Drug cartels have moved much of their recruitment online, weaponizing social media, gaming platforms, and bogus job boards to find and groom couriers, money-mules, and foot soldiers. They post flashy videos (cars, cash, parties) and coded “job” ads—sometimes disguised as security work, delivery gigs, or influencer opportunities—then shift recruits into encrypted chats (WhatsApp, Telegram) for vetting and logistics. Young people, migrants, unemployed adults, and college students are prime targets: recruiters exploit economic desperation, romantic interest, or simple naiveté, promising fast cash for simple tasks (carry a package, open a bank account, or make “reshipping” transfers) while concealing the criminal nature of the work. Law-enforcement agencies have documented these tactics and repeatedly warned the public that seemingly legitimate remote-work posts or flashy social-media offers can be cartel recruitment fronts.
Published on 1 month, 1 week ago
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