesting. Let's take another quick break.
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All right, Katerina, we're back from the break. I wanted to ask you one thing too.
That's just kind of kind of out there about the TikTok influencer that got
killed live streaming.
Valeria. Yeah. So Valeria was a famous influencer in Mexico. She had that buchona look, which is
the body, small waist, curves, long blonde hair from Guadalajara.
And Guadalajara is a hotspot.
It's the CGNG, you know, birthplace, Jalisco.
And so a lot of people followed her because she was pretty,
but also because she was always on live streaming, keeping it pretty real.
She would just eat her favorite snacks on there.
And actually, since she was murdered, people in her memory have been like
buying her favorite snacks and posting about it and to keep her alive.
Now, she's on this live stream and she's at her beauty salon that she owned.
And she tells the audience that
she's been told she's receiving three gifts that day.
And the last one is going to be an expensive gift.
And so she's kind of talking through, she's excited.
And a friend of hers is also at the salon with her.
And first she gets a Starbucks, a delivery man comes by, drops a Starbucks,
and I think at that same delivery she got a plushie of a pig. And it's so interesting
because in Mexico too, like a pig or a pig's head is really significant, you know, it's like puerco.
So you get, a lot of the times too, people will, in Guadalajara even, when people take out hits,
they'll leave a pig's head on top of that person, show that person was dirty or vile,
whatever the message it may be. And she got that plushie and then she gets flowers and then she's waiting for her third most expensive gift.
And she starts saying in the livestream, she goes,
I'm creeped out. Something's wrong.
And you can tell she's kind of on edge.
And she says, you know what, girls, I think I'm going to go.
I'm kind of creeped out.
And her friend tells her behind the camera, no, you can't go.
There's another gift coming for you.
And some context to this is that Valeria had received gifts from viewers before.
She really liked gifts and she would talk about how she would date men who would give
her extravagant gifts and a lot of viewers would send her things.
And someone comments in the chat, you shouldn't tell people where you are.
And she says, well, you know, everyone knows that this is my salon, something along those
lines. everyone knows that this is my salon something along those lines and then a
delivery man comes she's looking out and she mutes the live and then you just see
her take three bullets and the first bullet I've watched this video so many
times at this point she's wearing like a chain necklace and and the first bullet
because people were saying it was fake and that it didn't look like the bullet
even hit her but the first bullet hits her necklace and her necklace goes flying off it hits the pendant the whole necklace goes flying off
she gets shot again and then she gets shot in the head and she's like slumped over and her hair is
covering her whole face so the video is really jarring because you're seeing a woman get murdered
on live get being shot three times but it's not like this cinematic boom boom boom and she's all bludgeoned and she just kind of slumps
in and she's holding the pig plushie too, dead. And the friend comes over picks up
the phone and turns off the live stream. And people were saying you know you
didn't hear screaming but it's important to keep in mind she muted the live.
Why did she mute the live?
If she was so scared, why didn't she leave?
She already had that feeling.
And so people are saying that the friend set her up
or that her ex-boyfriend,
who is allegedly part of organized crime,
I want to say like objectively just an unattractive guy,
especially for a girl who is, she's very beautiful, she had a very striking look.
They say he was responsible for it.
But the interesting thing is, you know,
where is the forensics in Mexico and investigation?
She was murdered now like weeks ago at this point.
And nobody has come out to say who the main suspects are, what the state of the investigation is.
And this became international news because there's this beautiful girl being murdered on TikTok live stream and people interacting with her as she's
talking about being scared.
