Quantcast
Channel: Borderland Beat
Viewing all 14998 articles
Browse latest View live

Can You Hear Me Now?

$
0
0
Borderland Beat

Marines Cancel 300- foot Narco Tower

Last week, Mexico’s navy said it dismantled a radio communications network used by organized crime to report the movements of the armed forces and police.

A communications system consisting of rebroadcast antennas and a radio frequency station” was found on the Veracruz state side of the Panuco River and dismantled, the Navy Secretariat said in a statement. The radio frequency station enabled an illegal communications network to function in the towns of Ozuluama and Naranjos, in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz, as well as in the cities of Tampico, Ciudad Madero and Altamira, in the neighboring state of Tamaulipas. In the operation, which began on Sept. 2011, a group of marines and communications specialists corroborated an illegal emission of frequencies at that station. 

Radio communication equipment, several antennas, power supply units, controllers and couplers, a 90-meter-high (295-foot-high) transmission tower and other materials were seized in the operation. 

The network was used to report the movements of the military and police in the northern part of Veracruz and the Tampico-Ciudad Madero-Altamira metropolitan area, the Navy Secretariat said.

The statement did not indicate which organized crime gang operated the station, although the notorious Los Zetas drug cartel is known to operate in both Veracruz and Tamaulipas.

Marines were sent in to dismantle it. The statement doesn't say which cartel operated the system but both the Gulf cartel and the Zetas operate in the area and have been known to have sophisticated communications systems.

The easiest way  for criminals to  be arrested  is to be heard in telephone conversations by police, says Robert Johnson of Business Insider. To avoid this weakness in its chain of the organization , the  drug cartel los Zetas  has installed hundreds of  antennas and repeaters  throughout Mexico. Last year, Michael Weissenstein of the Associated Press reported on the Dec. 4th bust that  the  network consists of  everything from radio towers,  to the hand held two-way radios which transmit  radio waves through the tower.
When a convoys of soldiers or federal police move through the scrubland of northern Mexico, the Zetas drug cartel already knows they are coming. The alert goes out from a taxi driver or a street vendor, equipped with a high-end handheld radio and paid to work as a lookout known as a "halcon," or hawk. 

The radio signal travels deep into the arid countryside, hours by foot from the nearest road. There you will find, the 8-foot-tall (2-meter-tall) dark-green branches of the rockrose bush conceal a radio tower painted to match. A cable buried in the dirt draws power from a solar panel. A signal-boosting repeater relays the message along a network of powerful antennas and other repeaters that stretch hundreds of miles (kilometers) across Mexico, a shadow communications system allowing the cartel to coordinate drug deliveries, kidnapping, extortion and other crimes with the immediacy and precision of a modern military or law-enforcement agency. 

The Mexican army and marines have been attacking the system, seizing hundreds of pieces of communications equipment in at least three operations since September 2011 that offered a firsthand look at a surprisingly far-ranging and sophisticated infrastructure. 

Current and former U.S. law-enforcement officials say the equipment, ranging from professional-grade towers to handheld radios, was part of a single network that until recently extended from the U.S. border down eastern Mexico's Gulf coast and into Guatemala. 

The configuration of  the  sophisticated network  was launched  by former  Mexican soldiers  special forces  who now comprise a fundamental part  of Los Zeta,  using  communications specialists to install, run and update the network .

The network allowed Zetas operatives to conduct encrypted conversations without depending on the official cellphone network, which is relatively easy for authorities to tap into, and in many cases does not reach deep into the Mexican countryside. 
"They're doing what any sensible military unit would do," said Robert Killebrew, a retired U.S. Army colonel who has studied the Mexican drug cartels for the Center for a New American Security, a Washington think tank. "They're branching out into as many forms of communications as possible." 

The network was built around 2006 by the Gulf cartel, a narcotics-trafficking gang that employed a group of enforcers known as the Zetas, who had defected from Mexican army special forces. The Zetas split from the Gulf cartel in 2010 and have since become one of the nation's most dominant drug cartels, with profitable sidelines in kidnapping, extortion and human trafficking. 

The network's mastermind was Jose Luis Del Toro Estrada, a communications expert known as Tecnico who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute cocaine in federal court in Houston, Texas, two years ago. 

Using millions of dollars worth of legally available equipment, Del Toro Estrada established the system in most of Mexico's 31 states and parts of northern Guatemala under the orders of the top leaders in the Gulf cartel and the Zetas. The Gulf cartel boss in each drug-smuggling territory, or plaza, was responsible for buying towers and repeaters as well as equipping his underlings with radios, according to Del Toro's plea agreement.
                                
 Del Toro employed communications specialists to maintain and run the system and research new technology, according to the agreement. 

Mexican authorities, however, presented a different picture of the cartel radio infrastructure, saying it was less monolithic than the one described by U.S. authorities. A Mexican military official denied that the army and navy have been targeting one network that covered the entire Gulf coast. The operations had been focused on a series of smaller, local systems that were not connected to each other due to technical limitations, he said. 

"It's not a single network," the official told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the topic. "They use it to act locally." 

In recent years, reporters traveling with the Mexican military have heard cartels using radio equipment to broadcast threats on soldiers' frequencies. The military official told the AP that the signals are now encrypted, but cartels are still trying to break in. 

At least until recently, the cartel's system was controlled by computers that enabled complex control of the radio signals, allowing the cartel to direct its communications to specific radios while bypassing others, according to Grupo Savant, an intelligence and security consulting firm in Washington that has firsthand knowledge of Mexico's cartel operations. 

The radio system appears to be a "low-cost, highly extendable and maintainable network" that shows the Zetas' sophistication, said Gordon Housworth, managing director of Intellectual Capital Group, LLC, a risk- and technology-consulting firm that has studied the structure and operations of Mexican cartels and criminal groups. 

Other Mexican criminal organizations maintain similar radio networks, including the Sinaloa cartel, based in the Pacific coast state of the same name, and the Barrios Azteca street gang, which operates in Ciudad Juarez, across from El Paso, Texas, a U.S. law-enforcement official said. The Zetas' system is the largest, however, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic. 

The Mexican raids are "a deliberate attempt to disrupt the business cycle of the cartels," said one former law-enforcement official with direct knowledge of the network. "By going after command and communications you disrupt control." 

Law-enforcement officials and independent analysts described the operations against the Zetas' communications system as significant short-term victories in the fight against the cartel. 

"The seizures show that the organization is scrambling," said Steven Dudley, co-director of InSight, a group that analyzes and investigates organized crime in Latin America. 

The longer-term impact is unclear. The cartel has had little difficulty in replacing radio gear and other equipment seized in smaller operations in recent years. And contacts among the highest-ranking Zetas operatives tend to take place in highly encrypted communications over the Internet, according to Grupo Savant. 

Certainly, cartel radio equipment is a near-ubiquitous presence for Mexicans living along the front lines of the drug war.


In the state of Tamaulipas, across the border from eastern Texas, many antennas are concealed in the foliage of the rockrose, an invasive shrub that has spread across much of the state's open land. 

Even from a few meters away it's nearly impossible to see the towers or their power cables. 

In Nuevo Laredo, the Zetas' first stronghold, antennas sprout from rooftops and empty lots. One soldier told the AP that even when authorities took down an antenna there, it was swiftly replaced. 





Violence Continues in Piedras Negras

$
0
0
Borderland Beat
Note:  I am writing a post about Acuna, Coahuila...which I was going to combine with this post but I think it should be on its own.  If Anyone has heard of or has knowledge of violence happening around the 17th of September please email me @ laverdad_52@yahoo.com.mx Thank you, Paz, Chivis
 

Shootout results in the death of 4 who may be prison escapees


Authorities of Coahuila informed that a confrontation occurred in the colonia San Joaquín and another confrontation in the colonia Guillén.
State and federal forces are conducting a extensive security operative by land and air in this municipality and it surroundings after registering two shootouts that left four armed men dead.
The confrontation between police and gunmen occurred Monday afternoon in different points of the city. In one of the confrontations, agents of the Special Tactics and weapons Group (GATES) killed four suspects and confiscated a car and a pick up.
The spokesman on topics of safety of Coahuila, Sergio Sisbeles Alvarado, said that the first confrontation was around 12:00 hrs in the colonia San Joaquin, southwest of the city, where the GATES identified a black Pick up Dodge Ram, where four suspects were boarding it, however the men evaded arrest by escaping through vacant lots and buildings on foot..
Later, an operative to search for the suspects took place but failed.
One hour later, at 13:10 hrs, on the high way Perez Trevino and Francisco Marquez, in the colonia Guillen, another confrontation took place, where the agents killed four men that were on a white Pontiac.
Sisbeles added that the police found 800 doses of marijuana and “crack”, 2 long weapons, a rifle and an Uzi in the Pontiac where the suspects were killed.
He also said that the police are obtaining the fingerprints of the murder victims to determine if they are some of the 131 fugitives of the penitentiary of Piedras Negras, last Monday, Sept 17.
As for the surveillance operative, he précised that the elements of Secretariat of National Defense (SEDENA), Secretariat of Marines- Army of Mexico (SEMAR), GATES, municipal and federal police, are who are doing it.
He also stated that the government of the state continues to amplify efforts to guarantee security to the families of Piedras Negras.
 
 
Sources: Universal and Zocalo

"Lalo" Moreira Son of Humberto Moreira Executed In Acuna

$
0
0
Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

 
Cold blooded execution

Jose Eduardo Moreira Rodriquez, 28,   was shot and killed in Acuna Coahuila tonight at around 9:15PM on the road to Santa Eulalia.  Also known as “Lalo”, he is the  son of Humberto Moreira, the former Governor of Coahuila and federal  PRI party president.  Lalo’s uncle is the governor of Coahuila.
His death is described as a cold blooded execution, and it is rumored to be a cartel killing.  Los Zetas control the city of Acuna.  Acuna has experienced violence in the past few weeks, none of which has been reflected in the news.
Acuna is located and hour from Piedras Negras, where violence has erupted since the prison break in which 131 prisoners escaped.  Strange circumstances surround the killing, as Lalo was alone at the time of his death, without his bodyguard, and he was driving his armored vehicle yet he felt secure enough to exit his vehicle, which lends the probability that he knew his attackers.  His body was riddled with bullets.
 
Del Rio Texas is adjacent to Acuna.  The road he was killed on is one that lies in the outskirts of the city and it runs past the maquila row.  He was said to be in the area to attend a function for a new project he was involved in.  The road is somewhat desolate at night but it is a quicker way to maneuver around the city. 
                                                              Lalo and Lucero Moreira
Baby Jose Eduardo with his grandfather
Lalo was very respected in Acuna for his work with impoverished people.  He was the regional coordinator of social programs of the Department of State Development.  His latest project was home repairs for the poor such as roof replacements. 
 
