Who was ‘El Mencho,’ the Mexican drug lord whose death sparked violence? – National

Sunday’s killing of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes by the Mexican army marks the most important blow to the country’s drug cartels in years, sparking a wave of violent retaliation.

Oseguera Cervantes, higher often known as “El Mencho,” led the powerful and deadly Jalisco Recent Generation Cartel, which has earned a repute for brazen attacks against Mexican security forces while establishing itself as a top distributor of cocaine, methamphetamine and fentanyl.

“He was brutal,” said Alejandro Garcia Magos, an assistant professor on the University of Toronto who studies Mexican politics, who called Oseguera Cervantes’ death “excellent news.”

Oseguera Cervantes was facing multiple indictments in the USA, and the U.S. State Department had offered a US$15 million reward for information resulting in his arrest. Canada and the U.S. designated his cartel and others foreign terrorist organizations a yr ago.

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Here’s what to learn about “El Mencho” and the cartel he formed and led until his death.

A lengthy criminal history

Born in rural Michoacán in western Mexico in 1966, Oseguera Cervantes grew up in a poor family before he reportedly illegally immigrated to the U.S. within the Eighties.

He settled within the San Francisco Bay Area, where he was arrested multiple times on firearms and drug charges and deported back to Mexico, but managed to re-enter the U.S.

A Univision profile of Oseguera Cervantes claims he smuggled drugs from Mexico into the U.S. multiple times, crossing the border under various aliases.


Click to play video: 'Canadians stranded in Mexico'


Canadians stranded in Mexico


In 1992, after settling in California once more, Oseguera Cervantes and his brother Abraham were arrested on federal charges in Sacramento, three weeks after a heroin take care of undercover cops.

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In keeping with Rolling Stone, Oseguera Cervantes pleaded guilty with the intention to avoid a life sentence for Abraham, who had acted as the vendor while “El Mencho” served as lookout.

Oseguera Cervantes was sentenced to 5 years in prison but was released on parole after three years, after which he was deported back to Mexico.

Upon his return, “El Mencho” became a Jalisco state police officer before joining the Milenio Cartel. He soon married Rosalinda González Valencia, whose family led the cartel.

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Oseguera Cervantes first served in an assassin squad that protected Milenio’s leaders and regularly rose through the cartel’s ranks to turn into a top lieutenant during a time when Milenio effectively merged with the powerful Sinaloa Cartel.


Click to play video: 'More than 26,000 Canadians in Mexico have registered with Global Affairs Canada: Anand'


Greater than 26,000 Canadians in Mexico have registered with Global Affairs Canada: Anand


“El Mencho” worked closely with Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel, an ally of Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, to assist implement Sinaloa’s control of drug trafficking through Jalisco state and its capital city of Guadalajara.

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In a span of months between 2009 and 2010, Coronel was killed in a shootout with Mexican soldiers and Milenio’s top leader, Óscar Orlando Nava Valencia (“El Lobo”), was captured.

Out of the leadership vacuum, the Milenio Cartel fractured into two warring groups — one in all them led by “El Mencho,” which won the war over control of the Jalisco drug trade and altered its name to Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación, or CJNG.

CJNG steadily expanded its control over drug trafficking across Jalisco and into other neighbouring states “with the political protection of governors” who were corrupted, said Edgardo Buscaglia, a senior scholar in law and economics at Columbia University.

“That’s huge, when you’ve gotten the political protection of nine governors — that lets you engage in local monopolies to make lots of money through not only drugs, not only human trafficking, not only migrant trafficking, but you begin earning money through the state, through public procurement,” he said.

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“So the Jalisco cartel was very much merged with the Jalisco state.”


Click to play video: 'Violence in Mexico after cartel leader killed'


Violence in Mexico after cartel leader killed


Days before Oseguera Cervantes was killed, the U.S. government accused him and CJNG of a timeshare fraud scheme in Puerto Vallarta as a further illicit revenue stream for the cartel.

CJNG’s assets have been estimated to be around US$20 billion by state terrorism researchers on the University of Maryland.

González Valencia, “El Mencho’s” wife, who was often known as “La Jefa,” has led the cartel’s financial and money laundering operations, which included real estate and luxury resort properties.

“There isn’t a single state in Mexico that doesn’t have the presence of either the Jalisco cartel or the Sinaloa Cartel in some shape or form, be that when it comes to boots on the bottom or the financial structures of those organizations,” said Deborah Bonello, the managing editor of InSight Crime, an organized crime think tank that has published several profiles and analyses of “El Mencho” and CJNG.

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“El Mencho” effectively solidified his position as Mexico’s latest top drug lord in 2016, after the ultimate capture of “El Chapo” Guzman, when CKPG kidnapped two of Guzman’s sons while they were vacationing in Puerto Vallarta. The 2 men were eventually freed after a negotiation with Guzman that involved payment to CKPG in money and medicines.

Oseguera Cervantes evaded capture by Mexican forces multiple times before his death on Sunday and maintained an especially low profile.

His cartel, meanwhile, developed a repute for brazen violence against Mexican authorities and politicians, including the 2013 murder of Jalisco tourism secretary Jesús Gallegos Álvarez, which was believed to have been ordered by “El Mencho.”

In 2015, CJNG forces ambushed a police convoy travelling from Puerto Vallarta to Guadalajara, killing 15 officers. A number of weeks later, during a retaliatory operation by Mexico’s military on “El Mencho’s” suspected compound, cartel soldiers shot down a military helicopter, killing nine Mexican army and police officials.

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The cartel followed that up by unleashing a wave of violence across Jalisco state just like the present unrest.


Click to play video: 'Canada issues travel advisory for Mexico amid violence following death of cartel leader ‘El Mencho’'


Canada issues travel advisory for Mexico amid violence following death of cartel leader ‘El Mencho’


CJNG was also blamed for the attempted assassination in 2020 of Mexico City Police Chief Omar García Harfuch, who’s now Mexico’s federal security secretary.

The Canadian government says CJNG “is thought for his or her modern use of rigging drones to drop explosives, a violent tactic adopted from insurgent groups.”

The cartel has also used public executions and kidnappings in territories it controls to instill terror in communities, the Canadian terrorism listing for CJNG says.

Toronto police seized 835 kilograms of cocaine linked to CJNG in January 2025, marking the most important drug seizure in the town’s history.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration announced in September last yr it had seized 77,000 kilograms of medication and over one million counterfeit pills during five days of operations within the U.S. and Mexico.

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With Oseguera Cervantes now dead, it stays to be seen whether CJNG will be fully taken down.

“Unless the political protection of the Jalisco cartel ends, the death of ‘El Mencho’ will mean nothing,” Buscaglia said.

—With files from Global’s Touria Izri, Uday Rana and Jackson Proskow


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