‘Cartel enforcer' sentenced in San Diego to 28 years behind bars
SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — A man accused of acting as a cartel enforcer who admitted to ordering the killing of a Tijuana police officer and dozens of others was sentenced in a San Diego federal court on Friday to 28 years behind bars on drug trafficking charges.
Edgar Herrera Pardo — also known as 'Caiman' — was indicted back in 2019 on a slew of federal charges tied to his alleged role as a leader of the group Los Cabos, a Baja California-based branch of the cartel Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG).
CJNG was one of the eight cartels and transnational organizations designated as a foreign terrorist organization by the Trump administration earlier this year.
Border Patrol finds 13lbs of meth plastic wrapped to man at San Diego checkpoint
According to prosecutors with the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of California, Los Cabos was involved in a 'campaign of violence' in the Mexican state, abducting and killing purported enemies of CJNG to maintain their drug trafficking channels through Tijuana.
Herrera Pardo, 35, pleaded guilty as part of an agreement with prosecutors to two felony drug trafficking conspiracy charges for his role in the scheme, which involved directing or threatening violence against a number of people in the Baja California region, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.
As part of the agreement, he admitted to roles in a number of deaths between September 2018 to November 2018, including a Tijuana police officer, cartel rivals who had provided information to law enforcement and former members of CJNG who had joined other cartels.
According to prosecutors, a group chat of Los Cabos led by Herrera Pardo discussed 'well over' 100 murders.
Prison officials search for man who fled San Diego County reentry program
Herrera Pardo was arrested and extradited to the U.S. in 2023, court records show. The U.S. Attorney's Office says the Department of Justice's Office of International Affairs assisted in the arrest and extradition process.
'This cartel sicario ordered brutal killings to instill terror and crush opposition,' interim U.S. Attorney Adam Gordon said in a release. 'The cartel he served earned its designation as a foreign terrorist organization for a reason: its reach and ruthlessness rivaled that of any terror group. But today, his reign of terror has come to an end.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
FDNY chaplain's signature forged on letter backing Queens pot dispensary
They'll burn for this one! The owners of a legal Queens marijuana dispensary are under fire for allegedly trying to dupe government officials to back their expansion efforts — by claiming the FDNY's top religious leader is high on the plan. A recently circulated letter supporting Astoria-based Terp Bros' application to open a second dispensary in Ozone Park that was 'purportedly authored and signed' by FDNY Chaplain Msgr. Jamie Gigantiello, 'appears to be a forgery,' warned FDNY Deputy Commissioner of General Counsel Don Nguyen in a June 5 letter to Queens Community Board 10. Advertisement The FDNY has 'no position' in general on applications to run cannabis dispensaries in the Big Apple, he added in the letter, obtained by The Post. 3 FDNY Chaplain Msgr. Jamie Gigantiello told The Post he wasn't aware of the letter. Stefano Giovannini The bogus letter addressed to 'legislators, Community Boards and the NYS Office of Cannabis Management' claimed Gigantiello is pushing Terp Bros' plan because 'safe use of Hemp and other Cannabis plants is long overdue.' Advertisement 'We must help those like Terp Bros gain the opportunity to continue working with the community in providing them with a safe, legal way to purchase cannabis and cannabis-related products,' the faux holy man wrote. Terp Bros' co-owners Jeremy Rivera and Alessandro Cottone opened their pot shop at 3610 Ditmars Blvd. in October 2023. In April, Time Out magazine ranked it New York's ninth best weed dispensary out the state's 405 licensed cannabis shops. The letter tries to portray Rivera — an ex-con who spent 11 years in jail for criminal possession of controlled substances and robbery — as a sympathetic figure. 3 Jeremy Rivera and Alessandro Cottone opened their Astoria pot shop in October 2023 and earlier this year, Time Out magazine ranked it New York's ninth best weed dispensary out the state's 405 licensed cannabis shops. Kyle Stevens/Shutterstock Advertisement He, 'his family, and many others like him have paid a great price caused by wrongful and failed policy targeting minorities and the failed war on drugs as it pertains to hemp and other cannabis,' it reads. Gigantiello insisted to The Post he didn't write or authorize the letter — and never even heard of the weed joint until learning of the letter. 'I had no idea. Someone shouldn't be using using my name in any form,' added the monsignor, who made headlines two years after being relieved of his administrative duties for allowing pop star Sabrina Carpenter to film a racy music video inside Our Lady of Mt. Carmel-Annunciation Parish in Williamsburg. 3 Owners of the popular shop didn't respond to messages seeking comment. Helayne Seidman Advertisement The board rejected the pot shop's application in January — and said it didn't get the letter until only a few weeks ago. Board members showed the letter to NYC Council Minority Leader Joann Ariola (R-Queens), who alerted the Fire Department. 'It's very telling that someone would fake a letter from a monsignor because they couldn't deal with the results of a community board vote,' Ariola said. 'If they didn't like the way the board voted, I get it, but forging a letter from an FDNY chaplain is the absolute worst way to try and change their opinion.' The state's Office of Cannabis Management will ultimately decide whether to approve the plan. Messages left for Terp Bros' owners were not returned.


