Tag Archives: cartel

Incredible moment special forces swoop from helicopter onto cartel ‘mother ship’ carrying £136million of cocai – Daily Mail

  1. Incredible moment special forces swoop from helicopter onto cartel ‘mother ship’ carrying £136million of cocai Daily Mail
  2. Irish drug ship raid: More than €150m of suspected cocaine seized BBC
  3. Ireland in Record $166 Million Cocaine Seizure After Naval Operation U.S. News & World Report
  4. Three arrested as ‘significant’ quantity of drugs found aboard ‘mothership’ cargo vessel following multi-agency operation Independent.ie
  5. Army ranger wing boards second vessel in suspected drugs smuggling investigation The Irish Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘We threw ourselves to the floor’: Mexican passenger plane caught in cartel crossfire

MEXICO CITY, Jan 5 (Reuters) – “That’s an attack plane, Dad,” said one of David Tellez’s young children as they spotted Mexican military aircraft touching down alongside their Aeromexico passenger plane early on Thursday.

Then the gunfire began.

“As we were accelerating for take-off, we heard gunshots very close to the plane, and that’s when we all threw ourselves to the floor,” Tellez said after the incident in the northern city of Culiacan.

Violence broke out on Thursday throughout Culiacan after the arrest of Ovidio Guzman, the son of the notorious drug lord known as El Chapo, and a senior member of the Sinaloa cartel.

Aeromexico said nobody on Tellez’s flight had been hurt. The Culiacan airport closed shortly after, as security forces patrolled the city, which was strewn with burned vehicles, attempting to contain the violent backlash.

Tellez, 42, was traveling with his wife and children, aged 7, 4 and 1, after spending Christmas with family.

He told Reuters he had reached the airport for his 8:24 a.m. flight without incident, despite encountering road blockades set up after overnight shootouts. Although Guzman’s arrest had not yet been confirmed, nervous security guards urged travelers to enter quickly.

“Authorities were not saying anything,” he said by phone.

Tellez hid in an airport bathroom with his family after hearing that gang members were in the airport. The rumor turned out to be false, and the Aeromexico travelers boarded quickly.

Yet, just as flight AM165 to Mexico City was about to take off, a succession of military planes landed on the airstrip.

Tellez took out his cellphone, recording several videos that show two large air force transport aircraft, smaller, fighter-like attack aircraft and military trucks on the tarmac. Then gunshots began to echo in the distance.

A video circulating on social media, appearing to capture the same incident, showed passengers crouching low below their seats as a child cried.

A flight attendant said the engine had been hit, triggering a leak. The crew directed passengers to disembark, moving them to a windowless waiting room in the airport.

It is not clear who was shooting at whom.

Tellez’s family plans to board another flight on Friday, but until then, is staying put.

“We prefer to stay at the airport until it’s safe to leave,” he said. “The city is worse. There is a lot of shooting and confusion.”

Reporting by Sarah Morland and Carolina Ruiz in Mexico City; Editing by Bradley Perrett

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Headless bodies and deadly bombs: cartel violence escalates in Ecuador | Ecuador

The week began with the discovery of two headless bodies, left dangling from a pedestrian bridge. Then prison guards were taken hostage by inmates, nine car bombs detonated in two coastal cities and five police officers were shot dead.

The string of horrifying attacks across Ecuador this week would once have been unthinkable, but this kind of bloodletting is now becoming almost routine in the Andean country, as gang violence escalates to levels never seen before.

Late on Tuesday, President Guillermo Lasso announced a 9pm curfew under a new state of emergency in the affected Guayas and Esmeraldas regions. He called the violent incidents “a declaration of open war” and said he was “prepared to act harshly”.

He added that soldiers and police had raided jails and seized weapons, ammunition, explosives and phones.

Analysts say criminal gangs emboldened by lucrative links to Mexican drug cartels are using terror tactics to intimidate the authorities and civilians as the country of nearly 18 million teeters on the edge of becoming a narco-state.

Ecuador’s interior minister Juan Zapata said the two officers shot dead on Tuesday “lost their lives at the hands of organized crime”. Two more officers were injured in a separate attack on a police station.

“This year has been very sad and tragic for the national police, said Zapata. “With these two cases we now have 61 police heroes fallen in the line of duty.”

