Who is ‘El Mencho’, Mexico’s most-wanted drug cartel leader?

At least 25 members of Mexican army left dead in aftermath of military raid which killed crime boss

Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, also known as "El Mencho", appears in undated photographs in a wanted poster on the US state department website. Photograph: Reuters
Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, also known as "El Mencho", appears in undated photographs in a wanted poster on the US state department website. Photograph: Reuters

Mexican drug lord Nemesio Oseguera, commonly known as “El Mencho” and infamous for the trail of bodies he left behind in battles with government forces and rival gangs, died in a ‌military raid on Sunday.

The operation set off a wave of violence, with torched cars and gunmen blocking highways in more than half a dozen states. At least 25 members of Mexico’s army were left dead in separate attacks, as well as 30 criminal suspects, Mexican authorities said on Monday.

A former police officer, Oseguera (59) was the leader of the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), an international criminal enterprise widely viewed as one of Mexico’s most powerful.

Over a relatively short period of time, Oseguera ​masterminded the CJNG’s emergence as a criminal empire rivalling his former allies in the Sinaloa Cartel. He managed to evade arrest for years despite the offer of a $15 million (€12 million) reward from the US for information leading to his arrest or capture.

CJNG has been blamed for smuggling vast quantities of drugs into the US, including the synthetic opioid fentanyl, which has been linked to hundreds of thousands of overdose deaths in recent years.

'El Mencho': His cartel, his death, and what happens nextOpens in new window ]

“Apart from the heads of the Sinaloa ​cartel, El Mencho has been the biggest prize for many, many years,” said Vanda Felbab-Brown, a security expert and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.

“And it’s really stunning, just like the heads of the Sinaloa cartel, how long he managed ⁠to evade US and Mexican law enforcement gunning for him.”

Arguably Mexico’s most influential crime boss after captured kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, now in a US prison, Oseguera diversified ‌into ‌rackets ​such as stolen fuel, forced labour and human trafficking.

But unlike Guzman, who became a media celebrity, El Mencho preferred to remain in relative obscurity. He achieved notoriety for expletive-laden recordings leaked on social media in which he threatened enemies and officials. Oseguera was also known for evading ⁠capture in spectacular fashion.

Jalisco New Generation Cartel graffiti in Aguaje, Michoacan, Mexico. Photograph: Daniel Berehulak/New York Times
Jalisco New Generation Cartel graffiti in Aguaje, Michoacan, Mexico. Photograph: Daniel Berehulak/New York Times

In May 2015, as Mexican forces closed in on ​him, his tipped-off henchmen shot down a military helicopter with a rocket-propelled grenade to give ​their boss time to escape.

Targets of his hit men were rarely so lucky. His gang routinely employed beheadings and other gory means of intimidation.

In one six-week period in 2015, the gang ‌killed two dozen police in western Mexico as a warning to authorities.

Mexico's security secretary Omar Garcia Harfuch speaks next to Mexico's president Claudia Sheinbaum last week. Photograph: Mario Armas/AFP via Getty
Mexico's security secretary Omar Garcia Harfuch speaks next to Mexico's president Claudia Sheinbaum last week. Photograph: Mario Armas/AFP via Getty

In ​2020, Mexico City’s then chief of police Omar Garcia Harfuch survived an assassination attempt that killed two of his bodyguards in an attack authorities blamed on JNGC. Harfuch is now the country’s security chief and helped oversee the ⁠operation against Oseguera.

Oseguera was born in 1966 ​in a poor village in the mountains of the rugged and notoriously lawless western state of Michoacan. There, cultivation of opium poppies and marijuana have competed with avocado production for decades.

As a boy, he worked the fields, and later went to seek his fortune in the US, where prosecutors said he got into the heroin trade. After a few years, he was arrested and served time in a US prison.

Police officers inspect a car after the 2020 attack on Omar Garcia Harfuch. Photograph: Pedro Pardo/AFP via Getty
Police officers inspect a car after the 2020 attack on Omar Garcia Harfuch. Photograph: Pedro Pardo/AFP via Getty

He was deported back to Mexico, where he joined the police before entering the Milenio Cartel, a satellite of the Sinaloa Cartel. Eventually, he became a top enforcer after stints as a sicario, or cartel assassin.

After a failed attempt at taking over the Milenio Cartel, he struck out alone, declared war on Sinaloa, and founded the CJNG in alliance with a local gang of money launderers.

The cartel is ‌named for the western state of Jalisco, ⁠home to one of Mexico’s largest cities, Guadalajara. The CJNG mixed Sinaloa-style drug trafficking and community outreach with the ultra-violent methods of the Zetas Cartel, a gang that used paramilitary tactics to diversify into criminal enterprises such as extortion and kidnapping.

For years, Oseguera paid off police to cover his back as he operated with ‌near-total impunity inside Jalisco. He also sought political protection.

“El Mencho’s Jalisco New Generation Cartel was one of the biggest buyers of politicians and political campaigns, which has given it an enormous social base,” said Edgardo Buscaglia, ​an organised crime expert at Columbia University.

Noting El Mencho’s ability to win public support, Buscaglia pointed to footage broadcast during the ​2020 coronavirus pandemic of people lining up for CJNG-stamped food packages handed out by cartel gunmen, not government workers, to help cushion the economic blow of lockdowns.

“Compared to the Mexican government,” said Buscaglia, “he was the least bad option.” – Reuters

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