According to a statement released by Daniel Pinal,  Humberto Moreira, the former governor wrote: "They killed my son, Jose Eduardo, a young clean, social  promoter who used to work with the most humble people of Acuña, Coahuila".

My foundation had the opportunity to work with Lalo after the floods from hurricane Alex, and I found him to be a sincere, dedicated, compassionate person. He was married in 2010 in Acuna and had a baby son, born this year and who is the first grandchild of Humberto Moreira, who attended the birth.
President Felipe Calderon made contact with the state governor to coordinate efforts to enable the capture of those responsible. Federal agencies such as PGR and Sec of Marina will coordinate the investigation.
Reports are coming in that he was killed in a shootout between police and narcos, however people are rejecting that report saying he was executed and left on the road.  Other reports state that there were two killed. 
Was it a revenge killing? From Proceso today 10.4.12


So far unclear what caused the murder, but unofficially it has emerged that could be revenge from the "Zetas" leader Miguel Angel Trevino Morales, alias "Z40".

This because the state police killed one of his nephews yesterday in Piedras Negras, after a confrontation in which four people died.
 
This hypothesis was based on a "narcobanners" appeared in the region with the text "family by family", whose entire content has not yet been released.

Today 10.5.12 reports are surfacing that Lalo was kidnapped earlier in the day, killed in an unknown location, though a good guess would be the rugged terrain of Santa Eulalia, then transporting the body back to be dumped in or adjacent to Acuna.  Santa Eulalia is the area behind Acuna that is used for off road ATV riding and hunting.


 

Mexico Arrests 2 For Murder of Border Patrol Agent

$
0
0
Borderland Beat

UPDATE:  10.5.12
Investigators are preparing to announce that the death of Border Patrol Agent Nicholas Ivie in Arizona earlier this week was the result of friendly fire -- accidental gunfire from another agent who responded to the same scene, state and federal officials told NBC News on Friday.

Agent Ivie
Mexican troops have arrested two suspects in the killing of a U.S. Border Patrol agent and the wounding of a second officer in Arizona, Mexican security officials said on Wednesday. he two suspects were detained in a Mexican military operation in the city of Agua Prieta, in Mexico's northern Sonora state, a few miles from the spot where Nicholas Ivie was shot dead early on Tuesday while responding to a tripped ground sensor, a Mexican Army officer, who declined to be named.
Ivie was among three agents who were patrolling on foot about five miles north of the international border when gunfire erupted. A second agent was also wounded while the third, a woman, was unharmed.  
The agents had been patrolling in an area near the border town of Naco, well-known as a corridor for smuggling, and the Cochise County Sheriff's department has said that tracks were found heading south after the shooting.
Ivie was a 30-year-old father of two, he had been an agent for four years.
A Mexican police official in Naco, across the border from the Arizona town of the same name, confirmed the arrests, which occurred in the early hours of Wednesday.
U.S. officials refused to comment on the report of the arrests..
                (click map to enlarge)
The alleged perpetrators of the attack were arrested in an operation that began in the area of ​​Naco, Sonora (Arizona border) and ended hours later in the neighboring town of Agua Prieta, just over 40 miles east of where the assault occurred .
 
The Mexican operation involved federal and municipal police.  Without providing details, the source said the men were transferred to an agency of the attorney general in Agua Prieta.
It was the first fatal shooting of an on-duty Border Patrol agent since December 2010, when Brian Terry was killed in a shootout with bandits near the border. Terry's shooting was later linked to the government's "Fast and Furious" gun-smuggling operation, which allowed people suspected of illegally buying guns for others to walk away from gun shops with weapons, rather than be arrested.
 
Update:  An Investigation Has Begun to Rule Out "Friendly Fire"
Investigators report that that have reached no conclusions and still have lots of work to do. But they said they cannot rule out that it was a friendly fire incident.
 
 

Mexican security forces reinforce Coahuila in wake of shooting

$
0
0
You can read the BorderlandBeat.com account of the murder of Jose Eduardo Moreira Rodriquez here.

Foto de Twitter
By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com


An undisclosed number of Mexican federal security troops have been deployed to northern Coahuila state in the wake of the shooting of the nephew of Coahuila state governor Ruben Moreira Valdes.  He is also the son of former Coahuila governor Humberto Moreira Valdes, Wednesday night, according to Mexican news accounts.

According to a news report posted on the Borderland Beat website, Jose Eduardo Moreira Rodriquez, 28, was found shot to death near the village of Santa Eulalia, near the border city of Ciudad Acuna Wednesday night.   Moreira Rodriquez was apparently engaged in work for the poor as regional coordinator of social programs of the Department of State Development.



Foto de Twitter

Ciudad Acuna, which is less than 40 kilometers from Piedras Negras, has been the scene of a number of shootings and security incidents, which like Piedras Negras stem from a prison break in Piedras Negras September 17th.

Until the murder of Moreira Rodriquez, Mexican federal response to the numerous shootings in the area has been tepid.  Much of Mexico's security in the state is concentrated in the east of the state in support of Operacion Noreste, which is itself centered in Tamaulipas state and Seguro Laguna, which is centered in La Laguna, where Torreon, Coahuila and Gomez Palacio, Durango form a sort of twin city metropoitan area.

According to various tweets and news story, including an item posted on the website of Vangardia news daily, Mexican naval infantry and Policia Federal troops arrived in the airport at Plan de Guaralupe in Ramos Arizpe municipality, near Saltillo, the state capital of Coahuila state.  Other tweets have said that other federal investigatory units, characterized as elite, have been spotted in Ciudad Acuna, barely 24 hours after the murder of Moreira Rodriquez.

Foto de Twitter

Mexican Army and Naval Infantry troops, originally spotted at the Government palace in Saltillo, where security meetings were held including military officials, were later seen heading north towards Ciudad Acuna and Piedras Negras, according to Twitter accounts.  Saltillo is also the location for the headquarters for the Mexican 6th Military Zone.

High level military officials attending included Admiral Jose Santiago Álvarez Valdés , Chief of the General Staff of the Mexican Navy, and General Alcazar Noah Sandoval, commander of the Ninth Military Region. and General Dagoberto Espinosa Rodríguez, commander of trhe 6th Military Zone.

Chris Covert writes Mexica Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

11 die in Zacatecas state

$
0
0
By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A total of 11 individuals were killed in several shootouts and executions Sunday, Wednesday and Thursday in Zacatecas state, including a shootout between a elements of a Mexican Army road patrol and armed suspects, according to Mexican news accounts.


According to a news item posted on the website of El Sol de Zacatecas news daily, a Mexican Army patrol encountered armed suspects in Jerez municipality near the village of Encino Mocho Thursday evening.

The armed suspects were reportedly members of the Gulf Cartel (CDG), and had fired on the army unit.  Army return fire killed five and critically wounded one armed suspect.  Four soldiers were hurt in the encounter from the pursuit which presumably ended with the firefight.

A week ago, a Mexican Naval Infantry unit encountered armed suspects in Enrique Estrada municipality, about 20 kilometers due east of Jerez municipality.
You read about the armed confrontation between a Mexican marine unit and armed suspects by clicking here
Six unidentified individuals were murdered or were found dead in ongoing drug and gang related violence in Zacatecas state last Wednesday and Sunday, according to several items which appeared in the web edition of El Sol de Zacatecas.
  • Three individuals were shot to death in a shooting at a drinking establishment in Zacatecas municipality last Sunday.  According to the news item, armed suspects dismounted a Nisaan Sentra sedan at about 2100 hrs at Meolodramas on Avenida Francisco García Salinas in Lomas del Campestre colony, and fired their weapons inside the establishment before fleeing the scene.  The owner, identified as Leonardo Rojas Mora, and two employees died at the scene.
  • A man was found shot to death in Sombrerete municipality near the village of Benito Juarez Wednesday morning.  The victim was identified as  Rolando Gonzalez Aldaba,  The report said the victim had been tortured and shot and, probably had a nexus to organized crime.
  • A Mexican Army unit found two unidentified bodies in Villanueva municipality near the village of San Juan Wednesday. The victims had been tortured and shot.
Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

WIDOW BLAMES GOVERNOR: Lalo's Funeral: Humberto Moreira Speaks About His Son

$
0
0
Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

Widow blames the governor of Coahuila for Lalo's death, demands he resign

 
 
Lucero Davis, widow of Lalo Moreira speaks out on Twitter putting the blame for the death of her husband on the head of his uncle, Ruben Moreira, Governor of coahuila. The twitter account as been authenticated as belonging to LuceroThe Governor did not attend the funeral nor the Acuña mayor.
TOP: You don't know how to govern!!! This is your damn fault!!!! Resign
BOTTOM:I demand Justice!!!!! For the assassination my husband Jose Eduardo
 