People in the comments were even saying to her, if you feel weirded out or uncomfortable,
just go home. I mean, if this was a hit that was planned on her, then it would have happened
no matter where she was. Then you have a lot of conspiracy theorists or people, conspiracies
going around saying that she didn't actually die, she was probably
being threatened and so she faked her death on live and that it was AI and it doesn't,
the way the blood splatters on the table and the way she falls over holding the plushie,
it just doesn't look like someone who had been shot three times. So, this, though, the murder speaks volumes to the state of Mexico, like the entire country,
because over the past couple of months, a lot of YouTubers and social media influencers
have fallen victim to being publicly murdered like this. Whether they have narco ties or not is one thing, but this is
certainly sending a message. If you do not do what we say or follow our agenda,
especially with the large platform you have, or you do us dirty, you're dead. And
you know the problem too with this being so publicized is there's a lot of false information that's coming out and a lot of false theories that people are taking and running with as if it's fact.
So and then people are also editing fake videos of her. I saw one video of her and it's very hard to tell if it's real or not, where she's got a song in
the background and she's kind of like lip syncing it.
And the caption on the video is like, basically to the gist of, you know, use men for what
they can give you, enjoy the benefits of it, but you know, basically like have multiple
guys who can give you nice things and don't get attached.
And people were saying, you know, she was a gold digger who messed with the wrong person, and she got her karma,
which at the end of the day, someone was murdered.
So it's really fucked up to say that, even if this isn't a perfect victim to you.
But it's also hard to tell what is real
and what isn't about her
because it's such a publicized case.
She had such a large platform on social media
and there doesn't seem to be much transparency
with her investigation.
Why do you think she was murdered?
One of two reasons.
So I have two theories.
I think the one that sticks out to me the most is she was probably dating the wrong
guys.
She didn't grow up wealthy.
She came from very humble beginnings.
And I think that she was a beautiful girl.
And she used that to her advantage. Dated guys who were cartel associates,
part of organized crime, and she pissed someone off.
She had already posted previously on her Instagram
screenshots of messages with a boyfriend
where he was threatening to kill her and said,
"'You've never seen me mad and you don't wanna see me mad,
"'but you're gonna force me to do something I don't want to do.
And she posted and said, if something happens to me
or my family, it's this guy.
So that's what I think happened, is that she broke up
with a guy who had a very fragile ego
or she did him dirty in some way in terms of their relationship, and he sought revenge.
And he did it publicly to send a message. It makes sense to do it on live. This is what happens if
you're going to fuck with me or make a fool of me. You die. And the way that the message was set up,
you know, getting the pig plushie, three gifts, and then the last one is the most expensive and you get three bullets.
That's, it looks like a narco hit.
But then there is that other part of me that maybe wonders, you know, maybe that so-called
friend wasn't actually a friend.
Because I talked to my best friend about it
and I said, what would you do if we were just sitting there and I got shot? Because you know,
especially with this job, I run the risk. And she said I would freak out and she goes, I don't think
that I would even have the capacity to think about picking up your phone and turning off the live and then attending
to you.
The first thing would be to attend to the person.
But that's purely speculation.
Was the shooter on video?
There is CCTV video of a guy coming up on a motorcycle outside.
On the live stream though?
No.
So maybe she shut it off before the, I mean, he's probably wearing a mask, but maybe she
shut it off before that reveal happened.
Well, yeah, because the phone is facing her and she's facing the window.
So you can see when she's receiving these gifts, you can see when she sees someone comes
up to give her a gift and her friend was on the other side in the salon. Gotcha.
And then some people are saying, well, if you look at where the bullets came from,
they didn't come from in front, they came from the side and the friend probably
took that moment to shoot her. But this also happens a lot in Mexico. I mean, anywhere.
You know, the pretty girl gets killed.
It's like the Gabby Petito case.
It becomes this huge debacle and there's so many theories.
But in Mexico, it's particularly distinct because there is also that element of organized
crime and corruption and lack of oversight in investigations.
And so something like this happens and people want justice. Are you going to get that
justice? It depends on who the perpetrator is. How about propaganda? How are they recruiting?
What are they using? Propaganda, I would say, you know, it's funny because you asked me, how do you
tackle the cartels in this whole issue?
I think propaganda, based on what I've seen, is one of the major components that needs
to be tackled first.
And we're nowhere near there.
