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United States bids its citizens not to travel to Colima, Guerrero, Michoacan, Sinaloa or Tamaulipas

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Proceso article

Subject Matter: US travel warnings
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required


Reporter: Mathieu Tourliere
The Government of the United States today called for its citizens not to travel to Colima, Guerrero, Michoacan, Sinaloa and Tamaulipas, or if there to leave soon, due to the high levels of criminality in these regions and added Mexico to its list of countries that must be visited " with major precaution".

In its platform for updated travel alerts, the State Department recommended that tourists reconsider their travel plans to 11 states in Mexico: Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, State of Mexico, Jalisco, Morelos, Nayarit, Nuevo Leon, San Luis Potosi, Sonora and Zacatecas, due to the "serious risks to security and integrity" that are there.

The US Foreign Ministry warned that violent crimes such as murder, kidnapping and robbery are widespread in Mexico and recommended its citizens take precautions in bars, clubs and casinos.

The country’s main tourism destinations — Cancún, the Mayan Riviera, Los Cabos, Puerto Vallarta, Riviera Nayarit, and Mexico City — have no travel restrictions.

US officials are not allowed to travel to most of the Mexican municipalities that make up the metropolitan area of ​​Mexico City - from Ecatepec to Chalco - nor to the Lampoas de Zempoala, in Morelos.

 In Nuevo León, they only have the right to travel outside Monterrey during the day and at night they can not be found outside the municipalities of San Pedro Garza and Santa Catarina

In Tamaulipas, officials are subject to a "curfew" between midnight and six in the morning.The US government also banned travel of public servants throughout the state of Guerrero, including Acapulco.

In Jalisco, it limited the areas allowed to Guadalajara, Puerto Vallarta, Chapala and Ajijic, and stressed that for "no reason" they can stop in the municipalities of La Barca or Ocotlán.Meanwhile, in Nayarit he only let them visit the regions of the Riviera, Santa María del Oro and Xalisco.

 Regarding Tamaulipas, the State Department pointed out that "the activity of gangs, including shootings, is widespread"He added: "Armed criminal groups assault the buses of public and private passengers that cross the state and often take the passengers as hostages and ask for ransom.

Officials can not visit the Isthmus in Oaxaca either, while in Veracruz they are advised to stay in tourist areas.The US government formally prohibited US officials from "sponsoring" the table-dance and betting businesses in Coahuila, Colima, Durango, Jalisco, Nayarit, San Luis Potosi, Tamaulipas and Zacatecas.

Cancun: 3 Dead 7 Injured in Restaurant-Bar Armed Attack

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Chivis Martinez

Three are dead and seven wounded, the result of an armed attack that occurred last night at a restaurant bar located in a popular neighborhood of Cancun, Quintana Roo, “The Mexican Caribbean”.  Authorities attributed the assault to organized crime.

According to preliminary data issued by the Attorney General of the State of Quintana Roo, shortly after 8:40 pm local time,  the local emergency center received a report of gunfire at the restaurant bar, “ La Palapa de Chuki”.

When arriving at the location,  emergency and public security, reported  two dead and seven wounded, the wounded  were transferred to the General Hospital of Cancun.


It was reported tonight that three of the injured are serious injury.

Losing Faith in the State, Some Mexican Towns Quietly Break Away

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Posted by Yaqui for Borderland Beat from: NYT


BY THE GUN: José Santos at a checkpoint near the entrance to Tancítaro. Fed up with both the cartels and the government, the people of Tancítaro pushed out both.
                                   Photo Credit: Brett Gundlock for The New York Times
Jan 7, 2018

Tancitaro, Mexico :  The road to this agricultural town winds through the slums and cartel-controlled territory of Michoacán, ground zero for Mexico’s drug war, before arriving at a sight so strange it can seem like a mirage.

Fifteen-foot stone turrets are staffed by men whose green uniforms belong to no official force. Beyond them, a statue of an avocado bears the inscription “avocado capital of the world.” And beyond the statue is Tancítaro, an island of safety and stability amid the most violent period in Mexico’s history.

Local orchard owners, who export over $1 million in avocados per day, mostly to the United States, underwrite what has effectively become an independent city-state. Self-policing and self-governing, it is a sanctuary from drug cartels as well as from the Mexican state.



But beneath the calm is a town under tightfisted control, enforced by militias accountable only to their paymasters. Drug addiction and suicide are soaring, locals say, as the social contract strains.

Tancítaro represents a quiet but telling trend in Mexico, where a handful of towns and cities are effectively seceding, partly or in whole. These are acts of desperation, revealing the degree to which Mexico’s police and politicians are seen as part of the threat.

Visit three such enclaves:  Tancítaro, the Avocado Capitol; Monterrey, a rich commercial city; and Ciudad Nezahualcóyotl, just outside the capital of Mexico City and you will find a pattern. Each is a haven of relative safety amid violence, suggesting that their diagnosis of the problem was correct. But their gains are fragile and have come at significant cost.

They are exceptions that prove the rule: Mexico’s crisis manifests as violence, but it is rooted in the corruption and weakness of the state.

               A Squadron of Tancitaro's Homegrown Militia Guarding the Main Entrance to Town

Tancitaro: "A Million or Two on Weapons"

It began with an uprising. Townspeople formed militias to eject both the cartel, which effectively controlled much of Michoacán, and the local police, who were seen as complicit. Orchard owners, whose families and businesses faced growing extortion threats, bankrolled the revolt.

This left Tancítaro without police or a government, whose officials had fled. Power accumulated to the militias that controlled the streets and to their backers, an organization of wealthy avocado growers known as the Junta de Sanidad Vegetal, or Plant Health Council. Citizens sometimes call it the Junta.

