CRIME ECUADOR - POLICE OFFICERS KIDNAPPED | EXPLOSIONS IN CITIES | PRISONS IN CHAOS

Bubble Head

Has No Life - Lives on TB
We have at least 3 of the gangs active in the surrounding area. Latin Knights, Wolfs, Los Lobos. Latin Knights have been active in Pueblo Colorado for years. They use the surrounding rural areas as dumping grounds for their victims. Then you have the San Luis Valley that is filled with gang activity and recruitment.
 

end game

Veteran Member
Sadly it will one day happen here.
Already has but the roles reversed.

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jed turtle

a brother in the Lord
Build yourself a small sandbag fortress in the living room.

Grab your AR and a favorite book.

Pour yourself a cup of coffee.

Now you have a good place to be.
Maybe on the concrete floor of my cellar, but certainly not on any of the the wooden floors of my 50 year old wooden house made of recycled 150 year old barns and a 200 year old church belfry…, owner designed and maintained without inhibition of building codes or bank mortgages… yeah, definitely on the cellar floor only.
 

jward

passin' thru
OSINTdefender
@sentdefender

The Peruvian Minister of the Interior, Víctor Torres Falcón has ordered the Immediate Deployment of a Special Force with the Directorate of Special Operations under the Peruvian National Police to the Border with Ecuador in order to prevent the Conflict in the Neighboring Country from Spilling-Over into Peru.
 

Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Is any place? Feeling kinda sour tonight.
I understand, POD. You've had a rough year. It's harder to keep positive when you've lost someone. The world situation just keeps getting worse. We never thought the US would fall so low. Gotta have hope and faith that things will get better. There are signs that things are turning around. Embrace them and look towards the spring.
 

Samuel Adams

Has No Life - Lives on TB
It's harder to keep positive when you've lost someone.

I had forgotten Profit lost his dearest.

Lost mine 2006.

Took a while, but I learned to commune, if not communicate, with her in spirit.

It’s a long row, but I’m going to make it.

Concentrate, not on where you failed her, but how you would handle things better all the way through, were you to get the opportunity.

Something tells me we will, and perfected, premeditated love at the soul level can’t be a bad thing.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

What we know about ‘Fito,’ Ecuador’s notorious gang leader who went missing from prison​

This wanted poster posted on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024 on X formerly known as Twitter, by Ecuador's Ministry of Interior, shows José Adolfo Macías Villamar, leader of Los Choneros gang. Macías was discovered missing on Sunday from a Guayaquil prison cell where he was serving a 34-year sentence for drug trafficking. Also known by the alias “Fito,” Macías is on the country's most wanted list and a reward is being offered for information that helps find his whereabouts. (Ecuador's Ministry of Interior via AP)

This wanted poster posted on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024 on X formerly known as Twitter, by Ecuador’s Ministry of Interior, shows José Adolfo Macías Villamar, leader of Los Choneros gang. Macías was discovered missing on Sunday from a Guayaquil prison cell where he was serving a 34-year sentence for drug trafficking. Also known by the alias “Fito,” Macías is on the country’s most wanted list and a reward is being offered for information that helps find his whereabouts. (Ecuador’s Ministry of Interior via AP)
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BY GABRIELA MOLINA
Updated 12:07 AM EST, January 11, 2024
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QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — José Adolfo Macías Villamar, leader of Los Choneros, one of the Ecuadorian gangs considered responsible for a spike in car bombings, kidnappings and slayings, was discovered missing from his prison cell where he was serving a sentence for drug trafficking.

Macías began serving a 34-year sentence in 2011, but his prison stays have been in style and comfort.

His disappearance Sunday led the government to declare a state of emergency that involved sending the military into prisons, which sparked a wave of at least 30 attacks around the South American country, including an assault at a television station in Guayaquil.


The brazen raid of the station while it was broadcasting a newscast live Tuesday stunned Ecuadorean TV viewers who saw 15 minutes of gang members waving guns, threatening staff and claiming they had bombs. It also led President Daniel Noboa to declare that the country had an “armed internal conflict.”


Macías, who is known as “Fito,” was born 44 years ago in Manta, a coastal city in the province of Manabí, where authorities say Los Choneros emerged. Often sporting a beard, wavy hair, protruding belly and heavy build, he has become a recognizable figure in a country traumatized by violence.


Little is known about his humble origins in Manta, but his criminal record is extensive. Robbery, murder, manslaughter, illicit association, organized crime, possession of weapons, attack on life and crime against property are among at least 30 charges against him, according to Ecuador’s judiciary.

He is on Ecuador’s most wanted list and a reward was offered for information leading to his capture.

His mother, Marisol Villamar, says he is innocent.
“He’s being investigated for everything,” she said. “They accuse him of selling drugs, stealing cars and even of stealing chickens. For everything that happens in Manta they want to hold him responsible,” Villamar complained in a 2017 interview published by local newspaper El Diario de Manta.

