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Reuters reports that top
Mexico trafficker claims he was DEA informant.
MEXICO CITY — (Reuters)
– A top Mexican drug trafficker awaiting trial in Chicago is
claiming that he has immunity from prosecution as he was working all along as
a confidential informant for U.S. agents — allegations the
U.S. government denies.
Jesus Vicente Zambada-Niebla is the son of Ismael "El Mayo"
Zambada, the right-hand man of Mexico’s most wanted criminal, Joaquin
"Shorty" Guzman who leads the powerful Sinaloa cartel.
Regarded
as a major trafficker in his own right, "El Mayito" or the
"Little Mayo," was arrested two years ago in Mexico City. Extradited to the United
States last year, he is now in jail awaiting trial in a U.S. federal court in
Chicago in February next year.
The
younger Zambada, who is charged with cocaine and heroin trafficking, is
claiming he was an informant for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA), and WAS GIVEN IMMUNITY FROM PROSECUTION AT THE TOP LEVEL OF
GOVERNMENT.
Zambada is charged with TRAFFICKING COCAINE AND HEROIN, and RUNNING BULK CASH PROFITS [this bulk cash smuggling
is the reason the US supports drug trafficking (see video at the end of this
entry)] back to the cartel, which the indictment
alleges ran one to two tons of cocaine a month through the Chicago
area. The indictment also names Zambada’s father, Guzman and
others.
One of a slick new generation of Mexican traffickers, dubbed "narco
juniors" south of the border, Zambada’s extradition was hailed by
the Justice Department as one of the most significant in years.
But
court documents filed by his lawyers in late July argue that a deal was
struck between the DEA and Sinaloa cartel attorney Humberto Loya in 1998, granting Loya and top
cartel chiefs immunity for providing information about their rivals.
Zambada claims the agreement was "known and approved" by the
Justice Department and cartel leaders and is seeking to have all
charges tossed arguing he took over from Loya the role of "primary
liaison on behalf of the Sinaloa Cartel with the United States
government" in 2008.
A snappy dresser far from the brash Mexican cowboy style of his father, Zambada claims to have
met with regional directors of the DEA for Latin America and Mexico at a hotel in downtown
Mexico City shortly before his arrest where he received guarantees of his
immunity from prosecution.
Zambada
"was specifically told that he would receive immunity, not only under
Loya’s prior agreement, but as an agreement with him personally and
approved at the highest levels of the government," his counsel said.
U.S. government officials in Mexico declined to comment on Zambada’s
allegations. U.S. prosecutors have denied that Zambada had "public
authority" granting him immunity, and they have until September 9 to
file a response with the court.
Allegations that Mexico’s most powerful cartel cut a deal with U.S.
officials, if proven, could be potentially embarrassing for the U.S. government.
Raging
drug violence has claimed more than 40,000 lives since Mexican President Felipe
Calderon took office nearly five years ago and sent troops to crush the
powerful cartels.
…
The Examiner reports that dead
(Gary Webb) journalist further vindicated.
Targeted dead journalist
further vindicated: Feds’ tons of drug-traffick
By Deborah Dupre, Human Rights
Examiner
Targeted journalist hero, the late Gary Webb was further vindicated Wednesday
with news parallelling Fast
and Furious and California’s
prison snitch or be tortured policy, that SEVERAL TONS OF COCAINE
WERE BROUGHT INTO THE UNITED STATES BY U.S. FEDERAL AGENTS allowing asset Sinaloa
drug cartel to traffic the haul, reportedly in exchange for information about
rival cartels, according to court documents filed in a U.S. federal court.
"The
latest allegations are part of the defense of Vicente Zambada-Niebla, who was extradited to the
United States to face drug-trafficking charges in Chicago," according to El
Paso Times.
It took a Chicago court holding a status hearing today to order the
U.S. government to respond to Zambada-Niebla’s motion containing the allegations
by Sept. 11.
Jesus Vicente Zambada Niebla, son of Ismael “El Mayo,” is a top
leaders of the Sinaloa drug-trafficking organization.
In April, Zambada claimed
to have been working with the U.S. government for years according to
pleadings filed in federal court in Chicago.
