(Borderland Beat) Panama –Local media said today Mexican drug trafficking groups operating in Panama are using the country as a base for trafficking cocaine from Colombia to Mexico and the United States.
According to intelligence reports cited by the newspaper La Prensa, the Gulf cartel, Beltran Leyva, Los Zetas and Juarez Cartel were the drug trafficking organizations most readily identified as being present in Panama. The information also indicated that there are 2,500 foreign prisoners incarcerated in Panamanian jails, between 90 and 100 are Mexican nationals, all charged with drug offenses, confirmed by Angel Calderon, Panama’s Director of Prisons to La Prensa.
In September 2010 when Edgar Valdez Villarreal, aka La Barbie, was captured in an operation in the Mexican capital, he told authorities: “all the drugs we transport into Mexico come from Colombia through Panama.” Valdez Villarreal was reported to be in Panama in 2007 for the first time when an intelligence report associated the operation with the Beltran Leyva cartel. At that time he was listed as “Boss and security coordinator” of drug deliveries from Colombia that were transported through Panama.
Public Ministry sources consulted for the report indicated that, at the request of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) and Interpol, they investigated in Panama between 2007 and 2008 to determine whether the Beltran Leyva had accounts or assets in the country, but the inquiries were fruitless.
In the last seven years, La Prensa outlined several instances that are linked to Mexican cartel members. In one of these incidents, in 2007, a Sinaloa Cartel cell was dismantled. 16 Mexicans and 3 Panamanians were arrested upon the interception and ultimate seizure of their boat loaded with 19.4 tons of cocaine in the Pacific Ocean.
A week after the bust of that large vessel, authorities captured two other Sinaloa Cartel operatives with 200 kilos of cocaine and 2.5 million in cash they were intending to bury in backyard of the residence in the capital. While from Los Zetas, in 2009, they seized three cars with drug compartments loaded with cocaine crossing at the Paso Canoas border with Costa Rica.in 2010 four suspected Juárez cartel members were captured at the Tocumen International Airport with drugs in their suitcases with false bottoms. The presence in Panama of drug trafficking sicarios from Mexican drug cartels are not only witnessed in the streets of this country but many have been left behind in Panamanian prisons for the crimes they’ve committed.
Besides the activities of drug trafficking, Mexican cartels have also left the country samples of their brand of cruelty by eliminating those who betray them or who are acting contrary to their interests.A local intelligence report in late 2012, seen by La Prensa, said: “A group of Mexican hitmen were in Panama, then Mexican agents lost track them in Paso Canoas.”According to this information, suspected Sinaloa cartel sicarios, “were looking for several members of the opposing Los Zetas cartel operating in Central America, including Panama.” According to the report, this group of gunmen had several “jobs” in Guatemala, Costa Rica, Colombia and Honduras.
La Prensa reports the agents believe that the Sinaloa cartel and Los Zetas have been taking their war to Central America and to meet this objective, each side tries to “disappear” people who have washed their drug money. Another report from the Homicide Division of the Directorate of Judicial Investigation (DIJ) of the National Police indicates, that between 2009 and 2012, 20 Mexicans were killed in Panama linked to drug trafficking cases. Furthermore, an analysis of the Integrated Criminal Statistics broken down between 2007 and 2012, 4,099 homicides occurred in the country of Panama. Of this total, 45 murders were credited to cases that involved drug trafficking, 127 mafia style executions, 135 were settling scores and 309 were attributed to gangs and the rest had some other motives.. Also according to this report, the homicide rate in Panama rose from 13.0 to 18.0 per 100,000 inhabitants during the same period,
Four Groups in the Isthmus
A recent report from the Attorney General of Mexico states that in the country eight drug cartels are currently operating, who have partnerships in 16 countries in the Americas, from Canada to Argentina.
According to the Mexican intelligence document, there is evidence that at least four of these drug cartels have operations in Panama. The Mexico’s drug cartels are identified as the Pacific, Gulf, Los Zetas, Los Arellano Felix, La Familia Michoacana, the Knights Templar, Beltran Leyva and Juarez Cartel. The report notes that the Pacific cartel expanded its presence to 13 countries of the continent: Canada, United States, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Belize, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Colombia, Peru, Chile, Argentina and Venezuela.
While the Gulf Cartel and Los Zetas, two of the most vicious and territorial, operate in nine countries: United States, Guatemala, El Salvador, Panama, Colombia and Bolivia.
Also documented was the presence of Los Zetas in Honduras, Argentina, Brazil, while there are traces of Gulf cartel in Belize, Costa Rica and Peru.
The rest of these groups also contribute to criminal activities in some of these countries, but not the same level as the others. For example, the once-powerful members of the Arellano Felix cartel, are present only in the United States and Peru, while Juarez Cartel is also in the U.S. territory, keeping its alliances in Colombia, Honduras, Costa Rica, Panama and reaching to Argentina, according to the report.
The Knights Templar, emerged from La Familia Michoacan in 2011. While the group operates on U.S. soil, they are involved as well in Colombia, Costa Rica and Guatemala.
The tentacles of the Beltran Leyva stretch from their own network to the United States, and also into Guatemala, Honduras, Costa Rica, Panama and Colombia.
La Prensa reports assassinations or executions in Panama in recent years are related to the strategic geographic location of Panama and that these criminal organizations are increasing operations and transferring more business to Central America.
Sources Milenio, La Prensa, hell on earth blog panama, K. Mennem