Narco-Influencers: Mexico's Corrupted Landscape. episode artwork

EPISODE · Sep 25, 2025 · 14 MIN

Narco-Influencers: Mexico's Corrupted Landscape.

from Cybermidnight Club– Hackers, Cyber Security and Cyber Crime · host Alberto Daniel Hill

The rise of the narco-influencer in Mexico marks a strategic evolution in cartel operations, shifting from traditional propaganda like narcocorridos (drug ballads) to sophisticated, digital "narco-marketing". This phenomenon is rooted in narcocultura, which grew in areas where poverty and state neglect positioned traffickers as anti-heroes.Digital Tactics and Lethal ConsequencesSocial media platforms, especially TikTok, function as an "algorithmic amplifier" that normalizes the criminal lifestyle, presenting it as an accessible and aspirational career path for youth. Cartels flood platforms with content showcasing luxury cars, high-value assets, and exotic pets like tigers.To bypass content moderation, cartels use a sophisticated digital vernacular, including coded communication with emojis. Examples include the rooster emoji (🐓) for the CJNG leader "El Mencho" and the pizza emoji (🍕) for "Chapizza," referencing the sons of "El Chapo" Guzmán, known as "Los Chapitos". Los Chapitos exemplify "narcojuniors" who deliberately use their online presence to flaunt inherited power, contrasting with the secrecy of older leaders.This digital strategy fuels recruitment funnels. Job advertisements are disguised as legitimate roles like "security personnel". The recruitment net extends into online video game chats (e.g., Free Fire, Fortnite), targeting minors. By 2021, an estimated 30,000 teenagers had been recruited by cartels.Platforms are also vital for psychological warfare (posting gruesome interrogation videos) and public relations campaigns (distributing aid after disasters) to cultivate a "Robin Hood" image and challenge state legitimacy.Operating in this space carries fatal risk:• Valeria Marquez, a beauty influencer, was murdered during a TikTok livestream in May 2025. U.S. sanctions named her alleged romantic partner, CJNG commander Ricardo Ruiz Velasco ("El Doble R"), as the prime suspect.• The narco-influencer Camilo Choa was killed after a hacker was contracted by "El Mayo" Zambada to locate him in a private subdivision. The location was confirmed after his wife opened a malicious link. This highlights the use of digital tools for targeted homicide.Systemic Political CorruptionThis cartel influence is underpinned by deep-seated corruption and complicity within Mexico's political structure. The sources identify politicians from nearly all major parties—including Morena, PRI, PRD, and the Green Ecologist Party—linked to cartels like CJNG, the Gulf Cartel, Los Zetas, and Beltrán Leiva. These "narcopolíticos" occupy high-level posts, including governors, federal deputies who approve laws, and supreme tribunal justices.This complicity allows cartels to operate freely, move armed personnel across state lines (by telling police/military to "rest"), and engage in a form of "competitive governance," solidifying control where the state fails to deliver justice or welfare. The overall system is described as a "narcoestado" where the political structure is "trash".Ineffective ResponsesThe response from official entities has been misaligned.• Government Strategies: The government has oscillated between non-confrontational strategies ("hugs, not bullets") and the revived "kingpin" strategy, which has historically caused cartels to fragment and violence to escalate.• Corporate Moderation: Platform policies are systemically incapable of containing the adaptive, coded nature of the propaganda, forcing a game of "whack-a-mole".• Impunity: The violence is enabled by extreme impunity; the homicide conviction rate is estimated to be as low as 1%. This lack of consequence ensures that violence remains a primary tool of control. The corruption extends to the media, with press often being compromised ("narcotelevisión").For marginalized youth facing poverty and inequality, the narco-influencer remains a potent, though perilous, symbol of upward mobility and respect, fueling the system's perpetuation.

The rise of the narco-influencer in Mexico marks a strategic evolution in cartel operations, shifting from traditional propaganda like narcocorridos (drug ballads) to sophisticated, digital "narco-marketing". This phenomenon is rooted in narcocultura, which grew in areas where poverty and state neglect positioned traffickers as anti-heroes.Digital Tactics and Lethal ConsequencesSocial media platforms, especially TikTok, function as an "algorithmic amplifier" that normalizes the criminal lifestyle, presenting it as an accessible and aspirational career path for youth. Cartels flood platforms with content showcasing luxury cars, high-value assets, and exotic pets like tigers.To bypass content moderation, cartels use a sophisticated digital vernacular, including coded communication with emojis. Examples include the rooster emoji (🐓) for the CJNG leader "El Mencho" and the pizza emoji (🍕) for "Chapizza," referencing the sons of "El Chapo" Guzmán, known as "Los Chapitos". Los Chapitos exemplify "narcojuniors" who deliberately use their online presence to flaunt inherited power, contrasting with the secrecy of older leaders.This digital strategy fuels recruitment funnels. Job advertisements are disguised as legitimate roles like "security personnel". The recruitment net extends into online video game chats (e.g., Free Fire, Fortnite), targeting minors. By 2021, an estimated 30,000 teenagers had been recruited by cartels.Platforms are also vital for psychological warfare (posting gruesome interrogation videos) and public relations campaigns (distributing aid after disasters) to cultivate a "Robin Hood" image and challenge state legitimacy.Operating in this space carries fatal risk:• Valeria Marquez, a beauty influencer, was murdered during a TikTok livestream in May 2025. U.S. sanctions named her alleged romantic partner, CJNG commander Ricardo Ruiz Velasco ("El Doble R"), as the prime suspect.• The narco-influencer Camilo Choa was killed after a hacker was contracted by "El Mayo" Zambada to locate him in a private subdivision. The location was confirmed after his wife opened a malicious link. This highlights the use of digital tools for targeted homicide.Systemic Political CorruptionThis cartel influence is underpinned by deep-seated corruption and complicity within Mexico's political structure. The sources identify politicians from nearly all major parties—including Morena, PRI, PRD, and the Green Ecologist Party—linked to cartels like CJNG, the Gulf Cartel, Los Zetas, and Beltrán Leiva. These "narcopolíticos" occupy high-level posts, including governors, federal deputies who approve laws, and supreme tribunal justices.This complicity allows cartels to operate freely, move armed personnel across state lines (by telling police/military to "rest"), and engage in a form of "competitive governance," solidifying control where the state fails to deliver justice or welfare. The overall system is described as a "narcoestado" where the political structure is "trash".Ineffective ResponsesThe response from official entities has been misaligned.• Government Strategies: The government has oscillated between non-confrontational strategies ("hugs, not bullets") and the revived "kingpin" strategy, which has historically caused cartels to fragment and violence to escalate.• Corporate Moderation: Platform policies are systemically incapable of containing the adaptive, coded nature of the propaganda, forcing a game of "whack-a-mole".• Impunity: The violence is enabled by extreme impunity; the homicide conviction rate is estimated to be as low as 1%. This lack of consequence ensures that violence remains a primary tool of control. The corruption extends to the media, with press often being compromised ("narcotelevisión").For marginalized youth facing poverty and inequality, the narco-influencer remains a potent, though perilous, symbol of upward mobility and respect, fueling the system's perpetuation.

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This episode was published on September 25, 2025.

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The rise of the narco-influencer in Mexico marks a strategic evolution in cartel operations, shifting from traditional propaganda like narcocorridos (drug ballads) to sophisticated, digital "narco-marketing". This phenomenon is rooted in...

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