Because propaganda at this point, cartel propaganda, is deeply entrenched in every aspect of Mexican
culture, society, and daily life.
How so?
So, first things first, the music, okay? You have these narco corridos songs that are literally
dedicated to certain capos or certain cartels, and they are fully, blatantly glamorizing this lifestyle. The singers are, you know,
whether it's Peso Pluma, Junior H, Nathan Elcano, there's so many of them, the list goes on, but
they're super popular. They top charts in Mexico and in the United States too. In their music
videos, they have the Rolex presidential whole Gucci outfit and they're singing
about, you know, they're strapped up with the scar
and they drive the cars around that are fully
armored, they get their money, they're selling the
merchandise and they make this life seem so enticing. You have so much money,
you have all these hot girls, you have everything that's trendy and you have a great beat to
accompany it. Because I must say, sometimes I listen to these songs too and I'm like,
this is great. This is a great song. But what it's
the narrative it's pushing is absolutely horrible. And so the Mexican government has tried to crack
down on this. I mean, corridos have been banned in Sinaloa for a while and a lot of other states
have banned this music genre in public places, at establishments, at concerts. Actually, a lot of Mexican musicians are now being sanctioned
and having their visas revoked by the U.S. for their lyrics,
what they're singing, because it so explicitly promotes
cartel propaganda. And the Mexican government
plays their role, and the federal government actually just put out this initiative
Mexico Canta, Mexico canta, Mexico sings, to encourage people to participate in
like this basically a competition where you can play music, you have a band or
sing a song, original singer songwriter, whatever it is, but that has nothing to do with cartels or narco propaganda.
And the interesting thing is, when the Mexican government talks about this genre of music,
they particularly focus on violence against women, violent acts, and drug trafficking.
What they're missing, that is the key point is, Hey young people, this is propaganda.
This life is actually not as cool as these songs
are making them seem to be.
This is how you die.
This is how you end up like Valeria.
You want to be that pretty girl with a rich guy on your side?
Yeah, well guess what?
He might kill you afterwards.
And a lot of these young people in Mexico
certainly fall for it.
And I don't blame them.
You're being inundated with this music, these
TV shows, this culture that's promoting a
lifestyle that on the surface seems so luxurious.
Wouldn't you want to have the extra cash too?
You're growing up in a place where both of your
parents are working very hard and you know, maybe
you can't even afford your schooling.
But Buddy on the radio is telling you that you
could pick up your parents in a G-Wagon.
You just have to take part of this lifestyle.
And so the propaganda is deep in the pop culture.
On the other hand, you have blatant forms of propaganda, um, through social media,
which now has exploded for them.
I mean, it's social media is a major tool for the cartels.
And Mexico has also tried to crack down on this. Social media is a major tool for the cartels.
And Mexico has also tried to crack down on this. They're constantly banning TikTok accounts that are promoting cartel
propaganda or trying to recruit people.
What does that propaganda look like?
What is it?
What is it?
TikTok?
Yeah.
It's.
Is it the same stuff, luxurious lifestyle, lots of flashy shit?
It's the flashy, flashy shit, but it's also the actual operations.
You'll have like a, a good song and they're showing, uh, them loading up
kilos into a light aircraft and flying it across Pablo Escobar style.
They kind of switch the aesthetic based on whichever platform they're on and
who they're trying to appeal to.
Gotcha.
So you have those type of TikTok accounts and they're showing the money, they're showing
the guns, but they're also showing the actual warfare.
They are showing some of the ugly side of it, but they're making it seem cool.
It's like militarized.
And then you'll have a link in the bio of that TikTok account that you click it and
it directly opens a WhatsApp group chat.
That's the beginning step of cartel recruitment where you're joining-
No kidding. Yeah, you're joining this group chat and you have certain higher level operatives for the
cartel in there that will ask you certain questions or tell you what you're getting
into and then they vet you based on your answers to those questions or the personal information
you give.
