Anonymous ID: 2ce9ea Aug. 31, 2020, 12:23 a.m. No.10480564   šŸ—„ļø.is šŸ”—kun   >>0569 >>0573 >>0763 >>0895 >>1110

Special Report: Drug cartel ā€˜narco-antennasā€™ make life dangerous for Mexicoā€™s cell tower repairmen

 

-----ā€”

Within 10 minutes, he had company: three armed men dressed in fatigues emblazoned with the logo of a major drug cartel.

 

The traffickers had a particular interest in that tower, owned by Boston-based American Tower Corp (AMT.N), which rents space to carriers on its thousands of cellular sites in Mexico. The cartel had installed its own antennas on the structure to support their two-way radios, but the contractor had unwittingly blacked out the shadowy network.

 

The visitors let him off with a warning.

 

ā€œI was so nervousā€¦ Seeing them armed in front of you, you donā€™t know how to react,ā€ the worker told Reuters, recalling the 2018 encounter. ā€œLittle by little, you learn how to coexist with them, how to address them, how to make them see that you donā€™t represent a threat.ā€

 

The contractor had disrupted a small link in a vast criminal network that spans much of Mexico. In addition to high-end encrypted cell phones and popular messaging apps, traffickers still rely heavily on two-way radios like the ones police and firefighters use to coordinate their teams on the ground, six law enforcement experts on both sides of the border told Reuters.

 

Traffickers often erect their own radio antennas in rural areas. They also install so-called parasite antennas on existing cell towers, layering their criminal communications network on top of the official one. By piggybacking on telecom companiesā€™ infrastructure, cartels save money and evade detection since their own towers are more easily spotted and torn down, law enforcement experts said.

---------ā€”-

 

s/b no surprise, can hear some of their tacticals 25.4-26.9 usb or amā€¦and some 27400-29000 usb. pretending to be taxi service. radio doesn't care about borders.