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Drug cartel ‘narco-antennas’ make life dangerous for Mexico’s cell tower repairmen


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2020 Jul 16, 6:07pm   719 views  5 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (55)   💰tip   ignore  

https://www.yahoo.com/news/special-report-drug-cartel-narco-110728201.html

The young technician shut off the electricity at a cellular tower in rural Mexico to begin some routine maintenance.

Within 10 minutes, he had company: three armed men dressed in fatigues emblazoned with the logo of a major drug cartel.

The traffickers had a particular interest in that tower, owned by Boston-based American Tower Corp , which rents space to carriers on its thousands of cellular sites in Mexico. The cartel had installed its own antennas on the structure to support their two-way radios, but the contractor had unwittingly blacked out the shadowy network.

The visitors let him off with a warning.

"I was so nervous... Seeing them armed in front of you, you don't know how to react," the worker told Reuters, recalling the 2018 encounter. "Little by little, you learn how to coexist with them, how to address them, how to make them see that you don't represent a threat."

The contractor had disrupted a small link in a vast criminal network that spans much of Mexico. In addition to high-end encrypted cell phones and popular messaging apps, traffickers still rely heavily on two-way radios like the ones police and firefighters use to coordinate their teams on the ground, six law enforcement experts on both sides of the border told Reuters.

Traffickers often erect their own radio antennas in rural areas. They also install so-called parasite antennas on existing cell towers, layering their criminal communications network on top of the official one. By piggybacking on telecom companies' infrastructure, cartels save money and evade detection since their own towers are more easily spotted and torn down, law enforcement experts said.

The practice has been widely acknowledged by telecom companies and Mexican officials for years. The problem persists because the government has made inconsistent efforts to take it on, and because companies have little recourse to stop it, experts on law enforcement and Mexican society said.

"There is a sense of powerlessness" in Mexico, said Duncan Wood, director of the Wilson Center’s Mexico Institute in Washington. He said companies feel they "cannot respond to issues like this because (they) are afraid of the consequences from groups that essentially enjoy impunity."

Mexico's Defense Ministry said it provides security for federal agencies that request its help in dismantling "parasitic equipment" installed by cartels on cell towers.

The nation's Attorney General's office did not respond to a request for comment about criminal activity at these sites. The Federal Telecommunications Institute, Mexico's telecom and broadcasting regulator, said its compliance unit had not received reports of parasite antennas from any companies under its jurisdiction.


Right, like repairmen are going to report it. Lol.

...

Most of the technicians said they encounter the devices, known colloquially as narco-antennas, just a few times a year. But one engineer who spoke with Reuters estimated that parasite antennas are present on roughly 20% of towers where his firm works, while another said about 30% of his sites had them when local criminals were particularly active in his area in 2018.

Their No. 1 rule when discovering cartel equipment on a tower is simple: Don't touch it.

Dealing with gangsters in person is trickier, they said, requiring diplomacy and a cool head. Some said their interactions have been cordial, bordering on friendly. Others said they have been threatened, detained and at times fearful for their lives.

The traffickers "convey their superiority, ...it's like when someone wants to mark their territory," one technician said. "I can't get nervous because they pick up on when someone is secure and when someone is very afraid."

Cartels and other criminal groups sometimes demand telecom workers pay "security payments" or "quotas" in order to perform maintenance on towers and other tasks, according to five contract laborers who have worked on projects involving America Movil SAB de CV , Slim's telecommunications firm, as well as American Tower and AT&T.

These people said the best strategy is to be polite, stay calm and pay up immediately. Those costs get passed along to their employers; laborers for subcontractors said their firms often charge the big telecom companies higher rates for working in dicey areas.

A spokesman for America Movil and Telesites declined to comment. Axtel, which sold some of its telecom towers in 2017, said it had not received any reports of incidents on its remaining infrastructure. AT&T said that "under no circumstances" does it "tolerate or authorize payments outside of those established by law." ...

Narco-antennas are just one aspect of telecom companies' headaches in Mexico. Criminals raid their infrastructure for batteries and copper cables to resell on the black market, executives in the sector told Reuters.

