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Deadly cartel hacked surveillance cameras to track and kill FBI informants

Deadly cartel hacked surveillance cameras to track and kill FBI informants

Daily Mirror6 hours ago

An infamous Mexican drug cartel known for its association with drug lord 'El Chapo' used a hacker to track down and kill informants for the FBI by accessing surveillance cameras, a shock new report suggests
A hacker employed by a fearsome cartel once led by 'El Chapo' managed to gain access to surveillance cameras in Mexico City to track down and kill informants for the FBI, according to a report by the US Justice Department. The hacker also obtained the phone records of an FBI official known as an 'assistant legal attaché' (ALAT) at the American embassy in the Mexican capital.
The 'Audit of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Efforts to Mitigate the Effects of Ubiquitous Technical Surveillance' said the hacker was employed by the Sinaloa Cartel, synonymous with Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán - who was arrested for a final time in 2016 before being extradited to the US.

The FBI was working on El Chapo's case when it was tipped off that the hacker offered 'a menu of services related to exploiting mobile phones and other electronic devices'.

After identifying the ALAT at the embassy, the hacker used their phone number to 'obtain calls made and received, as well as geolocation data'.
The report said: 'According to the FBI, in addition to compromising the ALAT's phone, the hacker also accessed Mexico City's camera system, used the cameras to follow the ALAT through the city, and identified people the ALAT met with. According to the case agent, the cartel used that information to intimidate and/or kill potential sources or cooperating witnesses.'
The report said the incident in 2018 led to the Sinaloa Cartel using the information to 'intimidate and, in some instances, kill potential sources or cooperating witnesses'. The hacker, victims and ALAT were not identified in the report.
In a stark warning to authorities attempting to curtail the power of drug cartels, the report also warned that advances in technology had 'made it easier' for 'less-sophisticated nations and criminal enterprises to identify and exploit vulnerabilities' in information collected by governments. The Bureau said a plan was in process to try and tackle such vulnerabilities; this includes more training for agents.

This week, police in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas unveiled a fleet of armed drones they say will better position them against the heavily armed drug cartels vying for control of their border with Guatemala. Frequently outgunned by cartels with heavy guns and increasingly with drones that drop improvised explosive devices, Mexican authorities are trying to catch up.
Concerningly, the same Chiapas state police force generated an international diplomatic incident earlier this month when they pursued an alleged gunmen into neighbouring Guatemala, engaging in an extended shootout in the streets of border town La Mesilla.
The drones could be equipped to carry guns or to fight fires, said Chiapas Security Secretary Óscar Aparicio Avendaño. He did not explain what the rules of engagement would be for police using an armed drone.
Chiapas has struggled in the past couple years with competition between Mexico's two most powerful cartels, the Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, as they fight for control of lucrative smuggling routes along the Guatemalan border.

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Deadly cartel hacked surveillance cameras to track and kill FBI informants
Deadly cartel hacked surveillance cameras to track and kill FBI informants

Daily Mirror

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Deadly cartel hacked surveillance cameras to track and kill FBI informants

