US sanctions Mexican drug cartel associates accused of scamming elderly
Americans
[August 14, 2025]
MEXICO CITY (AP) — The U.S. Treasury Department imposed sanctions
Wednesday on more than a dozen Mexican companies and four people it says
worked with a powerful drug trafficking cartel to scam elderly Americans
in a multimillion-dollar timeshare fraud. |

Mexican Security and Citizen Protection Minister Omar Garcia Harfuch
gives a news conference about Mexico having sent 29 Mexican drug cartel
figures to the U.S., in Mexico City, Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2025. (AP
Photo/Fernando Llano) |
The network of 13 businesses in areas near the seaside tourist
destination of Puerto Vallarta were accused of working with the
Jalisco New Generation Cartel, a group designated by the U.S.
government as a foreign terrorist organization.
In a scheme dating back to 2012, four cartel associates are
accused of defrauding American citizens of their life savings
through elaborate rental and resale schemes, according to a
Treasury statement. In the span of six months, officials said
they were able to document $23.1 million sent from mostly people
in the U.S. to scammers in Mexico.
The sanctions imposed by the administration of U.S. President
Donald Trump would prohibit Americans from doing business with
the alleged cartel associates and block any of their assets in
the U.S..
“We will continue our effort to completely eradicate the
cartels’ ability to generate revenue, including their efforts to
prey on elderly Americans through timeshare fraud,” U.S.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement.
In past years, the administration of then-President Joe Biden
also sanctioned associates and accountants related to such
schemes.
The Wednesday announcement was made amid an ongoing effort by
the Trump administration and the Mexican government to crack
down on cartels and their diverse sources of income.
The U.S. Treasury Department has slapped sanctions on a variety
of people from a Mexican rapper who it accused of laundering
cartel money to Mexican banks facilitating money transfers in
sales of precursor chemicals used to produce fentanyl.
The announcement also came one day after Mexico sent 26
high-ranking cartel figures to the U.S. in the latest major deal
with the Trump administration as Mexico tries to avoid
threatened tariffs.
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