Nearly four years in, long after other militia-run towns in Michoacán collapsed into violence, the streets remain safe and tidy. But in sweeping away the institutions that enabled crime to flourish, Tancítaro created a system that in many ways resembles cartel control.

Their rule began with a purge. Young men suspected of involvement in the cartel were expelled. Low-level runners or informants, mostly boys, were allowed to stay, though the cartel murdered most in retaliation, a militia commander said.

Though violence eventually cooled, the wartime power structure has remained. The militias now act as the police, as well as guards for the town perimeter and the avocado orchards.

Cinthia Garcia Nieves, a young community organizer, moved into town shortly after the fighting subsided. Idealistic but clear-minded, she wanted to help Tancítaro develop real institutions.

But lines of authority had “blurred,” she said in a cafe near the town center.

Ms. Nieves set up citizens’ councils as a way for local families to get involved. But militia rule has accustomed many to the idea that power belongs to whomever has the guns.

She has high hopes for community justice forums, designed to punish crimes and resolve disputes. But, in practice, justice is often determined — and punishments administered — by whichever militia commander chooses to involve himself.

“We took them out in the street and gave them a beating,” Jorge Zamora, a militia member, said of some men accused of dealing drugs. Their lives were spared because two of them were his relatives, he said. Instead, “we expelled them from the town.”


                                 Emilio Aguirre Rios at his farm outside Tancitaro, Michoacan
                                                Photo Credit: Brett Grundlock for the NYT

Though his militia is tasked with guarding orchards, not policing, its proximity to the junta’s interests gives it special power. “For those people, it’s not a burden at all to spend a million or two on weapons,” Mr. Zamora said.

Officially, Tancítaro is run by a mayor so popular that he was nominated by the unanimous consent of every major political party and won in a landslide. Unofficially, the mayor reports to the farm owners, who predetermined his election by ensuring he was the only viable candidate, according to Falko Ernst and Romain Le Cour Grandmaison, security researchers who study Tancítaro.

The citizens’ councils, designed as visions of democratic utopianism, hold little power. Social services have faltered.

Though the new order is popular, it offers few avenues for appeal or dissent. Families whose sons or brothers are expelled — a practice that continues — have little recourse.

The central government has declined to reimpose control, the researchers believe, for fear of drawing attention to the town’s lesson that secession brings safety.

Ms. Nieves remains a believer in Tancítaro’s model, but worries about its future. “We have to work together,” she said, or risk a future of “oppressive authority.”



       BY THE CHECKBOOK: Taking portraits for a Quinceañera, or coming-of-age, celebration in Monterrey, Coahuila, Mexico: The city’s business elite quietly took over public institutions.
                                             Photo Credit: Brett Gundlock for the NYT

Monterrey: ‘They Destroyed the Whole Thing’

If Tancítaro seceded with a gun, then the city of Monterrey, home to many top Mexican corporations, did it with a Rolodex and a handshake . Rather than ejecting institutions, Monterrey’s business elite quietly took them over — all with the blessing of their friends and golf partners in public office.

But their once-remarkable progress is now collapsing. Crime is returning.

“I’m telling you, I have a long career in these matters, and the project I am more proud of than anything is this one in Monterrey,” said Jorge Tello, a security consultant and former head of the national intelligence agency.

“It’s very easy to lose it,” he warned, adding that it may already be too late.

Monterrey’s experiment began over a lunch. Mr. Tello was dining with the governor, who received a call from José Antonio Fernández, the head of Femsa, one of Mexico’s largest companies. Femsa’s private security guards, while ferrying employees’ children to school, had been attacked by cartel gunmen, he said. Two had died repelling what was most likely a kidnapping attempt.

The governor put the call on speaker. It was the first of many conversations, joined by other corporate heads who faced similar threats. A club of corporate executives who call themselves the Group of 10 offered to help fund and reform the state’s kidnapping police. The governor agreed.

They hired a consultant, who advised top-to-bottom changes and replaced nearly half the officers. They hired lawyers to rewrite kidnapping laws and began to coordinate between the police and the families of victims.

When the governor later announced an ambitious plan for a new police force, intended to restore order, he again invited business leaders in. C.E.O.s would now oversee one of the most central functions of government. They hired more consultants to put into effect the best and latest thinking in policing, community outreach, anything that could stop the violence tearing through their city. They bankrolled special housing and high salaries for officers.

Their payroll and human resources departments serviced the force. Their marketing divisions ran a nationwide recruitment campaign. When government officials asked to approve the ads before they ran, corporate leaders said no. Perhaps most crucially, they circumvented the bureaucracy and corruption that had bogged down other police reform efforts.

Crime dropped citywide. Community leaders in poorer areas reported safer streets and renewed public trust in the police.

Monterrey’s experience offered still more evidence that in Mexico, violence is only a symptom; the real disease is in government. The corporate takeover worked as a sort of quarantine. But, with the disease untreated, the quarantine inevitably broke.

A new governor, who took office in late 2015, let reforms lapse and appointed friends to key positions. Now, crime and reports of police brutality are resurging, particularly in working-class suburbs. Business leaders, whose wealthy neighborhoods remain safe, have either failed or declined to push the new governor.

“Things got better, people felt comfortable, and then they destroyed the whole thing,” Mr. Tello said.

Mexico’s weak institutions, he added, make any local fix subject to the whims of political leaders. Countries like the United States, he said, “have this structure that we don’t have. That’s what’s so dangerous.”

Adrián de la Garza, who is mayor of Monterrey’s municipal core, said the city could do only so much to insulate itself. “This isn’t an island,” he said.

