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Other sites include Diario del Narco and La Policiaca. [30] In addition, officials have tried to eliminate the word "narco" and keep it out of everyday life. [35] The government also came out with anti-narco comics and songs directed at kids. The Mexican government sponsored a ten episode comic series.
Nota roja (lit. “red note” or “red news”) is a journalism genre popular in Mexico. While similar to more general sensationalist or yellow journalism , the nota roja focuses almost exclusively on stories related to physical violence related to crime, accidents and natural disasters.
The Blog del Narco credited the attacks to Joaquín Guzmán Loera (a.k.a. El Chapo), who reportedly left another message for Los Zetas about the Sinaloa cartel's incursion in Nuevo Laredo. [46] Car bomb explosion outside the city hall in Nuevo Laredo.
On 13 March 2022, Juan Gerardo Treviño Chávez alias El Huevo, leader of Cártel del Noreste since 2016, was arrested after an operation in the Hidalgo neighborhood in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas. There were several confrontations and blockades in the city, among which 38 armed attacks against several military bases stand out, as well as an ...
Narcoculture in Mexico is a subculture that has grown as a result of the strong presence of the various drug cartels throughout Mexico. In the same way that other subcultures around the world that are related to crime and drug use (for example the Scottish neds [1] [2] and European hooligans, [3] [4] [5] or the American street-gangstas, cholos, and outlaw bikers), [6] Mexican narco culture has ...
2012 Boca del Río murder of journalists: May 6, 2012 Boca Del Río, Veracruz: 4 Cadereyta Jiménez massacre: May 13, 2012 Cadereyta Jiménez, Nuevo León 49 Los Zetas murder Mexican civilians, either Gulf Cartel members or US-bound immigrants. San Luis Potosí massacre: August 9, 2012 San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí (state) 14
Pablo Acosta Villarreal, commonly referred to as El Zorro de Ojinaga ("The Ojinaga Fox") was a Mexican narcotics smuggler who controlled crime along a 200-mile stretch of U.S.-Mexico border.
Rafael "Rafa" Caro Quintero (born October 24, 1952) is a Mexican drug lord who co-founded the now-disintegrated Guadalajara Cartel with Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo and other drug traffickers in the late 1970s.