After the death of Los Choneros’ boss José Luis Zambrano, alias “Rasquiña,” in December 2020, Macías and Junior Roldán were left in charge of the gang but the latter was killed shortly after exiting prison, leaving Macías as its sole leader. Authorities in Ecuador have classified the gang as a terrorist organization.

According to authorities, the group controls the passage of drugs through the Pacific coast and it has links with Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, to whom it has provided security and logistics services for decades.

Los Choneros originated in the 1990s, and police say it dominates prison pavilions. Until 2020, when Rasquiña died, it controlled other criminal groups. But the death of its initial leader launched a power struggle with rivals such as Los Tiguerones, Los Lobos and Los Chonekillers, who were formerly allies.


Ecuador’s president recently questioned Macías’ prison privileges by saying his cell had more more electric outlets than a hotel room.
“Let’s start with the fact that there shouldn’t be a plug to charge his cell phone or an internet router inside his cell,” Noboa said.

Authorities say Macías likes to be seen and does little to hide the privileges he has enjoyed in prison, almost defying the state by flaunting them in videos and photographs on social media. There are murals with his image inside prisons.

During his stay at La Regional prison, authorities say, he threw parties and had access to forbidden items including weapons, appliances, liquor, fighting cocks and jewelry, among other items. A framed painting shows him in robes, since he graduated as a lawyer in prison. His bathroom was decorated with ceramics.

The prison complex in Guayaquil, about 170 miles (270 kilometers) southwest of the capital, also houses the largest and most dangerous lockup in the country.

From prison, Macías sent recorded messages to authorities and “to the Ecuadorian people.” In his last video, released in July 2023, he appeared surrounded by armed men and a police officer, whose participation authorities said was coerced.

One video clip he appeared in was of a Mexican corrido. He attributed the ballad’s production to his daughter. The so-called “corrido of the lion” starts by calling Macías “the boss of bosses,” “leader of Los Choneros” and “a very good person.”

He is believed to have escaped from his cell before his transfer to a maximum security prison where he would be held in isolation, though no official in Ecuador has used the word “escape.”

Authorities refer to his absence from his cell, leaving it unconfirmed whether he actually escaped.

If true, it wouldn’t be the first time he escaped from prison. He previously did it in 2013, but was recaptured.

In an interview Wednesday, President Noboa said Macías was in his cell during roll call the day before at 7 p.m., although he admitted that “it may be that they falsified the list.”

The truth is that they don’t know where Macías is or when or even how he left his cell.

 

jward

passin' thru
NEXTA
@nexta_tv

Ecuador will refuse to use Russian military "metal scrap" and exchange it for US arms

The Ecuadorian authorities have decided to exchange old military vehicles, Russian and Ukrainian-made, as announced by the country's President, Daniel Noboa.

"We will receive assistance from the United States. There will be an exchange of Russian and Ukrainian scrap metal for $200 million worth of modern equipment," Noboa told a local radio station.

The country has Mi-171E helicopters and the “Igla" air defense system.
 

jward

passin' thru

SlipperySlope

Veteran Member
My ex BIL lived there for about 10 years. His facebook told about how wonderful it was to retire there. I noticed about 6 months ago he was back in the USA. I thought it was because his partner had died. Maybe it was because of the unrest settling in.
 

Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB
That’s OK, Pinecone.

Wait till all those Equadorian prisoners cross the southern border, then move in to the home next door to you.

Paid for by you, of course…
Right now they'd have to slip their way up past 20 degree temps, 3.5 inches of sleet and a nice layer of freezing rain on top of that. More freezing rain on Tuesday, then it may warm up some. They're gonna be down in your area first.

Really, I hope they all stay home. We have enough problems with our own government without the illegals rubbing salt in that wound.
 

Southside

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Well, just a guess here. Ecuador will no longer be in the top 3 places for Americans to retire to anymore, according to International Living.
Probably not even in the top 10.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Gunmen in Ecuador kill 9, injure 10 others in attack in coastal city of Guayaquil as violence surges​

Ecuador's President Daniel Noboa shakes hands with a farmer during his visit to Poalo, Ecuador, Thursday, March 21, 2024, where he met with dairy farmers and handed out 400 land titles. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)

Ecuador’s President Daniel Noboa shakes hands with a farmer during his visit to Poalo, Ecuador, Thursday, March 21, 2024, where he met with dairy farmers and handed out 400 land titles. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)
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Updated 1:04 AM EDT, April 1, 2024

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — Gunmen attacked a group of people in Ecuador ’s coastal city of Guayaquil killing nine and injuring 10 others, police said Sunday, the latest in a string of violent incidents in the South American country.

The attack took place around 7 p.m. local time Saturday in the southern neighborhood of Guasmo. According to police, the armed group entered a pedestrian street in a grey Chevrolet Spark, where a group of people were practicing sports. The gunmen got out of the vehicle and proceeded to shoot people.