An Eye for an Eye, A Nephew for a Nephew
Acuna is a town adjacent to Del Rio Texas.  It is a dusty border town that no one would choose to vacation in.  There is nothing pretty about Acuna, no tropical scenery, no impressive metropolitan it is just a town that at first glance is one that says, “nothing here”. I am not sure the why, but I fell in love with the border town.
This is the city Lalo lived in with his family.  His childhood was not the same as his siblings who were born within wedlock, fact is he was not even acknowledged as Humberto Moreira’s son until the senior Moreira was beginning his campaign for governor.   From all accounts however Humberto had made regular visits to Acuna to visit with his son and they appeared close. 
I have received a couple of comments, respectful, but objecting to what they perceived as a martyred view of Lalo.  That is not the case.  I can only report to you about my interaction with the young man.
I look at him and wonder, “was this Humberto at the same age”?  Humberto began with dreams of becoming a professor, did his life begin this way with a sincere intention to live an honorable life and things went horribly off course and he walked a path of corruption, betrayal and sin? I don’t know.  What I do know is in Mexico rarely is anything black and white there is a huge backstory and gray area to most issues.  Well intentioned dreams do not pardon a person from bad choices, but it does give a glimpse into the dilemma Mexicans find themselves when stepping into politics.  The video of the newly elected mayor’s meeting with the LFM cartel is a perfect example, in some parts of Mexico it is destined that one become that which they fought against, or in Humberto’s case worse.
With Lalo there are those that say he would have followed the path of his father, and perhaps that is true, though I think it would have been difficult for him not to, we will never know.  What I do know is that he did not die for his wrongdoings or collusion with criminals, but for those of his father and Uncle.  It is said he was chosen because he was an easy hit, he did not have the security that his siblings or cousins have.
It is said that Zetas leader Miguel Trevino was retaliating against the  uncle of Lalo, Coahuila Governor Ruben Moreira, for sending state troops to Piedras Negras which resulted in a shootout that claimed the life of Trevino’s nephew. This is the persistant soken about scenario, and I have no doubt they conducted theexecution  with the help of municipal police who sleep with the last letter.
All I can say for sure is that the Lalo that the people of Acuna knew,  worked diligently for the impoverished people and that he was loved.  He worked as hard when the cameras were off as when they were rolling.  So I just offer that at this point in his life it had not taken that dark path of the elder Moreiras. 
And that this is another tragedy of Mexico, it exemplifies how its brightest hope for the future seems to seldom culminate in the life expected.  Ultimately, corruption, crime, bigotry, coercion, and prejudice usually intercedes.  
Overview of video narrative of Humberto Moreira
On behalf of all my family I thank you for being here.
Months ago, I propose Lalo to stay living in Saltillo, I told him that I would like for him to move to Saltillo with his wonderful wife Lucero,  and he told me that wasn’t  his dream, that his dream was to live in the town  that he loved the most, Acuña.
At that time I told him that he could make a political career if that was what he wanted, he said: ok, wait dad, I don’t want to make a career in Saltillo, my biggest dream, my greatest wish is to one day become the mayor of Acuna.
Today it is just a dream, my son is dead. He didn’t accomplish either the dream of taking his son, which is not even one year old, to the lake fishing. It was the dream that my son, Jose Eduardo, talked about, every time he was at the house. He wished to see his son walk, he wanted to see him grow up, and he didn’t accomplish that dream either.
He had many dreams and now is truncated. All pains are strongly suffered  and when you lose someone is very hard but to lose a son, a husband, a brother and in the way it was lost, is very hard to overcome it and I want to thank you all that are accompanying us. The force of God is keeping me standing, our family and I feel our heart broken, and there is anybody that knows Lalo that can tell you how he was, a young man that lived modestly. He was achieving his goals.
One day,  a few months ago, I offered my son help by giving him additional income because we saw that his salary wasn’t letting him grow, economically speaking,  and Lalo refused it alo said that he wanted to grow with what he could accomplish with own salary. He wanted to start from the bottom.
My son had many dreams. Today and yesterday, with no doubt, are the saddest days of our lives. Only God knows the pain we are feeling by losing a son in this absurd war that is presenting on this country. I am just another father of the thousands of fathers that have lost a son, Lucero is another wife of the thousands of wives that have lost their husbands, and my grandson is another child of the thousands of orphans of this war.
God bless you all for being on the most difficult moments of our lives, for accompanying us.
I have a strong belief in God. During the months of tribulation, I had the opportunity to read the bible, the 66 books of the bible  and that is the reason I am standing, if I hadn’t done that, probably my emotional position would be even more complicated than how I am today. God bless you all.


The Funeral
GATE, PGR, and Federal Police were mobilized to Acuna before the funeral.  Movement in el centro was slow and difficult.  Many citizens purposely stayed clear of the plaza fearing the possiblilty there may be additional violence at the funeral, others keeping their children home from school as a safety precaution.  Funeral violence is not that uncommon in the world of narcos, they are known to  conduct an attacks at funerals,  killing additional targets and funeral attendees. 

At least 2 helicopters were conducting air surveillance all day, around the city and the church.
The funeral was today October 4, at 2:00 PM. It was held at the Guadalupe Catholic Church in Acuna Coahuila. The plaza was packed with GATE and Federal police officers.
 
In the photo of inside the church, is Humberto sitting in the front pew, to his left is the now widowed Lucero, to his right his daughter, followed by Vanessa and his mother.
 
The last photo is the body being transported to the burial site, Humberto's white Suburban is following the hearse.

When the coffin was coming out the church the people started chanting:" Lalito! Lalito! Lalito!"
People extended a sign of support and sensitivity during his time of grief, many said simply Humberto by saying: "Humberto Amigo Acuña esta contigo", ( Humberto friend Acuña is with you). For today the people put aside anger and disappointment, for today it was not about politics, cartels and accusation, those things are set aside for this day. Today it was about a father and family who lost someone they loved very much, and almost all of us can relate to that sorrow.
This goes without saying, but we are not professional photographers, we did our best, click on any photo to create a better view.

 
 
 
"YO SOY LALO!!" From Cristero of Borderland Beat Forum:
 
 Lalo no era un delincuente, solo fue la persona quien pago las deudas de su papa y si tio, el no estaba vinculado que ningun cartel y jamas se sirvio de los exesos de su papa y su tio, creo debemos tomar esta trajedia y utilizarla como a Lalo le uviera gustado, que no sea en vano su muerte, no dejemos que ni los carteles ni los Moreiras corumpan lo que fue este joven en vida, fue una person quien vivio y trabajo para la gente de escasos recursos, pues sigamos con su legado. Debemos de tomar la plataforma que nos dio su trajica muerta y utilizarla para unir a todos que fueron victimas, debemos utilizar esta nuerte de este joven para unir a las familias de otras victimas, alfin de cuentas en Mexico todos somos victimas y por eso todos somos "LALO". Mexico como un pais, Mexico como una cultura, Mexico como una idiolojia fue robada y esta siendo robada por el crimen organizado y por la corupta maquina politica que han permitido todo esto. Repito Mexico es un Pais,que tiene una cultura que es unica en el mundo, tenemos una gente que es bella, una hermosa gente Mexicana! Amo mi patria! amo al Mexicano, hasta cuando vamos a decir "Basta Ya!!" Ami me han robado a Mexico y por eso "yo soy Lalo!!" quien mas es Lalo?

Police and local officials implicated in Eduardo Moreira's murder

$
0
0

Excelsior. 10-5-2012.

Translated by un vato for Borderland Beat

Coahuila State Attorney General, Homero Ramos Gloria, disclosed that four persons have been detained under investigation and three others have been presented.

Ciudad de Mexico, 10-5-12 (www.excelsior.com.mx). Police and municipal officials took part in the murder of Jose Eduardo Moreira, the son of Coahuila former governor, Humberto Moreira. 
"At this time, in a parallel manner, there are municipal officials who are implicated in the events," stated the State Attorney General, Homero Ramos Gloria, who explained that, for that reason, four persons are detained for purposes of investigation and have given statements this morning.

In a radio interview, the state official disclosed that three other persons have been formally arrested ("presentadas"), and they have also given formal statements.

Nevertheless, he did not reveal the names of any of the people allegedly involved, although he did say there were municipal officials and (municipal) police involved.

He commented only that the suspects gave the names of the persons who actually carried out the murder, but said he will not give out more details yet to prevent them from fleeing.

Ramos Gloria did not rule out the hypothesis that the death of Humberto Moreira's son could be related to the death of a nephew of a Zetas capo.  


Friendly Fire Killed Border Patrol Agent

$
0
0
Borderland Beat
I have not seen a confirmation of the NBC report.  News agencies are still referring to the investigation ballistic testing as pending...


Investigators are preparing to announce that the death of Border Patrol Agent Nicholas Ivie in Arizona earlier this week was the result of friendly fire -- accidental gunfire from another agent who responded to the same scene, state and federal officials told NBC News on Friday.
A formal statement about the findings could come later Friday.
The incident involving Ivie and two other agents occurred Tuesday in a rugged area about five miles north of the US-Mexico border near Bisbee, Ariz. The agents had responded to an alarm from a sensor that tracks illegal movement along the border.
The conclusion is based on an analysis of the ballistics, the lack of evidence of other criminals in the area at the time, and other factors, the sources said.
A formal statement about the findings could come later Friday.
 A second agent was wounded and was released from the hospital after undergoing surgery. The third agent was unharmed.
State and federal officials said immediately after the incident that the shootings were committed by armed criminals. And since then, Mexican authorities have said they arrested two men in Agua Prieta, northern Sonora state, a few miles from where the shooting occurred.
Source:NBC

Death and mourning in the political class

$
0
0

El Universal. 

By Samuel Gonzalez

Translated by un vato for Borderland Beat

(politica@eluniversal.com.mx )

Friday, October 5, 2012. For years we have held that the spiral of violence in this country would reach the highest levels of the political, business and social classes. Today, unfortunately, it touched a 25 year old young man, son of one of the most important politicians in Mexico today. He enjoys privileged status because of his proximity with the next president's team and with Ruben Moreira.

In the case of the homicide of the young Moreira, we should also remember that the challenge is even greater because they murdered him knowing that his uncle Ruben is the current governor of that state and that his aunt works very closely with the current President-elect, Enrique Pena Nieto. This homicide is a reminder that the violence unleashed these last eight years doesn't distinguish by social class, nor by business, political or cultural status.

It's about a transverse violence that we are all subject to. It's a product of our inability as a society to strengthen the Mexican State, and to reach agreement on a transition that will allow the country's  burdens and benefits to be distributed correctly. This crisis of  weakness in the Mexican State is patent and manifest, it can be seen throughout the length and breadth of the country because we have created preserves of power where there exists a true Mexican feudalism.

We have studied diverse realities from Colombia to Ireland, from Afghanistan to Italy, and in all of them, we find that there is a certain turning point after which the governing elites in a country begin to understand what they have to do to reverse the violence process. Like a great paradox, each famous death, and the pain  it causes, represents a hope that the governing elites will understand what they have to do to have a State capable of providing security and justice for everybody, an environment in which all of us can exercise our rights without a fear of being executed in an absurd war in which criminals impose their law because they know that, one way or another, impunity will prevail and they will not be brought to justice.

This, the impunity, is the product of the weakness of the Mexican State that allows anyone to challenge authority without there being any consequences. The challenge for the next administration is to strengthen the State, to make political actors understand that the State's strength derives from a respect for the law and from the establishment of a system that sanctions everybody equally, that will distribute income to prevent hundreds of thousands from joining organized crime because they don't have any other alternative. It will happen by applying an integrated strategy, something the current administration understood too late. The challenge is not to spend more on federal forces, but to achieve security through fighting corruption, creating transparency, reducing violence and ending a feudalism in political and economic sectors that threatens everybody's future equally.


Mexican Army kills 1, wounds 3, rescues 5 in Tamaulipas state

$
0
0
By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

Mexican Army units operating in Tamaulipas state killed one armed suspect and rescued five individuals in separate actions Wednesday and Thursday, according to official Mexican government news sources.


A Mexican Army road patrol in Valle Hermoso municipality near the village of El Empalme came under small arms fire from an armed group of unknown size Thursday.  Army return fire killed one and wounded two armed suspects.  presumably the rest of the armed group escaped the encounter.

Following the conclusion of the firefight, soldiers seized three rifles, one handgun, tactical gear and a vehicle.

Separately on Wednesday, a Mexican Army unit on patrol in Reynosa municipality came under small arms fire.  Army return fire wounded one unidentified armed suspect. Five unidentified individuals were also released from capture following the armed encounter. 