The latest spate of attacks is believed to have come in response to the transfer of detainees from Guayaquil’s Litoral prison, the scene of the worst prison massacre in the country’s history last year, which left at least 119 dead.

The latest bloodshed comes just months after a deadly bomb attack killed at least five and injured 17 people in Guayaquil, marking an escalation of terror tactics against civilians, and prompting a fourth state of emergency in the violence-torn city.

“In certain areas, the state has been displaced,” said Col Mario Pazmiño, the former director of Ecuador’s military intelligence, referring to parts of Guayaquil and Ecuador’s Pacific coast. “We are talking about criminal rule with this new escalation in the level of violence.

More than 400 prison inmates have been killed – many burned alive or beheaded –since February 2021 in an explosive rise in murders as rival gangs fight for control of lucrative cocaine trafficking routes to the US and Europe.

Ecuador – which sits between Colombia and Peru, the world’s two largest cocaine-producing countries – is a strategic smuggling route due to its long Pacific coastline and large shipping and fishing fleets.

Analysts say the spike in violence started when local criminal gangs began vying to work with the rival Mexican Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation drug cartels.

During the first eight months of this year, there were 2,785 violent deaths in Ecuador, a 10-year record which has already exceeded the total number of murders in 2021, according to police figures. Around two-thirds of those deaths were in coastal regions.

The rate nearly doubled in 2021 to 14 per 100,000 inhabitants and reached 18 per 100,000 between January and October this year.

Luis, 42, a hydraulic parts dealer in Guayaquil, the coastal city which has been the epicentre of the violence, said he was afraid to leave his home because criminals hang out on his street corner.

“You can’t go out of the house in the evening. It’s really tough,” he said. “Every day there are more criminals, you don’t even want to catch a taxi,” he added.

He was also suspicious of the police, believing like many Ecuadorians that the institution had been penetrated by narco-trafficking.

As for the government’s response, he responded: “It’s really lukewarm. Trying to impose a curfew, [the criminals] will just laugh in your face.”

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‘Better Call Saul’ Is Officially a Show About the Cartel

Of the myriad possibilities for the midseason finale of Better Call Saul’s final season, “Plan and Execution,” let’s give the show credit: Surely nobody anticipated the parallel arcs of Howard Hamlin and Lalo Salamanca. But against all odds, two characters from completely opposite ends of the series—the legal and cartel sides that have overlapped more with each season as Jimmy McGill transforms into Saul Goodman—found themselves desperately searching for proof to support outlandish claims against their enemies, and arrived at the same destination. Howard and Lalo’s respective journeys land them at Kim Wexler’s apartment before the credits roll, and it ends well for only one of them. Given their professions, you can probably guess who got more than he bargained for.

Let’s start with Howard, who finally found himself on the receiving end of Jimmy and Kim’s long-gestating scheme to tarnish his career. Their plan hinged on the latest meeting about the Sandpiper Crossing retirement home case that HHM is handling, and which is being mediated by a retired judge with a striking handlebar mustache. Jimmy and Kim hired a lookalike to portray the judge and make it seem like he was being bribed by Jimmy, staging photos for Howard’s private investigator to deliver to him. But as revealed in “Plan and Execution,” Howard’s P.I. has been working for Jimmy and Kim the whole time. And when the P.I. handed the supposed evidence over to Howard, the photos were covered with the mysterious topical substance that Jimmy and Kim acquired in the previous episode from Dr. Caldera, something that temporarily causes a person’s heart rate to skyrocket and pupils to dilate. After Howard touched the photos, it basically looked like he was coked out of his mind.

When the judge showed up for the mediation session, Howard made a wild-sounding accusation that the mediator was being paid off by Jimmy and said that the photographic evidence was up in his office. Naturally, though, the fake P.I. switched out the photos with some shots of Jimmy handing over a frisbee to a college student with a handlebar mustache. (Out of context, those frisbee photos would feel right at home in an I Think You Should Leave sketch.) The humiliation of the sequence is punctuated by Howard’s dilated pupils and his sweaty, manic appearance: compelling proof that there’s something seriously wrong with him. With the mediation cut short, the judge storms off and Cliff Main informs Howard that they’re going to have to accept the current settlement from Sandpiper. By extension, even though the main objective of the scheme was to ruin Howard’s image, Jimmy gets a cushy payout from the settlement that could go a long way toward decorating the garish law office he’ll have in Breaking Bad. (Apologies to Francesca and her lovely interior design.)