Any Mexican city, he said, is policed by multiple forces. Some report to the mayor, some to the governor and some to the federal government. And any one of those political actors can derail progress through corruption, cronyism or simple neglect. Even Mexico’s most powerful business leaders could cut them out only briefly.

“It’s a big problem,” Mr. de la Garza said. Managing it, he said, is “just political life in Mexico.”



BY THE BALLOT:  Police officers in Ciudad Nezahualcóyotl. The chief has been free to experiment because the government is not part of the entrenched party system.
                                             Photo Credit : Brett Gundlock for the NYT

Neza: "How Long Can We Hold This?"

“You don’t expect to see a bright light in a place like Neza,” said John Bailey, a Georgetown University professor who studies Mexican policing.

Ciudad Nezahualcóyotl, a million-resident sprawl outside Mexico City, was once known for poverty, gang violence and police corruption so widespread that officers sometimes mugged citizens.

Today, though still rough, it is far safer. Its police officers are considered “a really promising model,” Mr. Bailey said, in a part of the country where most are seen as threats.

Unlike Tancítaro or Monterrey, Neza has no militia or business elite to seize or win power. Its government appears, on the surface, normal.

But the police chief who has overseen this change, a grandfatherly former academic named Jorge Amador, is not normal. For years he has treated Neza as his personal laboratory, trying a wild mix of hard-nosed reforms, harebrained schemes and fanciful experiments.

Many failed. Some drew arch amusement from the foreign press. (A literature program provided officers with a new book each month — mostly classics, all mandatory — and rewarded officers who wrote their own.) But some worked.

Mr. Amador was free to experiment — and his successes stuck — because Neza’s government is not normal, either. It has seceded from a part of the state that Joy Langston, a political scientist, called Mexico’s key point of failure: its party system.

Neza inverted Monterrey’s model: Rather than establishing an independent police force and co-opting the political system, Neza established an independent political system and co-opted the police.

Mexico’s establishment parties are more than parties. They are the state. Loyalists, not civil servants, run institutions. Officials have little freedom to stretch and little incentive to investigate corruption that might implicate fellow party members. Most are shuffled between offices every few years, cutting any successes short.

Neza, run by a third party, the left-wing P.R.D., exists outside of this system. Its leaders are free to gut local institutions and cut out the state authorities.

Mr. Amador is doing both. He fired one in eight police officers and changed every commanding officer. He shuffled assignments to disrupt patronage networks. Those who remain are under constant scrutiny. Every car is equipped with a GPS unit, tracked by dozens of internal affairs officers.

The state police are treated like foreign invaders. Neza’s leaders believe state officials are quietly undermining their efforts in a bid to retake power.


                         Police officers monitoring cameras that are trained on the streets of Neza.
                                             Photo Credit Brett Gundlock for the NYT

Neza’s bureaucratic secession allowed Mr. Amador to remake the force in his image. Corruption and crime would always pay more than he could, Mr. Amador knew. So he would offer something more valuable than money: a proud civic identity.

Essay contests, sports leagues and scholarships come with heavy messaging, cultivating a culture that can feel cultlike. Awards are handed out frequently — often publicly, always with a bit of cash — and for the smallest achievements.

“We have to convince the police officer that they can be a different kind of police officer, but also the citizen that they have a different kind of officer,” Mr. Amador said.

Yazmin Quroz, a longtime resident, said working with police officers, whom she now knows by name, had brought a sense of community. “We are united, which hadn’t happened before,” she said. “We’re finally all talking to each other.”

But Neza’s gains could evaporate, Mr. Amador said, if crime in neighboring areas continued to rise or if the mayor’s office changed party. His experiment has held drug gangs and the Mexican state at bay, but he could solve neither. He compared Neza to the Byzantine Empire, squeezed between larger empires for centuries before succumbing to history.

“The question is,” he said, “how long we can hold this?”

The Interpreter is a column by Max Fisher and Amanda Taub exploring the ideas and context behind major world events. Follow them on Twitter @Max_Fisher and @amandataub.

Dalia Martínez reported from Tancítaro, and Max Fisher and Amanda Taub from Monterrey and Ciudad Nezahualcóyotl. Arturo Aguilar contributed reporting from Monterrey and Ciudad Nezahualcóyotl.


Full Detailed State Department Mexico Travel Advisory and travel tips

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By Chivis Martinez for Borderland Beat


After the U.S. State department’s 10.10.2018 Mexico travel warnings, many people were confused and wondered why a certain city or state was not on the list.  The fact is, main stream media chooses to highlight certain locals and only include a morsel of the overall listings.  For whatever reason seldom is the actual warning republished in full. I have uploaded the warning to my scribd page and embedded it in this post.  This gives you a total and accurate account of the advisory.

It lists states, cities, level of caution, with level 4 being the greatest warning, stating an entire state should be off limits regarding travel. It also gives specifics to each locale and what restrictions imposed on government employees.

As far as travel, some common sense actions should be followed, like the use of ATMs, or which taxis to use or avoid, but since narco violence is fluid, one really should check and know before you go.  

Check the State Department website.  

If information confuses, call the consulate ask for recent activity.

I advise that in most cases if you check the position of the U.S. government, regarding travel by government employees, that is a pretty good compass.

Check consulate/embassy websites for advisories and advice for specific travel.

Register with STEP. The Smart Traveler Enrollment Program is a free service to allow U.S. citizens and nationals traveling and living abroad to enroll their trip with the nearest U.S. Embassy or Consulate.  https://step.state.gov/step/ 
  • Receive important information from the Embassy about safety conditions in your destination country, helping you make informed decisions about your travel plans.
  • Help the U.S. Embassy contact you in an emergency, whether natural disaster, civil unrest, or family emergency.
  • Help family and friends get in touch with you in an emergency. 


