A Mexican drug cartel known for gruesome public slaughtering drained $40 million from Americans and stole many elderly victims’ life savings without a drop of blood in 2022, according to FBI stats.
It’s part of a rapidly evolving timeshare scam run by the Jalisco New Generation cartel (CJNG) that is becoming more intricate and is now estimated to be stealing hundreds of millions from Americans each year.
According to the U.S. Treasury, it started as a small operation in the Puerto Vallarta area and expanded to popular tourist spots like Cancun. In April, the Treasury issued sanctions against seven fugitives and 19 Mexican companies connected to the scam.
“CJNG uses extreme violence and intimidation to control the timeshare network, which often targets elder U.S. citizens and can defraud victims of their life savings,” Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen said in November. “The Treasury remains committed to the Administration’s whole-of-government effort, in coordination with our partners in Mexico, to disrupt CJNG’s revenue sources and ability to traffic deadly drugs like fentanyl.”
The Courier Journal followed a decade-long journey through the cartel’s layered scheme that cost one man just shy of $1.8 million.
The initial lure was a healthy profit from his timeshare. After years of being scammed, the cartel came back with promises of reimbursement from a seemingly legitimate Mexican lawyer filing a class action lawsuit that kept the man hooked.
The callers, whom the news report noted spoke perfect, accent-free English, continued their ceaseless pursuit for decades, with years-long stretches of silence.
By the end of the situation involving just this one victim, there were 99 wire transfers, more than 150 people involved and at least 12 Mexican bank accounts, according to the Courier Journal.
“It’s almost like an addiction,” said Stephen, who asked the Louisville newspaper to only identify him by his first name because he didn’t want his employer to know. “I kept thinking the next person was going to help me get out of it.”
The FBI said in a March 2023 warning that owners of timeshares in Mexico are being targeted at an alarming rate.
In 2022, the bureau received over 600 complaints with losses of about $39.6 million in 2022 from victims contacted by scammers in Mexico.
The FBI did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment and updated information.
“The sales representatives often use high-pressure sales tactics to add a sense of urgency to the deal,” the FBI said. “Timeshare owners who agree to sell are told they must pay an upfront fee to cover anything from listing and advertising fees to closing costs.
“Once the fee is paid, timeshare owners report the company becomes evasive – calls go unanswered, numbers are disconnected, and websites are inaccessible, or the company creates additional fees that victims are required to pay before the real estate transaction becomes final.”
Years go by, and some victims – like in Stephen’s case, which was detailed in the Courier Journal’s report – the scammers act like they are from bogus recovery companies or lawyers dangling promises of restitution.
A month after the FBI’s warning – on April 27, 2023 – the U.S. Treasury levied its first of three sanctions in a seven-month span as part of a federal crackdown on the cartel’s scam.
Last November, the treasury hit the cartel’s fraud network for the third time, with a fresh set of sanctions against three Mexican criminals and 13 Mexican companies, bringing the total to 40.
The sanctions froze assets that are in the U.S. and banned American citizens and businesses from dealing with any of the listed companies and fugitives.
Many of the sanctions’ targets are located in Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, which is one of CJNG’s strategic strongholds for drug trafficking.
“The CJNG cartel, a leading trafficker of narcotics like illicit fentanyl into the United States, generates substantial revenue for its multi-faceted criminal enterprise through its timeshare fraud network,” Yellen said in a November 2023 statement.
The cartel’s lucrative criminal enterprise that rivals the drug trade doesn’t come without bloodshed to Mexican citizens.
Hacked-up body parts of at least eight Mexican workers, who were all under 30 and tried to quit jobs at an illegal call center, were found in plastic bags in June 2023, The Associated Press reported.
“Best guess is these kids had decided they wanted out of the business,” a U.S. official told AP under the condition of anonymity, adding the cartel was “sending a message to other defectors.”
“It appears this has happened before,” the official added.
On Dec. 29, 2023, Mexican law enforcement and the Mexican Army dismantled illegal internet antennas in Buenavista, according to the attorney general of the Mexican state of Michoacán.
“Illegal internet antennas were disabled, used by a criminal cell for commercial purposes, under threats and excessive costs to the population,” the Mexican Attorney General’s Office said in a translated Facebook post.
“During the incident, a person allegedly connected to the crimes was arrested.”
But that’s virtually nothing to the far-reaching operation that’s grown in size, complexity and intricacy since 2010.
The Courier Journal reporter, Scott Fisher, talked about the cartel scams during a March 13 podcast called “The Excerpt.”
“According to U.S. government officials that I spoke to, we’re talking about hundreds of millions of dollars every single year,” Fisher said.
He gave a brief history of the scam, which he said started as a new criminal business venture in 2010, when someone connected to the cartel pitched this idea.
“Being a cartel that is very agile, (the cartel) said, ‘Absolutely.’ And they took over call center after call center, forcing these individuals to work for them. And not only do that, but teach them how to do this and how to do it better and better,” Fisher said.
The scheme itself is “shockingly sophisticated,” according to the reporter, who’s part of the USA Today Network.
“I mean, we’re talking about individuals, they hire people who speak perfect English in these call centers and they provide what appear to be very legitimate documents,” he said on the podcast. “And these scams can develop incredible ways.
“First, as I mentioned, it can start out with these fees that are required by say the Mexican government, capital gains fees. All of this is in the tens of thousands often, and it just keeps going, but you can have your money as soon as you pay. And that is what keeps them on the hook.”
And they stay off Mexican and U.S. law enforcement’s radar by constantly dropping and creating new shell companies, he said.
According to Fisher, the stigma of reporting the scam and admitting to being duped also exists, which likely means the reported number of cases is just a fraction of the whole operation.
The U.S. government – as outlined by the FBI bulletin and the sanctions imposed by the federal Treasury – are aware of the scam, which Fisher said mostly targets older Americans, and are “following the money.”
But the cartel seems to always be a step ahead.
In Mexico, “little seems to be done,” Fisher said. “I was told that Mexican banks could do much more to flag these suspect payments that are made to these accounts, to these fraudulent shell companies.
“And in Mexico, there seems to be little motivation to put significant resources toward stopping this scamming of American citizens.”
What Fisher described is in line with Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and his administration’s policy to either deny or downplay cartel violence and criminal activity.
He omitted any reference to drugs, crime or the cartels during his September 2023 State of the Union address.
Then, after publishing a story in February about an investigation into alleged connections with the cartels, he went after a New York Times reporter, revealing her contact details, including her telephone number.
In April 2023, Obrador criticized the U.S. for investigating the Sinaloa Cartel, calling it “abusive, arrogant interference that should not be accepted under any circumstances,” according to a report by the America First Policy Institute (AFPI).
He also said last March that his government was “not going to permit any foreign government to intervene in our territory, much less that a government’s armed forces intervene,” Al Jazeera reported.
Obrador’s office could not immediately be reached for comment.
In the FBI’s March 2023 bulletin, the bureau released four safety tips to protect yourself and then what to do if you’ve been victimized:
- Be cautious of uninvited telephone calls, texts or emails from anyone interested in your timeshare.
- Research all entities you are in contact with, contact offices independently to confirm if you are speaking to a representative of their company, and enlist the help of a real estate agent or lawyer you trust.
- Scammers will use tactics such as pressure and time-sensitive offers.
- Know that when opportunities appear “too good to be true,” they often are.
If you or anyone you know has fallen victim to a timeshare related scam, file a complaint with the Internet Crime Complaint Center at ic3.gov. Be sure to include any available information including:
- Emails, phone numbers, domains, company names.
- Transaction information even if no funds were lost.
- Details regarding the interaction with the scammers.