“This is a campaign by Jimmy to take me down!” Howard assures Cliff, but his accusations do no good. Howard is left to suffer a similar fate as Chuck McGill in Better Call Saul’s third season, when he angrily testified against Jimmy and came out the other end looking totally unhinged. The tragic irony is that, like Chuck, everything Howard claims that Jimmy has done—forged photos with a lookalike, hired a con man to be his P.I., drugged him—is true, even if he can’t prove it. After years of being sympathetic to Jimmy over the way that Chuck treated him, including offering him a job at HHM last season, Howard has finally borne the brunt of one of Jimmy’s signature grifts. Despite having bowling balls thrown at his car and being accosted by sex workers at business lunches, Howard has been admirably levelheaded in the face of Jimmy’s antics—a fitting response from someone who has a “Namast3” license plate. But Jimmy and Kim have gone too far, and Howard’s ready for a long overdue confrontation.

Meanwhile, Lalo has returned from his relaxing German getaway with a clearer understanding of Gus Fring’s plans to create his own meth lab. The problem is that he needs to bring proof to Don Eladio, who has no reason to suspect one of his top earners of any wrongdoing. So Lalo spies on Fring’s laundromat business from a drainage grate, hunkered down in the Albuquerque sewer system like he’s Pennywise the Clown. We can say this for Lalo: The dude is committed.

For Better Call Saul, the Lalo conundrum is twofold: the show has created an amazing villain who’s been brought to life with scene-stealing charisma by Tony Dalton, but he never shows up in Breaking Bad and we already know that Fring’s meth lab will be operational in the future. (Fring also claims in Breaking Bad that all the Salamancas are dead, which doesn’t exactly help Lalo’s odds.) All signs point to Lalo meeting his doom—not only is he greatly outnumbered by Fring’s men, but the Chicken Man has kept a gun hidden in the still-incomplete lab in the event they have their inevitable confrontation underground.

But Lalo gets a lifeline in “Plan and Execution”: When he calls to give Hector Salamanca an update, he hears a faint static over the line. The phone in his uncle’s room at the retirement home has been tapped, so Lalo no longer has the element of surprise against Fring and must regroup. It’s at that moment that Lalo spots a cockroach scurrying in the sewer. That might seem innocuous, but in last season’s “Bagman,” Lalo reassured Kim that nothing was going to happen to Jimmy in the desert because he’s a “born survivor” like the cucaracha. And seeing as Lalo already had one memorable standoff at Kim’s apartment in Season 5, he knows exactly where to find him.

Howard is the first to show up at the apartment, which Jimmy and Kim already expected. It’s a tense scene, not least of all because the specter of Lalo looms large over it. But there are still brilliant little moments reflecting Jimmy’s inner turmoil. When Howard mentions he’s suffering through depression and marital problems, Jimmy appears genuinely surprised and looks over at Kim, the real mastermind behind the operation. Deep down, Jimmy knows that Howard probably doesn’t deserve such punishment. The fact that they’ve been piling on a guy who’s losing his wife and clinging to his career to feel any sense of normalcy is especially cruel. “You’re perfect for each other,” Howard says. “You have a piece missing. I thought you did it for the money but now it’s so clear: Screw the money, you did it for fun. You get off on it, you’re like Leopold and Loeb, two sociopaths.”

As Howard promises to dedicate his life to exposing the truth about them, Lalo arrives. Unsurprisingly, Jimmy and Kim are both terrified, while Howard is oblivious to the mortal danger he finds himself in. “I just need to talk to my lawyers,” Lalo tells Howard, to which he responds: “You want my advice? Find better lawyers!” It’s a grimly funny exchange that almost immediately curdles into bone-chilling terror, as Lalo attaches a silencer to his pistol and Howard slowly realizes that he’s out of his depth. It’s a feeling he won’t hold on to for long: With a swift shot to the temple, one of the H’s in HHM has been wiped off the board. Just before the credits roll, Lalo reminds Jimmy and Kim why he’s there: He wants to talk.

