2 cases tagged “female cartel leader”
Accused: Verónica Mireya Moreno Carreón
She had been decorated for bravery. She had taken a bullet in the line of duty, recovered, and returned to the streets of San Nicolás de los Garza as what colleagues called a model police officer. Then Verónica Mireya Moreno Carreón walked out of her uniform and into the most violent organization in northern Mexico. By the fall of 2011, Mexican Navy intelligence had identified her as the plaza boss of Los Zetas in San Nicolás, the first woman known to hold formal territorial command within the cartel's brutal hierarchy. She managed executions, torture operations, extortion networks, drug distribution, and a web of corrupted police officers, some of whom she almost certainly knew from her years on the force. When marines finally caught up with her in a stolen vehicle in a working-class neighborhood, they found a revolver, 150 doses of cocaine and crack, marijuana, and six cell phones. She was barely 35 years old. Her story has no clean ending: no publicly confirmed conviction, no final sentence on record. What remains is a portrait of institutional failure, personal transformation, and a question Mexico's justice system has never fully answered.
Alleged Offender: Enedina Arellano Félix de Toledo
She outlasted them all. While her brothers were being shot in the streets, arrested by federal police, and extradited to American courtrooms, Enedina Arellano Félix de Toledo was doing something none of them ever managed: disappearing in plain sight. Born in Mazatlán in 1961, she earned a legitimate accounting degree, married a Tijuana lawyer, and spent decades managing the financial engine of one of Mexico's most brutal criminal organizations. The U.S. Treasury sanctioned her in 2000. The DEA tracked her for years. Mexico's attorney general eventually put her on a priority fugitives list shared with U.S. authorities. And yet, as of early 2026, she has never been arrested. Not once. No handcuffs, no courtroom, no extradition hearing. While the Tijuana Cartel her family built collapsed around her, one brother killed, the others imprisoned, she transformed what remained into a quieter, more businesslike operation running through pharmacies and real estate in Guadalajara. The DEA and Mexican authorities consider her the first woman ever to lead a major Mexican drug cartel. She carries the aliases La Jefa, La Madrina, and La Narcomami. Intelligence reports place her in Guadalajara today, living under a false identity. The accountant, it turns out, has always been the hardest one to catch.