Then you move into a different group chat and and then another one, and it kind of goes down the steps
to the point where you're then in direct contact
with high level cartel operatives
who are actively helping you get into the cartel.
And literally to the point where it's like,
okay, a car will come and pick you up from your address now
now that you've shown us that you are willing
to be a part of our group.
And it'll take you to a bus station, you get on that bus, you're going to meet us here
and you're going to train for six months in the mountains of Puerto Vallarta.
So the social media is just the first step to this.
And it's major for them, because without numbers, without this support, the controls can't function.
And if you have vulnerable, impressionable young people who are looking for a fatter paycheck,
who are enamored by this lifestyle, and who want to be a part of something,
you have the perfect victim. And you take them in, and you absolutely abuse the shit out of them and dehumanize them and you turn them into a machine
and you give them some money and
Now this is the beginning part of someone working for the cartel
How do they advance is this all like family members that stay at the top or how do you advance if you're you know?
Just a new guy. Oh, that's yeah, that's just wanting to get recruited and get in there.
So it is mainly family members, but then it's about proving your loyalty.
How much are you going to do for us?
And especially if when you prove your loyalty, it's successful.
So a good example of this could be, um, you're starting off, you're, you know,
fresh in the cartel, you just got out of the training.
And then you find out that one of the National Guard members that you guys are paying off
is actually acting as an informant or also on the adversary's payroll, whatever the case
may be, right?
And then you go and you tell the boss,
hey, I know this, this, and this, I'll go kill him,
or I'll go torture him.
Then you move your way up.
Or, hey, I know a way that we can move this much of,
this amount of undetected fentanyl from
one American state to another.
No one's going to figure it out.
And I have a good connect over there.
Let's do it.
Okay, they run the operation.
Profits increase.
Now you're on your way up.
They are true.
It's action-based.
And really showing loyalty, your willingness to die for the organization.
But this all starts off, yeah, on social media.
It's ridiculous.
And the Mexican government has done like a crackdown.
They've removed multiple TikTok accounts.
But there can only be so much oversight with that.
Social media is so vast.
And particularly when you have young people who are using a tool that didn't exist before,
because virtual propaganda has always existed.
We've seen like in Juarez back in the early 2000s, and even today, but you know, you have
people hanging from bridges, pants pulled down and a narco manta on top of them, a message to whoever is next,
or this is what will happen to you if you act like these rats.
That's a form of propaganda.
But that is tangible, blatant propaganda.
You bring social media into the mix.
It fucks up the whole game, because how do you apply any oversight to this?
How do you ensure that young people aren't being targeted just through the phone that they always have in their hand?
And
That's why these social influencers are main targets.
A major youtuber in Mexico, Marquitos Toys, he has millions of subscribers,
he shows this flashy lifestyle, he's from Sinaloa,
his brother was murdered in Baja California.
And then it's constant, it's constant.
Are you saying they're murdering influencers
as part of the propaganda machine?
It's certainly part of the propaganda
because it sends a loud message.
And I think a lot of these influencers also have a role, their role in organized crime, uh, whether it's, uh, laundering money or pushing some sort of narrative.
In Mexico, a lot of the time when you make a lot of money or you, you gain a
platform, somehow the cartel will find a way to use you to push
their agenda forward.
What kind of narrative would they be sending out through an influencer?
Exactly, exactly this, the propaganda that they're not the bad guys.
That this is a luxury lifestyle and you should be part of it.
Okay, so it's essentially the same thing as the songs. Yeah, it's it's the recruitment and
Also to put pressure on their adversaries
So the music does it to the youtubers do it to it's very much like we're with CJ and G
cuatro letras
Fuck whoever else our adversary is.
And it garners larger support throughout the population for that one cartel.
Like even nowadays, people will ask me, who do you want to win in Sinaloa?
Chapo or Mayo?
And I'm like, what do you mean?
And there are, people have those conversations.
I will be at a regular dinner with people who have absolutely nothing to do with this.
They're completely out of the realm.