An infamous Mexican drug cartel known for its association with drug lord 'El Chapo' used a hacker to track down and kill informants for the FBI by accessing surveillance cameras, a shock new report suggests A hacker employed by a fearsome cartel once led by 'El Chapo' managed to gain access to surveillance cameras in Mexico City to track down and kill informants for the FBI, according to a report by the US Justice Department. The hacker also obtained the phone records of an FBI official known as an 'assistant legal attaché' (ALAT) at the American embassy in the Mexican capital. The 'Audit of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Efforts to Mitigate the Effects of Ubiquitous Technical Surveillance' said the hacker was employed by the Sinaloa Cartel, synonymous with Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán - who was arrested for a final time in 2016 before being extradited to the US. ‌ The FBI was working on El Chapo's case when it was tipped off that the hacker offered 'a menu of services related to exploiting mobile phones and other electronic devices'. ‌ After identifying the ALAT at the embassy, the hacker used their phone number to 'obtain calls made and received, as well as geolocation data'. The report said: 'According to the FBI, in addition to compromising the ALAT's phone, the hacker also accessed Mexico City's camera system, used the cameras to follow the ALAT through the city, and identified people the ALAT met with. According to the case agent, the cartel used that information to intimidate and/or kill potential sources or cooperating witnesses.' The report said the incident in 2018 led to the Sinaloa Cartel using the information to 'intimidate and, in some instances, kill potential sources or cooperating witnesses'. The hacker, victims and ALAT were not identified in the report. In a stark warning to authorities attempting to curtail the power of drug cartels, the report also warned that advances in technology had 'made it easier' for 'less-sophisticated nations and criminal enterprises to identify and exploit vulnerabilities' in information collected by governments. The Bureau said a plan was in process to try and tackle such vulnerabilities; this includes more training for agents. ‌ This week, police in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas unveiled a fleet of armed drones they say will better position them against the heavily armed drug cartels vying for control of their border with Guatemala. Frequently outgunned by cartels with heavy guns and increasingly with drones that drop improvised explosive devices, Mexican authorities are trying to catch up. Concerningly, the same Chiapas state police force generated an international diplomatic incident earlier this month when they pursued an alleged gunmen into neighbouring Guatemala, engaging in an extended shootout in the streets of border town La Mesilla. The drones could be equipped to carry guns or to fight fires, said Chiapas Security Secretary Óscar Aparicio Avendaño. He did not explain what the rules of engagement would be for police using an armed drone. Chiapas has struggled in the past couple years with competition between Mexico's two most powerful cartels, the Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, as they fight for control of lucrative smuggling routes along the Guatemalan border.

Israeli strike kills 18 Palestinians as turmoil mounts over food distribution
Israeli strike kills 18 Palestinians as turmoil mounts over food distribution

South Wales Guardian

time10 hours ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Israeli strike kills 18 Palestinians as turmoil mounts over food distribution

Hospital officials said 18 people were killed. The strike was the latest violence surrounding the distribution of food to Gaza's population, which has been thrown into turmoil over the past month. After blocking all food for two and a half months, Israel has allowed only a trickle of supplies into the territory since mid-May. Efforts by the United Nations to distribute the food have been plagued by armed gangs looting trucks, and by crowds of desperate people offloading supplies from convoys. The strike in the central town of Deir al-Balah appeared to target members of Sahm, a security unit tasked with stopping looters and cracking down on merchants who sell stolen aid at high prices. The unit is part of Gaza's Hamas-led interior ministry, but includes members of other factions. Witnesses said the Sahm unit was distributing bags of flour and other goods confiscated from looters and corrupt merchants, drawing a crowd, when the strike hit. Video of the aftermath showed bodies of multiple young men in the street with blood splattering on the pavement and walls of buildings. The dead included a child and at least seven Sahm members, according to the nearby Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital where casualties were taken. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military. Israel has accused the militant Hamas group of stealing aid and using it to prop up its rule in the enclave. Israeli forces have repeatedly struck Gaza's police, considering them a branch of Hamas. An association of Gaza's influential clans and tribes said on Wednesday they have started an independent effort to guard aid convoys to prevent looting. The National Gathering of Palestinian Clans and Tribes said it helped escort a rare shipment of flour that entered northern Gaza that evening. It was unclear, however, if the association had co-ordinated with the UN or Israeli authorities. 'We will no longer allow thieves to steal from the convoys for the merchants and force us to buy them for high prices,' Abu Ahmad al-Gharbawi, a figure involved in the tribal effort, told the Associated Press. The move by tribes to protect aid convoys brings yet another player in an aid situation that has become fragmented, confused and violent, even as Gaza's more than two million Palestinians struggle to feed their families. Throughout the more than 20-month-old war, the UN led the massive aid operation by humanitarian groups providing food, shelter, medicine and other goods to Palestinians despite the fighting. Israel, however, seeks to replace the UN-led system, saying Hamas has been siphoning off large amounts of supplies from it, a claim the UN and other aid groups deny. Israel has backed an American private contractor, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which has started distributing food boxes at four locations, mainly in the far south of Gaza for the past month. Thousands of Palestinians walk for hours to reach the hubs, moving through Israeli military zones where witnesses say Israeli troops regularly open fire with heavy barrages to control the crowds. Health officials say hundreds of people have been killed and wounded. The Israeli military says it has only fired warning shots.

