

A landless empire ruled by bullets, bound by blood, defined by legend.
Hawk Copeland's Narratives
I was 20. Barely old enough to drink. Already old enough to have died twice.
Afghanistan had burned everything soft out of me. My whole platoon got wiped in the ambush.
I walked out alone. Bloody, limping, half-dead—and dragging a Red Cross convoy behind me. The army called it a miracle. I didn’t call it anything.
They wrote me off as KIA. I liked it better that way.
Then Alonso Mondego found me. Said I wasn’t dead—I was just unfinished.
He didn’t offer me a future. Just a job.
Become a sicario. A sanctioned ghost.
Take out the Guerrero Cartel. Deliver Felix Guerrero to the Feds. No questions, no attachments, no names.
Three years. That’s how long I ran that mission. Three years of blood, silence, and bodies that didn’t scream loud enough to haunt me.
I didn’t know what game I’d been dropped into. I thought it was about drugs. Smugglers. Guns. The kind of dirty work that bleeds and burns out fast.
But even back then—something didn’t smell right. The silence was too controlled. The files too redacted. Too many names missing. Too many ghosts in the room.
I knew there was more. Something older. Something personal. But I had no right to ask.
I wasn’t paid to ask. I was paid to kill.
All I knew was what they told me:
“You’re not a hero, Hawk. You’re a consequence.”
TERMINATION EVENT: CODE NAME "HAWK"
Subject: Copeland, Hawk
Age: On his early 20's at time of last 2002 encounter.
Nationality: Doesn’t matter.
Allegiances: Las Aguilas.
Known for:
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Precision killings.
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Zero negotiation policy.
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Unconfirmed paramilitary background.
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In 2009, all known Felix Guerrero capture were neutralized within a 72-hour window.
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No survivors. No witnesses. No recovery of bodies.
A single message was intercepted via burner device following the event:
“You touched the wrong bloodline.”
📁 CLASSIFIED CONTRACT: OPERATION ASHEN DUSK
Date Issued: August 18, 1999
Destination: Northern Mexico (Sonora, Sinaloa)
Recipient: [REDACTED] – Known alias: Hawk Copeland
Operative ID: LA-026C
Authorization Tier: Black-Alpha Clearance (U.S. Federal Proxy + Private Alliance)
🔒 OBJECTIVE
Dismantle the Guerrero Cartel’s command structure by initiating strategic eliminations, discrediting leadership, and removing heir Felix Angel Guerrero from succession line. Deliver him alive into FBI jurisdiction under narcotics trafficking statute to serve as bait for future cooperative plea deals.
🎯 PRIMARY TARGETS
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Federico “Rey Negro” Guerrero – Cartel head. Ruthless, unstable. Believed to have ties to rogue Cuban intelligence and Vatican-armed logistics.
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Enrique Guerrero – Operations strategist. Handles weapons, finance, and border corruption.
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Felix Angel Guerrero – Third son. Highly intelligent, but emotionally volatile. Former medical student turned lieutenant. Not yet fully entrenched. The only Guerrero worth flipping. Among the active Guerrero men, he was the youngest—still unsure of his place, which made him both vulnerable and unpredictable.
🔐 MISSION REQUIREMENTS
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Do not eliminate Felix Guerrero.
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Objective is to break his loyalty to family, expose him to U.S. custody, and neutralize him as an heir. His intelligence and guilt may later be weaponized in court or propaganda.
⚠️ CONTEXT INTEL
The Guerrero cartel is not just a drug empire—it is a cultural dynasty that owns media, medicine, and migrant smuggling channels. They are rebuilding after the 1995 blood purge in Baja and are using post-NAFTA corruption pipelines to expand across the border.
Felix has shown signs of conscience conflict. Recent surveillance suggests:
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He protects civilians from raids
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He’s stopped several executions ordered by his father
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He is in love with Carmela Mondego, a former orphanage volunteer with ties to a northern monastery. (Unknown to Hawk, she was also the woman he fell in love with before his mission—long before he discovered her identity. The Mondego family kept the truth from him: that she survived a coma after attempting to flee with Felix Guerrero, and that the child she carried—Alex—was raised in secret by Alonso Mondego, current Commander-in-Chief of Las Águilas. Felix believed Carmela died years ago, and Hawk was never told she had lived or borne a child. The truth was buried as part of a legacy protection protocol.)
💰 PAYMENT
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Retainer Fee: $4.8 million USD (offshore, staged deposits)
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Completion Bonus: $7.2 million USD
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Success Clause: An additional $3M if Felix’s capture leads to further cartel convictions by 2002
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In-kind benefit: Hawk receives full medical immunity for any injuries sustained during the operation. (Note: Hawk is a natural-born U.S. citizen through his Cherokee heritage—no residency incentives required. He also has unrestricted access to all allied military transport channels worldwide, bypassing standard customs and border controls.)
🖋️ FINAL INSTRUCTION (Embedded Voice Note from Handler):
“You’ve been chosen, Hawk, because you’re the one bastard neither the Guerreros nor the CIA can claim.
You’ll make it look like a ghost did it—bloody, surgical, clean.
Don’t make it personal.
Don’t fall for the stories.
Especially not the ones coming from the Guerrero's youngest.Deliver him.”
– Handler codename: Redwood

