Mexican police have seized $205 million after raiding a house in an exclusive neighborhood of the capital, the attorney general’s office has said. Seven people were arrested at the house in the Lomas de Chapultepec district, where police discovered wads of US bank notes in bulging cases and stacked to the ceiling in closets on Friday.

Mexican media said the haul was four times the amount of drug-related money confiscated in Mexico during all of last year.

Police said the money belonged to a drug gang that smuggled chemicals used to make methamphetamine, a powerful stimulant.

The attorney general’s office said the gang operated behind a pharmaceuticals front company which imported tonnes of the chemical pseudoephedrine, used in making methamphetamine, from India.

Meth certainly is becoming the drug of choice – for making lots and lots of money in Mexico.



  1. god says:

    Obviously, Mexican gangsters can now afford better trucks.

    http://www.dvorak.org/blog/?p=10334

  2. Lauren the Ghoti says:

    How much you wanna bet that pile was 3 times that size before the arrival of los Federales?

    In totally unrelated news, dozens of men in Mexican police uniforms have been sighted in Houston and Los Angeles, pricing out Lamborghinis, Ferraris and Bentleys.

  3. ChrisMac says:

    non news at its finest

  4. GregA says:

    I have a cold right now, and I blame meth users for my inability to get good cold medicine over the counter.

  5. Matthew says:

    Now imagine 175 times as much money, $36 Billion dollars in cash, unaccounted for and ‘spent’ by contractors in iraq.

  6. Mr. Fusion says:

    #4, I’m with ya bro. Usually I understand the ban on pseudoephedrine, but right now I’m cursing those SOBs.

  7. tallwookie says:

    #4 – I agree completely… obviously this isnt “stemming the tide”… can we just legalize drugs and get this mess over with already?

  8. TJGeezer says:

    7 – You’re missing the point. Do you have any idea how many people, from national politicians taking bribes (oops) campaign contributions to black ops agencies to bigtime bankers, and right down to prison guards and corruptos at all levels, depend on these black markets? That’s not even counting local poor folk who see the black markets as their only good path to economic comfort.

    Piles of cash like the one in the picture, even before they’ve been depleted by whoever can grab a bundle here, a bundle there, are barely the tip of the black market iceberg. Regulating in place of prohibition would gore the ox of a lot of self-righteous people.

  9. BubbaRay says:

    Just think, ARod (Alex Rodriguez of the NY Yankees) could put another 3 stacks around this, put some plywood on top and hire Pink Floyd to get on stage and sing ‘Money’.

  10. Dire Straits says:

    Sung to “Money for Nothing”…

    I want my…

    I want my…

    I want my THC…

  11. Frank IBC says:

    Let’s see –

    1) Meth dollars outsourced to Mexican economy – CHECK

    2) American cold/allergy sufferers thoroughly and needlessly inconvenienced – CHECK

    3) Slightest hint of a dent made in meth use in USA – NO DICE

  12. Lauren the Ghoti says:

    4) Drug traffickers deterred by severe sentences for smuggling marijuana, now switched to importing / selling 1000x more harmful but more profitable substance – CHECK

  13. Juan Cardona says:

    There must be a dozen politicians now impatiently waiting put the money in their pockets after the press is done taking pics at the heap of cash.

  14. BubbaRay says:

    If drugs were legal (well, pot anyway), that could be a couple hours worth of tax dollars to support the illegal wars we’ve had.

  15. Fred Flint says:

    Apropos of nothing, the house Bill Gates built cost about half the amount in this pile.

  16. Lauren the Ghoti says:

    Your statements are, I’m sure, quite sincere. But nevertheless, the Mexican government, and particularly law enforcement, at all levels, are remarkably corrupt. Persons highly sympathetic to the plight of the Mexican people will invariably cite their poverty as an exculpatory factor and the root cause of the corruption. But more objective observers have demonstrated long ago that it’s a lot more complex than that. The corruption certainly contributes to the impoverishment of the citizens, but those same citizens, as a matter of national character and long-accepted tradition, feed that corruption with a combination of rationalization of dishonesty as being made necessary by poverty, a collective fatalism that promotes the universal sentiment of “why bother,” and a range of -centric behaviors and attitudes, particularly egocentrism and ethnocentrism. I have lived for over 15 years in a city over 35% Mexican and have observed the collective and individual behaviors and am under no delusions regarding the Mexican people.

    I would further delineate the individual and collective psychological traits that are behind the situation of Mexicans in both Mexico and the US.

    Suffice it to say, Attorney General Gonzales is an excellent example of the stereotypical Mexican politico. He is more than willing to apply his efforts and successes in his profession (i.e. being one of those paragons of moral, ethical behavior, a lawyer), not to help his less fortunate Mexican brethren, but to instead cozy up to his own people’s enemies, to sell out his own brothers and sisters for personal riches and influence. He was, in notoriously corrupt Texas politics, a liar and a hypocrite, and with the help of fellow corrupt Texans, has brought his turncoat mentality to a national audience, doing his part to help renodel the US Justice Department along the lines of its Mexican counterpart . And the Mexican government – and therefore, the Mexican gen pop – features no shortage of individuals struck from the same mold.

    When many Mexicans succeed here, as there, they immediately shed any connection with their peasant roots and seek to emulate, flatter and thereby join, the ruling class. This, despite all the rationalizations, is time-honored Mexican tradition.

    I would hasten to note that this is not universally applicable across the board. There certainly are noble, dedicated, caring Mexicans who want very much to do what they can to help elevate the situation of their people, and work hard for that goal. They almost certainly outnumber the out-and-out corrupt, but in the end it doesn’t matter, since the sellouts, given their willingness to join their oppressors’ side against their own, are repaid by those same oppressors with power and influence the reformers are denied, so their influence is magnified and out of proportion to their numbers. They wind up calling the shots and leaving their countymen to struggle on their own.

    All of Mexico’s failings are someone else’s fault. Always have been.
    Ya.

  17. Drock says:

    i dont know about yall but some one isss veryyy pissed about taht money alot of people are going to get killed…. i believe if the police let the big timers do their thing they will get what they are in the game for money…. but u never mess with pplz money especially that much…i think that they should share the wealth… f tha police they need to keep their oink oink otta pplz bizz and snitches should end up DeD


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