DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Terrifying way ultra rich Americans were smuggled out of cartel hell

February 26, 2026
in News
Terrifying way ultra rich Americans were smuggled out of cartel hell

Ultra rich Americans were forced to flee by boat when one of Mexico’s top tourist destinations turned into a cartel hellhole following the killing of a murderous drug kingpin.

Wealthy vacationers escaped Puerto Vallarta via the ocean when its airport shut down and narco-terrorists set up road blocks across the state of Jalisco this week.

An insider told the California Post people were hiring well-armed mercenaries or security teams to smuggle them to the port where they chartered vessels up to Cabos before flying back to the US.

Aerial view of a burnt bus on a highway in Zapopan, Mexico, surrounded by fire trucks, police vehicles, and firefighters.
Ultra rich Americans were forced to flee by boat when one of Mexico’s tourist destinations turned into a cartel hellhole. AFP via Getty Images
Mexican National Guard members in combat gear stand in and around white pickup trucks.
Wealthy vacationers escaped Puerto Vallarta via the ocean when its airport shut down. Mario Guzman/EPA/Shutterstock

Mexico descended into a warzone when special forces killed cartel boss Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes in an early morning raid on Sunday.


Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters

California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn California Post Sports Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X California Post Opinion California Post Newsletters: Sign up here! California Post App: Download here! Home delivery: Sign up here!Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!


The bustling tourist hotspot of Puerto Vallarta became the epicenter of the violence, with cars burnt in the streets and visitors locked down in their hotels.

A source with deep knowledge of security personnel and contractors operating in the country revealed it is a booming business there and was sparked into action this week.

They told the Post: “A lot of people make money getting people out. The main exit was a pipeline of people going on ferry rides from Puerto Vallarta across to Cabos and on private flights out.

“Most of the clients did that. High net worth people who had family members down there, ex-wives, kids on timeshares down there, people who may or may not be linked to US politics.”

They continued: “People are making a lot, its lucrative but dangerous. It’s regulated federally now. If you get caught without documents or found with a gun and working outside the law you’ll be in federal custody.

A car on fire in the streets of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
The bustling tourist hotspot of Puerto Vallarta became the epicenter of the violence, with cars burnt in the streets. reypuentess / SWNS
Members of the Mexican Army and state police inspect vehicles in Cancun after the death of cartel leader Nemesio Ruben Oseguera Cervantes.
“People are making a lot, its lucrative but dangerous. It’s regulated federally now. Alonso Cupul/EPA/Shutterstock
A bus set on fire by organized crime groups in Jalisco, Mexico.
“Most of the clients did that. High net worth people who had family members down there, ex-wives, kids on timeshares down there, people who may or may not be linked to US politics.” AFP via Getty Images

“Its the wild west in Mexico.” They continued: “There’s security and extractions and a whole business around it, it’s booming. The joke is the American dream isn’t in Florida anymore it’s in Mexico.

“There are a lot of mercenaries working in extraction in the hostile environment.” They said the operations were “spicy” because cartel roadblocks suddenly descended around Jalisco state.

They continued: “It’s spicy heading into the town. There were two roadblocks not the military, they’re not hiding, they’re out in force.

“The cartels are not just the guys on back of trucks, they’re also in the police and the military working directly for them.”

Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho,” was tracked and killed after intelligence agencies were able to follow one of his lovers to his secluded resort compound.

Officers found the woman was taken to Tapalpa, a mountainside getaway community in Jalisco where Oseguera and his men were located.

While the girlfriend eventually left the resort, El Mencho and his men remained holed up in the compound when the Mexican military deployed its special forces to take them out.

The post Terrifying way ultra rich Americans were smuggled out of cartel hell appeared first on New York Post.

Japan Is Redefining Its Place in the World
News

Japan Is Redefining Its Place in the World

by New York Times
February 26, 2026

Ever since its defeat in World War II, Japan’s place in the world has been shaped by a deliberate policy ...

Read more
News

Exclusive: Startup aiming to break Nvidia’s strangehold on AI data center workloads raises $10.25 million

February 26, 2026
News

Martin Short’s daughter ‘bonded’ with Nick Reiner when they played together as kids: Report

February 26, 2026
News

South Korea Fell Hard for This Dessert, but That Was So Last Month

February 26, 2026
News

Hilary Duff says she divorced when her son was 2 to show him you have to ‘fight for your happiness’

February 26, 2026
​Kim Jong-un Hints at Improving U.S. Relations — With Caveats

​Kim Jong-un Hints at Improving U.S. Relations — With Caveats

February 26, 2026
McKinsey studied 61 growth companies that outperformed their peers through COVID, inflation, and labor shocks. Here’s what they all had in common

McKinsey studied 61 growth companies that outperformed their peers through COVID, inflation, and labor shocks. Here’s what they all had in common

February 26, 2026
Matthew Lillard on ‘Scream 7,’ ‘Carrie,’ ‘Daredevil,’ and how a director’s snub led to ‘a beautiful moment’

Matthew Lillard on ‘Scream 7,’ ‘Carrie,’ ‘Daredevil,’ and how a director’s snub led to ‘a beautiful moment’

February 26, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026