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News / Nation & World

Ambush that killed 15 officers in Mexico a rarity

U.S. Treasury enacts sanctions against Jalisco cartel

The Columbian
Published: April 8, 2015, 5:00pm

MEXICO CITY — The U.S. Treasury Department announced sanctions on Mexico’s violent and growing Jalisco New Generation cartel a day after the gang mounted a bloody ambush that killed 15 Mexican police officers.

On Monday, the Jalisco cartel stopped a police convoy on a rural highway and opened fire, killing 15 officers and wounding five in the bloodiest single attack on Mexican law enforcement in recent memory.

The cartel and a related gang, the Cuinis, were placed on the U.S. Foreign Narcotics Kingpin list Tuesday. The designation seizes the property and interests of the gangs and their leaders in the United States and prohibits U.S. citizens from engaging in transactions with them.

“These two organizations have rapidly expanded their criminal empire in recent years through the use of violence and corruption,” said John E. Smith, acting director of the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control. “They now rank among the most powerful drug trafficking organizations in Mexico.”

The cartel originated in Jalisco, the western state once dominated by Sinaloa cartel leader Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel until his death in a shootout in 2010. But since then, the cartel “has expanded beyond Jalisco to other Mexican states, including Michoacan and Colima,” Smith’s office wrote in a press statement, and “has also further developed its ties to other criminal organizations around the world, including in the United States, Latin America, Africa, Europe, and Asia.”

Monday’s assault on a Jalisco state police convoy on a rural road between the Pacific coast resort of Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajara, the state capital, was the latest in a series of ambushes and attack by cartel gunmen that some analysts say amounts to a military-style offensive against the government.

While officials have been loath to publicly name the cartel involved in Monday’s attack, an official of the state prosecutors’ office, who was not authorized to speak on the record, confirmed that all evidence indicates that Jalisco New Generation carried out the ambush, as well as a previous string of attacks over the last two weeks. Last week, cartel gunmen made a failed attempt to kill state Security Commissioner Alejandro Solorio, and on March 19, they ambushed a federal police patrol, killing five officers.

Mexican security expert Jorge Chabat said the attackers appeared to be aimed at “intimidating the government” and as a reprisal for government efforts against the cartel.

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