Following the firefight, soldiers seized 32 rifles, one 40mm grenade launcher and seven vehicles, two of which were armored.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

6 die in Zacatecas state

$
0
0
By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A total of six unidentified individuals were killed in separate encounters in Zacatecas state Thursday and Friday, according to official Mexican government and private news sources.


A Mexican Army unit with the 11th Military Zone came under small arms fire while on patrol in Garcia de la Cadena municipality near the village of Las Higueras Friday.  Soldiers in the patrol unit observed a convoy with several vehicles, and exchanged gunfire with the convoy's occupants.

Mexican Army counterfire killed four armed suspects.  Following the firefight, soldiers seized two AK-47 rifles, one AR-15 rifle, one FAL 7.62mm NATO rifle, 39 weapons magazines, an undisclosed quantity of ammunition and a BMW SUV.

In a separate incident, reported in a web report posted on the website of El Sol de Zacatecas news daily, two unidentified individuals were killed and another female victim was wounded in an armed attack on a taxi in the village of Encino Mocho in Jerez municipality Thursday evening. 

A total of five unidentified individuals were killed in an armed encounter with a Mexican Army unit in the same village at about the same time.  According to the latest news report, an army unit was tasked with providing protection for the female victim in the taxi attack as she received medical attention.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

Living in Mexico with Virtual Kidnappings

$
0
0
Borderland Beat
                                                    Terror calls the house
Nobody stops the extortions and virtual kidnappings

The fright caused by the deprivation of liberty without asking for ransom favors telephone extortion

The psychosis that has provoked in the collective unconscious the phenomenon of kidnapping,  the kind that doesn't usually ask for ransom since the goal is homicide, is being used as an instrument of blackmail by the extortionists that have found home and cellular telephones are the best weapon to terrorize the population and obligate their victims to pay for a lie.  Riodoce gathered ten stories that warn of  the method in the performance of this crime in Sinaloa.

I.  Tell me compadre

In an office located right in the center of Culiacán, María  answered the telephone with the courtesy obligated by the company, but all changed as she heard the first words from the other end

—Mama, mama, help me please.  They kidnapped me.  I'm scared!  They are going to kill me!

The screams accompanied by crying was heart rendering and was enough to provoke hysteria in Maria who immediately thought of her daughter Leticia.The sobbing got to her and the man who spoke to her even tried to calm her.


—Don't cry señora, Don't be nervous. Do as if you're talking with a compadre .  yes, call me  compadre.

----It's fine compadre, tell me.

—Look the truth is that I spend money, I have a problem but don't worry about the girl, nothing will happen to her if you do what I say

The subject explained to her what she must do. he asked her how much she  had. She said nothing, but that in the bank she had some $3,000 pesos. With that it was enough, said the extortioner

—Look you're going to tell your  work mates that you was going to leave for a moment. You have  do a errand for the supervisor.
---Yes, compadre

Before  doing it, he asked for her cell number to monitor her and he warned her not to hang up. Nervous, Maria dictated the wrong number and a few seconds later the subject was screaming angrily why wasn't she answering her cel phone and that he wasn't playing around. Because it hasn't rung, answered a weeping Maria, who realized she gave him the wrong number and asked a colleague to give it to her. In this lapse, she reached to write on a piece of fax paper  asking her workmate: “Dial the house and ask about Leticia”,  At home, they informed her that Maria's daughter was in the house and automatically Maria hung up the phone.

Her daughter never was kidnapped. The nervous crisis returned. Maria decided to go to her house to see that her daughter was well. The cellular rang time and time again and she not only didn't turn it off but asked her work mates to extinguish it

II. Mama, they kidnapped me!

It was similar case with Delores who they called the house phone

—Mama, mama they kidnapped me
without thinking she immediately hung up. The reason was simple. Her only child was three years old and was with her besides, " the one on the phone sounded like a grown up."

III. $15,000.00

The case where extortion was performed (in) is the case of Sara whom they called to tell her that they kidnapped her son from school
—we want 15,000 pesos
—tell me where and when to take it, said the desperate lady.
The extortionist suggested to her the Cinépolis (de) Culiacán . They met in the parking lot of the commercial plaza she handed the cash that she had withdrawn from the bank and the man told her not to worry.

—The boy is already back in school go get him, he assured.

In reality, the boy never left his classroom.

IV. Colitis

Argelia spent the worst day of her life when she answered the home phone and heard the intimidating voice of a man

—We have your daughters, we kidnapped them from school and we want to negotiate otherwise we will hurt them. In that moment she felt a sharp pain in her stomach, the crying, the nerves, the desperation all together hit her and she became hysterical. A relative asked her what was going on and as much as she was able she informed the relative. who convinced her to hang up and immediately go to the school to check that the girls were there and otherwise go to the police to denounce the crime

Terrorized because the extortioner warned her not to hang up or he would harm her daughter. the women finally followed her relative's advice and arrived at her daughters school. Banging on the door like a crazy woman, and first she saw one of the girls sitting in her chair and then she searched for the other and the  same happened

She suffered a collapse that took her to the hospital where the doctor diagnosed her with colitis caused by the shock

Argelia cancelled her home and cellular phone.

At home, one of the daughters said that the day before that "an uncle" had called asking question which the girl answered.

V. Nobody calls her that

For Refugio, daughter of Irene, the scam of the extortioners didn't work.  They called the mother's house and the only boy of 5 years old answered.

They asked for Irene and the boy said, "No Irene lives here."  The mother took the phone, cause the phrase caught her attention.

— Hello
— Aunt Irene?

— who is it? Refugio says
— Don't you know who I am? they insist

--- then Refugio answered

 — Certainly a scammer because here there is nobody that has that name and she hung up.

Effectively, at home they only know Irene by her nickname, Nena.  And that is how the grandson found out his grandmother's name is Irene.

VI. A courtesy call

Ana a young house wife received a cell phone call and just like that a guy threatened her with kidnapping her and whoever accompanies her at that moment.  the reason? That person had information from her cell phone that a drug seller had been denounced that operated in that area (that) and because of that he was in jail.  The petition was for her to withdraw the denouncement and the problem will end.

Ana didn't panic even decide to even record the conversation because she assures that her husband wouldn't have believe the thing happened to her.  "He says I exaggerate" But this time she wasn't and shared the recording with Riodoce

—Well look before hand this is a courtesy call to make an arrangement with you; Beforehand I don't want to use violence on you or your family and much less I believe that you would much less like me arriving with my gunmen to your house.  I find myself 20-25 minutes from your home.  As I told you I have orders from my boss to arrive at this address, right? and  more over kidnapping any person that is found in the house. As I told you, I gathered some information before getting to your house in which the neighbors are telling you are a pacific person that you don't bother anyone {inaudible video}. I am giving you this courtesy call to get into an agreement with you and to proceed with the withdrawal of the denouncement without the need of kidnapping you, touching you or disrespecting you or anyone in your family. 

—But why are you going to do this when I don't have any problems with anybody?  I don't even know who I'm talking to.

—Look mija (inaudible)...As I told you in the beginning, the problem is that cartel people were reported and beforehand, you know, I don't believe you haven't seen how many killing there have been in all the republic of Mexico every day for reporting people of organized crime, do you follow me. Don't you know how many people die every day or how many people are in the  TV news?  



—Well, the truth is I don't see neither tv or newspaper

—Well mija, beforehand you know how it is (inaudible), I don't think you'd like me to arrive with all my gunmen and have to kidnap you in a van 
with all your family because you are with more people in your house, right? And before hand, don't think you or your family would like us to kidnap you? Would you?

—no, of course not because we're not problematic people

—Well, look then if you don't want to have problems, If you don't want me to arrive with my people to your house, if you don't want me to tie your hands and feet, handcuff your hands, blindfold you and throw you into  van (inaudible), I want you to cooperate and in whatever I ask I want you to answer in a good way.

—But what's your name?

—my name is Cristian Morales mija, I am in charge of the guard, I'm M-16, Hear me

—ah, ok yeah
—I am in charge of the guard for (inaudible), pay attention to what I'm going to tell you.  I want you to tell me one thing and answer it truthfully.  Do you want to cooperate or should I get into your house with my gunmen?

—But why are you threatening me.  I mean what is your point?
—Look  my point is that I have orders from my boss to take you all tied up and force you to withdraw the denouncement: I don't think there is a need to use violence against you because I believe I'm talking to a person who understands and reasons. Do you have your feet on the ground or am I wrong, mija?
—Of course my feet are on the ground.  She hung up

There was no more courtesy phone calls

VII. It's me, your daughter

But not only in Culiacan  this is happening.  In the city Los Mochis, Gabriela also answered the phone and the first thing she heard was the voice of a young lady with fake sobbing, desperately asking for help

—Mom help me they put me into a car
—How? Who is this talking, she asked

—It is me your daughter they put me in a car and immediately they hung up
Gabriela knew immediately what it was about and she thought they would call back again but it didn't happen.  She thinks they gave up because she didn't panic just because her daughters were home playing

VIII. Do you know who I am aunt?
Guasave isn't safe from this type of phone call like the one Consuelo answered, to whom her supposed "nephew" called her home
---Aunt?
—yes, tell me
—Aunt, do you know who I am?  I'm in the highway aunt
—¿Manuel?
—Yes, I  was on the highway coming home but I crashed  and the Federal transit police stopped me.  They won't release me because  a little girl got her skull cracked in the accident and they are taking her to the hospital.  I need money for her to be attended to and $3000 for the Federal Police to release me

The supposed nephew told her that he had personal checks that he would cash in Guasave, and once he arrived, he would get the money back.  She said she didn't have money but she would notify his mother.  He asked her not to do that, so she wouldn't worry, and that he would call back in 20 minutes to give her time to gather the money

Consuelo notified the mother and they told her it wasn't true because Manuel was with them.

The second phone call arrived but she didn't answer

IX.   The big or the small?

Also in Guasave, Alicia was in her house doing domestic chores when the telephone rang

— Hello, is Roberto Higuera home
---  Senior or junior?, She responded

Then the voice that said to be a "commandante" informed her that he had been following Roberto junior, for days, and that if they didn't deposit 25,000 pesos they would kidnap him.  She responded that she didn't have that amount of money and that if they were following him they would surely have already noticed that

The "commandante" got mad, insulted her and yelled at her that she didn't love her son and with that said they were going to kill him

With this he managed to upset her and he gave her one hour to get the money.  The woman panicked and she started to get the money. She went to Elektra and asked for a loan but she was refused

She went to one of her daughter and it was her who said that surely they were extortioners and she should calm down.

More relaxed, she returned home where her son was and didn't  let him out of his room fearing that the telephone threat might be true.

Thought out the afternoon the telephone was ringing insistently.  She didn't answer.

