Outlandish Nicknames Suit Mexican Criminals (2024)

MEXICO CITY—

The Mexican underworld’s taste for bizarre nicknames was on full display in February, when Mexico City police filed kidnap and murder charges against a gang whose aliases sounded like something out of Snow White.

There was “El Salivotas” (the Drooler), “El Guero” (Blondie), “El Enano” (the Dwarf), “El Duende” (the Elf), “El Cejas,” (Eyebrows) and “El Tamalon” (the Big Tamale).

The lone female member was legally named Dulce Maria, or Sweet Maria.

Ordinary Mexicans use nicknames a lot. “Gordo,” for instance, means “Fatty” and is considered a term of endearment. But criminal aliases that turn up in charge sheets can be so bizarre that even Mexicans are lost for explanations.

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“Winnie Pooh” was Oscar Guerrero Silva, a triggerman for Mexico’s drug cartels. Hardly a lovable bear, he belonged to a gang of Mexican army deserters who worked for the drug lords. His specialty -- before dying of a gunshot wound to the head in February in an apparent suicide -- was busting drug suspects out of jail at gunpoint.

How about “El Cachorro” -- The Puppy? That Mexico City mechanic allegedly specialized in kidnapping and abusing young women.

One mainly male gang of northern Mexican hoodlums named themselves “Las Carmelitas” -- roughly the Carmelite Sisters -- after their female leader, Carmela.

Many suspect that cops and crime reporters encourage, embellish and even invent some of the stranger nicknames. (That’s akin to what has happened in the United States. Think “Black Dahlia,” the grisly 1947 murder. Even today, it’s not unusual for law officers to nickname bank robbers or burglars.)

Presented with police reports that often list up to a half-dozen aliases for one suspect, the media and the public usually focus on the most outrageous one.

“If you want to get a crime story on the front page, you’ve got to have an impressive nickname, and if the suspect doesn’t have one, you’ve got to look for one,” says Paco Ignacio Taibo II, who writes detective novels.

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Some gangs were almost certainly “dubbed” that way by the public, press and police, like the two most famous kidnapping gangs of the 1990s: “The Ear Loppers” and “The Finger Cutters,” who did exactly that to their victims.

Journalists deny inventing nicknames, saying those bubble up spontaneously out of Mexico’s violent, socially frayed neighborhoods.

“People in some of these neighborhoods are known more by their nicknames than their real names,” says Celeste Saenz, the general secretary of Mexico’s Press Club. “The nicknames give them some status, some sense of belonging to a group.”

Federal prosecutors acknowledge that they collect as many nicknames as possible on crime reports, but only so they can fully identify and locate suspects who might use several tags.

But lawyer Americo Delgado, who has defended some of Mexico’s highest-profile drug suspects, contends police sometimes try to slap labels on his clients -- “The Lord of Methamphetamines,” for instance -- to make them appear guilty.

“Then, even if they are acquitted, those labels stick,” says Delgado. “Some people still talk about them as ‘acquitted drug lords.’ ”

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According to Taibo, the public’s fascination with criminal nicknames goes back at least to the 1920s, when hoodlums with monikers like “The Black Cap” roamed Mexico City. But back then, even the worst bandits were known by fairly innocuous monikers like “The Gray Car Gang.”

By the 1980s, the drug wars and an influx of cultural imports -- everything from U.S. movies to Kung-Fu videos -- gave birth to a strange new nomenclature, Saenz says.

Aliases became more high-flown and grisly, like “El Senor de los Cielos” -- “The Lord of the Skies” -- for a trafficker who flew planeloads of cocaine into the United States.

Movies appear to play a big role, says Luis Astorga, a researcher on the sociology of crime at Mexico’s National Autonomous University.

A beefy housewife who allegedly dominated the drug trade on Mexico City’s rough east side had a gang calling itself “Ma Baker.”

“I’m sure they saw a pirate copy of a U.S. movie about Ma Barker and thought that would be a good nickname,” Astorga says. “They just got the spelling wrong.”

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The same appears to apply to the diminutive armed robber known as “Chuky, the Diabolical Doll.” Chuky is the Mexican spelling of Chucky, the murderous doll in the 1988 U.S. horror movie “Child’s Play.”

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Outlandish Nicknames Suit Mexican Criminals (2024)

FAQs

Outlandish Nicknames Suit Mexican Criminals? ›

Miguel Félix Gallardo, the original Mexican drug lord, was given two - El Jefe de Jefes (The Boss of Bosses) and El Padrino (The Godfather). Often, nicknames are earned off the back of some sick act. Santiago Meza Lopez was dubbed El Pozolero (The Stewmaker) because he dissolved hundreds of bodies in acid.

