Museo del EnervanteThe Museo del Enervante is a Mexican museum. It is also known popularly as the Narco Museo,[1] Museo del Narco[2] and other nicknames. It is also known, officially, as Museo del Enervantes de la Secretaria de la Defensa Nacional[3] (Sedena). HistoryThe museum was established in 1985.[4] DisplaysThe museum offers different displays of artifacts that belonged to notorious Mexican drug traffickers, and to Jesus Malverde, the so-called "saint of Mexican drug dealers".[5] There is a dissected body of a dog named "Zuyaqui", who in life was the dog that detected the most drugs in Mexican Military history; and items belonging to Daniel Perez Rojas, Benjamin Arellano Felix and Javier Torres Felix, among others.[6] Other informationThe museum is located at Lomas de Sotelo, Distrito Federal de Mexico, but it is not open to the public.[7] Only military personnel and certain students are allowed to visit. References
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