Brit-born hunter 'normalised killing animals for fun' with bloodthirsty brags
Brit-born hunter 'normalised killing animals for fun' with bloodthirsty brags

Daily Mirror

time14 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Brit-born hunter 'normalised killing animals for fun' with bloodthirsty brags

Robin Hurt has helped trophy hunters kill a variety of majestic animals but defended his industry, calling it "one of the best ways to fund the conservation of wildlife" One of Britain's top trophy hunters has boasted about his bloodthirsty exploits helping clients to slaughter elephants, leopards, hippos and lions. Robin Hurt features on a list of the world 's most notorious hunters named in connection with a new book published next week to tie in with the 10th anniversary of the slaughter of Cecil the lion by American dentist Walter Palmer. His sickening brag is included in his autobiography where he also said: 'I thoroughly enjoy hunting leopards'. ‌ His exploits had been uncovered by Eduardo Goncalves, the founder of the Campaign to Ban Trophy Hunting, who discovered Hurt shot his first leopard at the age of 12 and his first elephant at 17. ‌ Author of "Mainlining on Heroin", Eduardo Goncalves, said: 'Robin Hurt is more than just a trophy hunter, he is a symbol of an industry that has normalised killing animals for fun. His career spans the colonial era to the modern safari business, and yet the ethos remains the same — it's about domination and death, dressed up as tradition and sport. This is not conservation. It is cruelty with a price tag.' Robin, now 80, dubbed 'the hunter's hunter', was born in London but moved to Windhoek, Namibia to be closer to the animals he arranges hunts for. His firm - Robin Hurt Safaris - is ranked 11th in Safari Club International's Record Book — a grotesque leaderboard of death — after helping hunters kill at least 37 record-breaking leopards, 16 hippos, 14 lions, three elephants, and countless antelope, hyenas and other species. One leopard killed under Hurt's guidance is currently ranked as the 14th largest ever recorded. Some animals, including a white-eared kob and a tiang, were reportedly shot using revolvers. His autobiography, A Hunter's Hunter, published in 2020, reveals that he has shot with clients '100-pound tuskers (elephants), 200-pound leopards, 10-foot lions with heavy manes, and 30-inch-plus rhinos.' According to the publishers, Safari Press, 'Robin's record is an unsurpassed accomplishment in the history of African hunting.' In the sickening autobiography, he also tells the story of how a dead elephant provided bait for an unsuspecting lion. ‌ He wrote: 'We took off after the jumbo. Bob took a side brain shot, perfectly placed. The old boy never felt a thing. Now. Lion like elephant meat! We had a readymade bait!' Eduardo Gonclaves explains the elephant is skinned, and its meat dragged along the ground to a place where lions often hunt. Robin Hurt continues [in his autobiography]: "A big heavy maned lion! There was a convenient ant hill offering perfect cover for a stalk. The possibility of the Big Five[the five most challenging and dangerous animals to hunt on foot in Africa: the lion, leopard, elephant, rhinoceros, and African buffalo], all in one day!' ‌ Investigators for the Campaign to Ban Trophy Hunting also contacted Hurt to ask whether it would be possible to hunt leopards and cheetahs. 'Cheetah, unlike leopard, can't be baited,' he wrote in an email. 'So it's purely a matter of luck getting a chance at one. Having said that, when hunting we are always on the look out for tracks.' Cheetahs are Africa's most endangered big cat, with only 6,500 individuals left according to IUCN, the global conservation body. ‌ In response to hunting a leopard, he wrote 'We could do next year if that works for you. We hunt them by baiting. "We have a very healthy population of leopard in our area, and some particularly large males.' Hurt said he had a plethora of other animals that the investigators could come and shoot. ‌ 'We have large amounts of plains game here. In particular we have superb Kudu, Oryx, Red Hartebeest, Blue and Black Wildebeest, Hartmanns and Burchells Zebra, Warthog, Jackals, Klipspringer, Steenbuck, Brown Hyena, Caracal (very difficult to hunt - again by chance). 'For Sable Antelope, Roan Antelope , Blesbok and Eland we hunt on a nearby neighbors (sic) territory.' In a telephone call to investigators, speaking with a crisp cut-glass, upper-class English accent, he said: 'I love it here. ‌ 'I thoroughly enjoy hunting leopards. We're not allowed to live bait. We have to put like a zebra leg as a bait. 