What is the nickname for Mexican gangsters? ›

If you didn't know, then narco is the Mexican slang name for a gangster.

What are Spanish criminal nicknames? ›

There was “El Salivotas” (the Drooler), “El Guero” (Blondie), “El Enano” (the Dwarf), “El Duende” (the Elf), “El Cejas,” (Eyebrows) and “El Tamalon” (the Big Tamale).

What are gangster nicknames? ›

Here, the origin of a few other interesting mob nicknames:
  • Al "Scarface" Capone. This Jan. ...
  • Albert "Tick-Tock" Tannenbaum. ...
  • Israel "Ice Pick Willie" Alderman. ...
  • Anthony "Big Tuna/Joe Batters" Accardo. ...
  • Donald "The Wizard of Odds" Angelini. ...
  • Joseph "Joe Bananas" Bonanno. ...
  • Joseph "Joey Brains" Ambrosino. ...
  • John "Jackie Nose" D'Amico.
Jun 26, 2018

Why do gangsters use nicknames? ›

In many cases the whole point of underworld nicknames is to keep your full legal name from getting tossed around where the wrong people might hear it. Even when someone is universally known by their nickname, Curious, it's considered polite to dust off their formal, legal name for weighty criminal proceedings.

What are Mexican mobsters called? ›

Mexican American criminal organization. Also known as: La Eme, Los Carnales.

What do Mexicans call hitmen? ›

sicario m ⧫ asesino m a sueldo.

What is a mobster in Spanish slang? ›

mobster
Principal Translations
InglésEspañol
mobster n(member of the Mafia)mafioso, mafiosa nm, nf
gánster, gangster n común
pandillero, pandillera nm, nf
2 more rows

What is the Spanish slang for gangster? ›

Meanings of "gangster" in Spanish English Dictionary : 20 result(s)
CategorySpanish
2Generalmafioso [m]
3Generalgánster [m]
4Generalmafiosa [f]
5Generalpandillero [m]
25 more rows

What are Spanish cops called? ›

The Policía Nacional or Cuerpo Nacional de Policía (the National Police Corps, or CNP) has a civilian status and deals with criminal offences and public order in big towns and cities (65,000).

What do gangsters call their boss? ›

Boss – Also known as the capomandamento, capocrimine, rappresentante, don, or godfather, is the highest level in a crime family. Underboss – Also known as the "capo bastone" in some criminal organizations, this individual is the second-in-command.

What is the nickname for a crip? ›

Crips traditionally refer to each other as "Cuz" or "Cuzz", which itself is sometimes used as a moniker for a Crip. "Crab" is the most disrespectful epithet to call a Crip, and can warrant fatal retaliation.

What do gangsters call their girlfriends? ›

Goomah — Mistress or girlfriend. It comes from the Italian comare, which means godmother or second mother. In other words, someone who takes care of you. Goomba — Compatriot or fellow comrade.

What does 13 mean for gangsters? ›

The gang has allegiance to the CA prison gang, Mexican Mafia, aka “La Eme”. Sureños identify with “13”, “XIII”, “X3”, the letter “M” - 13th letter in the alphabet - as homage to the Mexican Mafia. They typically use the color blue but may use other colors as well such as black or brown, dependant on the set.

What are some hood names? ›

If you are struggling to come up with good hood names for your friends, here are the best name ideas that you can adopt.
  • Falcon.
  • Bullet.
  • Phoenix.
  • Ace.
  • Magnum.
  • Champ.
  • Shadow.
  • Diesel.
Dec 7, 2023

What are the nicknames for Bloods gangsters? ›

Bloods members commonly call themselves CKs (Crip Killer), MOBs (Member of Bloods), dawgs, or ballers (meaning drug dealers).

What were Mexican outlaws called? ›

Banditos were Mexican bandits and outlaws who engaged in brigandage along the Texas-Mexico border during the Wild West era, from the end of the Mexican-American War in 1848 until the end of the Mexican Revolution in the 1920s.

What is the Mexican cartel called? ›

The Sinaloa Cartel has a presence in at least 22 of the 31 Mexican states, with important centers in Mexico City, Tepic, Toluca, Zacatecas, Guadalajara and most of the state of Sinaloa.

What is another name for Mexican boss? ›

We actually have two options in Spanish, jefe and patrón, though each has its own important nuances. In order to clarify the best word for boss in Spanish for different contexts, we've prepared this post on the difference between jefe vs patrón.

What do gangsters call their leader? ›

Boss – Also known as the capomandamento, capocrimine, rappresentante, don, or godfather, is the highest level in a crime family. Underboss – Also known as the "capo bastone" in some criminal organizations, this individual is the second-in-command.

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