Don’t rely on news articles.  They are grossly wrong or incomplete.  Examples; a recent story headline  “11 killed in Acapulco”  when in fact it was a ejido dispute with the government over 2 hours travel time away from Aca. [See the distance in the map below.]


Or the reporting on “Los Cabos”.  Headlines touting an incident “in the tourist mecca Cabos” without clarifying it was in San Jose not San Lucas.  A world of difference.   Although there are no advisories on either. Be aware, informed, careful, but also be smart in knowing what the truth is.

Remember, 20 million trips to Mexico by Americans each year with extremely little violence occurring.  And the state department tacks all incidents and are made public each year.  Drowning is a threat in places like Cabo San Lucas,  not physical harm.


The travel advisory document below,  can be adjusted for specific viewing by using the icons at bottom or linking to my scribd page and using the tools there.

Photo Journalist Attacked by State Police in Guerrero

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Posted by Yaqui from: CPJ


               Bernadino Hernandez , Mexican Photo Journalist attacked by police in Guerrero State
                He was covering the events Posted here on Borderland Beat by our ace reporter Otis:

                         http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2018/01/extra-judicial-killings-of.html

Mexico City, January 10, 2018-------Authorities in Mexico's Guerrero state should thoroughly and credibly investigate alleged police violence against a reporter in the town of La Concepción, in the Municipality of Acapulco, on January 7, the Committee to Protect Journalists ( CPJ ) said today.

According to statements that five reporters gave to local media after the alleged violence, state policemen attacked a journalist covering the violent clashes between police and soldiers and members of a self-styled community police force.

Photographer Bernandino Hernández, who contributes to The Associated Press and the Mexican photo agency Cuartoscuro, told CPJ on January 8 that state police beat him up after he took photos of government officers beating several members of the community police force including some who were unarmed.

The photographer said that, though he identified himself as a journalist, the policemen shouted that they didn't care who he works for and that they "would make him disappear" if he continued to take pictures.

"It is the job of the police to protect journalists, but we've seen too many cases in Mexico where police are the culprits in violence against journalists," said Alexandra Ellerbeck, CPJ's North America Program Coordinator, from New York. "Authorities should investigate this attack and prosecute any officers responsible."

Roberto Álvarez Heredia, a spokesperson for the Guerrero Coordination Group, which oversees all local and federal law enforcement in the state, told CPJ today that state authorities are investigating the attack.

"The government of Guerrero regrets what happened and it is our commitment to properly investigate the matter to prevent it from happening again,"Álvarez Heredia said, adding that he was as of yet unable to provide further details about the police officers allegedly involved.

CPJ was unable to reach the National Defense Secretariat in Mexico City or the Community Police in La Concepción for comment.

Reporters were documenting ongoing attempts from government authorities to disarm the community's self-styled police force and arrest an outspoken local community leader, according to the journalists with whom CPJ spoke and news reports. The community police refused to hand over their weapons, prompting a shootout at approximately 11:30 a.m. on January 7, according to news reports. At least three community police died in the crossfire, the reports said.

During the course of the shootout, state police began attacking journalists, three reporters who were present at the scene told CPJ.

Hernández told CPJ that he was hospitalized after police beat him with their hands and kicked him. The photojournalist said that policemen damaged his cameras, took his memory cards containing photos of alleged acts of abuse they committed during the protests, and stole his money.

Hernández said he lost consciousness for several minutes during the attack. The photojournalist's colleagues dragged him away from the scene and evacuated him by car to the Guerrero state capital of Chilpancingo, where he reported the attack to the state authorities. He was then brought to a hospital in Acapulco to be treated for his injuries, he said.

He told CPJ that he suffered a concussion and bruises on his legs, torso and head, but no brain damage. On January 9, while conversing with CPJ, he had trouble fully recollecting all details of the incident.

The state health secretary, Carlos de la Peña Pintos, told CPJ on January 9 that the Guerrero state authorities will pay for Hernández's medical expenses.

Francisco Robles, who contributes to the Mexico City-based newspaper Reforma and Agence France-Presse, told CPJ in a telephone interview on January 9 that he saw Hernández being dragged away from the place where he had been attacked, although he had not seen the attack itself.

Another reporter who was present at the shootout, Sergio Robles of news website Quadratín, told CPJ on January 9 that he and other reporters present also suffered some degree of verbal and minor physical abuse, including being pushed by officers.

Sergio Robles, Francisco Robles, and Hernández told CPJ that they recognized some of the state police from past assignments. Hernández said that he fears for his safety because he also recognized some of the state police from past reporting assignments. A federal police officer was posted to guard the hospital room where Hernández was receiving treatment, the journalist said.

Patricia Colchero, the head of the Federal Mechanism for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders and Journalists, confirmed to CPJ on January 9 that Mexican authorities assigned federal police to temporarily guard Hernández's home. Another spokesperson for the group whose name CPJ withheld for safety reasons said that they plan to speak with Hernández as soon as possible, although that meeting had not taken place.

Ricardo Sánchez Pérez del Pozo, the federal Special Prosecutor for Attention to Crimes committed Against Freedom of Expression, told CPJ on January 9 that his institution was aware of the incident, but that Hernández had not been in communication with federal authorities.

Mexico is one of the most dangerous countries in the Western Hemisphere for journalists. According to CPJ research, at least six journalists were murdered in retaliation for their work in 2017. CPJ is investigating another three murders to determine the motive.

Note: The actual number of murdered is higher than six for 2017 and there were countless numbers of  death threats and inumerable attacks and attempted murders.

