Two major figures in Mexican drug trafficking organizations faced American justice this week as Juan Gerardo Treviño-Chavez, former leader of the Cartel del Noreste, pleaded guilty to multiple trafficking charges and authorities announced the capture of a high-ranking member of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel in California.
Treviño-Chavez, 42, known as “El Huevo,” admitted guilt Tuesday to 15 drug trafficking charges in federal court in San Antonio, acknowledging operations that spanned Mexico and crossed the U.S. border. He had led the Cartel del Noreste from its 2016 split from the Los Zetas until his March 2022 capture, controlling territory including the strategic border city of Nuevo Laredo, opposite Laredo, Texas.
In a separate development, U.S. authorities arrested Cristian Fernando Gutierrez-Ochoa, 37, son-in-law of notorious Jalisco cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes (“El Mencho”), in Riverside, California. The Department of Justice charged Gutierrez-Ochoa with international drug trafficking and money laundering, alleging he orchestrated large-scale methamphetamine and cocaine imports into the United States.
The arrests come as Republican Representative Dan Crenshaw of Texas pushes for the creation of a specialized congressional committee to address cartel threats amid growing calls for military action against Mexican crime syndicates. President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to escalate anti-cartel efforts, recently appointing three hardline officials to implement his border security agenda.
The developments highlight increasing U.S. pressure on Mexican drug trafficking organizations as border security emerges as a central focus of incoming administration policies.