For viewers who have been critical of Better Call Saul’s relatively leisurely pace to start its final season, “Plan and Execution” is a proverbial headshot that sets up a tantalizing cliff-hanger ahead of the six remaining episodes. (Good thing we only have to wait until July.) And like Nacho Varga’s tragic sendoff earlier in the season, the final stretch will have to make do without another series mainstay in Howard Hamlin. Among the many great performances on Better Call Saul—here’s my regular reminder to the Television Academy that Rhea Seehorn deserves an Emmy nomination for this performance—it’s easy for Patrick Fabian to get overlooked. But the actor did an exceptional job of making the audience loathe Howard at the beginning of the show and later sympathize with him. Caught between wanting to do right by Chuck and his own misgivings with treating Jimmy like crap—and later reckoning with his law partner’s probable death by suicide—Howard constantly found himself in existential turmoil that he barely hid behind the facade of a polished, high-end lawyer. This reaction shot from Season 4 is an all-timer:

As for Jimmy and Kim, it’s hard to say what Lalo’s dramatic reemergence portends, or what they can do to help him get a leg up over Fring. (Again, it’s not like Lalo can do much when we know Fring will be alive and the meth lab will be open for business in Breaking Bad.) If nothing else, we do have a better idea of why Saul was so terrified thinking that Walter White and Jesse Pinkman were sent by Lalo during his introduction in Breaking Bad.

There’s also the small matter of Kim finding out that Lalo was still alive earlier this season from Mike Ehrmantraut and declining to tell Jimmy, and whether that will put a strain on their relationship. Mike told Kim that he didn’t think Jimmy had the stomach for this line of work, and that she was “made of sterner stuff.” Perhaps, given her absence in Breaking Bad, it’s Kim who’s hit a breaking point.

In any case, Howard’s death means that Better Call Saul has reached a point of no return. With Jimmy and Kim being pulled further and further into Albuquerque’s criminal underworld with every season, the legal side of the show had been increasingly hanging on by a thread. Aside from the immense toll that Howard’s death will have on its primary characters’ psyches, Better Call Saul is now completely subsumed by the cartel-related conflicts: a fitting development as we inch closer and closer to Breaking Bad’s timeline. (Not to mention the ongoing black-and-white adventures of Cinnabon manager Gene Takovic.) We know that Jimmy-cum-Saul is going to come out of his latest encounter with Lalo unscathed—he is, after all, the cucaracha. But with Howard lying in a pool of his own blood and Kim nowhere to be seen in Breaking Bad, all other bets are off.

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Russian Hacking Cartel Attacks Costa Rican Government Agencies

WASHINGTON — A Russian hacking cartel carried out an extraordinary cyberattack against the government of Costa Rica, crippling tax collection and export systems for more than a month so far and forcing the country to declare a state of emergency.

The ransomware gang Conti, which is based in Russia, claimed credit for the attack, which began on April 12, and has threatened to leak the stolen information unless it is paid $20 million. Experts who track Conti’s movements said the group had recently begun to shift its focus from the United States and Europe to countries in Central and South America, perhaps to retaliate against nations that have supported Ukraine.

Some experts also believe Conti feared a crackdown by the United States and was seeking fresh targets, regardless of politics. The group is responsible for more than 1,000 ransomware attacks worldwide that have led to earnings of more than $150 million, according to estimates from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

“The ransomware cartels figured out multinationals in the U.S. and Western Europe are less likely to blink if they need to pay some ungodly sum in order to get their business running,” said Juan Andres Guerrero-Saade, a principal threat researcher at SentinelOne. “But at some point, you are going to tap out that space.”

Whatever the reason for the shift, the hack showed that Conti was still acting aggressively despite speculation that the gang might disband after it was the target of a hacking operation in the early days of Russia’s war on Ukraine. The criminal group, which pledged its support to Russia after the invasion, routinely targets businesses and local government agencies by breaking into their systems, encrypting data and demanding a ransom to restore it.

Of the Costa Rica hacking, Brett Callow, a threat analyst at Emsisoft, said that “it’s possibly the most significant ransomware attack to date.”

“This is the first time I can recall a ransomware attack resulting in a national emergency being declared,” he said.

Costa Rica has said it refused to pay the ransom.

The hacking campaign occurred after Costa Rica’s presidential elections and quickly became a political cudgel. The previous administration downplayed the attack in its first official news releases, portraying it as a technical problem and projecting an image of stability and calm. But the newly elected president, Rodrigo Chaves, began his term by declaring a national emergency.

