Anonymous Takes On A Cartel

d.s.m.

Well-Known Member
Whatever the outcome, this promises to be damned interesting.

An international group of online hackers is warning a Mexican drug cartel to release one of its members, kidnapped from a street protest, or it will publish the identities and addresses of the syndicate's associates, from corrupt police to taxi drivers, as well as reveal the syndicates' businesses.

The vow is a bizarre cyber twist to Mexico's ongoing drug war, as a group that has no guns is squaring off against the Zetas, a cartel blamed for thousands of deaths as well as introducing beheadings and other frightening brutality.

"You made a huge mistake by taking one of us. Release him," says a masked man in a video posted online on behalf of the group, Anonymous.

"We cannot defend ourselves with a weapon … but we can do this with their cars, homes, bars, brothels and everything else in their possession," says the man, who is wearing a suit and tie.
Read the rest here:

http://www.chron.com/default/article/Online-hackers-threaten-to-expose-cartel-s-secrets-2242068.php
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
Hahaha, live by the sword, die by the sword.

Mike Vigil, the retired head of international operations for the Drug Enforcement Administration, said the Zetas must take Anonymous seriously.
"It is a gutsy move," Vigil said. "By publishing the names, they identify them to rivals, and trust me, they will go after them."
 

unohu69

Well-Known Member
+1 for the good guys, my only problem with anon is they have the power and ability to release all the information we all need to see. Yet they dont. Same thing wiht the wikileaks bull. Transparency in gov is the only way the people can truly be informed. With out the truth we cannot govern ourselves.
 

sso

Well-Known Member
+1 for the good guys, my only problem with anon is they have the power and ability to release all the information we all need to see. Yet they dont. Same thing wiht the wikileaks bull. Transparency in gov is the only way the people can truly be informed. With out the truth we cannot govern ourselves.
they want the hostage released and didnt dare to do this previously.
 

silasraven

Well-Known Member
i say do it! i want to see this go down. if the guy isnt alive the mexican cartel will lie in the dust. yeah weed prices might go up, im sure some dank is grow in their hot climate, but it would destroy one of the biggest group of people giving pot a bad name. though that would be one down and thousands more to go. fucken good start.
 

sso

Well-Known Member
every man growing in their closet is the greatest power we have against the cartels (lol, that and not buying from them ;))

i couldnt buy from people that regularily torture and kill people. just couldnt.

the thought just makes me sick.
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
It's started!

Now to what is described as their first featured Zeta: Paz, Buela

Anonymous gives first name hacking Gustavo Rosario Torres’ site ex-attorney general in Tabasco State
10/29/2011

This is the site of Gustavo Rosario, ex-Attorney General for the State of Tabasco. http://www.gustavorosario.com
Gustavo Rosario published the site to “clean his name”.
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
It looks like Anon gave them a warning about 34 days ago.

News/ Anonymous takes on Mexico's drug lords

Published 34 days ago


Members of the hacker group Anonymous responded to the murders of three Mexicans purportedly killed by drug cartels for information they posted on social networking sites.

On Monday afternoon, the group launched a denial-of-service attack against the official site of the government of the Mexican state of Veracruz.

Denial-of-service attacks seek to render websites and other Internet services unreachable by bombarding them with incoming traffic which is often hard to distinguish from a high volume of regular usage.

The call to action was posted earlier Monday afternoon on the group’s Mexican Facebook page and on Twitter. The message, translated from Spanish, matched Anonymous’s English-language slogan: “We are legion. We do not forget. We do not forgive. Expect us.” It appeared to refer to the recent killings in Nuevo Laredo, a city on Mexico's northern border.

The attack was successful. Within 20 minutes after its start at 3:55 Eastern Time, the government website was offline.

The messages did not make it clear why they were targeting the Veracruz government. But corruption of local governments by drug traffickers has long been a problem in Mexico’s drug war.

On Saturday, a woman was found decapitated in Nuevo Laredo, near the Texas border, with a note saying she had been killed for messages she posted on social networks aimed at criticizing the hyper-violent drug cartels. That came less than two weeks after the bodies of a man and a woman were found strung from a pedestrian bridge in Nuevo Laredo with similar notes.

All of the signs were signed Z, an apparent reference to Zetas, one of the main drug-running cartels.

Other messages posted on the Anonymous Facebook page made direct reference to Javier Duarte, the governor of Veracruz. “Javier Duarte. Expect us!” Anonymous posted.

Duarte was elected earlier this year, taking over a state that had been left to the control of the Zetas by his predecessor, Fidel Herrera. The Mexican press has speculated that Duarte’s election campaign was partially financed by the Zetas.
 

dp sux

New Member
Whatever the outcome, this promises to be damned interesting.



Read the rest here:

http://www.chron.com/default/article/Online-hackers-threaten-to-expose-cartel-s-secrets-2242068.php

All I know is these guys are both smarter and more ruthless than any other organized crime familys on planet...
They scare me and I dont scare EZ,,
And they will get there way even if it is not known to the public or media ..(trust me these dudes are bad fuckin ass real deal set the new standerd gangsters) and I aint mexican,,Im Italian!!!!!
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
Technology > violence

This won't even be a fair fight. The cartels main cover is anyonymity, when anonymous exposes that, they'll be dealt the same hand they've been using against the citizens of Mexico.

Beautifully organized plan. The cartel is powerless to fight back.
 

dp sux

New Member
Technology > violence

This won't even be a fair fight. The cartels main cover is anyonymity, when anonymous exposes that, they'll be dealt the same hand they've been using against the citizens of Mexico.

Beautifully organized plan. The cartel is powerless to fight back.
Wrong they know names of who they been paying!! NO ONE KNOWS THE REAL PEOPLE WHO ARE ON TOP OF THEIR PYRYMIDS(the gov thinks they do) You dnt think I can give you bribe money w/ out you knowin my identedie(THATS THE WHOLE REASON FOR CHAIN OF COMMAND)so you have hard time knowing whos actually runnin things!!
 

dirtsurfr

Well-Known Member
+1 for the good guys, my only problem with anon is they have the power and ability to release all the information we all need to see. Yet they dont. Same thing wiht the wikileaks bull. Transparency in gov is the only way the people can truly be informed. With out the truth we cannot govern ourselves.
Truth?? truth?? you can't hanlde the truth!!!!LOL!!
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
Quite frankly, loose lips sink ships and the cartels are not made out of fine upstanding individuals and they do talk. In today's day and age you can run, but you can not hide. Well, at least not at the same time you are trying to enjoy the fruits of your crimes/murders.
 
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