Illustration of a Chihuahua prosecutor resigning following a drug raid with alleged CIA involvement in Mexico.
Illustration of a Chihuahua prosecutor resigning following a drug raid with alleged CIA involvement in Mexico.
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Chihuahua prosecutor resigns after operation with alleged cia agents

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Guillermo Arturo Zuany Portillo resigned as head of strategic operations for the Chihuahua prosecutor’s office after foreign agents were revealed to have joined a drug raid. The April operation in Morelos municipality sparked investigations into a possible violation of national sovereignty.

Guillermo Arturo Zuany Portillo submitted his resignation on Tuesday afternoon after prosecutor Wendy Chávez reported videos showing a foreign agent carrying a firearm inside the Fiscalía de Operaciones Estratégicas facilities. Administrative staff immediately began processing his dismissal.

The operation took place between April 16 and 19 in the community of El Pinal to seize a synthetic drug laboratory. Four foreign individuals joined the convoy wearing civilian clothes and without official insignia. On April 19 a traffic accident killed two agents from the Agencia Estatal de Investigación and two Americans.

Governor Maru Campos defended the operation and stated it was carried out by Mexican agencies with legal authority. She said she neither authorized nor knew about the foreign presence and ordered a specialized unit to assist the Fiscalía General de la República.

President Claudia Sheinbaum sent a diplomatic note to the United States on April 22 demanding explanations. No formal response from U.S. authorities has been received so far.

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Initial reactions on X highlight the resignation of Chihuahua prosecutor Guillermo Zuany Portillo following confirmed presence of alleged CIA agents in a drug raid, with posts noting political fallout for Governor Maru Campos and raising sovereignty concerns; sentiments range from neutral reporting to skepticism about potential cover-ups or sacrifices.

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President Sheinbaum demands clarifications on CIA role after fatal Chihuahua drug lab crash involving Mexican officials and US agents.
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Sheinbaum demands clarifications on CIA role in Chihuahua after fatal drug lab crash

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In an update to the April 18 crash that killed two Mexican officials and two CIA agents during a joint drug lab operation in Chihuahua, President Claudia Sheinbaum demanded explanations from state authorities and the US ambassador, calling unauthorized US involvement a 'violation of the law.' Senator Javier Corral accused the state of contradictions, as reports revealed it was the CIA's third operation in the state this year.

Mexico's Security Cabinet revealed that the two presumed CIA agents killed in a Chihuahua accident on April 19 lacked permission for operational activities. No federal authority knew of their involvement in a raid on a drug lab. Governor María Eugenia Campos created a special unit to investigate the events.

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President Claudia Sheinbaum stated that her administration had no prior knowledge of Chihuahua state's collaboration with US agents in a drug lab operation that preceded the deaths of two US Embassy personnel and two Mexican officials in a car crash in Chihuahua.

Marco Antonio Almanza, former head of the Sinaloa Investigative Police, denied in a video that he surrendered to US authorities and confirmed he remains in Culiacán.

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Mexico City prosecutors revealed that a drug trafficking group organized the murder of Ximena Guzmán and José Muñoz, aides to Clara Brugada. Authorities have arrested 18 people in the case so far.

Federal and state authorities restored dialogue with communities in Chilapa, Guerrero, following an escalation of violence attributed to criminal groups that caused displacements.

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Sinaloa governor on leave Rubén Rocha Moya and seven other officials appeared before the Fiscalía General de la República in Culiacán on May 26, responding to the citations issued earlier that week.

 

 

 

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