In the 1985 Camorella incident, he was subjected to inhuman torture for 30 hours while forced to be

Mondo Sports Updated on 2024-02-26

In the 80s, the drug trade was more rampant than ever, especially in Mexico. Due to Mexico's inaction and connivance, Mexico has become the stronghold of drug lords, and the war against drugs has become extremely difficult.

In order to solve the drug problem, the United States established the DEA to specifically combat the drug trade. In Mexico, however, DEA agents are in a difficult situation. Although they sent multiple agents to investigate, they were never able to get useful information due to the cunning of the drug lords.

It wasn't until the arrival of Camorella that things took a turn. He obtains important evidence that inflicts heavy damage on the drug lords, but it also provokes the drug lords' frenzied revenge.

Later, Camorella was kidnapped on the streets of Mexico and his whereabouts have not been known since. The abduction and disappearance of American agents in Mexico is an open provocation by drug lords against the United States**, which caused a huge shock on the American side.

Camorella: Who is to blame behind the burning of ** plantations in Mexico? Mexico has always been a haven for drug lords due to its unique geographical location.

In the 80s of the 20th century, a group of ** growers migrated to Guadalajara and formed a drug trafficking group led by Ernesto Fonseca and Carlo Quintero, which became the largest drug trafficking organization in Mexico.

However, the arrogance of these drug lords is not accidental, and shops, hotels, restaurants and other places are controlled by them. They travel in luxury cars and are even protected by armed forces. Mexico acquiesced to their presence, and no one even dared to mess with them.

In the United States, due to the harm of drugs, the DEA was established to crack down on drug trafficking, only to find that a large amount of drugs came from Mexico. In order to cut off the flow of drugs at the source, the United States sent agents to set up a substation in Mexico.

However, their investigation in Mexico has been difficult.

When the DEA (United States Drug Enforcement Administration) cracked down on drug crimes, it found that there was a collusion of interests between Mexico and drug lords, and even some ** personnel helped drug lords escape from pursuit.

Although DEA will carry out raids after obtaining local approval, the drug lords have already transferred drugs to other places, and DEA can often only collect a small amount of drugs, which seems to have become a kind of "war record" left by drug lords to DEA.

Not only Mexico's *** Federal Secrecy Service (a secret police unit under the CIA) has also been infiltrated by drug lords. The ** of the Federal Secret Service are all elites who have been rigorously selected.

Kiki Camorella, a former U.S. Navy veteran, resolutely applied for a transfer to the Mexican bureau in order to fight drug traffickers. There, he witnessed first-hand the rampant drug trade in Mexico and deeply felt the pain of the Mexican people who were deeply affected by drugs.

He joined the DEA and vowed to do his part in the fight against drug traffickers. Camorella was a persistent man, and as soon as he arrived in Guadalajara, he immediately began his investigation. However, DEA is faintly aware of the collusion between Mexico and drug lords, and Camorella's investigation can only become more hidden.

His actions were to protect the Mexican people from drugs.

Camorella is an informant expert who focuses on combating drug trafficking. He delved into the Guadalajara drug cartel and gathered intelligence to understand its inner workings.

In order to obtain authentic and reliable information, he even ventured into the drug cartel and became an undercover agent. His hard work finally paid off, and he gained vital information about a huge poppy plantation.

He reported the news to the Mexican Drug Enforcement Agency and the consulate and hoped they could take action. However, they repeatedly shirked his pleas on the grounds that they had not seen the evidence.

Faced with this situation, Camorella decided to find the evidence himself. He contacted the Mexican pilot, Alfredo Zavala Ávila, and the two took several aerial shots of the plantation in a surveillance plane.

Despite the difficulties, Camorella's determination and courage allowed him to successfully uncover the secret base of this drug cartel.

Mexico can no longer make excuses for the fact that the plantations in Mexico are burned. They immediately sent troops and succeeded in destroying the poppy fields that brought more than $8 billion a year to the Guadalahaha drug cartel, dealing a heavy economic blow to the drug traffickers.