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
NYPD to contract Israeli firm to search deep web for bomb makers
The NYPD is preparing to partner with an Israeli company to scour the deep web for terrorists who want to make bombs, other explosive devices and chemical weapons, according to an official notice online. The two-year, $567,000 deal with Tel Aviv-based Terrogence Global will cover the purchase of 'Explosive Tradecraft Intelligence Reporting Services' that will look for and analyze online conversations in multiple languages, according to the notice seeking public comment. The comment stage is a precursor to a deal. The company provides a tool for searching for online discussions on IEDs (Improvised Explosive Devices), bombs and chemical weapons, a police source said. Advertisement 3 The NYPD is entering a contract with a company that will help scour the Internet for threats. AFP via Getty Images On its website, Terrogence says its 'analysts utilize multiple virtual agents (Avatars) to gather information' from the Internet. They agents also 'proactively engage potential threat actors on social media, instant messaging and the Deep Web, and provide the relevant context to mitigate threats,' according to the website. The three-year contract would go into effect Sept. 15 with options to renew through 2033, according to the notice seeking public comment. Advertisement The move to bolster the detection of bad actors online comes as arsonists torched at least 11 marked NYPD vehicles in a Brooklyn parking lot Thursday. Investigators found undetonated explosive devices in the area after two masked suspects were seen running away, police and sources said. 3 The company will search clandestine spaces on the web, according to its website. Gorodenkoff – 3 Shai Arbel is chief executive officer at Terrogence Global, the company that's set to get the NYPD contract. linkedin/in/shai-arbel-7a430b6 The NYPD has been ramping up its tech abilities recently overall. Advertisement Last year the department inked an $383,744 contract to purchase a drone-tracking system. The stationary system uses radio frequencies, cameras and radar to id and follow drones, according to the contract.

Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Man sentenced to 23 years in prison in Mexico-to-Pittsburgh drug operation
An Allegheny County man has been sentenced to 23 years in prison and five years of supervised release for his role in a large-scale drug scheme that funneled drugs into Pittsburgh from Mexico a decade ago. Andrew Beatty, 41, formerly of Crafton, was sentenced on charges of conspiracy to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine and a kilogram or more of heroin, as well as conspiracy to launder drug trafficking proceeds, Acting U.S. Attorney Troy Rivetti said. Investigators said wiretaps were used to connect Beatty to the operation. 'Beatty communicated directly with sources of supply based in Mexico who arranged for associates in California to hide heroin and cocaine inside vehicles that were then shipped to Pittsburgh (and several other cities) via commercial car carriers,' the U.S. Attorney's Office wrote in a media release. DEA agents arranged for the Ohio Highway Patrol to conduct a traffic stop in December 2013 of a car-carrier truck that was carrying a car Beatty shipped to a Mexican organization. And in 2014, investigators found a cache of hidden drugs inside a vehicle the same group left for Beatty to retrieve, prosecutors said.