As a doctoral student studying drug cartels in Mexico, Dr. Nathan Jones was given the nickname La Barbie after an American who became a Mexican drug lord and wound up as a snitch. The locals were convinced the young, clean cut student was a CIA or FBI agent.

In Mexico City, while his landlord was installing a lock on his apartment to prevent petty theft, Dr. Jones was bitten by his dog. The landlord feared retribution because he believed his dog bit an FBI agent. During a meeting over coffee with Mexican politicians, they jokingly asked him to do a flip “so we can see the listening devices fall out of my pockets.”
“People thought I was a FBI or CIA agent,” said Dr. Jones. “I am not, nor have I ever been. People also thought I was military. I am just an academic interested in drug cartels.”
Dr. Jones regularly witnessed the aftermath of drug violence on Mexican streets, bullet holes in Tijuana where police were killed in gun battles and a non-descript white van suddenly lit up with lights and sirens. He didn’t know if the van was occupied by police or cartel leaders.
Despite the evidence of violence, Dr. Jones only experienced one unnerving incident. A few day after giving an interview on his work to National Public Radio in San Diego, he was suddenly pulled over by a young 18-year-old soldier at an army checkpoint and approached tactical style with a 9 mm and AR-15 rifle. While he admits he was speeding, he still doesn’t know if it was because of the media interview or whether they viewed him as an America crossing the border for drugs or prostitution.
In his research, Dr. Jones was able to document the U.S. and Mexican responses to the cartels, each of which addresses the same problem from a different perspective. Mexican authorities saw the organization as a flat structure because they looked at high level leaders in the Columbian cartel; whereas the U.S. saw a hierarchical structure because they were looking at drugs coming into the country and they considered the levels of management needed for the cartels to get them here. He also saw how Operation United Eagle, where fugitive operation teams were vetted and trained in the U.S. and returned to Mexico to capture leaders, was successful in making high level arrests because it required teams to cut off communications with their families, thus eliminating threat to the mission that might come from kidnapping family members. Dr. Jones also witnessed the impact local citizens had on the cartel in fighting the kidnapping and murder of citizens in Tijuana, which led to a split in Arellano Felix that ultimately led to its demise.

After graduating from the University of California in Irvine, Dr. Jones was accepted for a post-doctoral fellowship at the Baker institute at Rice University, where he worked on drug policies and wrote the proposal for the Mexico Center, a $1.8 million grant to fund a project which looked at improving relations between Mexico and the U.S. in many fields, including energy reform. Dr. Jones started the Baker Institute Viewpoint, a blog that featured experts on policy-related issues. As well, he wrote policy memos on issues involving Tijuana.
As an Assistant Professor at Sam Houston State University teaching undergraduate and graduate students in the Department of Security Studies, he brings the topics--including border security, homeland security and transnational violence networks—to life through his experiences and his perspective resulting therefrom.
“The College of Criminal Justice is amazing and we have some amazing students,” Dr. Jones said.