X.  They have my daughter
.
The case of Marina shows how disturbing these phone calls can be.
It was a Sunday and she answered the phone and they said that they had kidnapped her daughter and yes indeed she believed she was listening to her daughter yelling,  "Mom, help me"

—"Silvia?" —  came from her mouth

It was then a man told her what she should do.  He asked her if there was an Oxxo nearby where she could recharge her cellular balance.  She answered no and very angrily he scolded her and threatened that he was going to send her daughter's head to her.  He hung up.

Fear burst. The woman came out running frantically from her house crying even though she could barely speak she managed to yell, "they have my daughter."

Some neighbors helped her.  They dialed her daughter's cellphone and she answered, and they let Marina talk to her daughter so she would calm down;

While still with the neighbors, they called her again.  But she didn't answer and she turned off her phone

The Dilemma

the virtual kidnapping in Mexico became popular in 2001, with the boom of cellulars.  It is telephone extortion and it has been evolving because before they used to use the phone book to obtain information about the victim and now a days they use social networks. The  PGJE has detected that most of the phone calls of this kind are made from inmates in the jails mainly from DF.  This is most common with countries with high insecurity like Mexico, the criminal manages to put fear in the respondents because everyone is aware of kidnappings in everyday life.

In all the tales told to Riodoce one constant was that the facts were not denounced.  The reasons because nobody does anything.  And the Anti-Kidnapping Specialized Unit say that "there are 1000's of cases that they don't pay any attention to.  "They ask for the cell phone" and when regularly it shows "private" in the phone screen-so why bother?" 


How to behave before a telephone extortion

—Keep calm
—Don't give away any information on the phone
—Cut the communication and try to locate the relative
—Try to use caller id and register numbers
—Communicate with the police and denounce it
—Share the experience with family, friends and neighbors
Source: Instituto Ciudadano de Estudios Sobre Inseguridad, A.C. (ICESI).


—In México only 2 out 10 are reported or denounced
Source: Instituto Ciudadano de Estudios Sobre Inseguridad, A.C. (ICESI).

"Comandante Ardilla" Caught in Nuevo Laredo

$
0
0
Borderland Beat 
Captured in Mexico* Zeta Regional Boss* Alleged Mastermind of Slaying 72 Migrants


NUEVO LAREDO, Mexico - An alleged regional leader of the Zetas cartel that is linked to the slaughter of 72 Central American migrants that occurred in 2010 was captured in the city of Nuevo Laredo, on the U.S. border, a source said Saturday the prosecution.

72 Migrants Killed and Discarded by Los Zetas San Fernando, Tamaulipas 2010
                                                           
After a series of shootouts between soldiers and gunmen that occurred on Saturday, "arrested a man identified as Salvador Alfonso Martinez Escobedo, alias Comandante Ardilla", the source said the Tamaulipas state prosecutor (northeast), who asked not to be identified. Martinez Escobedo was arrested in a residential area of Nuevo Laredo, said the source, who declined to elaborate.

For Martinez Escobedo, identified as head of a cell of the Zetas in San Fernando, Tamaulipas, Attorney General offered a reward of 15 million pesos (1.15 million dollars) for his capture.

The suspect is identified as one of those who planned the slaughter of 72 migrants, mostly Central Americans, and some from Ecuador and Brazil, which occurred in August 2010.
The Zetas cartel is considered one of the most powerful and bloodthirsty operating in Mexico. 
 Lone Survivor of Brutality, Luis Fredy Lala Pomavilla
 A badly beaten Luis Fredy Lala Pomavilla of Ecuador stumbled into a  checkpoint and led marines to a gruesome scene strewn with the bodies of 72 fellow migrant travelers, some piled on top of each other, about 100 miles from the border, the U.S. border.  The 58 men and 14 women were killed.

Disgusting Display of 72 migrants in Tamaulipas by Los Zetas
 Mexican authorities previously apprehended one of the commanders of "Los Zetas" linked to the killing of 193 people in San Fernando, Tamaulipas, Abraham Barrios Caporal, alias "El Erasmo" or "El Comandante Erasmo" was transferred along with three of his federal criminal accomplices to Villa Aldama, Veracruz. Barrios Caporal continually implicated Salvador Alfonso Martinez Escobedo, alias Comandante Ardilla" as mastermind.
Abraham Barrios Caporal, alias “El Comandante Erasmo”



Capture


Zetas Slaughter 72, 72 Dreams Ended in  Massacre

Slaughter of innocents Failed their Victims

Narco Homicides the Real Number, El Erasmo


Imprisoned without trial; guilty until you can prove your innocence

$
0
0

Rio Doce

Judith Ortiz

Translated by un vato for Borderland Beat

Sunday, September 30, 2012

They accuse them without proof, try them without a judge and convict almost all of them. 

After court proceedings that lasted two years, Julio Vasquez Leon obtained a verdict of "not guilty." The 4th Unitary Tribunal of the 2nd Circuit in the State of Mexico, through Ruling 297-07, gave him absolute freedom because it did not find evidence of guilt for organized crime and drug possession with intent to sell, the offenses he was accused of. The sentence came too late, since he had already endured two years of incarceration, although he was innocent.

Contrary to the principle that "a person is innocent until there is proof to the contrary," Julio entered the Altiplano maximum security prison on October 5, 2007. From that date, he had lived in a bureaucratic tangle, with amplified statements from police agents and factual witnesses, the testimonies of relatives and friends, physical and psychological examinations, ballistics and laboratory tests, and hundreds of court documents that swelled his court files.

Julio was arrested and accused by four Federal Preventive Police (PFP; Policia Federal Preventiva) agents, who, in their expanded statements, contradicted themselves in their narratives about securing the drugs, and who also manipulated the original arrest report, according to File No. 57/2007, filed in the Third District Court on matters involving federal criminal proceedings in the State of Mexico, of which Rio Doce has a copy.

Numerous incarcerations and sentencing of innocents that have taken place in recent years have an element in common: the only proof of the charges is the accusation made by the arresting officers themselves, which may be enough to find the defendant guilty if he lacks a good defense to prove his innocence.

President Felipe Calderon's war on drug trafficking has paraded before news media and  incarcerated thousands of illegally detained men and women. Many of them are innocent individuals who are being processed in different prisons around the country.

"This is the problem with the administration of justice in Mexico, where 70% of the persons deprived of their freedom are innocent," points out a study by the Open Society Institute and the Research Center for Development (CIDAC; Centro de Investigacion para el Desarrollo), which states that, "since the start of the war against the narco, the prison population of persons who have not been convicted grew almost 50% (fifty per cent) when it went from 63,724 inmates in 2000 to 94,746  in February of 2011."

Tried without a judge

Guillermo Zepeda Lecuona, a research professor with the Technological and Superior Studies Institute of the West (ITESO; Instituto Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores de Occidente), who participated in this study, maintains that abuse of preventive incarceration is evidence of the inefficiency of the justice system and the inability of police agencies to present evidence in their investigations: "They accuse people without proof, try them without a judge, and convict almost all of them. This suggests that there is very little investigation, and of very poor quality. Therefore, with a deficient investigation, you can't catch the guilty parties and innocent persons my be convicted."

The report charges that 42% (forty-two per cent) of inmates in Mexico are "legally innocent." A total of 90,000 of the 210,000 persons in prison have not been convicted, but find themselves in preventive incarceration, used "irrationally and indiscriminately" as "one of the pillars of a criminal (justice) policy desperate in the face of authorities overwhelmed by criminal phenomena and by citizen demands for security."   

The analysis considers preventive prisons in the Security and Criminal Justice System "improper, unjust and costly," in addition to being "warehouses for human beings where rehabilitation is unthinkable" and where the right to conditional release with bail for thousands of people is restricted, violating the defendants' fundamental rights."

The professor, an analyst on matters of national security, argues that "prosecuting entities use the fact that agents of the Public Ministry (MP; Ministerio Publico) make a great number of arrests as criteria of efficiency, and they impose arrest quotas on officials; they choose to go forward with cases even if there are insufficient elements to do so, although every year 40,000 (forty thousand) persons are released for lack of evidence."  

How does the Mexican government make reparation to Julio for two years of unjust incarceration? In the document The Myths of Preventive Prison in Mexico (2009), Guillermo Zepeda concludes that "preventive prison does not reduce the number of crimes that are committed, does not make citizens feel safer, does not incarcerate the most violent prisoners and does not allow adequate reparation for harm to the victim."

Guilt factory

According to the results of the study, Security and Criminal Justice in the States: 25 Indicators of our Institutional Weakness, performed by the organization Mexico Evalua, there exists the possibility that none of the stages in the procurement and imposition of justice are functioning adequately, and that there may be many innocent persons being sanctioned improperly. This is a very serious situation, it warns, due to the fact that in 78% (seventy-eight per cent) of the cases processed by state criminal prosecutors, the defendants end up in jail.

The report shows that the population in all of Mexico's prisons is approximately 227,000 inmates, mostly poor young men and women, of whom 37% (thirty-seven per cent) are accused of simple, non-violent theft of amounts less than 5,000 pesos (about $380.00). And, in cases involving the sale of drugs, where they received less than 1,600 pesos (about $125.00) from the sale.

With respect to the Sinaloa state prison system, the prisons have an occupancy rate of less than 100% (one hundred per cent), but present rates of homicides and incidences inside the prisons that are greater than the national average. Here, the degree to which this has affected the physical integrity of the inmates is alarming. The entity has the fourth highest rate of homicides per each thousand inmates with 2.8% , (a rate that is ) surpassed only by Tamaulipas, Durango and Coahuila. This is without taking into account the "deaths for health reasons" and suicides reported inside the state's jails.

The report also documents that Sinaloa is also the state with the second highest number of homicides per one hundred thousand inhabitants (at 68.9% (sic)), (a rate) surpassed only by Chihuahua;  that occupies third place with respect to the level of impunity for this offense (93%), higher than the median, which is 80.6%; which has 298 police officers for every 100,000 inhabitants (lower than the national average of 354); and in which only 7.3 % of persons surveyed stated they trusted the Preventive Police (Policia Preventiva) "a lot," a percentage that is also below the (national) average,  7.6%.    [Note: the 68.9% figure the author cites to represent the number of homicides per 100,000 should not be a percentage, but rather, "68.9 per 100,000," a number more in line with reported statistics from other sources.--Translator] 

The book, El preso sin condena en America Latina y el Caribe ("The 'unsentenced' prisoner in Latin America and the Caribbean), published under the auspices of the Institute of Latin American Nations United for the Prevention of Crime and Treatment for the Offender (Ilanud; Instituto Latinoamericano de Naciones Unidas para la Prevencion del Delito y Tratamiento del Delincuente), mentions that "there are prisoners that remain incarcerated due to the lack of an adequate defense and because of economic limitations that prevent payment of bail. Many of them will be absolved in the end. And it is absurd to tell them that they have not been subjected to a (prison) sentence, but simply to a precautionary measure intended to safeguard the process."