Stories like this are unfolding in industries across Mexico as criminal groups branch out far beyond drugs. Cartels have siphoned millions of dollars' worth of fuel from Mexican state oil company Petróleos Mexicanos or Pemex in recent years; they steal cargo and pilfer lumber. The tentacles of organized crime extend even into Mexico's avocado growing regions, where gangs extort farmers and hijack loads of the green fruit.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador took office in 2018 advocating a softer approach to his predecessors' war on drugs with the motto "hugs, not bullets." The cartels' encroachment on legitimate businesses did not start on his watch. But the change in strategy has left companies with nowhere to turn, said Mike Vigil, a former chief of international operations for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).

"Lopez Obrador has sent a message to all of Mexico, including the private sector... that he doesn't want a confrontational situation with the cartels," Vigil said. "Telecom companies are caught between a rock and a hard spot."

Lopez Obrador's office did not respond to requests for comment. The president previously has insisted that Mexico must tackle poverty and other factors that drive crime, in addition to using law enforcement.

"We must continue confronting organized crime... There is no longer protection for anyone, as there was before," Lopez Obrador said in early June. "We are committed to achieving peace and we have made progress in combating, in reducing, crime." ...

When it comes to communicating in real-time with large groups, radio is tough to beat. These networks are often encrypted and, unlike cellular networks, the location of someone using a radio can't easily be pinpointed, said Paul Craine, a former director of the DEA's operations in Mexico and Central America. ...

To a trained eye, cartel equipment sticks out like a sore thumb. At the foot of the tower, criminals place a base station, which generates the radio waves, often tucked into a suitcase or picnic cooler for protection from the sun, according to Craine and the technicians who spoke with Reuters. Higher up they install parasite antennas to project the signal.

Gangs typically don't bother with camouflage. The Zetas are particularly brash, Craine said. He recalled seeing coolers emblazoned with their logo: the letter Z. A former engineer for Huawei Technologies Co, the Chinese telecom vendor, told Reuters that one of the workers he supervised sent him a photo of a device on a Telesites tower in early 2018 with a sign that read: "This antenna belongs to the Zetas. If any problems arise, please call…," followed by a phone number. ...

The equipment persists on companies' networks, industry executives and law enforcement experts said, due to the difficulty of rooting out the devices across far-flung towers, and the risks that removal might pose to engineers in the field, many of whom don't report them out of fear.


Duh.

Telecom companies quietly have acknowledged the cartels' presence in meetings with Mexican government officials. Gerardo Sanchez Henkel, a former director of compliance for telecom regulator IFT, told Reuters he discussed the issue of parasite antennas regularly in meetings with companies before leaving government in late 2015. ...

The National Association of Telecommunications (ANATEL), a trade group representing players including America Movil, AT&T and Telefonica, said companies it surveyed reported 62 parasite antennas from 2017 through mid-2018, the most current data available. Nearly 3,000 batteries were stolen from cell towers over the same period, it said.

ANATEL CEO Gabriel Szekely said he had no more information to provide on the phenomenon. He told the Mexican newspaper Reforma in 2018 it was clear that criminal groups were capitalizing on what companies had built.

"Suddenly you find devices that are not yours, they belong to organized crime," Szekely told Reforma. "And there are places where they do not even let you in to maintain your own facilities."

In the worst criminal hot spots, maintaining towers often comes at a price.

The five telecom workers who told Reuters that they or their colleagues had been forced to pay up said those encounters typically involved groups of armed men confronting them at the towers. The workers are sometimes unsure of exactly who they are dealing with. In some parts of rural Mexico, self-defense organizations have emerged to fill the vacuum left by the state, with these vigilantes often running elaborate extortion schemes to fund their operations, security analysts said. ...

A spokesman for Huawei said the company could not comment on specific allowances, citing the confidentiality of its contracts with suppliers and employees.

"We will never pay anything that is (beyond) the scope of the contract," Funes said.

Technicians who work in dangerous parts of Mexico say making nice with drug traffickers is a crucial part of the job.

One subcontractor said traffickers stick close to his crews to ensure workers don't touch cartel antennas, and to be certain they are not enemies who have come to spy on them.

"You work with a narco-escort," the subcontractor said.