And they're talking about which side of the faction they support.
And that's what the propaganda is doing.
Do you think they're using reporters like yourself as part of their propaganda machine?
I think so. And I think that's why a lot of reporters die, are murdered, because a lot
of reporters don't want to be a part of that.
But for the most part, they have no choice, especially people who are working for small
to medium sized outlets in regions where there is such a cartel stronghold and they don't
want certain news stories to get out or they want certain news stories to get out with
a narrative.
Yeah.
And they're not even getting paid for that.
It's just a life or death scenario.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
How much of the cartel's money are they, or how much money in general are they ceding
into US politics?
A lot of the cartel money is in the US, point blank.
Whether that is through the shell companies or certain operations that they're conducting
in the US.
In terms of politics, there are a number of US politicians or US authorities in law enforcement that are on
the cartel payroll.
For the most part, this happens in border towns or in states that are major profit regions
for the cartel.
So that's California, Texas, Arizona.
So are these local governments or all the way up to?
It goes up high on the food chain.
How high?
How high are they getting?
To the federal level.
To the federal level?
Yeah.
I've seen it firsthand.
Who in the federal level? Yeah. I've seen it firsthand. What, who in the federal level?
Senators, congressmen, what are we talking about?
FBI agents?
What, do you have any idea?
On the federal level, cartels have basically infiltrated any member of politics that they believe they can get to, that is willing
to work with them, and that can push policy that directly benefits them.
So whether it's senators, congressmen, DEA, ICE even, they have their clause in all of these departments.
Do you think these people know that it's the cartel who's influencing them?
I think a lot of them do.
How would you know?
How would I know that these people know?
Or how would they know?
Would the cartel want these people to know that that's who the, I mean basically it's
lobbying, right?
So would the cartel want their quote unquote lobbying firm being known as?
I would think they wouldn't want them known as, this is a cartel lobbying firm, this is
set up by the Sinaloa or whoever.
I think if I was them, I would try to get my narrative
or whatever I'm lobbying for to appear as something innocent or just money driven.
Do you see what I'm saying? I wouldn't want the...
I wouldn't want the individual to know that it's coming from a cartel because that would
be...
It's less incentivizing and it's blatantly illegal.
It happens both ways.
So certainly they have these lobbying groups set up
or they can push their agenda in a way
where it doesn't seem like it's directly coming from them.
Now, at the end of the day, I have an issue with this
because I find that it's hard not to know.
Anyone with half a brain,
especially if you're in a high ranking position of power,
you can dig deep enough to figure
it out.
And they do have ways to use it to their advantage with certain companies they have and...
I mean, what would they...
You wouldn't have to...
What's an obvious one?
An obvious one they would be lobbying for would be border security. Yes
So nobody would have to know that it's the cartel that's lobbying for that
Specific, you know for the border they could just they could do the you know, they could just get a group of people that
Here and I mean the US is very divided
they could just get somebody that thinks that we should have open borders and create that
group and fund it.
And then all it is, is just a bunch of people that want to let illegal immigrants through,
you know what I mean?
And they lobby that.
So it doesn't have to, that's how I would do it.
But what other things would they be lobbying for other than open borders?
It would be open borders.
It would be lack of oversight of agriculture coming from Mexico.
It would certainly be drug policies, so like safe supply stuff. Um, and also I think a major one would be the arms dealing too, because the majority
of the guns that are used at Mexican crime scenes, like 70% are American made firearms.
So all of their guns are coming from, most of their guns are coming from the US.
And so they're not going to want that to shut down or to stop at any point in time.
Because without those weapons, they can't commit the crimes.
And because you can't really get a gun in Mexico the way you can get a gun here, which
is exactly why they use that to their advantage.
So that would be, and not to mention,
a lot of the straw buyers too are moving guns from the U.S. into Canada to arm these same people.