OPERATIONAL HISTORY
1970 – Francisco Guerrero establishes Sierra del Sol as a formal cartel, after Las Águilas provides the infrastructure, political leverage, and military-grade contracts to propel the family into power.
1979 – The betrayal. At a nightclub in Mexico City, several Guerrero sons—infamously dubbed the Narco Babies—became obsessed with the two daughters of the Mondego family. Drunk on power and paranoia, they orchestrated a botched kidnapping.
Mineah escaped.
Carmela was nearly raped.
That single act of treachery shattered their alliance with Las Águilas and sparked a blood feud that would last generations.
1980–1983 – Rapid downfall of the Guerrero Cartel. Their power crumbles.
A new family rises, once again backed by Las Águilas, cementing their role as silent kingmakers in the region.

MEXICO CITY NEWS | FEB. 07, 1979
BREAKING NEWS: MONDEGO HEIRESSES REPORTED MISSING IN MEXICO
Michoacán, Mexico – In a shocking development that has shaken two of Latin America’s most powerful families, Mineah Mondego and her cousin Carmela Mondego—both heiresses to the formidable PharmaMexico dynasty—have reportedly gone missing following a night out at a popular discotheque in the city center.
Witnesses say the two young women, accompanied by a full security detail, were last seen exiting the venue shortly after 11:30 PM. The vehicle, a white Mercedes-Benz part of a three-car convoy, was allegedly ambushed several blocks from the club by unidentified armed assailants.
Sources close to law enforcement have confirmed that Mineah Mondego was able to flee the scene. Her current condition is unknown.
Carmela Mondego, the youngest daughter of Don Marco Antonio Mondego, was reportedly forcibly removed from the vehicle. Several members of the convoy, including two bodyguards, sustained serious injuries.
Authorities are investigating the involvement of the Guerrero brothers, known affiliates of a dismantled drug trafficking ring operating out of Michoacán. Though the Guerrero family has largely kept a low profile in recent years, past associations with organized crime remain under scrutiny.
No official updates have been released regarding the status or whereabouts of the two Mondego women.
Neither the Mondego family nor PharmaMexico has issued a public statement, but sources inside the family circle confirm that a private investigation is underway. Additional security protocols have been implemented across family estates in Mexico City, Oaxaca, and Guatemala.
The incident marks a troubling escalation in what some insiders suggest may be a long-dormant feud reigniting between the Mondego and remnants of the Guerrero syndicate.
Further updates to follow as the story develops.
OPERATIONAL HISTORY
1983 – The entire Guerrero family vanishes.
Francisco and his sons become international fugitives, evading capture for nearly two decades.
They leave behind corpses, rumors, and a trail of broken alliances.
1999 – Enter Hawk Copeland.
Early 20s. Unaffiliated. No known country of origin.
Tagged by multiple agencies as:
“The Grim Reaper.”
“The Henchman.”
“The Sicario with no god.”
One by one, Hawk dismantles the Guerrero line.
Brothers. Nephews. Enforcers.
No trial. No warning. Just precision kills across borders.
2002 – Final move: The capture of Felix Ángel Guerrero, the most elusive of them all.
Few bullets.
No bloodbath.
Copeland brought him in alive—a statement more terrifying than any execution.
Turned over directly to the FBI.