Cartels have kidnapped technicians doing maintenance on cellular towers to make them fix their networks, people working in the sector said. The technicians usually are released after a few days, if not sooner. Still, those who spoke with Reuters said they live in fear of being forced by traffickers to do such work, lest they be killed for knowing too much, or become targets of authorities or rival criminal groups for being complicit. Whenever possible, they said, they downplay their expertise.

After traumatic run-ins with cartels, some technicians refuse to go into the field or have left the industry entirely, people working in the sector said.

One subcontractor estimated that 10 workers, primarily new recruits, quit his company over the past year due to security concerns.

Even old hands can run into trouble. In 2016, a technician working for an America Movil supplier learned his colleagues had been turned away from a site in a cartel stronghold.

Determined to finish the job, the engineer headed to the tower alone. He was quickly surrounded by five men armed with long guns and dressed in clothing bearing the cartel's initials. They forced him into their vehicle and took him to a house in town, where their boss was waiting.

The engineer said he reverted to his security training, resolving not to show fear. When the cartel boss complained that his antennas had been failing, the captive seized an opening.

"It's in all our interest that the tower is working," he recalls saying. "Just let us work, and we won't interfere with your equipment… On the contrary, we'll check it for you."

The cartel agreed, driving the engineer back to the tower. He said he re-established service at the tower and made a perfunctory check of the illicit antennas. He tried to head off any requests for additional help, saying he was a supervisor whose technical skills were rusty.

Throughout the encounter, the engineer maintained his composure. But when he returned to his hotel room that evening, he said his body shook with such force that he thought he might be having a breakdown.

"In the moment, I was fine, I just trusted in God," he said. "My nerves got me afterwards."

The young technician who accidentally disrupted a cartel's communications at an American Tower site told Reuters he knows the risk he's taking. But he said he has a family to support and earns a premium for working in a territory that many peers wouldn't touch.

After a few years working the area, he said he has established a rapport with gang members, who often let him pass to the job site with little more than a wave hello.

He has learned from his early mistake. Now, before he cuts the power, he first connects any parasite antennas to a generator to ensure the cartel's network keeps humming.


Let's invite them all to America!

Oh wait, Democrats already have. No border, no papers needed, free medical, free school, and they can vote here!

Comments 1 - 5 of 5        Search these comments

1   HeadSet   2020 Jul 17, 6:31am  

The blame for that situation in Mexico, where 35,000+ are killed annually by cartels that essentially run large sectors in Mexico, is the Americans that consume illegal drugs from Mexico. Without all that cash from the US, the cartels would not exist.
2   NDrLoR   2020 Jul 17, 8:28am  

Patrick says
cellular tower in rural Mexico
When I worked as a temp for Sprint Sites from 1998 to 2002, which was the part of the company that set up cellular towers, I was told that their most profitable business came from South Texas between 2:00 and 4:00 a.m.
3   Karloff   2020 Jul 17, 8:39am  

The US military is deployed all over the world and is involved in "engagements" for the stated purposes of "protecting democracy" and "aiding the people". Yet, right next door is a massive drug cartel violence problem that the Mexican police can't handle, is spilling over into the US, and they do nothing.

Par for the course by the liars and crooks in power.
4   HeadSet   2020 Jul 17, 10:45am  

Par for the course by the liars and crooks in power.

Those liars and crooks may also be under threat to keep the border open. The old "lead or silver" the cartels do to any new Mexican police chief is case in point. The cartel agent offers the cop lead (death) or silver (bribe). Since America is the cartels biggest market, I would not be surprised if Pelosi was given that offer, and now has a Swiss bank account funded by a cartel. Pelosi's job would be to keep open borders and prevent serious drug interdiction. The only was to stop this is for the American public to stop using drugs until the drugs are legalized. If you are a snorter, you are no better than any cartel member or bribed politico. Without the snorter, the cartels and all their horrendous crimes would cease.
5   Eric Holder   2020 Jul 17, 12:32pm  

HeadSet says
The only was to stop this is for the American public to stop using drugs until the drugs are legalized.


Or seal the border completely using US Military, stop all movement of people and goods between our countries and keep it like this for years until fucking cartels die off from the lack of revenue and fighting over ever shrinking pile of drug money.

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