So that's a big one that I believe that they're lobbying for. I mean, yeah, the border one is a
big one, but without the guns, they can't run any of their operations. But you asked, you know, why would they want people to know that they are a cartel if they're
lobbying or have certain, they have money in certain aspects of the federal government.
I think in some ways, sometimes them instilling that fear does work depending on what the
initiative is.
And I think they do use that to their advantage sometimes. And there are certain people that they can have
in their pockets knowing that the fear
and knowing that the cartel is on my ass
is going to keep them doing exactly what they want
and keep them from moving away or speaking out because once you have the cartel on your ass the only way to get out of that is basically to die.
Mm-hmm.
That's certainly less of the circumstance, but it is happening.
How are they using the migrant crisis as a tool?
Like people crossing the border? as a tool for what yeah
Cartels control over human crossings including children the use of distraction groups to tie up border patrol and
the human cost rape enslavement and
Exploitation of migrants it sounds I have it as they're using it as a tool
for all these things.
Can you elaborate on any of that?
I mean, I have no idea.
What is the use of distraction groups?
The use of distraction groups is so that they can get people
and drugs across the border.
There was actually just a video about this.
It was in, um, in
Texas where you have these five guys in a pickup truck and they're doing donuts around
and um, all the CBP pulls up on them and they're trying to outrun them. Well, at the same time
that's happening, there's people, a coyote illegally crossing people or drugs across
the border. And that's a really common tool that they use where they'll, you know,
they're trying to distract them one way and do something else. They do these smoke screens and
not just blatantly like that at the border, but with a lot of other actions too. Especially when...
Pete So, they're just creating a bunch of diversions.
Anna Yes, they're creating a bunch of diversions.
Especially when... So they're just creating a bunch of diversions.
Yes, they're creating a bunch of diversions.
They'll do this too, especially if there's a high level person who needs to get around
and that can't typically cross into Mexico or the US, vice versa.
Their regular border crossing and they need to move this person in a stealth way. So they've gotten very good at knowing
what captures American authorities' attention
and how to use that so they can run these profitable
or high-level operations at the same time
that something else is going on.
Do you think they're aware of all the tech
that we're implementing along the border of all and what exactly it does? Do you have any're aware of all the tech that we're implementing along the border wall
and what exactly it does?
Do you have any insight on that?
I think that they, okay, so with the people I've spoken to, especially who are working
in organized crime in border regions, they know that the border tech has been amped up.
In terms of to what extent, not as much as they should, they don't know as much as they should know,
but they are very hopeful.
I sound like a spokesperson for the cartel.
That's not the point here.
Oh my God.
Is this is just, you know, relaying the information, but they're very hopeful in their ability
to adapt because they've always done it
Hmm. It's it's just a matter of what has changed
How has the US ramped it up the same thing they do with the Mexican government actually? Okay, you want to put these troops here? Oh, you want to implement this? I don't know
Thermal technology that can tell you if someone's even close to the border along the over 2,000 miles that it spans
We're gonna find a way around that they typically do that and and that's why they've been so successful and profitable in every operation
But I don't want to sound like a spokesperson for the cartel and I said nice, you know talking about exactly how they're reacting to certain things
Or but they do adapt. That's one thing
There's a crackdown and they find another
way. I mean, it just happened in Sinaloa. The US and Mexico were trying so hard, had
this whole operation to get the main security enforcer for the Sinaloa cartel, La Pérrase.
They get him, there's a new guy in and he's bigger and badder than ever before.
I mean, they'll always find a way around it.
Oh, Trump and his first administration is cracking
down on the Southern border.
Fuck it.
Let's go to Canada.
And so you can put border technology across all 2000
miles of the Southern border and have it to the point
where it is like Guantanamo Bay.
It's, it's, they find a way because if human smuggling and drug trafficking is just that
profitable for them where they're making billions, tens of billions of dollars a year, by doing it,
they will find a way around it. I mean, wouldn't that be an incentive for you?
Yeah.
