Más Información
Caen cinco narcomenudistas en cateos de Marina y Ejército en Iztapalapa; aseguran 170 bolsas de cocaína
Morenistas plantean no aprobar presupuesto para haber de retiro de ministros de la SCJN; "vergüenza les debería dar", dicen
Senado discutirá reformas de Sheinbaum esta semana; votarán nuevas secretarías, extinción de autónomos y delitos que ameritan prisión preventiva
Tras 10 días, liberan a mujer china y a sus tres hijos que estaban retenidos en el AICM; buscan refugio en México
Suman más de 10 mil registros de candidaturas a elección judicial: Noroña; habilitan nuevo medio de postulación por “creciente interés”
Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador
is taking aim at the finances of the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) in what a top anti-money laundering official said was an opening salvo in the fight to stop criminal gangs from flourishing with impunity.
Santiago Nieto, the new head of the finance ministry’s Financial Intelligence Unit
, told Reuters on Thursday he had filed a complaint against three businesses and seven people linked to the CJNG . On Wednesday , the finance ministry had said Nieto’s unit filed its first complaint with prosecutors, but it provided no details.
The move against the Jalisco cartel, a relative newcomer that has risen to become one of Mexico’s most dangerous criminal gangs , sends a “first message” under López Obrador , who took office Saturday , of his government’s determination to crack down on drug gang finances, Nieto said.
“I am convinced the best way to prevent criminal behavior is by sending a message that these types of acts that violate trust and social norms will be punished,” he said in a telephone interview.
Mexico’s drug war has raged for over a decade
despite the capture of kingpins such as Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán . Although cartels have splintered, the flow of drugs north has continued unabated, while violence in Mexico hit record levels last year
.
In October , the United States offered a $10 million reward for information leading to the arrest of the suspected leader of the Jalisco organization, Nemesio Oseguera , also known as El Mencho .
Nieto said he was able to quickly file his complaints with prosecutors because the businesses and people they targeted already appeared on the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) so-called blacklist of drug traffickers.
Complaints from the Financial Intelligence Unit generally include sufficient evidence to prompt prosecutors to open criminal investigations.
Leftist López Obrador, who has pledged to fight corruption, has repeatedly stressed that he wants good relations with the United States , Mexico’s neighbor and main export partner.
To improve prosecutions, López Obrador will need to overhaul the attorney general’s office (PGR) , which has been criticized for systematically failing to punish money launderers by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) , a global organization that sets standards for fighting illicit finance.
“A lack of intelligence is not the issue. The problem is how do you transform that intelligence into evidence you can bring to a court of law,” said Alejandro Hope, an analyst who worked for Mexico’s national security intelligence agency , “We will see if the problems remain at PGR or not.”
A FATF report early this year pointed to a declining rate of already-low prosecutions based on data from the intelligence unit.
Nieto said action by authorities slowed even more in 2018, the last year of President Enrique Peña Nieto ’s administration. The number of complaints from the unit declined and only three of them led to charges this year, he said.
The new government would focus on filing more criminal complaints, freezing more bank accounts and seizing more goods and valuables from wrongdoers, Nieto added.
He said the government would also make a top priority of targeting the gangs and gas stations involved in rampant fuel theft. López Obrador this week said he would soon unveil a plan to tackle fuel theft, which has become one of Mexico’s most pressing economic and security dilemmas.
dnd