Eh? [i]Eh?[/i] [hider][center][img]http://txt-dynamic.static.1001fonts.net/txt/dHRmLjQ4LjU5OTk0OC5ROE9oY25SbGJDQmtaU0JQWVhoaFkyRSwuMQ,,/brillianthre.regular.png[/img] [sub]In lieu of a true insignia, the Oaxaca Cartel uses green as a gang color, co-opting green logos to differentiate location chapters. The Yucatan chapters display Monster Energy logos, the Quintana chapters tag walls with John Deere logo, and so on. This is the reason Pemex stopped making their station attendant uniforms green, and why philanthropic organizations in South Mexico are asked to donate boy's shirts only in blue, white, brown, or red.[/sub][/center] [color=599948][u][b]Faction Name[/b][/u][/color] Cártel de Oaxaca [color=599948][u][b]Territory[/b][/u][/color] Oaxaca, Chiapa, Tabasco, Campache, Yucatan, Quintana Roo [color=599948][u][b]Allies[/b][/u][/color] Too Many (WIP) [sub](where da factions @)[/sub] [color=599948][u][b]Faction History[/b][/u][/color] The Oaxaca Cartel was originally little more than a handful of armed farmers dressed in their Sunday best, pretending to be gangsters in order to sell their collective crops of marijuana and cocaine at marked up rates to spring-breakers partying a few mountains away from their thatched roofs. After a decade of this, la Cartel de Oaxaca simply [i]became[/i] another criminal organization according to Federal watchlists, having successfully faked it until they made it. [i]It[/i] being a willingness to commit crimes greater than pot-pushing, and not needing to wear costumes in order to be recognized as dangerous criminals. By the mid 2000's, the Oaxaca cartel was mentioned by name in the Mexican national news three times; Once for a shipment of marijuana found in an American spinach truck, once for poaching in the Guatemalan jungle, and once for a notorious drug dealer being found tarred, feathered, and thoroughly stabbed to death in the mountains of Oaxaca. Though the Oaxaca cartel is regarded to as one of the least violent criminal organizations in Mexico, preferring to maintain power through business connections rather than with violence, they are by no means considered benevolent or harmless. Aside from their selling of marijuana, cocaine, and untaxed tobacco, they are a group whose dealings are synonymous with any "mafia" in the particularly rural regions of southern Mexico. If a shipment of gasoline is hijacked, a hiker finds a skull in the mountains, or a rancher's cattle and daughters are taken away by a convoy of men in pickup trucks, the Oaxaca Cartel likely had something to do with it. That being said, they are known for sticking within their own territory almost constantly -- their bulk of their ranks being men in mountainside hamlets who own little more than a pistol, a green jersey, and a bicycle. Those who do not fear them, which is not entirely uncommon for the northern city-mice near America, derisively refer to them as "The Guatemalan Mafia". [color=599948][u][b]Important Characters[/b][/u][/color] • Carlos "El Ranchero" Delarosa Ramirez de Garcia, 45 - [color=599948]Leader[/color] • Martín Francisco Carrillo, 47 - [color=599948]Second-in-Command[/color] • Mario Alonso Ricardo de Canché, 34 - [color=599948]Assassin[/color][/hider]