However, the drug dealers were not reconciled, as evidenced by the subsequent development of this incident. After learning of the destruction of the plantation, Camorella was kidnapped, and Ernesto Fonseca and his men urgently discussed countermeasures in their living room.

Rafael Carlo Quintero was very angry about this, because he had previously paid that part of the profits to Miguel de la Madrid, Mexico. And now, the plantation has been destroyed, which is equivalent to his money being spent in vain, and the business has been cut off.

The top brass of the Guadalajara drug cartel gave the drug profits to Mexico*** in order to obtain the protection. However, Camorella's actions upset this balance and made the drug lords begin to suspect **'s intentions.

Before that, the US Drug Enforcement Administration had cracked down on them and confiscated their money, which made their nerves highly strained. The destruction of the plantation also exacerbated this tension, and the drug lords held a grudge against it.

After the destruction of the plantation, the drug lords, on the one hand, were uneasy, and on the other hand, they also had thoughts of revenge, treating all Americans as representatives of the Drug Enforcement Administration. Two months before the Camorella kidnapping, the whole of Guadalajara was enveloped in an atmosphere of fear.

Seven Americans have gone missing since the plantation was destroyed, including two couples who were openly kidnapped in the bountiful suburbs. At the time, newspapers reported on it, calling it a mysterious event: the Americans disappeared without a trace.

Seven Americans were taken away by drug dealers, who brutally interrogated them, and their relationship with the DEA was questioned. Drug dealers have gone mad, and they are frantically retaliating against the US Drug Enforcement Administration, suspecting that every American is related to it.

In this tense atmosphere, the Drug Enforcement Administration decided to retire Camorella and issued a transfer order to return him to the United States. Camorella had planned to leave Mexico with his family in two weeks, but the drug traffickers moved faster.

On the day of the kidnapping, the drug dealers had already planned and divided into three teams to carry out the operation, with a total of six or seven vehicles, each with four or five people on board, all carrying AK-47s and fully equipped.

Among them, Samuel's group is responsible for kidnapping Camorella.

The drug dealer parked his car a block or two away from the U.S. Consulate and kept a close monitor around the consulate after getting out of the car. Camorella and Mika made an appointment to have lunch together, and as soon as he came out of the consulate, he was targeted.

One of the drug dealers saw him, confirmed his identity and immediately walked towards him. Camorella was walking on the sidewalk, and the drug dealer walked up to him, claiming to be from the Federal Secret Service, and the commander wanted to see him.

At the same time, the drug dealer showed his documents, much to the surprise of Camorella. Although Camorella was calm, the drug dealer immediately pulled out a gun and threatened him not to resist or he would be dealt with on the spot.

Camorella could only give up resistance, was taken away by drug dealers, and sat in the back seat of the car. In order to prevent others from seeing, the drug dealer also had a jacket over Camorela's head.

Camorella didn't know anything about it, he didn't know what kind of torture awaited him.

In Lope de Vega's house, Camorella was interrogated by authorities, politicians and drug lords. When he was taken to this makeshift interrogation room, he was tightly bandaged by the drug dealers and blindfolded.

Despite being in a hut for a servant, Camorella was constantly tortured and interrogated by a group of men. The men beat him hard and asked him about the plantation.

Despite the fact that these people did not have the right to decide, Camorella insisted on seeing Carlo Quintero.

Carlo rushed into the interrogation room and, as soon as he entered, grabbed Camorella by the hair and pushed him to the ground. Camorella has destroyed plantations, and the damage has already exceeded hundreds of millions of dollars.

Carlo has been haunted by this matter, and he constantly vents his frustration with his fists on Camorella. In addition, Carlo suspects that Camorella has evidence of collusion with drug dealers.

So, he slammed his foot on Camorella's chest and tortured him, hoping to get some clues. However, Camorella kept her lips closed and didn't say a word.

Angry that he couldn't get the information he needed from Camorella, Carlo threw his fist and knocked him unconscious. Soon after, Camorella was regained consciousness, and they stripped him of his clothes until he was reduced to a single **, tying him to a stool with a rope.

Next, Camorella was beaten by various people and even burned by cigarette butts. He was kicked in the chest several times, and someone sprinkled gunpowder on his face and lit it as a torture.