“We are at war,” Mr. Chaves said during a news conference on Monday. He said 27 government institutions had been affected by the ransomware attack, nine of them significantly.

The attack began on April 12, according to Mr. Chaves’s administration, when hackers who said they were affiliated with Conti broke into Costa Rica’s Ministry of Finance, which oversees the country’s tax system. From there, the ransomware spread to other agencies that oversee technology and telecommunications, the government said this month.

Two former officials with the Ministry of Finance, who were not authorized to speak publicly, said the hackers were able to gain access to taxpayers’ information and interrupt Costa Rica’s tax collection process, forcing the agency to shut down some databases and resort to using a nearly 15-year-old system to store revenue from its largest taxpayers. Much of the nation’s tax revenue comes from a relatively small pool of about a thousand major taxpayers, making it possible for Costa Rica to continue tax collection.

The country also relies on exports, and the cyberattack forced customs agents to do their work solely on paper. While the investigation and recovery are underway, taxpayers in Costa Rica are forced to file their tax declarations in person at financial institutions rather than relying on online services.

Mr. Chaves is a former World Bank official and finance minister who has promised to shake up the political system. His government declared a state of emergency this month in response to the cyberattack, calling it “unprecedented in the country.”

“We are facing a situation of unavoidable disaster, of public calamity and internal and abnormal commotion that, without extraordinary measures, cannot be controlled by the government,” Mr. Chaves’s administration said in its emergency declaration.

The state of emergency allows agencies to move more quickly to remedy the breach, the government said. But cybersecurity researchers said that a partial recovery could take months, and that the government may not ever fully recover its data. The government may have backups of some of its taxpayer information, but it would take some time for those backups to come online, and the government would first need to ensure it had removed Conti’s access to its systems, researchers said.

Paying the ransom would not guarantee a recovery because Conti and other ransomware groups have been known to withhold data even after receiving a payment.

“Unless they pay the ransom, which they have stated they have no intention of doing, or have backups that are going to enable them to recover their data, they are potentially looking at total, permanent data loss,” Mr. Callow said.

When Costa Rica refused to pay the ransom, Conti began threatening to leak its data online, posting some files it claimed contained stolen information.

“It is impossible to look at the decisions of the administration of the president of Costa Rica without irony,” the group wrote on its website. “All this could have been avoided by paying.”

On Saturday, Conti raised the stakes, threatening to delete the keys to restore the data if it did not receive payment within a week.

“With governments, intelligence agencies and diplomatic circles, the debilitating part of the attack is really not the ransomware. It’s the data exfiltration,” said Mr. Guerrero-Saade of SentinelOne. “You’re in a position where presumably incredibly sensitive information is in the hands of a third party.”

The breach, among other attacks carried out by Conti, led the U.S. State Department to join with the Costa Rican government to offer a $10 million reward to anyone who provided information that led to the identification of key leaders of the hacking group.

“The group perpetrated a ransomware incident against the government of Costa Rica that severely impacted the country’s foreign trade by disrupting its customs and taxes platforms,” a State Department spokesman, Ned Price, said in a statement. “In offering this reward, the United States demonstrates its commitment to protecting potential ransomware victims around the world from exploitation by cybercriminals.”

Kate Conger reported from Washington, and David Bolaños from San José, Costa Rica.

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20 people dead after shooting at cockfighting venue in Mexico

Twenty people were shot and killed in central Mexico on Sunday, the State Attorney General’s Office (FGE) said in a statement. Authorities were called to the scene at around 10:30 pm following reports of an attack on a venue often used for hosting illegal betting on cockfights in the town of Las Tinajas, Michoacan state.

The attorney general’s office said the “lifeless bodies” of 16 men and three women were found at the scene, all bearing gunshot wounds. It later said an additional person had died en route to hospital. Six people were wounded in the attack, Mexican prosecutors said. 

Federal authorities are working “with the aim of capturing those responsible for the violent acts,” the office of Michoacan’s secretary of public security said.

“There are indications that the attack involved a confrontation between criminal groups,” the federal Public Safety Department said in a statement. It added that a team of federal investigators had been sent to the scene.

Michoacan and neighboring Guanajuato are two of Mexico’s most violent states, due to turf wars between rival gangs involved in drug trafficking and other illegal activities — including trade in stolen fuel.

