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- Jul 15, 2020
- 2,899
Anyone who sells illegal drugs in mexico is going to be part of a cartel, they run everything over there. I suspect thats why the sources are so good at getting N to people who buy it. they have extensive knowledge in importing and exporting drugs of all types, they have their hand in everything and basically run mexico, but there reach doesn't stop there they have connections worldwide. take for instance the sinaloa cartel they are absolutely massive and highly dangerous organization, i have seen the documentaries where they hang whole families from bridges in the middle of towns just because someone 'disrespected them'. I remember when the government caught el chaos son, the cartels set up road blocks and started causing chaos and the government let him go!!!!!!
i think the main cartel is sinaloa, but there are others aswell, i found an article about them below
Mexico's drug cartels are rapidly expanding their share of the international drug market, according to reports from U.S. drug enforcement officials and their counterparts in Europe and Asia.
As we recently noted, Mexican cartels are some of the most extensive and powerful criminal enterprises in history. Evidence suggests that the cartels have a presence (at least) in all of the world's major drug markets, and are now expanding operations into other types of illegal smuggling. In the past few months, the U.S. agencies have stopped using the acronym "DTOs," or drug-trafficking organizations to describe the Mexican cartels. They now favor the term "TCO," or transcontinental criminal organizations.
i think the main cartel is sinaloa, but there are others aswell, i found an article about them below
Mexico's drug cartels are rapidly expanding their share of the international drug market, according to reports from U.S. drug enforcement officials and their counterparts in Europe and Asia.
As we recently noted, Mexican cartels are some of the most extensive and powerful criminal enterprises in history. Evidence suggests that the cartels have a presence (at least) in all of the world's major drug markets, and are now expanding operations into other types of illegal smuggling. In the past few months, the U.S. agencies have stopped using the acronym "DTOs," or drug-trafficking organizations to describe the Mexican cartels. They now favor the term "TCO," or transcontinental criminal organizations.