These people used all kinds of evil methods to devastate Camorella.

Camorella was brutally tortured, his jaw was broken, his teeth were knocked out, his ribs were broken, and even his skull was cracked. Not only that, but he also suffered from **.

Almost all the bones in his body were shattered during the interrogation, and there was not a good ** on his body. According to the autopsy report, Camorella has undergone various tortures to the point of skinning and dismantling bones.

These people kept asking him about what he knew about the CIA, its relationship with drug trafficking, and the relationship between Mexico**, the CIA and drug lords. Camorella had been unclear about these questions, but the interrogators were clearly not convinced.

The interrogators did not get the results they wanted, so they continued to intensify the torture, causing Camorella to fall into a coma several times, and then to be awakened, and almost on the verge of a mental breakdown.

After being tortured for a while, Fonseca called in a doctor to give him Camorella**. However, Carlo only wants to better interrogate and torture Camorella, believing that Camorella's coma will affect the progress of the interrogation.

He then asked the doctor if he could keep Camorella awake during the interrogation. The doctor gave a definite answer.

Amphetamine has been detected in Camorella's body, and human tolerance is limited, but doctors' drugs can break through this limitation. Carlo ordered that when Camorella was close to his limit, doctors would inject him with the stimulant amphetamine to ensure that he was interrogated while he was awake.

After 36 hours of torture, Camorella's life force was almost exhausted. For him, death could be a relief, and after the kidnapping, death has become his only fate.

Carlo instructs the people to end his life, and Camorella's head is smashed by a steel bar. By this time, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration had discovered that Camorella was missing, blocked checkpoints across Mexico, and began to search everywhere, but found nothing.

Two hours after Camorella's kidnapping, the pilot he hired was also kidnapped and was similarly brutally tortured.

After Camorella's death, Fonseca learned of the bad news and hurriedly began to flee. The drug dealers hid Camorella's body in the Primavera forest, and the pilot's body was buried alive.

The disappearance of Camorella has attracted widespread attention, and Mexico** has to consider Carlo as a major suspect. Carlo began a career on the run, but Mexico** was helpless, and neither the United States nor the drug cartels were willing to clash with him.

Carlo openly fled from Guadalajara Airport, but the commander claimed that it was a friend of the Federal Secrecy Service. After 28 days of searching, Camorella's body was finally found and sent to the United States to be treated for a state funeral.

Camorella's death and the mistreatment on her body caused a lot of concern in the United States, and Time magazine also reported on it, causing outrage among the American people.

The U.S. side is very concerned about the cause of Camorella's death and suspects that Mexico was also involved. To this end, the US Drug Enforcement Administration launched an investigation called "Operation Legend", which officially began an in-depth investigation into the Camorella case.

Although Camorella has returned home under American escort, his drug lord has not escaped the pursuit of the United States. The United States, outraged by Mexico's incompetence and weakness, offered a reward for the capture of the drug traffickers in Guadalajara.

High-level drug dealers such as Carlo, Samuel, and Fonseca were arrested, and Guzmán, the "Shorty", became the leader of a new drug cartel. Since then, these drug dealers have reached a consensus that Americans cannot touch, and Camorella has become the protector of the American anti-narcotics police.

Although there are many doubts about Camorella's kidnapping, we cannot ignore the shadow of the CIA and the Federal Secret Service behind it. His ** is also an order from the American side, who believe that Camorella is about to expose their transgressions.

Camorella, a hero who gave his life for the cause of anti-narcotics, ended up dying at the behest of his own country. Drugs have ruined the happy lives of countless families, and we should resolutely resist it.

The blood of heroes will not be shed in vain, and although it is a dark night, the dawn will finally come. The references are rigorous and thought-provoking. The long-standing collusion of the United States anti-narcotics agency with the Mexican drug cartels must be condemned.

Corruption in Mexico is slowing down the war on drugs, and we should support the forces of justice. It is immoral for a hero to die because of the fight against drugs, while his homeland is promoting ** legalization.

In general, we should respect heroes, support justice, resist drugs, and work for a better world.

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