Earlier this month, gunmen killed the mayor of a town in Michoacan. Aguililla Mayor Cesar Valencia was shot dead by unknown attackers while traveling in a city hall vehicle near a soccer field in the town, officials said.

Michoacan is also the world’s biggest avocado-producing region and threats against a U.S. inspector working there last month prompted the United States to suspend Mexican exports of the fruit for more than a week.

Last month, an armed attack in the state believed to be the result of a gang dispute was reported to have killed up to 17 people at a wake.

The attack was believed to be motivated by “revenge” by one cell of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel against another, deputy security minister Ricardo Mejia said.

The government said it was unable to confirm the death toll because no bodies were found, although DNA samples of 11 possible victims were collected at the site.

The Department of Justice considers the Jalisco cartel to be “one of the five most dangerous transnational criminal organizations in the world.” 

Mexico has been trapped in a spiral of cartel-related violence since 2006, when the government launched a controversial anti-drug operation with federal troops.

There have been more than 340,000 murders since then, most of them blamed on fighting between criminals, according to official figures.

Earlier this month, gunmen killed nine people in an attack on a house in central Mexico, in an “execution” of six men and three women that shook a middle-class area of the usually peaceful town of Atlixco.

Puebla state governor Miguel Barbosa said that the attack had been on “a place for the sale and distribution of drugs” and that the victims’ identities were unknown.



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Biden working with G20 leaders to ‘create a cartel’ to ‘keep business taxes high,’ conservative critic says

President Biden and other world leaders at the G20 Summit in Rome endorsed a global minimum tax on corporations, a move U.S. officials are hoping will help bolster the president’s Build Back Better agenda.

G20 finance ministers in July had formerly agreed on a 15% minimum tax. The measure needed formal endorsement at the summit from the world’s economic powerhouses Saturday in Rome.

In a statement, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen claimed the agreement made by the leaders on international tax rules, with a minimum global tax, “will end the damaging race to the bottom on corporate taxation.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen speaks during a news conference after attending the G7 finance ministers meeting at Winfield House in London June 5, 2021.  (Justin Tallis/Pool via REUTERS / Reuters Photos)

WORLD LEADERS REACH LANDMARK GLOBAL TAX DEAL, SETTING 15% MINIMUM RATE

Biden, who had originally called for a 21% minimum tax, celebrated the move in a tweet, writing that the leaders “made clear their support for a strong global minimum tax.”

“Here at the G20, leaders representing 80% of the world’s GDP – allies and competitors alike – made clear their support for a strong global minimum tax,” Biden’s tweet stated. “This is more than just a tax deal – it’s diplomacy reshaping our global economy and delivering for our people.”

World leaders pose for a group photo at the La Nuvola conference center for the G20 summit on Oct. 30, 2021 in Rome.  (Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth – Pool/Getty Images / Getty Images)

The agreement aims to discourage multinationals from stashing profits in countries where they pay little or no taxes. These days, multinationals can earn big profits from trademarks and intellectual property. They can then assign earnings to a subsidiary in a tax haven country.

In the U.S., updating the tax law will require legislative approval by Congress – a feat that still faces an uphill trek to passage as the U.S. is home to 28% of the world’s 2,000 largest multinationals. The House and Senate will need to pass a bill raising the minimum tax on companies’ overseas profits to 15% from the current rate of 10.5%.

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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and U.S. President Joe Biden, pose for the media prior to a G20 summit meeting.  (Photo by Stefan Rousseau – Pool/Getty Images / Getty Images)

Democrats are planning to include the increase as part of their party-line tax and spending bill that will likely be passed using a procedural tool known as reconciliation, allowing the party to bypass a 60-vote filibuster by Senate Republicans.

“Joe Biden’s drive to get the G20 leaders to create a cartel to keep business taxes high will be as popular with taxpayers in America as the similar success of OPEC nations to set a high price for oil was for American car owners,” Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, told Fox News.

Fox Business’ Megan Henney and the Associated Press contributed to this article.

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Biden working with G20 leaders to ‘create a cartel’ to ‘keep business taxes high,’ conservative critic says

President Biden and other world leaders at the G20 Summit in Rome endorsed a global minimum tax on corporations, a move U.S. officials are hoping will help bolster the president’s Build Back Better agenda.