The text portrays prisons as institutions that, in general,  are highly criminogenic and pathogenic, and points out that "there are few things more unjust and which provoke more indignation than a State that, incapable of investigating crimes effectively, instead opts in advance to turn preventive incarceration into a prison sentence, most times unnecessary or unjust, in ongoing violation of international norms."

Presumed guilty


The principle of a presumption of innocence takes the form of a right or procedural guarantee in international treaties as well as constitutionally, and its application determines whether the criminal justice system works justly or unjustly.

It is incorporated into Article 11 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, according to which "any person accused of a crime has the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty, pursuant to the law and in an open trial in which all the guaranties necessary for his defense have been protected."

Inspired by the Universal Declaration, Article 8 of the American Convention on Human Rights, or the Pact of San Jose (OEA), provides that, "any person accused of a crime has the right to be presumed innocent until his guilt has been legally established." And, in similar terms, it is placed in Article 14 of the International Pact on Civil and Political Rights of the United Nations.

In this case, preventive prison alone is a contradiction of the philosophical principle of  presumption of innocence; a principle that is based on Article 14 of our Magna Carta: "No one may be deprived of his freedom, or of his properties, possessions or rights, except by means of a trial conducted before previously established tribunals."

According to studies by Guillermo Zepeda, 80% to 90% of defendants in Mexico "are suitable candidates for processing their cases while on conditional release with some form of precautionary measures." Nevertheless, "the use of preventive incarceration in Mexico --which is automatically imposed  on persons accused of a crime -- has become a predetermined sentence."

The professor maintains that, "in Mexico, the consumption of drugs is being criminalized, the last link in the chain, because there are 12,000 drug traffickers in jail, 87% of whom are charged with drug possession, and only 13% of whom are charged with trafficking, manufacturing and selling drugs."

Captivity, idleness and waste

  

-- The Mexican judicial system provides that a sentence must be issued within two years, however, there are innocent persons who spend up to six years in prison before being released without charges.

-- Mexico spends up to 33% (thirty-three per cent) of its yearly Public Security budget maintaining prisons that do not reeducate, do not socialize nor do they prevent crime.

-- Mexico each year spends an average of two billion pesos (approximately $144 million) per year to support prisoners who have not been sentenced; half of them will be released for lack of evidence or because they are innocent.

-- In Mexico each year, 250,000 prosecutions are initiated that may go on for years.

-- Currently, 70% of criminal justice system resources are dedicated to low impact crimes: a person accused of stealing some cookies could spend three months in jail and finally be released on bail upon payment of 800 to 900 pesos (between $62 and $70 dollars).

-- Every day that a person spends in jail instead of going to work he loses 45 pesos ($3.50) of income.. Today, there are more than 92,000 prisoners in Mexico who have not been sentenced, which could generate income of at least  1,331 million pesos (about $103 million dollars).

-- 60%  of prisoners who have not been convicted are of productive age (between 16 and 30 years old), and, except for exceptional cases, could be processed while free subject to precautionary measures other than preventive incarceration.

-- The yearly cost of the widespread and arbitrary application of preventive incarceration prior to trial is up to 10 billion pesos  (about $760 million dollars) for the State, the detainees and their families, and the community.

-- The number of "unsentenced" prisoners per 100,000 population is 65.3. However, there are states like the DF or Baja California where this number reaches 143.1 and 221.1, respectively.  

-- The rate of judicial error (persons who were arraigned before a judge, subjected to criminal prosecution and sent to preventive imprisonment without the MP [the prosecution] being able to substantiate charges for sentencing) is 20.8 per cent for the entire country.

-- Mexican prisons are at 130% of capacity, and some exceed 300% capacity.

-- More than 80% of the budgets for correctional institutes (Popular name: "Cereso"; Centro de Readaptacion Social)  are used to pay officials' salaries and other fixed costs, which deprives other priorities such as social re-adaptation programs. 


-- 93% of prisoners never saw an arrest warrant or court order.

-- Half of all inmates in the country's prisons were informed of the reasons for their arrests when they got to the office of the prosecutor, and 10% were informed in prison.

-- Of all detainees, 72% were never informed of their right to remain silent, and, in 70% of the cases, they were not even told they could make a phone call. Half of all inmates were not represented by a lawyer when they testified.

-- The total number of inmates in excess of capacity is 40,042 positions. 

Source: www.riodoce.com.mx

La Rosy detained in Ensenada

$
0
0
Female leader of trafficking group arrested

In Baja, California, the sister of escaped, and subsequently recaptured trafficker Hector Guajardo Hernandez was arrested, but State Preventaivetive Police, (PEP).  She was known as La Rosy, and has been alluded to by detainees related to organized crime for more then 18 months, after the capture of her brother, in May 2011, in Mexicali.  Rosa Angel Guajardo Hernandez, 39, assumed control of 'El Guichos' operations in Rosarito, Ensenada, and areas of Tijuana and Mexicali.  

Guicho was a member of Los Teos, the rebel group that contested Fernando Sanchez Arellano for control of the Tijuana square through 2008 and 2009.  He rose to a position of prominence after the detention of Teodoro Simental Garcia.  Through Jose Soto 'El Tigre' Gastuleum, he worked directly for the Sinaloa Cartel, under the branch of Ismael 'El Mayo' Zamabada.  Guicho, responsible for kidnappings, murders, and sending cocaine shipments across the border, coordinated from Jalisco, Sinaloa, and Baja, California, escaped from custody, by bribing the guard detail assigned to his hospital, from injuries sustained during his arrest. 

Guicho was detained, a few weeks after his escape, in Jalisco, on the run, and lacking resources.  His sister, ran the retail drug outlets in Rosartio, and Ensenada, where she was born.  Rosarito has been a power base of the Sinaloa Cartel outfits operating in Baja.  The cells of Sinaloa are sometimes antagostic to each other, despite being under the same banner, but regional disputes, family issues, and other points of contention lead to murders and execeutions between the bands of narcos.

Jeova Israel Morales, 'El Cuervito, a former Tijuana police officer, and member of Los Teos, detained in November 2011, spoke of the conflict between La Rosy, and the brothers Azarte, 'La Rana', and 'El Aquiles', as well as Jose Soto, 'El Tigre'.  Many of the killings in Rosarito and eastern Tijuana during the months after May 2011, were attributed to the rival Sinaloa cells.

Eventually Rosy sided with 'El Tigre', and has been working since.  It seems her ability to cross shipments into the US had been replaced with retail sales in her areas of the greatest influence, Rosarito, and Ensenada. She was arrested with 187 grams of crystal, a little under a half pound.  It is likely this was to be distributed to one or more 'tienditas', retail drug outlets, to be told in smaller quantities, greatly increasing the profits, particularly with crystal, as the drug can be manufactured, relatively inexpensively, and further diluted to increase revenue.

Her clothes and appearance, as well as the 1996 Jeep Cherokee she was arrested in, do not appear to be the makes of an upper level trafficker, in a coveted position.  It is also interesting, though common, that a regional boss, or cell leader would be so close to the drugs for sale on the street.  Her cousin was arrested September 22nd, in Ensenada, also engaged in retail drug sales, she was detained with 140 doses of crystal.  She told the PEP her cousin supplied her with the product.  Arrest warrants have been issued, but the upper level hierarchy of the Sinaloa Cartel cells in Baja, have yet to be arrested. 

Sources: AFN Tijuana. Zeta, Borderland Beat  

Presentation of Salvador Alfonso Martinez Escobedo, "Ardilla"

$
0
0
Borderland Beat
                                     
Navy spokesman, José Luis Vergara, confirmed that the death of American David Hartley in 2011  attributed to "Ardilla" as well as a commander of the Ministerial Police Rolando Flores

The Navy presented Salvador Alfonso Martínez Escobedo, "Ardilla", alleged regional commander of Los Zetas in Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon and Coahuila, considered responsible for more than 320 executions, including those of the narcofosas of San Fernando, Tamaulipas, and the "release" of than 280 inmates in the last two years.

During their presentation in the la Subprocuraduría de Investigación Especializada (SIEDO), Martinez Escobedo spent time 'mugging" to mass media 
The zeta leader, arrested on October 6 in Nuevo Laredo, hours after an attack on Marines in the city, had been imprisoned in Veracruz in 2008, but was released by a group of assassins, reappearing  the same year in the dispute for the places of Durango and Chihuahua.
Martinez Escobedo, 31 years of age, is held responsible for killing with his own hands 50 people in several States of the country, as well as the recent "release" of 131 inmates of the criminal of Piedras Negras and the 151 prisoners of prison again Laredo, so far largest evasion in criminal in the country.

They secured five rifles, 2 pistols, two grenades, 2 thousand cartridges, two vehicles and a diverse array of radio and communications equipment  
 "Ardilla" originated in Nuevo Laredo with five accomplices Carlos Martínez Benavides, Eduardo Alvizu Martínez, Javier Arturo Dueñas Méndez, Baudilio Manuel Villarreal González y Francisco Manuel Obregón Fernández.
The Navy said that Martinez Escobedo is linked to the death of 72 undocumented workers found in August of 2010 in San Fernando, as well as with the more than 200 corpses that months later were found in the same locality.

Reforma
 

Police Charged With Murder,The Moreira Split, The Governor Failed to Protect Lalo

$
0
0
Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

The brothers clash and  police chief reported charged with Lalo's murder
Family in grief
 THE MOREIRAS RIFT
Jose Eduardo Moreira, affectionaly known as Lalo (the Spanish nickname for Eduardo), was buried within 12 hours of his execution in his home town of Acuña, Coahuila.  Prominent absentees were the uncle of the 25 year old deceased man, Ruben Moreira.  Ruben Moreira is the current governor of the northern Mexican state of Coahuila. 
 
Lalo is the eldest son of Ruben’s brother Humberto Moreira, the former governor of Coahuila, who resigned in December, 2010, to begin his successful bid for National Chairman of the powerful PRI party.  It was expected that if Enrique Peña Nieto won the presidency, Humberto would be appointed Secretary of State.  Jorge Torres López was appointed to fill the vacant seat as a transitory governor until the election of 2011 concluded.   It was election that Ruben easily won, no surprise as the Moreira’s were loved by the people of Coahuila.
Humberto’s plans to seek the presidency in 2018 seemed firmly in place.  However the bottom fell out of those plans early this year, when Humberto resigned in disgrace as party chairman earlier this year under the cloud of a 3 billion state government debt that accumulated when he was governor of Coahuila, a debt financed largely by falsified documents. 
 