Veracruz Dismemberments: 4 Decapitated Heads left on vehicle

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posted by Mica republished from Reforma

This murder is the latest in a string of similar dismemberments  in Veracruz


January 12, 2018.- Four human heads were found by the authorities of Veracruz in the Municipality of Sayula de Alemán, placed on the trunk of a car.  The horror was discovered on a dirt road that connects the communities of San Isidro and El Mije.

On the windshield of the car was left a cardboard with a threatening message, while in the trunk of the car were dismembered bodies.

Also left with the decapitated heads were  a bottle of liquor and a broom.

According to military authorities, leaving a broom next to a murdered person means there is a “cleansing” between cartels or criminal gangs.  Sayula de Alemán is located south of Veracruz, about 350 kilometers from Xalapa.

Recent, similar murders

On January 7, two dismembered individuals were found inside a taxi in Colonia Insurgentes Norte, in the Municipality of Minatitlán, south of Veracruz.

Two green cards alluded to that the executed ones, were kidnappers and extortionists of the region.
By January 5, five human heads were abandoned on the chest of a taxi on the federal highway Cosamaloapan-Alvarado, Veracruz, at kilometer 175.

A narcomensaje linked to organized crime was also found with the bodies.

In the vehicle's hood, the perpetrators of the crime wrote down the acronym CJNG.

On December 2, authorities in Veracruz found five dismembered bodies in the municipality of Chacaltianguis, on the side of the federal highway 145 Sayula-Ciudad Alemán, at the height of the town of La Sabaneta.

The local police was alerted about the mutilated bodies of five men, which was attributed by the Cartel of Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) through a message written on a poster board.  

According to authorities, the violence in Veracruz is due to the dispute between criminal groups for the control of the plaza.
In the past, Veracruz was a stronghold of the Zetas and the Gulf Cartel, whose cells now dispute the territory against the Cartel of Jalisco Nueva Generación.


Data from the Executive Secretariat of Public Security establish that in Veracruz, the crime of intentional homicide,  increased by 32 percent, going from 1,679 complaints between January and November 2016 to 2 thousand 218 in the same period of 2017.

9 dismembered bodies found in van in Lomas del Tejar, Veracruz

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Cronicadexalapa article

Subject Matter: Dismemberment's in Veracruz
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required


Reporter: Carlos Hernandez
Nine bodies were found Saturday night in the El Tejar fraccionamiento, authorities presume that the victims were kidnapped with a man who was found executed in front of the Crystal Plaza. The events were registered on Lomas de Tejar Avenue in the aforementioned fraccionamiento, where a motorist phoned the 911 emergency number to report a van with the tailgate open and human bodies in the interior.

Elements of the Secretariat of Public Security attended and confirmed the discovery. The preliminary report from the authorities said that the victims were related to a man who was executed in Lazaro Cardenas on Saturday afternoon.

The victims were found in the back of a Nissan van, registration plates YHR 7449, which was removed by persons of the Attorney General of Veracruz office with the body parts being removed by the Medical Forensic Service (Semefo).

WARNING STRONG GRAPHIC IMAGE ON THE NEXT PAGE VIEW WITH CAUTION





Inside the vehicle were three cartulinas, all read, " For not respecting the agreement, we come with all 35Z".

The bodies were driven away in the same van in which they were discovered, by Semefo elements and Ministerial Police. A source revealed that the victims had been kidnapped in the Laureles colonia, others in the La Favorita bar, and the rest in the Higueras colonia.

Saturday afternoon, a man was executed as he got out of a vehicle and tried to flee, however, he was shot by his captors in the plain light of day and before dozens of witnesses.

The victim was kidnapped by a group of armed men outside of his house in the Laureles colonia in the company of three others, the victim was Rodolfo Viveros Morales, 43 years old, who was family of a functionary of the Attorney General of Veracruz.

At this point in time, the identity of the victims in the van are unknown, however, around 23:00 hours, three family groups arrived at Semefo to ask about the events in the El Tejar fraccionamiento.


Journalist Killed in Nuevo Laredo Tamaulipas. He wrote about electoral violence in Mexico

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Posted by DD
Sources;  NYT,   Infolliteras


Saturday, January 13, in the middle of the afternoon the 77 year old journalist Carlos Dominguez Rodriguez was murdered while in his car while maneuvering on the streets in downtown Nuevo Laredo.  His daughter was in the car with him but was not injured.  He is the second journalist killed in the country so far in 2018.

 State  security spokesman Luis Alberto Rodriguez told The Associated Press.   the body had stab wounds and there may have been gunshots.and said they were investigating to see if his death was related to his work.

 Dominguez had worked for different print media outlets, including the Diario de Nuevo Laredo newspaper, but he was currently an independent journalist who wrote opinion columns for news websites, Rodriguez and other journalists said.  The journalist had a political column and did not work for any media at this time, although he previously had a job at El Diario de Nuevo Laredo .


 If it is confirmed that Dominguez was murdered for his work, he would be the first journalist slain for his profession in the new year after a deadly 2017 that saw at least 10 killed in what international press groups called a crisis for freedom of expression in Mexico.

 Tamaulipas' government released a statement saying it "will act firmly against any attack on freedom of expression and the labor of communicators."

 In his last column, published Friday, Carlos Dominguez spoke of the violent events during the electoral period.  In that column he wrote;

 "the violence or the elector season makes the ground in Mexican tremble.  Ridiculous speeches are used to hide the failure of the federal government in matters of public safety.  

