A powerful cartel leader’s killing by Mexican forces over the weekend triggered widespread unrest that left tourists stranded and streets in flames in the popular beach city of Puerto Vallarta. On ...
MEXICO CITY -- The Jalisco New Generation Cartel, Mexico's most powerful criminal enterprise, suffered another blow Monday when the Mexican military captured one of its top leaders in the northwest of ...
Kali Muscle drops in on the Strength Cartel crew for a push-up competition that turns into a high-energy display of endurance and grit. What starts as a challenge quickly becomes a show of mutual ...
The State Department on Monday issued visa restrictions for 75 people who they say are linked to the Sinaloa Cartel in an effort to quell the Mexican transnational crime organization’s drug ...
Strength training doesn’t have to be complicated. Fitness content on social media may leave you thinking that you should only work out at specific times, use certain weights and incorporate an ...
A surprisingly simple measure may offer clues about longevity. Muscular strength, as determined by two tests, was a key predictor of a person’s risk of death, according to a new study published in ...
When you think of Pitbull, you think of the man with the sunglasses and suit and the musical hits. But it wasn’t always that way. Let’s go back to a time when no one outside Miami could translate, or ...
President Donald Trump announced a new military coalition to tackle drug cartel violence in the Western Hemisphere at the Shield of the Americas Summit on Saturday. Trump said the newly dubbed ...
Miami rapper Pitbull, known for hit songs like “I Know You Want Me (Calle Ocho)” and “Fireball,” wants to replace his childhood home with an office building in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood to serve as ...
Rapper Pitbull wants to build a headquarters for his Mr. 305 music company in Miami, The Real Deal has learned. Pitbull, whose real name is Armando Christian Pérez, proposes the project on the site of ...
These enforcement strategies have also failed to meaningfully restrict drug availability. Despite more than $40 billion in annual federal drug control spending, illicit substances remain widely ...