"Zambada Niebla’s allegation of U.S. GOVERNMENT
COMPLICITY IN HIS NARCO-TRAFFICKING ACTIVITIES is laid out in a
two-page court pleading filed in late March with the U.S. District Court for
the Northern District of Illinois in Chicago. The pleading asserts that Zambada Niebla was
working with ‘public authority’ “on behalf of the U.S.
Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement Administration (‘DEA’); and the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (‘FBI’); and the Department of
Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(‘ICE’)."
Niebla is also connected to the Gulfstream
II jet that wrecked on September 4, 2007 with four tons of cocaine on
board on.
European
investigators linked the wrecked plane’s tail number, N987SA, to CIA
“rendition” operations.
Niebla’s claim that he smuggled drugs from Mexico into the U.S. as an asset
for the U.S. government adds further weight to evidence confirming that THE CIA AND U.S. BANKING
GIANTS ARE THE TOP PLAYERS IN THE TRANSNATIONAL DRUG TRADE WORTH HUNDREDS OF
BILLIONS OF DOLLARS A YEAR.
Targeted
Individual: Investigative journalist Gary Webb (1955-2004)
The
CIA and U.S. banking drug dealing referenced allegations has been made by,
among others, Pulitzer Prize
journalist Gary Webb, who supposedly committed suicide in 2004, found with two
gunshot wounds to the head. (See: Stanton,
Sam. "Reporter’s
suicide confirmed by coroner," The Sacramento Bee; Dec. 15. 2004.
Retrieved Jul. 20, 2006)
Webb had revealed that the CIA was aware of cocaine transactions and large shipments
of drugs into the U.S. by Contra personnel. (See Gary Webb in embedded
Youtube on page left)
In his 20,000 word, three-part investigative series titled "Dark
Alliance," Webb alleged that Nicaraguan drug traffickers had sold and
distributed crack cocaine in Los Angeles during the 1980s, and drug profits were funding
the CIA-supported Nicaraguan Contras.
He had charged that the Reagan administration shielded inner-city drug dealers
from prosecution to raise money for the Contras, especially after Congress
passed the Boland Amendment that prohibited direct Contra funding.
As a growing number of Targeted Individuals do now, Webb experienced
workplace mobbing. He was blacklisted out of his work as a
reporter.
As Targeted Individuals consistently report today, Webb had complained of
both death threats and multi-stalkers: “government
people” stalking his home.
Criticized and black-listed from the mainstream journalism community, Webb’s reportage
has been vindicated after many of his U.S. federal agency drug
trafficking findings were validated.
…
These
latest revelations of U.S. officials’ systematic drug dealing further
vindicates Webb, now honored as a journalist hero, as the video about him
reflects.
"INVESTIGATIVE
REPORTING IS BEING SQUEAZED OUT OF THE PICTURE, I think INTENTIONALLY," Webb stated on camera.
My reaction: the US government is
working together with Mexican drug cartels to bring tons of cocaine into the
US.
1) A top Mexican drug trafficker, Jesus Vicente Zambada-Niebla, who is
charged with trafficking cocaine and heroin and running
bulk cash profits back to the cartel, is claiming he was an informant
for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and was given
immunity from prosecution at the top level of government.
2) Court documents filed by his lawyers in late July argue that a deal
was struck between the DEA and Sinaloa cartel attorney Humberto Loya in 1998,
granting Loya and top cartel chiefs immunity. The agreement was "known
and approved" by the Justice Department.
3) Zambada took over from Loya the role of "primary liaison on
behalf of the Sinaloa Cartel with the United States government"
in 2008.
4) Zambada met with regional directors of the DEA for Latin America and
Mexico at a hotel in downtown Mexico City shortly before his arrest
where he received guarantees of his immunity from prosecution. Zambada
"was specifically told that he would receive immunity, not only under
Loya’s prior agreement, but as an agreement with him personally and
approved at the highest levels of the government,"
5) Raging drug violence has claimed more than 40,000 lives in Mexico over the
last five years.
6) Further evidence of the US government’s role in drug trafficking
comes from the Gulfstream II jet which wrecked on September 4, 2007 with four
tons of cocaine on board on and has been linked by European investigators to
CIA "rendition" operations through its tail number, N987SA.
Conclusion:
The CIA and US banking giants are the top players in the transnational
drug trade worth hundreds of billions of dollars a year.
As for the reason why the US government became the largest drug dealer in the
world, watch The
ESF And Its History (part 5) below.
Eric de Carbonnel
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