
Will Mexico’s Jalisco cartel’s violent biz model survive El Mencho’s death?
Al Jazeera
El Mencho consolidated one of Mexico’s most powerful criminal organisations in part due to a unique franchise-based structure.
Monterrey, Mexico – Portraits of the missing cover Guadalajara’s “Roundabout of the Disappeared”, a landmark renamed by families to highlight the state’s disappearance crisis.
On February 22, the streets surrounding the memorial and throughout the city stood empty after the Mexican army killed Ruben Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, the longtime leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).
In retaliation, cartel members set fire to buses and taxis, erecting a series of blockades that spread across 20 states.
The widespread unrest demonstrated the CJNG’s capacity for rapid coordination, fuelled by a ‘franchise’ model that allows smaller cells to operate under the cartel’s brand and vast financial network.
While the group’s economic reach extends into Europe and Asia, its power remains rooted in its paramilitary force. This structure relies on extortion, brutal violence and forced disappearances as its main tools to seize territory and control markets.













