Did El Mencho’s Girlfriend Reveal His Location? Inside the Operation That Shook the Cartel Explosive claims are emerging that a woman described as close to cartel leader “El Mencho” may have provided information that helped authorities track his location

The 15-year hunt for the Western Hemisphere’s most elusive drug lord ended not with a technological breakthrough, but through the monitored movements of a woman in his inner circle. Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, “El Mencho,” leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), was killed in a military raid on February 22, 2026, after intelligence services tracked his girlfriend to a mountain safe house.

For over a decade, El Mencho operated as a phantom. Unlike the flashy Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, he left no digital footprint, never spoke on cell phones, and rotated locations every 72 hours. His security was legendary: a proprietary communication network, loyal communities acting as early-warning systems, and brutal discipline for leaks. This system rendered him invisible to the DEA and Mexican military, despite a $15 million bounty.

The breakthrough came from a human, not a technological vulnerability. Military intelligence had long focused on the cartel leader’s personal relationships. While legally married to Rosalinda González Valencia, El Mencho had a separate, years-long relationship with Guadalupe Moreno Curillo, a woman listed in leaked 2022 Mexican defense documents as a CJNG regional coordinator.

Authorities had Moreno Curillo under sustained surveillance. On Friday, February 20, their patience yielded a critical lead. A trusted ᴀssociate drove her to a property in Tapalpa, Jalisco, a scenic “magic town” in the mountains. Intelligence confirmed El Mencho was present for a meeting. The next day, Saturday the 21st, she departed. He remained.

This decision to stay sealed his fate. With the target’s location confirmed, special forces moved into position under absolute tactical silence to avoid alerting the local lookout networks. By the early hours of Sunday, February 22, a тιԍнт perimeter was established by army special forces, supported by six helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft.

The ᴀssault on the cabin complex was met with fierce resistance. Escorts armed with rocket launchers opened fire, damaging one helicopter and forcing an emergency landing. Two soldiers were wounded. As his security detail fought, El Mencho fled into the surrounding brush. He was quickly surrounded by special forces.

In the ensuing confrontation, Oseguera Cervantes and two escorts were wounded. He was captured and placed on a helicopter for medical evacuation, but died en route. The Mexican government confirmed his death, though official forensic results from DNA and fingerprint analysis have not yet been publicly released.

Authorities stress there was no direct, voluntary betrayal. “She did not betray him directly or voluntarily,” officials stated. The operation was the result of classic intelligence work: meticulously tracking the movements and ᴀssociates of a high-value target’s personal circle until a pattern revealed a location.

However, the presence of Moreno Curillo within the CJNG command structure, as indicated in the 2022 “Guacamaya Leaks,” raises unresolved questions. As an insider, she would have understood the security protocols and risks of her travel. Whether her trip was a routine visit, a calculated maneuver, or an unwitting catalyst remains a subject of intense speculation within security circles.

The operation underscores a consistent vulnerability for even the most guarded criminal leaders. From Pablo Escobar to El Chapo, intelligence agencies have systematically exploited the gap between operational security and personal attachment. El Mencho, despite building layers of separation, ultimately could not control the movements of those closest to him.

U.S. agencies played a supporting role. Following the 2025 designation of CJNG as a foreign terrorist organization, a U.S. inter-agency task force provided “additional information” that helped confirm the exact location, according to Mexican General Treviña. The specifics of that intelligence—whether from electronic surveillance or human sources—remain classified.

The death of El Mencho marks the end of an era for Mexican organized crime, removing a figure whose strategic brilliance and ruthlessness defined the CJNG’s rise to global prominence. Yet, the story is not fully closed. The pending forensic confirmation and the power vacuum within the hyper-violent CJNG ensure the aftermath of this raid will shape Mexico’s security landscape for years to come.

The final chapter of this manhunt demonstrates a timeless principle of intelligence: a fortress is only as strong as the trust placed in those who know the way to its door. In this case, a single car ride to a mountain town provided the thread that unraveled 15 years of perfect invisibility.

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