24 drug cartel surveillance cameras discovered in the city of San Luis Río Colorado, on the border with Arizona

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Mexican authorities said on Friday, September 27th, they detected and seized 24 drug cartel surveillance cameras fixed to telephone and light posts in the border city of San Luis Rio Colorado.

The city on the border with Arizona has suffered years of violence between drug cartels fighting for control of the border crossing, where they can smuggle drugs.

Prosecutors in northern Sonora state said the cameras had been placed there by “falcons,” the name commonly used in Mexico for drug cartel lookouts seeking to keep tabs on the movements of soldiers and police.

Army troops removed the devices, which were found in three different neighborhoods. Photos suggested they were common porch-style cameras wrapped in duct tape, and some were even attached to palm trees.

San Luis Rio Colorado, located across from Yuma, Arizona, is best known as a border town where Americans go for inexpensive prescriptions and dental work. But it has increasingly been hit by drug cartel violence.

It is not the first border city where cartels have installed their own surveillance networks.

In 2015, a drug cartel in the northern state of Tamaulipas used at least 39 surveillance cameras to monitor the comings and goings of authorities in the city of Reynosa across the border from McAllen, Texas.

The cameras were powered by electric lines above the city streets and accessed the internet through phone cables along the same poles, They included modems and were capable of operating wirelessly or through commercial providers’ lines.

Several of the cameras were trained on an army base, while others captured movement outside a marine post, offices of the attorney general and state police as well as shopping centers, major thoroughfares, and some neighborhoods.

Back in 2015, authorities also discovered 55 radio communication antennas between the nearby border cities of Matamoros and Miguel Aleman.

Source: Tribuna de San Luis

The Sonora Post