PRI party officials were apprehensive that the scandal would harm Peña-Nieto’s chances of a victory, considering the PRI party was in an all-out effort to improve their image of corruption by a campaign of honesty and transparency.  Humberto was sacrificed and was told to resign for the good of the party.  No one believed that that cocky PRI president walked away empty handed.  Surely a deal was cut, however for now he was told to disappear until after the election.
Ruben on left, Humberto far right in Happier times
Humberto left Mexico with a statement that he was “studying abroad”, which translated to San Antonio Texas, staying at one of his pricy US real estate properties.  After his brother Ruben began his governorship he returned to Saltillo with his family, wife Vanessa and their two toddler daughters.  There was not an enthusiastic welcome.  The fact of the matter is that he was ostracized by the movers and shakers of Coahuila.  His brother Ruben still incensed over the scandal was not waiting in the state capital with open arms.
 
The brothers’ relationship was rendered ruptured from months of clashing, to the point families did not spend Christmas together as was tradition in the Moreira family.  The Moreira matriarch Evangelina tried to mediate, but was unsuccessful resulting in the first Christmas that the brothers Moreira spent apart.
Rubens glaring absence at his nephew’s funeral was a shock to people, most people had heard of the relationship having difficulties between the two brothers, but for the governor to skip the funeral was baffling.  Though not confirmed it was said that Humberto sent word to his brother that he would not be welcome.
WHERE WAS THE MAYOR?
The presidente (mayor) municipal of Acuña, Alberto Aguirre Villarreal, was also missing at the funeral.  The mayor’s absence was almost as jarring as Ruben’s. Attendees of the funeral placed aside their fear to honor the fallen Lalo, and the realization that dignitaries were absent at the service caused heighten concern and confusion. 
 
 Aside from a short statement from the mayor in which he stated “Lalo was a great kid, he worked diligently for the poor”, there was silence.  Eyebrows were further raised from the no-show.  After all he was one of the last persons to be with Lalo before his murder.

Possibly sensing citizens were talking among themselves and angry at the mayors perceived disrespect, he finally issued a short interview giving his less than believable explanation, he explained that he could not attend the funeral as he was busy with Lalo’s murder investigation.  Further he stated he had given a complete declaration to the federal agency FGR who was conducting the investigation.  He began by announcing that 7 police elements were suspended due to the investigation. 
According to the mayor, on the day of the murder, Wednesday October 3, he had spent the day with Lalo, to the Colonia Enrique Martinez y Martinez, to prepare for the inauguration of the “Build a Roof” program.  They began the day with a 9 AM television interview, the group then went to lunch accompanied by representatives of the media. 
The media was along to determine logistics and prep for the following day’s celebration for the project.  Lalo’s uncle, governor of the state, was travelling to Acuña the following day to support the project.  The governor’s agenda was discussed and also inspected the area where the governor would visit.    
The mayor says they said their goodbyes he getting into his car and went directly to his home, and he saw Lalo enter his truck and depart.  They were to meet again with others at 6 PM for a sports field dedication..  The mayor said he did not attend the 6 PM event.
He ended his statement to The Zocalo by saying he will give full availability to assist in the investigations, hoping to shed light on the truth, of the “unfortunate” events.  He reiterated his affection and esteem he had for the young Moreira, saying the always had a great relationship and friendship, emphasizing his willingness to cooperate with the investigation and offered whatever was in his power to clarify the facts.
This is the man that could not manage one hour to pay his respects with the young man who he held in such high regard.
On his way to a sportsfiled dedication when he was killed
“I’M ON MY WAY, BUT FIRST I WILL SEE RODOLFO”.. Lalo Moreira

The mayor spoke of the 7 police officers suspended due to the investigation.  That number quickly amended to include every member of the force and 4 dispatchers on duty the day of the murder.  A total  of 48 police  were transferred Thursday evening to Saltillo, the state capital of Coahuila, along with Rodolfo Castillo (photo at left) and José Trinidad Cisuentes (possibly Sifuentes) and Victor Cisuentes.    Victor, was reported as first on the scene of the murder on the road to Santa Eulalia, in  southern Acuña , and discovered Lalo dead with two gunshot wounds to the head.  Reports are unclear if José was
 with him.  Jose is a police officer and Victor the supervisor on duty the day of the murder.
 
 
One of the last persons to speak to Lalo was his close friend and collaborator, in the regional office of social development, Guillermo Arzola. He was at the site of their 6PMevent; it was to dedicate a sports field next to the Marcoplaza. He called Lalo’s cell and asked if he was coming. Lalo replied, “I’m on my way, but first I will see Rodolfo to see what he wants”. He was referring to Rodolfo Castillo, Chief of the Municipal Police in Ciudad Acuña. The conversation took place at 5:45. Lalo would never arrive at the sports field.

It was the final time the two friends would ever speak.



Guillermo’s father, congress representative (Acuna region) Cuauhtémoc Arzola, phoned the police chief when Lalo failed to show.  Informed by  his son that Lalo told him he was meeting with the chief while on route to the sports field dedication he told the chief;   “we are concerned about Lalo, he did not arrive and we can’t locate him, Guillermo spoke to him while he was in route to the sports field and he said he had to meet you first to see what
you needed” said the senior Arzola to the chief. 

The police chief denied speaking to Lalo, or requesting to meet with him.
 
NARCOMANTAS APPEAR “A NEPHEW FOR A NEPHEW”
 
Photo from Tuesday's clash in Piedras


Piedras Negras, Coahuila is a city an hour east of Acuña.  Acuña borders the Texas city of Del Rio, and “Piedras” is adjacent to Eagle Pass Texas.  Violence has escalated in Piedras since the prison break in which 131 inmates gained freedom through an underground tunnel.  The 131 escapees were of the powerful Los Zetas cartel. 
Since the prison break, daily shootouts, killings and violence have gripped the city with terror. Governor Moreira made the decision to send in state forces including Special Forces known as GATES.  Social networks screamed with tweets and posts from residents advising the when and where of violence activity.  Such reporting is necessary in Mexico where a woeful amount of violence is reported in the media, often at the instructions from cartels.
On Tuesday extreme violence erupted in Piedras, resulting in at least three deadly shootouts in heavily populated areas.  One of the conflicts resulted in the killing of five known Zetas, one was named Alejandro Treviño Chávez.  Alejandro is the nephew of Miguel Trevino, aka Z40, a fierce primary leader of the Zetas. 
That night narcomantas appeared, this would be the eve of Lalo’s murder.   A rumor on the street was that they appeared in Piedras or close by.  However, subsequent to Lalo’s death, Carlos Moreira went public that the narcomantas appeared in Acuña Tuesday evening.  The exact text has not been made public, though Carlos contends they were a direct threat that a “Moreira” would pay, he stated the text included the phrase “ Family for Family.  Other reports state that some of the mantas included the words “an eye for an eye a nephew for a nephew”.
A WIDOW’S ANGUISH
Lucero Moreira Davis, and Lalo Moreira were married in 2010 and have an infant son.  At the funeral service she appeared inconsolable and grief stricken.  It was her actions following the funeral that made headlines in Mexico.  She utilized Twitter to post a series of tweets in quick succession; all were addressed to Ruben Moreira;
“Justice!!!!!  Justice!!!!”, You don't know how to govern!!! This is your damn fault!!!! Resign”,
“I demand Justice!!!!! For the assassination my husband Jose Eduardo”.
 
The governor’s spokesman generated a patronizing statement in an attempt to portray the governor of taking the high road with a patronizing reply, “we understand the widow is grieving at this time”. 
Sorry Pelon, (Pelon is the name many people give the bald governor) the accusations did not arise from grief.  Let’s put it in the vernacular, the widow is pissed to high heaven, and she has a mountain of reasoning behind her anger.
Lalo's Dodge Ram was free of bullet holes
Lalo as the son of a former governor, nephew of the governor and a general sense that the family is targets by people that wish them harm for one reason or another.  As such he was provided 4 body guards from the state police to guard him around the clock, in addition to a Jeep Cherokee Armored vehicle.
That protection for Lalo was withdrawn a month ago.  The governor made the decision that level of protection was not needed for Lalo in Acuña, in its place he ask the police chief Rodolfo Castillo to provide municipal police to act as body guards, in place of the highly trained state police, and in exchange for the Armored Jeep Lalo  was given a stock Dodge Ram pickup.  The same Dodge Ram tuck in which his executed body was found in.
The second event that involved the governor was his inaction after notification of the warnings issued in the narcomantas.  While he ordered extra protection for his own already protected family, he did nothing for his nephew or Acuña for that matter.  Lalo Moreira was a sitting duck.  The probability is 100% that this lack of protection, along with his accessibility played into the selection of his life becoming retribution. 
Therein lays the young widows fury.
THE MURDER
Today in the Coahuila Diario and other reports began early that Rodolfo Castillo the Acuña police chief was charged with complicity of pre-meditated murder in the death of Jose Eduardo Moreira aka Lalo.  Later reports add that Victor and Jose Cisuentes also have been charged of the same counts in the murder.  It is reported that they are related in some way, and that Victor  has vanished.
 
A hypothesis based on the evidence known,  this was a revenge murder ordered by Zetas leader Z40.  Municipalities along the border are controlled by cartels, Acuña  is controlled by the Zetas cartel.  Everyone from the media to the mayors office including the police are controlled by Zetas.  Lalo was on his way to the sports field dedication when he received a call from Chief Rodolfo Castillo that he needed to see him, this was between 5:15 and 5:45.  The Cisuentes were most likely Lalo’s guards for the day. 
Guillermo Arzola at the sport field called Lalo’s cell and asked if he was coming to the dedication, Lalo said he was on his way but he needed to see what Rodolfo needed first.  Rodolfo probably was the one who got Lalo to pull over while on the road to the 6 PM event.  The officer in the rear seat behind Lalo was most likely the shooter, and Lalo’s passengers were whisked away by Rodolfo in his vehicle.

Note that the exact names of the two officers has been reported differently in various media outlets. 

