Gangster Warlords: Drug Dollars, Killing Fields, and the New Politics of Latin America

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Gangster Warlords: Drug Dollars, Killing Fields, and the New Politics of Latin America Page 43

by Ioan Grillo

as threat to state, here

  on U.S. streets, here , here , here

  as warlords, here , here

  Simpson, Bertram Lenox, here

  Sinaloa, Mexico, here , here , here

  Sinaloa Cartel

  Gulf Cartel and, here

  La Familia compared to, here

  Maras and, here , here

  operation in Central America, here

  spreading out of, here

  truce with Juárez Cartel, here

  Valencia brothers and, here , here

  war on drug trafficking and, here

  Sinkinson, Phil, here

  Skull Gang, here

  slave trade, trans-Atlantic, here , here n6

  Smikle, Colin, here , here

  soccer, professional, here , here , here , here

  Solalinde, Alejandro, here

  Somalia, here

  Spain, here

  Spangler Posse, here

  Spaulding, Gary, here

  Spector, Carlos, here

  Star Gang, here

  Stockwell, John, here

  Streatfeild, Dominic, here

  “summer of the cans,” here

  Taliban, here , here

  Tamaulipas, Mexico, here , here , here

  Tavares-Finson, Tom, here , here

  Tegucigalpa, Honduras, here , here , here

  Tel Aviv gang, here , here

  Tepalcatepec, Mexico, here , here , here , here

  Texas, here , here , here , here , here , here , here , here

  They Call Me “The Maddest One” (N. Moreno), here , here

  “They Don’t Care About Us” (Jackson), here

  Third Commando, here , here , here , here , here , here , here n2

  Thomson, Dudley, here

  Thomson, Ian, here

  Tijuana Cartel, here

  Tivoli Gardens (garrison)

  Blood’s murder in, here

  boxing bouts in, here

  Dudus and, here , here , here , here , here

  Golding and, here

  Jim Brown and, here , here

  laborite affiliation, here , here

  massacre in 2010, here , here

  Passa Passa reggae dances in, here , here

  police and, here

  Simon (gangster), here , here

  waterfront control of, here

  Tlatelolco massacre, here , here , here n4

  Tlatlaya massacre, here

  torture, here , here , here , here , here , here

  Tosh, Peter, here , here

  The Transformation of War (Van Creveld), here

  Transparent Candidate, here , here n4 (chap.50)

  Trench Town slum, here , here , here

  Troubles of Northern Ireland, here

  United Kingdom, here

  United Nations, here , here , here , here , here , here , here

  United States

  Brazilian coup and, here

  Brazilian dictatorship support by, here

  children migrating to, here , here , here

  cocaine use in, here , here

  Cold War in Central America and, here

  drugs smuggled into, here , here , here , here , here , here

  drug trafficking networks in, here , here

  guns smuggled out of, here , here , here , here , here n3 (chap.39)

  Honduran migration to, here

  Jamaican destabilization campaign and, here

  Jamaican drug trade in, here

  Jamaican posses in, here , here , here

  Maras sent back to El Salvador from, here , here

  Mexican migration to, here , here

  narcoterrorism and, here

  Navy SEALS training, here , here

  new generation of Maras in, here

  responsibility for illegal drug trade, here

  Salvadoran migration to, here

  spy planes, here , here , here

  State Department, here , here , here

  states legalizing marijuana, here , here

  in Vietnam War, here

  vigilantism in, here n2 (chap. 43)

  war on drugs by, here , here , here

  Uruguay, here , here

  Valencia, Roberto, here

  Valencia brothers, here , here , here , here

  Van Creveld, Martin, here

  Vargas Llosa, Mario, here n5

  Vatos Locos (film), here

  Vatos Locos (gang), here , here , here

  Vietnam War, here , here , here , here

  Vigil, Mike, here , here

  vigilante movement, here , here , here , here , here , here , here

  Villa, Pancho, here , here , here n4

  Villar, Eliseo, here

  violent corruption, here

  violent lobbying, here , here , here , here , here

  Wailer, Bunny, here , here

  Walker, Karyl, here

  warlord, as term, here

  War of Canudos, here , here

  War on Drugs, here , here , here , here

  War on Terror, here

  Warriors United, here , here

  war tax, here , here , here , here

  weapons of gangsters, here , here , here , here , here , here , here n3 (chap. 30)

  West Kingston, Jamaica. See also Tivoli Gardens (garrison)

  Boys Town football club in, here

  as destination for uptowners, here

  Dudus’s rule of, here , here , here , here

  Golding as MP for, here , here

  marijuana and gun trafficking through, here

  people of, here

  Seaga as MP for, here , here

  “What America’s Users Spend on Illegal Drugs,” here

  “Which Dudus” (Ce’Cile song), here , here

  Why China Sees Red (Simpson), here

  Wild at Heart (Eldredge), here

  Wilson, Ludlow “Blood,” here

  Witter, Earl, here

  World War I, here

  youth crime prevention programs, here

  Yucatán State, Mexico, here

  Zamora, Mexico, here , here

  Zanella, Everton Luiz, here , here , here

  Zapata, Emiliano, and Zapatistas, here , here , here , here , here

  Zedillo, Ernesto, here

  Zetas cartel

  buying weapons in Honduras, here

  coal mining and, here

  Independence Day attack on civilians and, here

  La Familia compared to, here

  line of death by, here , here , here , here n1, here nn3–4

  Maras and, here

  medallion from, here

  Nazario and, here , here , here

  operation in Central America, here

  Solalinde and, here

  tanks of, here , here

  as warlords, here , here

  A Note on the Author

  Ioan Grillo has reported on Latin America since 2001 for international media including Time magazine, Reuters, CNN, the Associated Press, PBS NewsHour, GlobalPost, the Houston Chronicle, CBC, the BBC World Service and the Sunday Telegraph. His first book, El Narco: Inside Mexico’s Criminal Insurgency, was translated into five languages and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and the Orwell Prize. A native of Britain, Grillo lives in Mexico City.

  BY THE SAME AUTHOR

  El Narco: Inside Mexico’s Criminal Insurgency

  Bloomsbury Press

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  First published 2016

  © Ioan Grillo, 2016

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  Excerpt from C-Train and Thirteen Mexicans copyright © 2002 by Jimmy Santiago Baca. Used by permission of Grove/Atlantic, Inc. Any third party use of this material outside of this publication is prohibited.

  Lyrics from “Don’t Touch the President” copyright © 2010 by Bunny Wailer. Used by permission.

  Lyrics from “Los Caballeros Templarios” copyright © 2011 by BuKnas de Culiacan. Used by permission.

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  ePub: 978-1-62040-380-8

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