And would you find a way around it? I would try. The
thing is, I don't, I mean, I don't know how much we've actually, it's still to this day,
I don't know how much we've actually pushed them. You know what I mean? I think, you know,
if it, if we get serious about this, I don't think they will find a way, but... And I agree with you.
I don't think they will either.
Because cartels against full-fledged US government,
that's just a complete power imbalance.
The issue stands with the US hasn't pushed as hard as it could.
And so the cartels do feel somewhat untouchable.
I mean, there are certain actions that, you know, you extradite the 29 capos, you get
El Mayo into the states, you crack down fentanyl, seizures at the border have gone down significantly.
Okay, but that's really just the tip of the iceberg.
And they're so used to operating in a country with so much corruption and impunity where money talks.
That if you had a government come in where none of that works, the old tricks don't work
on this new dog, it would have to be a complete overhaul for them.
And like we talked about, they're certainly preparing for this. Have you heard any rumors about cartels aligning with traditional terrorist organizations?
Yeah.
What does that look like?
Especially with Iran.
That's a huge thing in terms of training, what kind of weaponry they need, and intelligence
is a big one, particularly when targeting America.
So, I know that there was an operation with Canadian authorities that were looking into
organized crime groups operating with terrorist groups and particularly in Iran. And the main objective of this was to find out how the intelligence gathering and covert operations that were
going on through attacking their intelligence.
And the thing about the Mexican drug cartels is, especially since Trump's first administration, they have had to amp up their efforts in knowing what the
US's next move is going to be.
Because the US next move determines just how much money they're going to make and how they
have to adapt.
And so Iran and Mexican drug cartels do have a connection, and this is with high ups of the drug cartels
To understand how the US is operating their intelligence
What type of actions the US could potentially take or is taking silently against drug cartels and
Ensure that there's they kind of build a firewall around themselves.
In terms of weaponry, a lot of the techniques and certain arms that drug cartels are using particularly now, have been learned from organized terrorist groups that have been around forever.
And on a side note, it goes into their propaganda too, because Mexican drug cartels post that
typical press release video admittingitting or denying a certain
Fatal tragedy that occurred or something that like a big news story. They address it head-on
They have the script they have the lighting they even have the logo the banner on it the background music
just like the same way Isis was doing and the Taliban and
Those videos now like when when Isis and the was doing it, it was on social media, whatever,
but it was mainly being sent to news outlets or, you know, they were posting it on their page.
It was more confined. Whereas now, it's just, you put it out there and it spreads like a virus. And so a lot of their techniques, which is why
it's interesting that it took so long to declare Mexican drug cartels as foreign terrorist
organizations because a lot of their techniques, whether it comes to gathering intelligence or
infiltrating the US or Canada and the way they are able to manage public perception of themselves, it completely matches
that of traditional terrorist groups.
Wow.
The only difference, I would say, is the way a lot of these traditional terrorist groups
would directly go and attack Americans, right?
There was a bomb, there was a shooting, someone drove through a crowd.
For Mexican drug cartels, it's chemical warfare, it's drugs.
They don't need to go and plant a bomb in the name of drug cartels. Do you think it'll ever get kinetic with down at the southern border?
If American boots hit Mexican soil.
I've been saying this and I really do believe that if American, especially tier one operators,
get into get into Mexico, we're going to see that traditional terrorism
style happen in the US, particularly along the border region. Because at that
point, it's like what we said, they have nothing to lose, and they will go down
with a fight. And if they're already working with traditional terrorist
groups, they know what the playbook says.
Man, that's terrifying to hear.
What do you think the US and Canada should be doing
that we're not doing?
I think there needs to be,
you know, it's gotten better,
especially at the southern border.
I really believe so.
And I've been covering that region since
for a while now so you can kind of compare the differences.
