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Cartel Mom -

She didn’t wear a bulletproof vest or carry a gold-plated AK-47. She wore yoga pants and drove a minivan to PTA meetings. But according to federal prosecutors, Maria de los Angeles “Angélica” Cárdenas was one of the most efficient drug traffickers on the West Coast—a master logistician who moved millions in methamphetamine while packing her children’s lunches.

Her children, now teenagers, were placed with relatives. The house in Chula Vista was seized. And the case became a touchstone in the debate over the feminization of cartel crime. Criminologists have noted a quiet but significant shift: women are increasingly occupying mid-to-high-level roles in drug cartels, not just as victims or mules. The "Cartel Mom" arche terrifies law enforcement because it defies profiling. A woman with children, a suburban address, and no criminal record can move drugs for years without raising suspicion. Cartel Mom

The image that circulated was jarring. Unlike the grim mugshots of Chapo Guzmán or the Zetas, Cárdenas’s photo showed a woman with soft features and a faint, almost bewildered smile. She looked less like a kingpin and more like a mother who had just been pulled over for rolling through a stop sign. She didn’t wear a bulletproof vest or carry

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