"As if it were an insinuation to violate the electoral process in its infancy, the bloody events have intensified in quantity and brutality since the beginning of pre-campaign activities for the presidency of the Republic.    
 In a season when tranquility is supposed to reign for citizens to scrutinize the characters that are fighting for the Presidency of theMexican government, the assassinations of politicians have become more abundant than ever and impunity is at the height of extremely violent events.

 "And as always, this generalized violence becomes prolific in the State of Mexico, Morelos, Guerrero, Michoacán, Colima, Nayarit, Chihuahua, Queretaro, Zacatecas, Sonora, Baja California and Baja California Sur, Sinaloa, Jalisco, Puebla, Veracruz, Tabasco, Quintana Roo and Mexico City ".

"And as always, this generalized violence becomes prolific in the State of Mexico, Morelos, Guerrero, Michoacán, Colima, Nayarit, Chihuahua, Queretaro, Zacatecas, Sonora, Baja California and Baja California Sur, Sinaloa, Jalisco, Puebla, Veracruz, Tabasco, Quintana Roo and Mexico City ".   

(DD note;  I is surprising that Dominguez did not include Tamaulipas  on that list considering that since the year 2000 to date, there have been 14 journalist killed in Tamaullpas, the second most lethal to the press according to the organization Article 19.)

 And he concluded: "Today as never before, Mexico is really a red center of violence in the American hemisphere, only surpassed by Venezuela, a country where a government of citizen submission is exercised that overcomes all the atrocities that have occurred in Cuba, Nicaragua, Guatemala and el Salvador". 

 The governor of Tamaulipas, Francisco García Cabeza de Vaca, expressed his condolences to the journalist's family through a message on his Twitter account."My commitment to them and the journalistic community of Tamaulipas that this homicide will not go unpunished."

 Tamaulipas has been wracked by drug cartel violence and the state is one where organized crime has often been able to intimidate media outlets into silence through violence and threats.

Both the United Nations and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights have expressed concern about the impunity surrounding the killings of journalists in Mexico

As reported on Borderland Beat, in Guerrero state in southern Mexico,this past week several journalists reported being roughed up. Bernandino Hernandez, who has worked with the AP, said state police beat, kicked and dragged the journalists.

 Earlier in January, a news editor was killed in Mexico City in a robbery apparently unrelated to his profession.

 Earlier in January, a news editor was killed in Mexico City in a robbery apparently unrelated to his profession. 



The Merida Initiative Continues despite Trump

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Milenio article

Subject Matter: Merida Initiative
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required


Reporter: Ruben Mosso
Mexico and US celebrated nine years of signing the agreement known as the Merida Initiative, a period in which the Americans have delivered more than 1,600 million dollars in equipment and training to strengthen the security and justice of our country.

The initiative was promoted in December 2008, by the then presidents Felipe Calderon and George W Bush, and has favored the federal forces in the fight against organized crime, which is endowed with cutting edge technology, aircraft and canines for the detection of drugs, ammunition and weapons. So far, the support is still valid, despite the policy of Donald Trump.

The support includes the state and federal penitentiary system that is certified by the American Correctional Association, the Federal Police, the PGR, the Army, the Navy and the Tax Administration Service, although they are not the only ones that receive assistance from the Merida Initiative.

Also support has gone to the members of the Judiciary and professors of public and private universities with the purpose of consolidating the New Criminal Justice System.


The US Department of Justice has set a goal to train more than one thousand Mexican law teachers and lawyers, with the aim of helping them in the transition to the new justice system.

The Initiative allocated more than 247 million dollars to support Mexico in the transition to the New Criminal Justice System, this includes exchanges between justice attorneys, forensic laboratory advising, training, certifications, accreditation's, equipment and seminars for students and professors of law careers.

Milenio accompanied 20 legal professors, including a Judge and people who worked as secretaries of agreements and agents of the Public Ministry, who were invited to a course of study in the cities of Atlanta, Georgia, and Miami, Florida.

The participating universities were the Marist of San Luis Potosi, the Pan-American of Aguascalientes, El Uno de Gudalajara, La Salle Saltillo, the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas -Nuevo Laredo, the IberoAmericana University of Tijuana, the San Pablo of San Luis Potosi, the Autonomous University of Durango of the Zacatecas campus, the Autonomous University of Coahuila, El Uno de Juarez de Durango, the Metropolitan University of Monterrey, and the Autonomous University of San Luis Potosi.

Pedro Lopez Medrano, a professor at the La Salle Saltillo University and Judge of the first instance in Criminal Matters in Coahuila, said he was surprised by the way US Judges operate and the manner in which students are trained in orality, a measure that, is considered as applicable in Mexico.

He assured that in our country there are few who are prepared to appear in court and work orally, since there are cases where agents of the Public Ministry and defenders will read hearings, when in the US that is unforgivable.

He indicated that in Mexico there are entities that have an optimum level of implementation in orality, among them, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon and Chihuahua, according to data from the Ministry of the Interior.

In turn, Jose Paulo Bassol Martinez, professor of international law at the Pan-American University campus in Aguascalientes, and who has been a fellow of the US Department of State, said it is vital to change our way of thinking, because not everything is solved by invoking an article of the law, when disputes can be arranged by negotiation with the defence or prosecution.

We have had to adapt to constitutional reform ( in criminal matters ) of 2008, all the states of the Mexican Republic in 2016 had to have implemented it, and we have been adapting to different levels. There are some states, undoubtedly, more backward than others in the new implementation, some that have an advantage, I speak about Aguascalientes, and the academic sector is not the exception in both the undergraduate and postgraduate areas, we had to do the adaption he pointed out.

More support

Mexico also receives CASA 235 maritime surveillance aircraft, valued at $50 million dollars each, which have been delivered to the Secretariat of the Navy, surveillance aircraft have been provided to the federal police, of the them with a value of 21 million dollars.


