U.S. Citizen Leads Mexico's Top Cartel, Complicating Crackdown
Source: wsj.com
TL;DR
- A California-born U.S. citizen has taken over as leader of Mexico's most powerful drug cartel, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, after his stepfather's death.
- Juan Carlos Valencia González, 41, born in Santa Ana and facing a $5 million U.S. bounty, heads the group's paramilitary elite unit.
- His citizenship creates legal hurdles for U.S. surveillance and targeting, slowing anti-cartel operations.
The story at a glance
Mexican and U.S. officials say Juan Carlos Valencia González, stepson of the slain Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera, has risen to lead the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) shortly after El Mencho's burial in early March. The CJNG remains Mexico's top cartel, known for paramilitary strength and drug trafficking. This is reported now because his U.S. birth complicates American law enforcement efforts against him. El Mencho was killed by Mexican forces in late February.
Key points
- Valencia González, born September 12, 1984, in Santa Ana, California, goes by nicknames like “Baldy,” “Bimbo,” “R-3,” “El Pelón,” “O3,” and “Tricky Tres.”
- He is the son of Armando Valencia Cornelio, Milenio Cartel founder, and Rosalinda González Valencia, who married El Mencho and ran the CJNG's financial operations.
- Two senior CJNG commanders stepped aside to let him take over peacefully, cementing the Valencia family at the cartel's top.
- The U.S. State Department indicted him in 2020 for drug conspiracy and firearms in narcotics; intelligence limits apply due to his citizenship.
- U.S. agencies need attorney general approval and Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court signoff to surveil him overseas, proving he acts as an “agent of a foreign power.”
- These rules could slow joint U.S.-Mexico operations, unlike those against non-citizen El Mencho.
Details and context
Valencia González long led the CJNG's Grupo Elite, a paramilitary unit, giving him strong internal backing after El Mencho's death in a February raid near Tapalpa. That operation, aided by U.S. intelligence like CIA drones, killed El Mencho but highlighted Mexico's push under President Claudia Sheinbaum amid U.S. pressure.
His family ties trace to Michoacán clans that built early cartels; his ascent formalizes their dynasty over the CJNG, which dominates cocaine, fentanyl, meth, and fuel theft. Past U.S.-Mexico cooperation extradited dozens of leaders, but citizenship adds procedural steps that may frustrate quick action.
Key quotes
- Eduardo Guerrero, Mexican security consultant: He has “the greatest legitimacy to be the leader of the cartel and ensure a peaceful transfer of power.”[[1]](https://nypost.com/2026/03/19/us-news/el-menchos-heir-is-a-californian-from-orange-county-and-it-makes-it-harder-for-the-feds-to-fight-the-cartels)[[2]](https://www.wsj.com/world/americas/mexican-drug-kingpin-american-citizen-7a8a9c2f)
Why it matters
The CJNG fuels U.S. drug deaths and violence across both countries, so leadership changes test bilateral security ties. U.S. citizens face stricter rules on surveillance and targeting, which could delay arrests or strikes and protect cartel operations. Watch for any U.S. court moves on his status or Mexican raids, though internal CJNG challenges remain possible.