Guerreros Unidos
Guerreros Unidos is a Mexican criminal syndicate operating in southern Mexico.
In 2014, the cartel kidnapped 43 students from Ayotzinapa College in Iguala, Guerrero. A witness confirmed that soldiers in the Mexican Army were involved in the kidnapping, by interrogating the students at the army base in the town of Iguala and then handing them over to the cartel.
Much of what is known about the gang comes from investigations into the disappearance of the Ayotzinapa
student teachers, and 23,000 text messages from BlackBerry communications among the gang members obtained by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
History
In December 2009, a drug cartel lord of the Beltrán-Leyva Organization, Arturo Beltrán Leyva was shot and killed by the Mexican Marines, splintering the Beltrán-Leyva Organization into smaller operations.Guerreros Unidos was founded in 2010 as two factions from La Familia Michoacana merged an alliance with different cartels. One faction chose sides with the Tijuana, Beltrán-Leyva, Juárez and Los Zetas cartels. Another chose alliances with the Gulf and Sinaloa Cartels. It splintered off from another gang, los Rojos. It established itself in Guerrero state, near the Ayotzinapa campus.
The faction that chose sides with the Sinaloa and Gulf cartels rivals formed Guerreros Unidos with the remains of the Beltrán Leyva Cartel. Before the kidnapping of the 43 students, it was suspected of attacking a bus of Ayotzinapa activists on 11 December 2011, with Guerrero state militia and police.
Mode of operation
According to The New Yorker magazine, the "specialty" of Guerreros Unidos was smuggling drugs in hidden compartments it fitted in passenger buses traveling to Chicago, Illinois inthe United States. In Chicago, a contact of the group, would unload and distribute the drugs, according to text messages collected by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
The gang had many police on its payroll. According to a sworn deposition of a member of Guerreros Unidos,
The gang also employed many lookouts to keep track of movements by the Mexican army, and used real estate and other "traditional" methods to launder
money.