Mexican Gangster File

Here, the line between survival and criminality is thinner than a razor blade.

As the sun sets over the Sierra Madre, a new convoy of black SUVs rolls down the highway. Inside, a 19-year-old with a diamond-encrusted Rolex checks his Instagram. He just decapitated a rival. He is also sending $200 to his grandmother for her diabetes medicine. mexican gangster

"They all think they are Pablo Escobar," says a forensic technician who asked not to be named. "But most of them end up here, in a white bag, with no one to claim them. Their mothers are too scared to come to the morgue." Here, the line between survival and criminality is

The archetype of the "Mexican gangster"—whether the street-level sicario (hitman) or the billionaire capo —is not born in a vacuum. To understand him, one must walk the dusty, unpaved streets of Lomas del Poleo, a hillside slum overlooking the glittering factories of Juárez. He just decapitated a rival