G20 finance ministers in July had formerly agreed on a 15% minimum tax. The measure needed formal endorsement at the summit from the world’s economic powerhouses Saturday in Rome.

In a statement, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen claimed the agreement made by the leaders on international tax rules, with a minimum global tax, “will end the damaging race to the bottom on corporate taxation.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen speaks during a news conference after attending the G7 finance ministers meeting at Winfield House in London June 5, 2021.  (Justin Tallis/Pool via REUTERS / Reuters Photos)

WORLD LEADERS REACH LANDMARK GLOBAL TAX DEAL, SETTING 15% MINIMUM RATE

Biden, who had originally called for a 21% minimum tax, celebrated the move in a tweet, writing that the leaders “made clear their support for a strong global minimum tax.”

“Here at the G20, leaders representing 80% of the world’s GDP – allies and competitors alike – made clear their support for a strong global minimum tax,” Biden’s tweet stated. “This is more than just a tax deal – it’s diplomacy reshaping our global economy and delivering for our people.”

World leaders pose for a group photo at the La Nuvola conference center for the G20 summit on Oct. 30, 2021 in Rome.  (Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth – Pool/Getty Images / Getty Images)

The agreement aims to discourage multinationals from stashing profits in countries where they pay little or no taxes. These days, multinationals can earn big profits from trademarks and intellectual property. They can then assign earnings to a subsidiary in a tax haven country.

In the U.S., updating the tax law will require legislative approval by Congress – a feat that still faces an uphill trek to passage as the U.S. is home to 28% of the world’s 2,000 largest multinationals. The House and Senate will need to pass a bill raising the minimum tax on companies’ overseas profits to 15% from the current rate of 10.5%.

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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and U.S. President Joe Biden, pose for the media prior to a G20 summit meeting.  (Photo by Stefan Rousseau – Pool/Getty Images / Getty Images)

Democrats are planning to include the increase as part of their party-line tax and spending bill that will likely be passed using a procedural tool known as reconciliation, allowing the party to bypass a 60-vote filibuster by Senate Republicans.

“Joe Biden’s drive to get the G20 leaders to create a cartel to keep business taxes high will be as popular with taxpayers in America as the similar success of OPEC nations to set a high price for oil was for American car owners,” Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, told Fox News.

Fox Business’ Megan Henney and the Associated Press contributed to this article.

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Colombia’s president hails capture of cartel boss Dairo Antonio Úsuga | Colombia

Colombia’s president, Iván Duque, has celebrated the downfall of “the most feared drug trafficker on Earth” after one of South America’s most wanted men was captured at his rainforest hideout following a massive manhunt involving hundreds of troops as well as US and British intelligence agencies.

Dairo Antonio Úsuga, the 50-year-old head of the Clan del Golfo drug cartel, was arrested on Saturday afternoon after heavily armed operatives laid siege to the criminal’s jungle stomping ground in north-west Colombia.

“Identify yourself!” a special forces army sergeant reportedly bellowed at the shirtless fugitive, who is known as Otoniel, after spotting him trying to hide beneath a heap of branches and scrubs.

“Cool it, soldier,” replied Úsuga, before confirming his name, raising his hands and asking not to be killed.

By nightfall, the former leftwing guerrilla and paramilitary had been flown to Colombia’s capital, Bogotá, handcuffed and stony-faced, where he was paraded before the media wearing black wellington boots.

In a triumphant televised broadcast, Duque compared the arrest to the 1993 slaying of Pablo Escobar in Medellín, saying: “This is the most severe blow that has been dealt to drug trafficking in this country this century.”

Colombian authorities had been pursuing Úsuga for about a decade, with the US state department offering a $5m reward for information leading to the capture of a criminal it accused of controlling a vast network of cocaine laboratories and illegal runways and speedboat jetties used to smuggle drugs north. A total of 132 warrants had been issued for Úsuga’s arrest.

Úsuga (centre) has been described by Duque as ‘the most feared drug trafficker in the entire world’. Photograph: Colombia’s Military Forces/Reuters

The cartel boss’s fate was reportedly sealed early this year when authorities decided to intensify their hunt, amid soaring levels of cocaine production.

Two weeks ago, intelligence officers managed to identify the approximate location of Úsuga’s hideout in the highly strategic Urabá region near the border with Panama, according to an account published by the Colombian newspaper El Tiempo on Sunday. They did so partly thanks to cartel employees who were ferrying medicine to the drug lord to treat kidney problems.

