La Nueva Familia Michoacana Organization

La Nueva Familia Michoacana
Founded2011
Founded byJohnny Hurtado Olascoaga, José Alfredo Hurtado Olascoaga
Founding locationMichoacan, Mexico
Years active2011—present
TerritoryMexico: Michoacan, Edomex, Morelos, Jalisco, Guerrero

United States: Texas, New Mexico, North Carolina, Georgia, Washington, D.C.

Europe: Belgium [citation needed]

Asia: China [citation needed]
EthnicityMexican
ActivitiesDrug trafficking, Murder, Extortion, Kidnapping, Blackmailing, Robbery, Illegal mining, Torture
AlliesLos Viagras (Armed wing)
Guardia Michoacana (Armed wing)
Los Blancos De La Troya (Enforcer wing)
Cárteles Unidos
La Familia Michoacana
Cartel Del Camaleón
Los Reyes
Cartel De La Virgen
Los Revueltas
Los Tenas
Los Pantanos
Sinaloa Cartel
Mexican Mafia
Bloods
Crips
RivalsJalisco New Generation Cartel
Knights Templar Cartel

La Nueva Familia Michoacana (LNFM; English: The New Michoacan Family) or La Nueva Familia (English: The New Family), is a criminal organization that specializes in illegal drug trafficking, illegal mining, and extortion. It is currently headed by Johnny Hurtado Olascoaga, alias ”El Pez”, and his brother, Jose Alfredo Hurtado Olascoaga, alias ”El Fresa”. The Organization formed as a splinter group in 2011 after the original La Familia Michoacana lost their power in 2010 with the formation of the Knights Templar Cartel and with Nazario Moreno's suspected death (he was not proven dead until 2014 with a DNA test).[1] The Organization mainly dedicated to drug trafficking and battling the CJNG criminal organization out of Tierra Caliente region in Michoacán and Guerrero. According to The United States Department of the Treasury, the organization is primarily involved in the distribution of cocaine, fentanyl, and methamphetamine to the United States, but it’s also involved in growing marijuana and poppies. Many of its leaders have been arrested for threatening and blackmailing people on social media. La Nueva Familia Michoacana operates in at least 35 municipalities in the southern areas of Mexico.[2]

  1. ^ Grillo, Ioan (2016-02-11). Gangster Warlords: Drug Dollars, Killing Fields, and the New Politics of Latin America. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4088-4603-2.
  2. ^ "Familia Michoacana - InSight Crime". www.insightcrime.org.[permanent dead link]