SnapShot: Cartel, Corvettes, Ostrich Boots, and the Man Who Wouldn't Go Away Podcast Por  arte de portada

SnapShot: Cartel, Corvettes, Ostrich Boots, and the Man Who Wouldn't Go Away

SnapShot: Cartel, Corvettes, Ostrich Boots, and the Man Who Wouldn't Go Away

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The invisible thread between prosecuting a cartel murder case and becoming their next person of interest runs thinner than most realize. What began as a standard investigation into a drug-related execution quickly evolved into something far more personal and unsettling.

Following my prosecution of five cartel members for a brutal murder in Portland, strange occurrences became my new normal. First came the obvious surveillance—vehicles trailing me home, necessitating new security protocols for my family. We changed locks, created emergency plans for our children, and strategically placed firearms throughout our home. But the real psychological warfare began after I left law enforcement on medical leave.

A mysterious figure emerged in our small town of 12,000 people—a Mexican man in his mid-sixties, always dressed in black from head to toe, complete with matching ostrich leather boots and belt. Driving a black Corvette, he materialized everywhere my wife and I went. The taphouse on Main Street. The coffee shop on Sunday mornings. Restaurants during dinner. His cover story about commuting an hour from Hillsboro because he "enjoyed the scenery" of our town crumbled under basic questioning. No girlfriend. No property. No friends. Just an inexplicable attraction to wherever we happened to be.

The surveillance escalated beyond coincidence when we drove an hour away to Topgolf on a Tuesday morning, only to find him there with associates. For six months, this shadowy figure maintained his presence before vanishing as mysteriously as he had appeared. Local inquiries yielded nothing substantive—just vague recollections of "a nice guy" passing through.

This experience fundamentally transformed my relationship with personal security. Even years later, I remain hypervigilant, constantly scanning for threats and unusual patterns. How does one process being watched by potential cartel operatives? How do you explain to family that your past professional life might still endanger them? These are the questions that haunt former investigators who've challenged powerful criminal organizations.

Have you ever felt watched? Share your experiences or questions about cartel operations in American communities. Subscribe to hear more firsthand accounts from the frontlines of law enforcement where the boundaries between professional duty and personal safety often blur beyond recognition.

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