Los Cabreras

It’s been a difficult stretch for Mayito Flaco, and the pressure is no longer just external. A faction identifying itself as loyal to “El 71” and the “Old School 211” publicly breaks from the Mayito Flaco and Cabrera structure, accusing its leadership of abandoning past codes by engaging in extortion, kidnappings, and abuse against civilians.

Under a harsh light in the dirt, a young captive in a red shirt delivers a final message. Told what to say by the men behind the camera, he warns mothers in Durango not to let their sons enter this life. Promised twenty thousand a month, he now realizes what it cost him.

Miguel Beltrán Martínez, a little-known reporter from Durango, was abducted and killed days after accusing the Cabrera Cartel of stealing gold from local mines. His posts blurred the line between truth and speculation, but one fact remains: naming José Luis Cabrera Sarabia — El 03 — sealed his fate in a state where silence is survival.

Federal heat has finally reached Durango. Navy units, mass police dismissals, and midnight surveillance flights mark a quiet war aimed at dismantling the Cabrera empire—the hidden backbone of La Mayiza. For the first time in years, the family that “owns the state” is being forced to look over its shoulder.

Across Durango, false job offers promise weekly pay and travel — a lifeline that turns into a trap. Recruits are stripped of their phones, sent to fight in the Cabreras’ expansion wars, and forced into silence. Women and children aren’t spared. They thought it was work — it was war.

Gunfire in Gómez Palacio triggered a citywide Code Red, exposing a deeper fracture within local police ranks. Explosives hit homes, armed crews raided puntos de droga, and whispers spread that officers flipped to a faction called La Feu. Federal forces arrived, but the plaza’s control—and loyalties—remain uncertain.

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