'If we're patient, you'll get a good shot. We've got some very big males in our area.' He suggested that the investigators bring their spouses along. 'They'll love it. We've got lots to do apart from hunting.' He also boasted of having lots of wealthy clients before complaining about efforts to ban hunting trophies in the UK. He blamed Carrie Johnson, wife of former PM Boris Johnson, for driving the legislation. 'She's a real anti. She just wants to kill the hunting industry.' ‌ But he warned that the investigators should come and hunt as soon as possible because of a looming UK Government ban on hunting trophies. 'I think things are about to change. I know there's big discussions going on and I don't know when the new regulations will come in – it will probably take a bit of time. But you're smart to come hunting now because I believe in a couple of years' time it's going to be very, very difficult to take trophies back to UK.' TV presenter Chris Packham, who has written the forward to "Mainlining on Heroin', said: 'We call ourselves a nation of animal-lovers. ‌ "Well, let's prove it. Let's help put an end to one of the most disgraceful forms of wildlife persecution in existence. Let's ban British hunters from bringing their trophies home. 'It's time to act. So if you love nature documentaries on TV, or The Lion King floats your musical boat, or if you grew up watching Disney's Dumbo - can I please ask you to ask your MP to get on with the job of banishing trophy hunting to the dustbin of history.' Robin Hurt said that 'safari hunting is one of the best ways to fund the conservation of wildlife and wilderness habitat outside of protected areas', and said that he offers a combination of legal licenced hunting and photography safaris on the land he manages. ‌ 'Take legal hunters out of the bush and they will immediately be replaced by illegal persons,' he added, referencing commercial poachers. He admitted to shooting his first leopard at 12 as it 'had been killing my grandmother's sheep' and said the elephant 'was a problem animal on Kenya's Ziwani Sisal estate.' In reference to the UK introducing a ban on imports, Hurt said it 'would be seriously damaging to humans that depend on and steward wildlife, let alone wildlife populations.' ‌ He also said that the Robin Hurt Wildlife Foundation has funded numerous schools, churches, water pipelines and other community projects, as well as caring for 14 rhinos funded by 'the legal use of common plains hunting'. Hunt denied shooting the elephant for bait, saying it was "legally shot by my client" but not to lure a lion. ‌ He also said he is now semi-retired and why he "may be a hunter" he is also a dedicated conservationist. "My livelihood depends on healthy and increasing wildlife numbers. There is very little difference between myself and a rancher, except I prefer to manage wild animals whereas a rancher manages domestic livestock," he said. It comes after Priscilla Presley has launched a blistering attack on the trophy hunting industry, calling it a 'sickness' that must be brought to an end. The actress and animal rights advocate, who famously married Elvis Presley, also backed the Mirror 's campaign to ban trophy hunting imports into the UK. ‌ Priscilla, 80, said: 'Ten years ago, the world learnt about the horrifying killing of Cecil the lion by an American dentist, Walter Palmer. Today it is going to learn about the terrifying scale of killing – even of endangered animals – that continues with the tacit blessing of governments and official bodies. 'Policymakers have had 10 years since Cecil was killed to act. Now they have no more excuses. The facts about this evil 'sport' are laid out as plainly as could be'. Conservationist Jane Goodall added 'the days of the great White Hunter should be brought to a close'. She said: 'If there were no industry, there would be no Walter Palmers. And Cecil would have lived out his life in peace, as he should have been able to do. 'Today's trophy hunting industry is a multi-million dollar business that is making a killing – literally - from the suffering and death of magnificent and often endangered animals. If we want to end trophy hunting – which we must – we should think about this vast industry.'

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