In addition, marines and federal police also have the UH-60M Blackhawk helicopters that have been used in the fight against organized crime. Likewise, a telecommunications system was installed among then border cities of both nations valued at 13 million dollars. The purpose of the system is to exchange information about criminal investigations.


In addition, 17 million dollars were invested to establish ten secondary inspection points in international points of entry for those people who require additional research.

The Merida Initiative has allocated $24 million in training and equipment for criminal background checking, internal affairs and police transcript research programs, to name a few.



Marinas Capture Sofia del Carmen Treviño, Niece of “ Z40 and Z42"

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Translated by Yaqui for Borderland Beat from: Proceso
"La Jefa del Plaza" By: Juan Alberto Cedillo Jan 12, 2018


Nuevo Laredo, Tamps -- Sofía del Carmen Monsiváis Treviño, niece of brothers Miguel Ángel and Oscar Omar Treviño Morales, "El Z40 and El Z42", respectively, and presumed leader of the sicarios for the CDN was captured for her probable responsibility in the murder of Ricardo Martínez Chávez, regional coordinator of the local Attorney's office, and four other ministerial agents, the PGJT reported today in a press release.
                                                       Ana Isabel Trevino Morales, Sister of "Z40 and Z42"

Sofía del Carmen is the daughter of Ana Isabel Treviño Morales and inherited the direction of the Cartel del Noreste (CDN) in Nuevo Laredo after her mother was captured last November.


Ricardo Martínez Chávez, regional coordinator of the Attorney General's Office (PGJT), two of his bodyguards and two dependancy officials were killed with more than 200 shots on Thursday Jan 4 at about 10:30 pm after a meeting in this city. They were ambushed by various gunmen and at the corner of Eva Samano and Municipio Libre Streets.  In addition a Ministerial Agent was wounded.

Ricardo Martinez Chavez, Regional Coordinator of the PGJT, the State's Attorney General's Office

Before he was assassinated,  Ricardo Martinez Chavez and his companions were working on investigations that showed ties and complicity between Authorities and organized crime cells, in particular  CDN and  ex Zetas and had already seized a large arsenal from the criminal group, for which he was threatened by the criminals, this according to the Governor of the State of Tamaulipas, Francisco Javier Cabeza de Vaca.


Gov Francisco Javier Cabeza del Vaca condemned the attack on Twitter calling the assassins cowards

Sofía del Carmen was "admitted to the Federal Center for Female Social Readaptation (Cefereso) in the state of Morelos, where she was admitted recently for various criminal acts of the federal jurisdiction".

Her capture was made by special forces of the Marines in recent days, but only today was the public informed about her arrest.


Before he was assassinated,  Ricardo Martinez Chavez and his companions were working on investigations that showed ties and complicity between Authorities and organized crime cells.

In particular  CDN and  ex Zetas and had already seized a large arsenal from the criminal group, for which he was threatened by the criminals, this according to the Governor of the State of Tamaulipas, Francisco Javier Cabeza de Vaca.

Los Rojos leader arrested after being recognized in elevator by PGR prosecutor

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Chivis Martinez for Borderland Beat translated and republished from Reforma

Los Rojos second in command in Guerrero


Jorge Higashi Chávez, "El Higashi", alleged leader of the criminal group Los Rojos, was casually recognized by a prosecutor of  SEIDO while the two were in an elevator of the luxurious CDMX Reforma complex. [Mexico City formally changed its name from 'Distrito Federal' or 'DF' for short, to 'Ciudad de Mexico', abbreviated as 'CDMX]

"El Higashi", who according to the PGR led a band of kidnappers who operated in Guerrero, Puebla and the CDMX, lived in apartment 222 of the complex,  just in front of the PGR headquarters.

Sources close to the case reported that, after the narco was recognized; "immediate orders" were issued for the search of his apartment, resulting in the seizure of weapons and 3 vehicles,  and his arrest.

On January 5, SEIDO Prosecutor Abraham Huertas, was in the complex to render reports as to the owner of the 1001 parking space.
In 1001 was  a BMW i8 with Morelos plates, whose 2017 model is worth 2.7 million pesos. There were also two Suburban suv’s.

The capo, accused of organized crime and kidnapping, was arrested in possession of a briefcase with cash, false documents and bank cards in the name of Jorge Alejandro Díaz.

The Criminal Investigation Agency (AIC) of the PGR detained Jorge Higashi Chávez, "El Higashi",  former member of the Beltrán Leyva Organization in Mexico City, who was in charge of trafficking heroin from Guerrero to the United States.

According to the federal agency, "El Higashi" led a gang of kidnappers who operated in Guerrero, Puebla and Mexico City, whose main victims were businessmen and merchants for whom he demanded ransoms for large amounts of money, murdering them if the economic demands were not made.  

At the time of his capture, they also secured cash, false documents, as well as radio communication equipment.

According to the authorities, after the death of Arturo Beltrán Leyva, "El Barbas", in 2009, "El Higashi" joined Los Rojos, a splinter group that broke away from the Beltrán organization.

With Los Rojos, in 2012, he became the second in command in Guerrero, just below Leonor Nava Romero, "El Tigre", who was arrested in May 2014.

"Derived from investigations, it is known that this person is responsible for ordering the killing of two federal policemen in the town of El Ocotito, in Chilpancingo, in August 2013, "the Attorney General added. 

