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Immigration See other Immigration Articles Title: Mexican cartels already in Oklahoma They are the "No. 1 threat" to Oklahoma, a narcotics official says.Editors Note: This article sheds light on the violent and shadowy underworld of the Mexican drug cartels in Oklahoma. In order to tell the most accurate story, The Oklahoman has relied on a variety of state and federal court records as well as the eyewitness accounts of two undercover agents with the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control. The identities of the two agents have been withheld for their safety. Crossing a Mexican drug cartel usually comes with a price death. On the U.S.- Mexico border, that price is being paid daily with an endless stream of execution-style slayings in a war to control drug routes to the north. As Mexican officials crack down on these cartels, violence spreads. Lives are merely the cost of doing business, and since 2007 the international press has documented more than 7,400 drug war-related murders on the border. Police are gunned down in public squares. Failed drug smugglers are tortured to death and bound from head to toe in duct tape. Enemies are beheaded. U.S. authorities fear the violence is creeping across the border. Yet the truth is that Mexican drug cartels are already entrenched in Oklahoma, casting an ominous shadow on the future of our cities and rural communities. "Oklahoma's No. 1 threat is the Mexican drug cartels," said Darrell Weaver, executive director of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control. "Make no mistake." Intelligence gathered over the past 14 years has revealed a shadowy underworld of "second- and third-generation" Mexican drug smugglers who have gained a foothold throughout Oklahoma. They often operate in rural towns under the guise of a legitimate business such as a meat market or restaurant, and their connections have been traced to nearly all of Mexico's most notorious cartels Sinaloa, Los Zetas, La Familia Michoacana, La Linea and Juarez. "At least 90 percent of the drugs we see here in Oklahoma are coming from the Mexican drug cartels," said one undercover state agent who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity. The agent, known as "Agent M.S." for this article, is a veteran investigator who often conducts direct buys with major drug distributors. He is a second-generation American citizen whose father once served in the Mexican military, and he has participated in many of Oklahoma's largest drug busts in the past 15 years. "They're really in our neighborhoods," said Agent M.S., who posed as a seller in a sting operation in August at Penn Square Mall in Oklahoma City. Unarmed, he met three Mexican dealers who scanned his body with a hand-held metal detector to see if he was wired with a recorder or listening device. Once satisfied that he wasn't an undercover agent or police informant, the men began to talk about business and their connections with Mexican drug cartel members in Dallas and beyond the Rio Grande. "They mentioned real names of cartel members," Agent M.S. said. "Suddenly I realized I'm dealing with a guy on a real level. He wanted 50 kilos (of cocaine) a week. You're talking $1 million to $1.5 million a week worth of cocaine. That's real money and whenever you're talking about those kinds of purchases, you're dealing with a Mexican drug cartel. "That really touches home." Information gathered from the encounter led to a Mexican restaurant owner who had been using his popular western Oklahoma business as a front for his drug-smuggling operation. The investigation continues with hopes of netting higher-level cartel members. "Oklahomans are in danger because they deal with these people without them knowing," Agent M.S. said. "They'll visit their restaurants (or other businesses) they own. The danger is being caught in the crossfire." The cartels are also providing children with drugs, and rural communities are no longer insulated from the major drug operations. In fact, Agent M.S. said, one informant recently claimed that two large warehouses are cooking methamphetamine somewhere in the state. Such warehouses known as "fiesta labs" in Mexico are designed to cook massive amounts of methamphetamine around the clock. Another undercover state agent, who also asked for anonymity as "Agent P.A.," said, "The average citizen doesn't have a clue as to the reality of the Mexican drug cartels operating in the United States, and specifically Oklahoma. "And it's not just in Oklahoma City. It's everywhere they can gain a foothold. You go to Elk City, and if you dig deep enough you'll find a connection in Elk City. You can go to Woodward Altus Frederick and you can find a connection if you look hard enough." Cartel-related cases of the past have taught agents well. A legendary lesson Abraham Weibe seemed like an unlikely source for a major drug smuggling operation when police stopped him in 1999 for drunk driving in the small Custer County town of Thomas. He had no education, a drinking problem and seemingly no future after leaving the old Mennonite colony in Cuauhtemoc, Mexico, in the mid-1990s with his wife and children. Then Weibe began talking. "Abe told us he knew of major shipments of marijuana coming into Oklahoma on a regular basis more than anyone had seen before," Agent P.A. recalled. "At first, no one knew if he was telling the truth. But he knew too many details." The state narcotics bureau added Weibe to the payroll, housed him in a rural farmhouse near Thomas and placed him under surveillance. Soon, shipments of marijuana began arriving from Mexico just as Weibe had promised. As weeks passed, the loads got larger often as much as 1,000 pounds of marijuana with a street value of several hundred thousand dollars. Court documents show Weibe and others took orders from Martin Rene Cisneros, who ran the operation out of his Eakly trailer house. The drugs were traced back to Mexican national Enrique Harms, a violent drug runner with ties to the Juarez Cartel. The documents show Harms and Cisneros utilized local truck drivers like pack mules to disperse their drugs. One of those drivers, Gerald Newman, an elderly, bearded man agents called "Santa Claus," transported loads of marijuana along Interstate 40 in the bed of his battered farm truck under bales of hay. "What that case showed us was that these cartels were setting up their drug operations in rural communities where they'd never be noticed," Agent M.S. said. "We never would have known what was going on in that case had it not been for Weibe." Cisneros eventually received a 20-year suspended sentence for drug trafficking in exchange for his cooperation as an informant. Despite the deal, authorities allege that Cisneros began dealing drugs again and is now a fugitive hiding out on the United States-Mexico border at Ciudad Juarez and El Paso. There were other ramifications of the case one that is now a legend among Oklahoma narcotic agents. "I received word there were men from Mexico looking for me to get to Weibe," Agent P.A. said. "I was going through a divorce at the time, and my kids would stay with me on weekends. I wouldn't let them come to my house for over a year afterward. I'd answer the door with a loaded gun." Weibe returned to Mexico against the advice of state agents. He soon disappeared. Another informant told agents that drug smugglers tortured Weibe for two weeks and dumped him in a lake. To date, his body has not been found. 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#1. To: X-15 (#0)
OK, so let's allow millions of undocumented Mexicans into the country so the drug cartels are camoflauged. Good I-DEA.
The U.S. Govt has become a tyrannical butcher; U.S. taxpayers are accomplices to international murder and mayhem. If you satisfy your fears by bowing to this butcher, you forfeit your humanity and possibly your soul.
Family-focused mindset, yes?
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