Trial of Rogue Tijuana Gang Raises Question of Violence Spilling Over to San Diego
The San Diego
trial of two gang members once linked to the Tijuana Cartel is a reminder that
Mexican groups have long used the city as a base. However, this group was
arguably in the unusual position of finding it safer to operate on US rather
than Mexican soil.
The two defendants, Jose Olivera Beritan and David Valencia, are charged
with involvement in several kidnapping and murder cases in San Diego in 2007. The two men were members
of a Mexican gang, the Palillos, which once worked for the Tijuana Cartel (also
known as the Arellano Felix Organization). But after the gang leader's brother
was killed by the Tijuana command, the Palillos
relocated to San Diego
circa 2003. They used their knowledge of the Tijuana Cartel's US network to kidnap members who were living in
the US.
The gang also targeted drug dealers, businessmen, and police.
While active in San Diego,
the Palillos used several tactics commonly deployed by gangs across the border.
They wore police uniforms when they kidnapped their victims. After collecting
the ransom money, they did not always set the hostages free. In at least two
cases, the captives were killed and their bodies dissolved in acid. The
Palillos are so associated with this practice that the head of Baja California's Association for the Disappeared recently
called for the FBI to investigate whether as many 20 people missing in Tijuana were killed and had their remains destroyed by the
Palillos in the US.
San Diego
law enforcement cracked down on the organization in 2009, issuing charges
against 17 members. Some of them fled to Mexico,
but at least two were recaptured and extradited back to the US. Beritan and
Valencia are the first of
the suspected Palillo gang members to go on trial, in a case which has been
cited by the FBI as an example of Mexico's drug violence spilling
over the border.
But other prominent cases of spillover violence between Tijuana
and San Diego
involve violence moving southwards rather than north. In the 1990s, the cartel
recruited members of San Diego
street gang Barrio Logan, also known as Calle 30,
as mercenaries. The recruits received combat training and plenty of cash, and
in return tortured, kidnapped, and killed on the cartel's behalf. Barrio Logan was reportedly
behind the 1993 killing of Cardinal Juan Jesus Posadas Ocampo in 1993. In 1997,
a Mexican judge charged seven Barrio Logan members with the attempted
assassination of Jesus Blancornelas, the publisher of Tijuana-based
investigative magazine Zeta.
A 2011 report by Zeta magazine suggested that such recruitment campaigns
are not a thing of the past. The piece argued that a former member of the
Tijuana Cartel, now working for rival organization the Sinaloa Cartel, has
enlisted members of Barrio Logan to cleanse the city of rival drug trafficking
cells. One of those Barrio Logan recruits reportedly included Armando Perez,
whom the magazine describes as one of San Diego's
"most wanted" criminals, after he killed his wife in San Diego City College
in 2010.
The Zeta report suggests that the faction of the Tijuana Cartel allied
with the Sinaloans sought to recruit US
gang members, as a way of gaining an edge during Tijuana's cartel wars. This is a reminder
that while it would be easy to label the ongoing Palillos trial as a clear
example of Mexico's
violence "spilling over" the border, such violence has apparently
moved in both directions.
It's worth noting that the Palillos shifted their operations to the US under very
specific circumstances: they were in the unusual position of finding it safer
to operate on US soil rather than Mexican. They could avoid their enemies, and
act on their grudge against the Tijuana Cartel's leadership, targeting victims
who were unwilling and unable to go to the police. The group were able to
prosper in San Diego
in large part by exploiting their knowledge of the Tijuana Cartel's network. The
Palillos are, arguably, a unique phenomenon, rather than being indicative of an
overall trend of spillover violence.
The more realistic risk is not that Mexican gangs will pack up and move
to the US, as happened in the Palillos' case, but that criminal organizations
like the Tijuana Cartel will deepen their collaboration with US street gangs,
using them to move, protect, and distribute drug shipments. The city of San Diego has as many as
81 street gangs, according to a report by local radio station KPBS. The extent
to which the Tijuana Cartel is currently working with such gangs is currently
unclear. But when discussing the risk of spillover violence, the deepening of
business links between Mexico's
cartels and US street
gangs is a far more likely prospect than that of Mexican gangs choosing to
relocate north of the border. Any gang that did so would probably eventually
face a fate similar to the Palillos.
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