A day after the Mexican army killed the country’s most powerful drug lord, the picturesque town where it happened was a study ...
Defence Secretary Ricardo Trevilla said 2,500 extra troops were deployed on Monday. The government said around 9,500 security personnel have been sent since Sunday.
The Cartel leader “El Mencho” killing sparked widespread unrest across 20 of Mexico’s 32 states, with suspected cartel members torching buses and businesses, blocking highways, and clashing with ...
Jonathan "Yoni" Pizer was on his way to a whale-watching trip when he was forced out of his car at gunpoint, he told the Chicago Sun-Times. His rental car was set ablaze and his party fled to safety ...
A Kansas City man in Puerto Vallarta spoke with KMBC 9 about his experience as he waits for a flight back to the U.S.: "It was all smoke." ...
Businesses across the city reopened Monday following arson fires set Sunday in reaction to the death of “El Mencho.” ...
Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, the Mexican cartel leader killed Sunday, was arrested multiple times as a young adult in San Francisco, where he lived and sold drugs.
Mexican security forces killed the country’s most-wanted cartel leader Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes in a high-stakes operation on Sunday that set off a spiral of violence and chaos.
Mexican security forces kept up their battle with cartel gunmen following the killing that sparked a surge in violence and ...
The Associated Press reports the Mexican army killed cartel leader "El Mencho" on Sunday. Since then, a shelter-in-place ...
Like other drug lords, Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as "El Mencho," had spent years avoiding the spotlight.