“So far, the result is nine people dead and 10 injured,” police Col. Ramiro Arequipa told journalists around midday on Sunday.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

It was the second mass killing in as many days. On Friday, five people who had been kidnapped were killed execution style in the coastal province of Manabi by an armed gang. Police said there were signs the victims were tourists mistakenly caught up in a local drug-trafficking dispute. They didn’t elaborate.

In that incident, an armed group had kidnapped a total of 11 people. Police said the other six, including five minors, were rescued and handed over to their families. Two suspects were arrested on Saturday morning, according to police.

The killings in Manabi “remind us that the battle continues,” said Ecuador’s President Daniel Noboa on the social media network X, formerly Twitter, on Saturday.



“Narcoterrorism and its allies are looking for spaces to scare us, but they will not succeed,” Noboa said. His post contained a video of a man handcuffed and bent over, being led away forcefully by an armed police officer.

Ecuador was once considered a bastion of peace in Latin America, but in recent years has seen a surge in violent attacks.

Noboa declared a state of emergency in January, which provides for permanent operations by a security force made up of police and military. In addition, a five-hour curfew is in force in high-incidence areas such as Guayaquil.

On March 24, the 27-year-old mayor of a small town — also in the province of Manabi — was killed along with her collaborator. Brigitte Garcia and Jairo Loor were found inside a vehicle with gunshot wounds.

On Thursday, a riot in a Guayaquil prison under military and police control left three inmates dead and four injured.

Ecuador surpassed a rate of 40 violent deaths per 100,000 inhabitants at the end of 2023, one of the highest in the region, according to police.
 

mzkitty

I give up.

Gunmen in Ecuador kill 9, injure 10 others in attack in coastal city of Guayaquil as violence surges​

Ecuador's President Daniel Noboa shakes hands with a farmer during his visit to Poalo, Ecuador, Thursday, March 21, 2024, where he met with dairy farmers and handed out 400 land titles. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)'s President Daniel Noboa shakes hands with a farmer during his visit to Poalo, Ecuador, Thursday, March 21, 2024, where he met with dairy farmers and handed out 400 land titles. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)

Ecuador’s President Daniel Noboa shakes hands with a farmer during his visit to Poalo, Ecuador, Thursday, March 21, 2024, where he met with dairy farmers and handed out 400 land titles. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)
Read More
Updated 1:04 AM EDT, April 1, 2024

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — Gunmen attacked a group of people in Ecuador ’s coastal city of Guayaquil killing nine and injuring 10 others, police said Sunday, the latest in a string of violent incidents in the South American country.

The attack took place around 7 p.m. local time Saturday in the southern neighborhood of Guasmo. According to police, the armed group entered a pedestrian street in a grey Chevrolet Spark, where a group of people were practicing sports. The gunmen got out of the vehicle and proceeded to shoot people.

“So far, the result is nine people dead and 10 injured,” police Col. Ramiro Arequipa told journalists around midday on Sunday.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

It was the second mass killing in as many days. On Friday, five people who had been kidnapped were killed execution style in the coastal province of Manabi by an armed gang. Police said there were signs the victims were tourists mistakenly caught up in a local drug-trafficking dispute. They didn’t elaborate.

In that incident, an armed group had kidnapped a total of 11 people. Police said the other six, including five minors, were rescued and handed over to their families. Two suspects were arrested on Saturday morning, according to police.

The killings in Manabi “remind us that the battle continues,” said Ecuador’s President Daniel Noboa on the social media network X, formerly Twitter, on Saturday.



“Narcoterrorism and its allies are looking for spaces to scare us, but they will not succeed,” Noboa said. His post contained a video of a man handcuffed and bent over, being led away forcefully by an armed police officer.

Ecuador was once considered a bastion of peace in Latin America, but in recent years has seen a surge in violent attacks.

Noboa declared a state of emergency in January, which provides for permanent operations by a security force made up of police and military. In addition, a five-hour curfew is in force in high-incidence areas such as Guayaquil.

On March 24, the 27-year-old mayor of a small town — also in the province of Manabi — was killed along with her collaborator. Brigitte Garcia and Jairo Loor were found inside a vehicle with gunshot wounds.

On Thursday, a riot in a Guayaquil prison under military and police control left three inmates dead and four injured.

Ecuador surpassed a rate of 40 violent deaths per 100,000 inhabitants at the end of 2023, one of the highest in the region, according to police.

Hey, let's all go visit Ecuador !! It'll be fun they said !!

:xpnd:

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Publius

TB Fanatic
in 2022 Ecuador had a population of about 17 million people. So today the 40 deaths per100,000. is a lot of dead due to violence. but it looks to be close to 6,000 to 7,000. people. My math may be off.
 

SSTemplar

Veteran Member
Always better and cheaper to send those violate monsters to their final reward. Always. Speedy like our constitution says. Trial,verdict,public hanging. 7 days better world.
 

hiwall

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Always better and cheaper to send those violate monsters to their final reward. Always. Speedy like our constitution says. Trial,verdict,public hanging. 7 days better world.
Many countries also have the option to send their monsters to America.
 
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