💥 Blood on the tiles. Bullet casings in the driveway. And a cartel kingpin living like royalty in the mountains. When Mexican special forces stormed a luxury cabin compound in Tapalpa, they uncovered what investigators say was one of the last hideouts of Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes — better known as “El Mencho.” The fugitive leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel had reportedly been hiding in a secluded hillside retreat near a country club — upscale cabins surrounded by pine trees, built for privacy and protection. After the raid: shattered glass, spent shell casings, and signs of a fierce gun battle. How did one of Mexico’s most wanted men manage to live in plain sight? What did authorities find inside the compound? And how close were they to capturing him? Inside the cartel boss’s final known hideout — full story below 👇

Inside El Mencho’s last hideout: Blood, bullets and a cartel boss’ life of luxury

A sculpture of a horse trampling a dragon.

A sculpture of a horse trampling a dragon sits at the top of the Cabañas La Loma complex in Tapalpa, Mexico.

 

The aftermath of a Mexican special forces raid offered a window into the life of a fugitive drug kingpin.
The Times gained access to a hideout used by ‘El Mencho,’ the fugitive leader of the Jalisco New Generation cartel.
The compound of upscale cabins was littered with spent shell casings, broken glass and other signs of a gun battle.

The most wanted man in Mexico was hiding out next to a country club.

When Mexican special forces soldiers attacked the hideout of Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes — the cartel boss known as “El Mencho” — they descended on his luxurious compound in the mountains outside Guadalajara.

A cluster of upscale cabins situated on a steep hillside dotted with pine trees, the location offered seclusion and ensured that Oseguera’s security detail would be able to see any approaching visitors coming from miles away.

🚨 Just as the world prepared to close the book on the CJNG’s leader, a mother’s voice has reopened the case. Mexican authorities reportedly handed over the remains of El Mencho to his family, only for his mother to stall the funeral with a stunning claim: the man in the box is a double.  Forensic experts are now facing a crisis of credibility. Was the “final raid” a carefully choreographed play to let a dying man vanish for good? If he’s still out there, the hunt hasn’t ended—it’s just become much more dangerous. 🛡️👣  IS HE STILL ALIVE? See the leaked “sighting” reports and the mystery of the body double in the comments below. 👇
When El Mencho fell, headlines declared the end of a kingpin. But what if the real power was never just his?  After the death of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, leader of the Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación, attention turned to gun battles, turf wars, and who would grab control next.  But behind the violence was another figure: his wife, Rosalinda González Valencia, often called “La Jefa.”  Authorities have alleged she helped oversee businesses, property, and financial networks tied to the cartel’s money flow — the economic engine that keeps an empire alive long after the gunfire fades.  Because cartels aren’t sustained by bullets alone. They’re sustained by money. By family ties. By quiet governance behind the scenes.  So when a kingpin dies, does the empire really fall? Or does the real power simply shift out of sight?
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