The cyber war between Los Chapitos and La Mayiza continues. Social networks continue to fill with images alluding to the confrontation that began on September 9 in Sinaloa; since then, intentional homicides have shot up to 246 cases, as of October 24.
Audios, narco-banners and videos of interrogations of alleged hitmen abound on the networks, pointing to each other as being responsible for the violence, kidnappings, robberies and extortions; alleged links between the military and politicians (including Governor Rubén Rocha Moya) with the two sides have also been mentioned.
In one of the latest videos, a man can be seen with his hands tied, without a shirt and with tape covering his eyes, while he is allegedly interrogated by men in the service of Los Chapitos. The victim claims to come from Durango, to serve the Grupo Flechas of the Cabrera Sarabia brothers; in addition, he confesses that they pick up people to “force them to work in the war.”
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- They are bringing a lot of people to the table
- Where are they bringing them from?
- From Canatlán, from Las Rancherías, from Durango and from La Mancha
- How are they bringing them to the table?
- They are bringing them to the table, they are forced to work here for the war
- Don’t they have people or what?
- Nobody wants to work, because they are Cu…, they are afraid of La Chapiza
Cybernetic war between Chapitos and Mayiza
War between Chapitos and Mayiza also triggered disappearances
The Sabuesos Guerreras collective of Culiacán informed this media that disappearances in Sinaloa increased since the moment that the arrest of Ismael El Mayo Zambada occurred, allegedly orchestrated by a betrayal of Los Chapitos.
Mayo fell into the hands of the US justice system on July 25; since then, and between August and September, the Sabuesos Guerreras have recorded at least 278 reports of missing persons in the state.
According to official figures, there are 209 reports of illegal deprivation of liberty, of which 72 victims were found alive and 27 dead, according to statements made by the Sinaloa prosecutor, Claudia Zulema Sánchez Kondo, on October 18.
In Durango, reports of missing persons are not as high as in Sinaloa, but this week the Attorney General’s Office shared the search file for Alan Alberto Amezquita González, a 38-year-old man who traveled to Mazatlán and since October 19 there is no information on his whereabouts.
During his interrogation, the alleged member of Los Cabrera, allies of La Mayiza in the war, confesses that they pay him 15 thousand pesos, but that they have not paid him because he has to have been in the criminal organization for at least three months; he also mentions some of the names of his bosses: El Flechas, El Carlín, El Malilla, el Talibán and El Avestruz.
Source: infobae