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Her husband, who was also arrested, told investigators he thought the family’s sudden wealth came from a successful food truck business. Whether he was complicit or simply willfully blind became a key question at trial. In 2019, Maria de los Angeles Cárdenas pleaded guilty to drug trafficking charges. At her sentencing, she sobbed as she addressed the court. "I am not a monster," she said. "I am a mother who made terrible choices because I was afraid of losing my home and my children’s future."

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. Cartel Mom

One DEA agent, speaking anonymously, noted: "She weaponized the most American thing imaginable: the invisibility of a mom. No cop pulls over a minivan with car seats and a soccer ball sticker." The investigation, dubbed "Operation Perfect Storm," lasted two years. It involved wiretaps, GPS trackers, and a network of informants. The final straw came when a driver working for Cárdenas was stopped with 150 pounds of meth hidden in a secret compartment of a Honda Odyssey—a vehicle she had purchased specifically for its "suburban camouflage." Her husband, who was also arrested, told investigators