RT.com, August
05, 2013
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| AFP Photo / Francisco Vega |
Mexican
drug cartels are hiring US military personnel to carry out murders. In exchange
for cash or drugs, some American servicemen are working as hit men or teaching
gangsters their skills.
Drug
cartels have recruited American servicemen for years, paying them thousands of
dollars to assassinate government informants, ousted cartel members, and other
enemies of the group, law enforcement experts told Fox News.
“There has
been a persistent gang problem in the military for the past six to eight
years,” said Fred Burton, vice president for STRATFOR Global Intelligence. “…It
is quite worrisome to have individuals with specialized military training and
combat experience being associated with the cartels.”
As of April
2011, the FBI National Gang Intelligence Center identified members of at least
53 gangs that have served in or are affiliated with the US military. The NDIC
has also noted a rise in gang-related violence and activity along the
US-Mexican border.
In one
case, Michael Apodaca, a 22-year-old private first-class stationed at Fort
Bliss, Tx., accepted a $5,000 offer by the Juarez Cartel to kill Jose Daniel
Gonzalez-Galeana, a cartel member who was secretly working as an informant for
Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Apodaca, who was 18 years old when he was
recruited, fatally shot the informant in May 2009, but was caught by
authorities and last week sentenced to life in prison.
In another
case, Kevin Corley, a 29-year-old Army first lieutenant stationed at Fort
Carson, Colo., conspired to commit a murder-for-hire for the Los Zetas drug
cartel in November 2012. He was promised $50,000 and five kilograms of cocaine
to conduct a drug raid and contract killing at a ranch near Laredo. He was
required to bring his own team of assassins.
Corley also
offered to provide tactical training for members of the cartel and steal
weapons from the US military. Undercover agents posing as members of the gang
discovered his intentions, and Corley was arrested. Former Army Sgt. Samuel
Walker, 28, had been working with Corley and was convicted for conspiring in
the murder-for-hire.
In May, a
43-year-old former lawyer for the Gulf Cartel, Juan Gerrero-Chapa, was found
dead in the parking lot of a mall in an affluent neighborhood near Fort Worth,
Tx. Authorities are concerned that the murder may have been conducted by an
American serving for the US military.
“Obviously,
the nature of this homicide, the way it was carried out indicates – and I said
indicates – an organization that is trained to do this type of activity,”
Southlake Police Chief Stephen Mylett announced after the body was found. “When
you’re dealing with individuals that operate on such a professional level,
certainly caution forces me to have to lean toward that this is an organized
criminal activity act.”
The US Army
no longer takes in applicants with tattoos that are sympathetic to gangs, and
fears that more of its members are aiding drug cartels each year – especially
the Los Zetas cartel, which is notorious for kidnapping civilians and beheading
its enemies.
“The FBI
judges with high confidence that Los Zetas will continue to increase its
recruitment efforts,” the FBI wrote in a bulletin last month, warning that
violence may continue to increase along the Southwest border.

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