Thursday, October 2, 2014

Mexico captures medication ruler Hector Beltran Leyva


The shoes of a victim are seen next to a flower and a cross during a mass for the commemoration of the first anniversary of a crime in Monterrey, Mexico, in which 52 people died on 25 August, 2012.
The shoes of an exploited person are seen by a blossom and a cross amid a mass for the remembrance of the first commemoration of a wrongdoing in Monterrey, Mexico, in which 52 individuals kicked the bucket on 25 August, 2012. 

A large portion of Mexico's roughness is credited to battling between adversary medication groups 

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The Mexican powers say they have caught the leader of a medication wrongdoing syndicate, Hector Beltran Leyva. 

They say DNA testing is continuously done to affirm his personality. 

This is the most recent in a string of prominent medication captures in the nation and if affirmed will be seen as a triumph for President Enrique Pena Neto. 

The US powers had offered a prize of up to $5m for data prompting Beltran Leyva's catch. 

Hector Beltran Leyva expected the initiative of the cartel named after his sibling Arturo, when the last was murdered in a shootout with Mexican troops in 2009. 

Their cartel, known as the ABL, is in charge of arms and medication trafficking to and from the United States and additionally hijacking, murder and torment in Mexico. 

Two more Beltran Leyva siblings are now in jail. Reporters say the cartel has been on the decrease as of late. 

On the off chance that affirmed, the capture comes a couple of months after the catch of Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, the manager of the Sinaloa cartel, which is viewed as the most effective medication cartel in Mexico. 

He was gotten in February after more than 10 years on the run after his break from jail. 

As per the US State Department, the Beltran Leyva cartel was initially piece of the Sinaloa cartel however softened with the gathering up 2

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