But what needs to be done is to tackle the root of the problem, the indoctrination and the financial pipelines. Because grabbing this, you know, picking up this big guy that runs a major faction and flaunting him around and
parading him and saying, look what we did, we captured this guy. That works for five minutes
before it's just as bad as again, or worse. After they got El Mayo, the Sinaloa cartel just
fucking exploded. It made hell like life was a living hell is a living
hell for a lot of people in that region. And so I think tackling it at its root is what
needs to happen. But that's a that's a huge operation that goes beyond just going in and
doing this covert mission to grab someone. You have to somehow put a stop to propaganda at its deepest form,
monitor the socials, and target financial pipelines, like I said,
remittance apps, the banks, the companies that are fronting for these groups.
And that's a lot harder, I think. Do you think that's harder?
Yeah, that would be tough.
It could be done.
But I, you know, what's interesting is I just,
I just don't think that we have really pushed on them at all.
And so it'll be, if that time comes, I mean,
to me securing our border is not pushing back.
That's just shit that we should have done a long time ago.
Yeah, it's a bad day.
But if we actually go on the offensive, then I mean, I think this could be wrapped up.
What would the offensive look like for you?
Like I said, I think what I would do is initially-
To hit them against each other.
I would hit them against each other to weaken them, to keep our people safe.
Let's weaken them as much as we
possibly can. In the meantime, you know, you could send in the intel reps, the
operatives to start tackling the financials. You know, you could outbid them
on the gas. You know, there's a lot of things you could do. I'd start, then I'd
do that and then to wrap it up I would send in the tier one units. Then I'd do that and then to wrap it up, I would send in the tier one units.
S1 0540
And I think it is slowly happening.
S1 0540 To demoralize them also.
S1 0540 Yeah.
S1 0540 A lot of strikes.
S1 0540 Because it is a psychological game too.
S1 0540 Yeah.
S1 0540 There is, you know, aside from the CIA planes that are flying over the northern
states, there's a vessel that's docked, a US vessel that's docked at the port of Veracruz. The border is militarized. And then you have like ICE DEA working, allegedly
working with Mexican forces to conduct operations without having to step foot in Mexico. But I,
without having to step foot in Mexico.
But I, it seems to be like these are all precursors to something bigger that could potentially happen, especially if the U.S.
isn't seeing the result that it wants, which is what?
Demoralized cartels, less fentanyl, less human smuggling, or for it to stop
altogether, which I just don't see happening.
But at the end of the day, you still have to deal with this big
figurehead, which is the Mexican government, who
has too much reason not to crack down on these guys. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I mean
It is what it is with them. It's our people that are being affected, you know, for sure
They don't want to help their people that's on them. But, but what the hell do I know?
I'm just a podcaster.
So anyways, well, I forgot to give you something here at the beginning.
Okay.
So do it at the end.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you so much.
Vigilance League gummy bears.
So excited.
You were asking me about this.
Not smuggled across the border.
But before we wrap it up, what are you getting ready to get into?
Anything exciting?
Yes, I'm really excited.
So I just did, I'm doing my podcast with Ironclad Borderland Dispatches.
So I'm basically just going boots on the ground to show people exactly what's happening without
having, you know, you know,
I try to always do beyond the headline reporting where I go and I speak to the people who are
affected right there and paint the picture of what's going on.
So on borderline dispatches, I went to the southern border and then I went up to the
northern border.
I showed everyone just how open it is. And soon we're going to be going in back
to Mexico to just show some of the curtail ridden regions and how it varies from different
areas and who's running what.
Does that mean you're having a crew go with you?
I operate alone.
Good for you, man.
I've been doing that. And actually, it's funny, a lot of people don't know that, but I've always done this
alone, so it's a lot of work, but I think it's worth it.
You know, that's a trust thing too.
I feel like if I go in alone, more people will talk to me and share more information.
It's disarming.
Well, where can we find you?
You can find me on the podcast, Apple, Spotify, Borderline Dispatches.
I also have my sub stack.
It's my full name, Katarina Schultz.
Everything is my full name with the most complicated spelling S-Z-U-L-C.
All right, Katarina.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
I really appreciate you.
I appreciate you having me here.
Hope to see you again.
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