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    HomeCrimeMexico weighs legal action after Musk links president to drug cartels

    Mexico weighs legal action after Musk links president to drug cartels

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    MEXICO CITY, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Mexican ‌President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Tuesday she is considering legal action ​following a comment by tech billionaire Elon Musk, the world's richest man, that alleged she was connected to drug ⁠cartels.

    Musk's post on X followed the capture and killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) leader Nemesio Oseguera, "El Mencho", by Mexican security forces.

    In the post, Musk responded to a 2025 video of ​Sheinbaum discussing cartel violence and alleged that she was "saying what her cartel bosses tell her to say." He ‌did not provide further evidence.

    "We are considering whether to take legal action", Sheinbaum said during her daily morning press conference, adding that government lawyers are currently reviewing the matter.

    In the 2025 video, Sheinbaum said ⁠a return to a "war on drugs" was not feasible.

    "Returning to the war ⁠on drugs is not an option ... it is outside the framework of the law," she said.

    The military offensive on cartels led by former President Felipe Calderon in 2006 led to bloody turf battles as gangs splintered, triggering a spiral of violence that many analysts see as a contributing ‌cause to still-high homicide rates.

    Sheinbaum said she expected security to continue to normalize in Mexico ⁠after cartel members coordinated a series of roadblocks and arson attacks ‌in the aftermath of the government's Sunday operation against Oseguera.

    Asked ​if the operation marked a return to more a more violent security stance, Sheinbaum said this would never be the case.

    "The detention of a suspected criminal with an arrest warrant can ‌generate this type of circumstance, but we are looking for ​peace, not war," she said.

    Ruling MORENA party ⁠president Luisa Alcalde also reacted to the post on social media, saying ‌Musk should use his platform and X social media ⁠network to fight drug consumption, addiction, disinformation and the stop the promotion of narco culture.

    "Wealth does not give moral authority," she said. "The lives that are lost in this fight, often fueled ​by consumption in other countries, are ‌worth infinitely more than any fortune amassed in Silicon Valley."

    Over 130,000 people are missing in Mexico, ⁠where much of the country's violence is linked ​to drug cartels that sell products to and obtain firearms from the United States.

    (Reporting ​by Aida Pelaez-Fernandez; Editing by Natalia Siniawski)

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