After this was posted came the report that Rodolfo Castillo has confessed to his role in the murder of Lalo, admitting his role was to lure Lalo to the site of his execution.
Complicity in the murder of Lalo Moreira; El Flaco, El Pelon, El Chagui
CONCLUSION
Lalo Moreira’s personal history differed from his siblings.  He grew up in the unremarkable, quiet border town of Acuña. His parents never married; in fact Humberto did not formally recognize Lalo as his son until his campaign for Governor.  By the very nature of Lalo being raised by his single mother in small town Acuña set him apart from his brothers and sisters.  He was not raised in the luxury lifestyle that his siblings enjoyed in big cities such as Saltillo, DF and San Antonio.
At Lalo’s funeral Humberto stated that he encouraged his son to leave Acuña and move to Saltillo, and Lalo said no, he did not want to leave Acuña.  He worked 4 years in social services and his dream was to stay in Acuña and become the mayor.  The citizens of Acuña loved him his run for the mayor would have been a slam dunk. 
There are those that say he would have been corrupted at some point and follow the path of his father and other relatives.  Perhaps so, but we will never know and can only fairly judge his 25 years on this earth.
But this is the story of one just murder in Mexico.  Although Lalo Moreira was known as a kind, and caring, worker for social causes, his death is no more a tragedy than the thousands of deaths brought by the violence of the drugwar. 
What it does illustrate is the path taken by some citizens in Mexico. Those who begin with honorable dreams that are obliterated by threats or payment and replaced by corruption, greed and complicity.
Humberto was a professor. His life dream was to teach.  His brother Carlos was also a teacher.  Humberto met his wife Vanessa when he toured the Monclova school she taught in.  A family of teachers.
The corruption of the Moreira brothers is well spoken about.  Most glaring is a lowly paid professor does not experience a drastic change in financial status in a few short years without help. Humberto’s lofty financial status amassed; luxury real estate holdings, automobiles, private jets, and substantial business holdings. 
 
In the case of Humberto it began prior than any funds he may commandeered from Coahuila state funds. Rumor has it that the man was in collusion with those that reign terror of the people of Coahuila and parts of Mexico.
 
Having good intentions and honorable goals are very difficult to maintain in the regions of narco violence in Mexico.  If cartels want your assistance you give in to threats, accept payment, or die.
And that is the greatest tragedy.
 
Thank you to the reader who sent in the PN photo...please extend thank you to your cousin
Thank you to my friends and associates in Acuna and Coahuila for their contributions to this post

CONFIRMED:Marina Releases Statement on Lazca: Reporting he was Killed in Sabinas, Coahuila Yesterday

$
0
0
Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

PHOTO corpse at Sabinas Garcia funeral home
NEW VIDEO: Commando took body, says it was taken Sunday..
Superimposing old and death photos-exact jawline and eye placement etc

The owner of the Sabinas Garcia funeral notice at  8: 00 transferred the corpse
 
Similarities:Chin, eyebrows, nose even hairline.
 
A string of reports as they came in....

Bodies gone, given to relatives after autopsy:
Lazca built his "pantheon" as his final home (El Universal)
Both Acuna and Piedras are apx 1:50 min drive from Sabinas

El Universal:
Reports the conflict was at 2:30PM on Sunday.  Reporting further that the official announcement will not be released until the DNA results have concluded and confirm identity.  In the report it says that the Marina was on regular duty and patrol when meeting up with the Zetas, the Zetas began launching grenades at them and the conflict ensued.

SEMAR CONFIRMS:
The navy just issued a press release that there is strong evidence that Lazano leader of the los zetas cartel was killed yesterday. 

Proceso reports:
Lazca was in a convoy in Sabinas at 1:30PM on Sunday when one of the vehicles began launching grenades at the Marina which began the conflict that resulted in two dead narcos, one was identified as Lazca.  One sailor also was killed in the conflict.

This is what other reports say that occurred in the capture:
 

Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano, El Lazca, leader of the Zetas, is dead according to preliminary identification techniques.  SEMAR released a statement in this hour that they are waiting on final testing to give a positive confirmation, must indicated the possibility is high that it is the Z leader.
What is known is that the confrontation occurred in Juniper road to Progreso, in Coahuila, which killed two suspected members of the Los Zetas criminal organization.
During the armed conflict an element of the Marina was wounded.  The federal force took the Zetas by surprise as the cartel members  watched a baseball game.
A third Zeta manage to escape.
The bodies of the subjects were lying inside of a Ford Ranger truck white at the height of the arc that welcomes progress.
According to eyewitnesses the armed men enjoyed a baseball game when suddenly arrived elements of the Navy of  Mexico.  After  a Chase which sparked a shootout two subjects were killed and one sailor wounded.  In the chase the Marina were fired upon with the grenade launcher.
This action occurred after that elements of intelligence had been tipped off that at the site was the leader of the Zetas.  It was said those who called in the tip were at the game.
Reportedly found at the crime scene, in the truck the Zetas were driving  were long rifles, 13 grenades and a rocket launcher with missiles to bring down helicopters.
The Marina is still  working on the identification of the bodies, waiting for forensics to confirm positively.  
United States authorities offered up to five million dollars for information leading to his capture, while in Mexico there is a reward of 24.6 million pesos.
On 5 June 1991, at age 17, Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano enlisted in the ranks of the Mexican army and lasted seven years. At the age of 24 he left the armed forces to venture into the world of drug trafficking.
On 27 March 1998, according to records of the national defense Secretariat (Sedena), Lazcano requested his discharge from the army when he had reached the rank of corporal infantry.

Here is another report
                                                      Just now from Washington PostMEXICO CITY — The Mexican navy says top Zetas drug cartel leader Heriberto Lazcano has apparently been killed in a firefight with marines in the northern border state of Coahuila,

The navy says there is strong evidence the body of one of two men killed in the shootout is Lazcano, who is also known as “El Lazca.”

From Vanguardia/Milenio/The Economist:

After a series of clashes the day yesterday, which began in Progreso, Coahuila and lasted until Sabinas, the Mexican Marina fought against  command  in which Heriberto Lazcano, leader of the Z, was killed.

The death of "Lazca" was after at least three clashes  on the road to Progreso Sabinas, Coahuila.
Heriberto Lazcano, was one of the founders of Los Zetas, a criminal organization dedicated to drug trafficking. 

The confrontations were last night, but waited to confirm indentification of the casualties suspecting Lazcano may be one.  He was indetified today.

thought it looks promising...until a formal Marina or PGR announcement I won't be happy.

UPDATE ...not GATES says Lazca killed in confrontation with Marina.  still says Sabinas.
sorry, this is sloppy but news trickling  in...doing my best

UPDATE 10:43PM
apx 10 minutes ago a national network from DF (Mexico City) ran the report on TV saying is is Lazca that was killed in Sabinas....still no government confirmation.

reports on Mexican radio and Twitter is a violent confortation between GATES and Zetas resulted in the capture or death of Miguel Trevino the leader of the Los Zetas cartel.  This took place either in Sabinas or Saltillo.  Sabinas is a city close to Piedras Negras and Acuna.  Saltillo is the capital and is also in the states of Coahuila...waiting for conformation...for now it is rumor but wide spread.  It is either Lazca or Trevino, however Trevino would be th more likely one, if true. This has not been confirmed.  Keep in mind we have gone down this rumor path before....if  anyone has additional information please send in. 

 
 
 
 
"The confrontation in which could have fallen a founder of the Zetas, was in Sabinas, Coahuila" wrote Lopez-Doriga. (Milenio news chief)
   
"I can confirm: the confrontation in which would have killed the founder of the Zetas, was in Sabinas, Coahuila," said then the communicator. 
   
So far it is waiting for an official statement or a version of the relevant authorities. 

  

BODIES SNATCHED: LAZCA POST COMMENTS PART 2

$
0
0
Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat
Comments are not posting on the Lazca Killed Post ..we may have maxed out..I apologize but there are many that were approved and not published. For now, use this post for all comments. . Post comments on this post Thank you!.
Rio Doce is reporting this is Lazca


Full Statement of PJGE and SEMAR( Sec of Navy):

Regarding the press release 196/12 given by this institution, yesterday, where it is informed about the killing of two alleged members of the organized crime, Secretariat of Navy informed the indications that signal that one of the bodies belong to Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano (aka) “El Lazca”, leader of the Criminal Organization of “Los Zetas”.
After researching in the data bases, the fingerprints of the thumb, index and middle finger, taken from the right hand of one of the killed criminals, the following demographic data was obtained:
Name: Lazcano Lazcano Heriberto

Year of Birth: 1975

Sex: Male

Height: 1.60 mts.

On the other hand, the analysis of the photographs of the killed criminal that is annexed to this press release, show that the facial features match those of Heriberto Lazcano. (photo above was attached to press release)
With the information and samples gathered during the autopsy, the expert evidence continues to be examined and tested.
Regarding the versions that were disseminated in different press media, related to the location of the fallen criminals, this information release confirm what was said on the press release 196/12, in the sense that in addition to the material, they were made available to local authorities for, integrating APP/535/2012 Preliminary Investigation on the First Board of the Public Ministry in Sabinas, Coahuila.

Note:  the last paragraph means, they were finished with their exam and collections of evidence and released the bodies to the funeral parlor and the Sabinas police.  The APP/535/2012 is the case number of the Sabinas police. This  may explain why the bodies were no longer under guard.  Some reports say federal authorities did not know at that point the identity of the dead men, however, autopsies are rarely done in Mexico, especially is small cities, the fact that it was conducted in this case, lends itself to the thought they knew  the indentification of the dead man as being Lazcano.   When the custody of the body was completed they transferred custody to the state and local authorities.
President Calderon speaks:

"Today I want to express my appreciation to the Navy of Mexico because the evidence clearly indicates that Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano, aka The Lazca, was killed while resisting the authority as a result of an operation implemented by the Navy, Sunday in Progreso, Coahuila "

Here is the scenario of the body snatching, I translated from the video this narrative:





This happened after the Marina  saw a suspicious vehicle and asked them to stop. They refused and the shootout began, killing the driver of the truck.  The passenger was able to flee temporarily but was stopped and killed in a hail of bullets from the Marina.
Beside him was a weapon known as R-15.  After searching him, they found a driver's license with the name of Mario Alberto Rodriguez Rodriguez.
The other suspect wasn't identified since he had no documents with him.
Both bodies were taken to the Funeral Parlor Garcia of Sabinas.  After arriving at the  funeral home, the agents proceeded to take fingerprints, as well as photographs of the bodies to proceed with identification.   Later an autopsy would be conducted to determine the cause of death.
At 8:05 on October 8th the owner of the funeral home reported 1:00 and 1:30 of the same day, an armed commando with faces covered,  (masks) entered the funeral home.  After restraining  the funeral home  personnel, the gunmen took the  two  bodies after placing them in a hearse  and  forcing the owner to drive the vehicle.
Meanwhile  experts continued with the investigation and identifying the suspects.  After  conducting a search of the finger print data base ,  the fingerprints of the  thumb, index and middle taken of the right hand of one of the killed suspects,  matched those belonging to  Lazcano Lazcano which was born in 1975.

In a statement, the Navy of Mexico and Coahuila PGJE (state attorney general)  confirmed "that based on the analysis of photographs and fingerprints of an alleged criminal killed over the weekend after a confrontation in Sabinas, Coahuila, it was found that matched Heriberto Lazcano Lazcano".

Comparing the facial feature of both photos
 

The Baseball Field
 
  
 
New Home for Lazca?

 
 
Viewing all 14998 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>