At about 5am on Friday, the decision was taken to launch Operación Osiris, a multi-pronged military assault on Úsuga’s rural domain, which security chiefs named after the ancient Egyptian god of the underworld.

Colombian media reports said the operation involved more than 20 helicopters, 10 unmanned surveillance drones and hundreds of troops who blocked rivers and roads to stop the target – codenamed “El Blanco” – fleeing a 3.5 sq km search area in Antioquia province. As commandos swarmed toward their objective past eight rings of security, navy vessels lurked offshore in the Caribbean Sea to ensure Úsuga could not escape by boat.

By Saturday afternoon, the news magazine Semana said four members of an elite army unit had tracked the “bloodthirsty capo” to near a simple wooden farmhouse in the Paramillo Massif mountain range. It was there that, shortly before 3pm local time, the criminal’s exact hiding place was betrayed by the sound of rustling undergrowth.

“Don’t kill me, don’t kill me,” he pleaded, before asking for a sip of water and falling silent. “Otoniel and his empire had collapsed,” declared Semana, which claimed the gangster asked police not to strip him of a medallion featuring a photograph of his parents embracing.

Colombia’s unpopular conservative president, who took office in 2018 and will step down next year, trumpeted the gangster’s capture – during which one police officer was killed – as a landmark victory against organised crime in a country that produces an estimated 70% of the world’s cocaine.

“Otoniel was the most feared drug trafficker in the entire world,” Duque said, claiming his demise meant the Clan del Golfo was finished.

Duque thanked the US and British governments for collaborating on intelligence, although their exact contribution to the operation was not clear. The British embassy in Bogotá congratulated Colombia’s government and security forces, calling the arrest “a major blow to crime and armed groups”.

Experts are sceptical that Úsuga’s detention will prove a gamechanger in Colombia’s decades-long drug conflict, which has claimed tens of thousands of lives.

“His capture is no minor feat and not something I want to underplay [but] the equation of the war on drugs remains unchanged,” said Sergio Guzmán, who runs the Bogotá-based consultancy Colombia Risk Analysis.

“He will be replaced by someone else, and how that someone approaches the war on drugs we will find out soon. But it doesn’t represent a seismic change in how the war on drugs is being waged and lost,” Guzmán added. “Whenever a mafia boss falls, several are ready to take his place – and that’s what we’re seeing with Otoniel.”

Adam Isacson, a Colombia specialist from the Washington Office on Latin America, voiced fears for the safety of the security operatives who appeared to be taking selfies with the criminal after his arrest. “They took off an important head today,” Isacson tweeted. “But the hydra remains intact.”



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Video shows Mexican cartel line up rivals for mass execution

Shocking video shows Mexican cartel members lined up on their knees and taunted, moments before they are executed by a rival gang.

The video, posted to social media by members of Los Tlacos, shows about 20 doomed men who are purported members of La Bandera, part of the Guerreros Unidos cartel, according to El País, a Spanish language publication.

A man narrating the disturbing footage says, “This plaza already has an owner,” El País reported.

“People from Iguala, here are all those who extorted money and who were killing innocent people and women,” the man says. “The garbage that terrorized this beautiful city.”

The footage of the massacre was released Wednesday and is part of the increasing violence in the southern Mexican state of Geurrero, reports said.

A video showed a Mexican cartel lining up victims for a mass execution.
@ReporTorres Twitter
About 20 men were killed.
@ReporTorres Twitter
The massacre is part of increasing violence in southern Mexico.
@ReporTorres Twitter

The footage shows a masked man taunting the doomed men, who are cuffed behind their backs. He violently grabs their hair and points a gun at their faces while interrogating them, asking their names and other information. Surrounding the men are other armed Los Tiacos henchmen.

The narrator accuses the incoming mayor of Iguala of having connections to Guerreros Unidos, a cartel believed to be tied to the 2014 kidnapping of Ayotzinapa Rural Normal School, El País said. Hours before the video, gang members left four bodies in front of Mayor-Elect David Gama’s home, the report said.

The doomed men are purported members of La Bandera, part of the Guerreros Unidos cartel.
The terrifying clip shows Mexican cartel gangsters lined up on their knees and taunted, moments before they are executed.

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