12 Articles
12 Articles
The person packing the fentanyl moved precisely as the light from his flashlight projected an intense glow that showed his hands with gloves moving at great speed at work. Old cars without a chest lay scraped under an absolute black sky. The floor was full of hydraulic cats, cable rolls and greasy rags. The man sprayed six packages wrapped in aluminum with a liquid that smelled like chlorine, a compound that he said would help the tracking dogs …
The New York Times journalists documented how Mexico's most powerful criminal cartel, which is adapting to the offensive of two governments, was hiding drugs.
The fentanyl packager moved precisely as the light from his front flashlight flashed an intense glow over the fast work of his gloved hands. Uncatered scraps of old vehicles lay scraped under a completely black sky. The floor was covered with hydraulic cats, coils and greasy rags. The man sprayed six packages wrapped in aluminum with a liquid that smelled like chlorine, a compound that, he said, would help the tracking dogs not detect fentanyl. …
Smaller loads, innovative methods of concealment and a network of bribes at the border are part of the changes that the Sinaloa Cartel has implemented to maintain its flow of fentanyl, journalists Paulina Villegas and Maria Abi-Habib point out in a report published on Saturday in the U.S. newspaper.
In a report published on August 9, 2025, The New York Times (NYT) documented the transfer of six kilograms of fentanyl from the Sinaloa capital, Culiacán de Rosales, to the United States. This was done through interviews with five members of the Sinaloa Cartel who participated in the operation. The New York newspaper's report included testimonies... Source
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