http://homelandsecuritynewswire.com/drug-cartels-employ-women-assassins-sica
rias-broad-killing-campaign

 


Mexico: descent into chaos


Drug cartels employ women assassins (sicarias) in broad killing campaign


Published 19 August 2010

As the drug war in Mexico escalates, drug cartels have began to employ
sicaria, or hit women; the women assassins, ranging in age from 18 to 30,
work alongside men in cells of La Linea, as the Juárez drug cartel is known;
cells are assigned to different jobs -- such as halcones (lookouts), hit
squads, and extortionists -- and operate independently; the hit women are
trained to use rifles and handguns and sometimes accompany their male
counterparts; women in Juárez have been previously accused of being part of
kidnapping rings, often assigned to keep watch on captives; women have also
held roles as recruiters, transporters and leaders of drug-smuggling cells

http://homelandsecuritynewswire.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/standard/
alg_anahi_cabrera.jpg

Anahi Beltran Cabrera, a cartel arsenal guard // Source: nydailynews.com

An alleged hit man told Mexican federal police that beautiful young women
are working as killers for the Juárez drug cartel. “They have to look good
to deceive our opponents,” Rogelio Amaya Martínez said in a videotaped
interview by Mexico’s Ministry of Public Safety.

Amaya, 27, is one of five men arrested last Thursday in Juárez and accused
of being a cartel hit squad that killed two federal police officers in
separate attacks earlier this month. Amaya, who appears relaxed in the video
while answering questions from a woman off screen, said there are 20 to 30
women working as sicarias, or hit women. El Universal newspaper in Mexico
placed the video on YouTube
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emIMGAnIK4g&feature=player_embedded> ).

Daniel Borunda writes <http://www.elpasotimes.com/juarez/ci_15808549>  in
the El Paso Times that Amaya said that the female assassins range in age
from 18 to 30, and they work alongside men in cells of La Linea, as the
Juárez drug cartel is known. A recruiter selects the women, he said.

Cells are assigned to different jobs — such as halcones (lookouts), hit
squads, and extortionists — and operate independently. The hit women are
trained to use rifles and handguns and sometimes accompany their male
counterparts.

“They have carried out various jobs,” Amaya said, making a reference to
murders. “They work like any other hit man.” Amaya said the women are young
and attractive to better fool their targets.

Borunda notes that women in Juárez have been previously accused of being
part of kidnapping rings, often assigned to keep watch on captives. Women
have also held roles as recruiters, transporters and leaders of
drug-smuggling cells.

“Up until now, we have them involved in almost all aspects of cartel
operations,” said Diana Apodaca, spokeswoman for the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) in El Paso. “To date, we don’t know them to be directly
involved in assassinations, but we wouldn’t rule it out,” Apodaca said.

The Juárez and Sinaloa drug cartels have been engaged in a bloody fight
since 2008 for control of smuggling routes and drug sales throughout the
state of Chihuahua. 

The violence in Juárez continued Tuesday, including an afternoon attack on a
municipal police vehicle that killed two officers. About 3 p.m., gunmen in a
moving vehicle fired 35 rounds at the patrol truck on Avenida Gomez Morin,
police officials said. After the officer driving was shot, he lost control
and crashed into a tree. The slain officers, Francisco Ramirez Rojo, 40, and
Leonardo Aparicio Cortes, 33, had been assigned to transport prisoners.

Juárez police spokesman Jacinto Segura said that thirty city police officers
have been murdered this year.

There were 22 homicides on Monday, raising the death toll since Friday to
73. More than 1,870 people have been slain in the Juárez area this year.

 



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