Tijuana BC 2018 : 77 Murdered in the First Two Weeks

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Translated by Yaqui for Borderland Beat from: El Sol de Tijuana

                                                                  Welcome to 2018

By: Uriel Saucedo Jan 14, 2018
Angel F. Gonzalez Jan 7, 2018
Extra Material from: UniMexicali/ Uniradio Informa

The three people killed on Jan 6, 2018,  make of total of 32 violent deaths, ie, criminal murders in the first five days of this year. At least 5 people were found in various incidents  and Colonias of Tijuana in the last 24 hours. With this figure, January averages just over 6 people executed every day in its first five days.

At 11:35 am, Municipal Police officers went to the Colonia Valle Imperial, Section One, where they reported the presence of what looked like human remains. Elements of the Attorney General's Office of the State (PGJE) arrived moments later and, when going down to a ravine, they confirmed that they were indeed human bones. The remains were transferred to the facilities of the Forensic Medical Service so that the cause of death is defined and the deceased is identified through necropsy.

Minutes before noon, paramedics from the Red Cross went to Calle Ramón López Velarde, in Colonia Pórticos de San Antonio, where a man was attacked with a firearm. The rescuers attended to the victim, whom they found on a public road, with a bullet in the head. 

The assaulted, around 35 years of age, did not present vital signs and was declared lifeless at the scene. According to witness statements, the victim was shot by three individuals who, after carrying out the assassination , fled on foot and were not located.


In another incident, at 2:30 p.m., an unconscious man was located on Jacaranda street in the El Florido First Section subdivision. Upon the arrival of the Red Cross paramedics, it was discovered that the man had been attacked with a firearm and abandoned in flower beds.


On Calle Article 5 of Colonia La Esperanza a man was shot in the thorax and abdomen. Paramedics confirmed the death and that his attackers had fled in Ford Explorer type vehicle. (apparently no police authorities arrived at the scene ????? )

A night watchman and/or Security Guard was found murdered at the establishment he was stationed, the Unidad Deportiva Tijuana  on Calle Via Rapida Poniente, Colonia 20 de Noviembre. The man, named Señor Cruz, 54,  showed signs of aggression and torture and died of severe wounds to his head delivered by blows. Señor Cruz was apparently asleep at the time of the arrival of his attackers.

A calcinated human body was found dumped on Calle Jose Maria Morelos in Ejido Chilpancingo. No information available on the identity of the person or witnesses.

Four men escaped on foot in the Colonia El Florida 1 Parque Industrial; a man was found murdered by bullets to the head on Calle Matanucos and another victim was found still alive but with several bullet wounds and thus was taken to the General Hospital.


Colonia Urbivilla del Prado 2: A dead male was found in the middle of a street with several bullet wounds to his body, apparently dumped there, while the perpetrators of his murder fled in a Dodge vehicle.

One identified victim, Jorge Reyes Aguilar, 41 years old , was assassinated by gunshots in different parts of his body. In this case neighbors made a 911 call to Authorities when they heard the sound of gunfire across the street. He was found in a second floor apartment.

A few more wounded were found at various locations, transferred via the Red Cross to the General Hospital and all attackers sighted by any and all witnesses reported seeing them flee in vehicles down dark streets.

In the first 14 days of this year, the death toll has reached the number of 77 dead. Among the latest cases reported during the night of Saturday and early Sunday, there were up to four violent deaths in different parts of the city.

On Monday, Jan 8th, eight murdered bodies were reported and / or discovered.

After 9:50 pm on Saturday, a fight was reported on the Matamoros Avenue of the Independencia neighborhood that required the intervention of municipal police. Several individuals were making  detonations on the public road, ie, there was a shootout.
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At the moment municipal police units arrived at the scene, they found three men badly wounded, so they requested the support of paramedics from the Red Cross in the place, who after attending to the wounded determined that one of them  did not have vital signs, while the other two were transferred to receive medical attention, reporting one of the injured in a serious state of health, while the second was not at risk.

Witnesses mentioned that one group of armed men fled in a black truck, so an operation was carried out in the area to try to find the vehicle.


At 8:15pm  a body was reported lying on the street, on the street Jalisco Canyon Jalisco Guadalajara, where he discovered the lifeless body of a man, which was wrapped in a blanket and had narco message tied to it.

Later, at 23:00 hours, it was reported that on Joaquín Murrieta street in Ejido Maclovio Rojas colony  a man was killed, no information was given information about his identity, but he died at the site of the attack of the injuries from bullet impacts that he presented in all different parts of his body.


Two men were apprehended by municipal police officers after they shot at a police unit when they were traveling down García Avenue in the Villas del Álamo neighborhood in Los Pinos.

The events occurred after the municipal police unit noticed that a black-colored vehicle was traveling at excessive speed, so they signaled them to stop, the men ignored it and started to flee so the agents on board the patrol initiated a persecution against the fugitives.
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When the men fled, they began firing against the unit so that they would not be apprehended; however, the officers managed  to catch both criminals, who identified themselves as Gabriel Esteban N, 29, and Yohen Elías N, 19; after searching them, the authorities  seized a 40-caliber weapon and a magazine containing eight useful shots. In addition, the license plates of the vehicle were verified and it was confirmed that the car had been reported stolen. The men were detained and  were taken before the corresponding authority.  No one was injured in this incident.

At 7:40 am on Sunday, on Spring Street in Colonia Los Alcatraces,  a man's body was reported after being spotted in a ditch which showed severe traces of violence.


Three Found Murdered in less than Two Hours:

Between 5:50 and 7:45 pm on Saturday evening , three men were assassinated in different points of the city. Whomever is responsible used firearms in all three cases and once again no one was detained.

The only facts released regarding these three incidents is that one of the murders occurred in Colonia Pedregal de Santa Julia and unknown subjects aboard a pickup shot one man as he was walking down the street.

SEMEFO:

It goes without saying that with the staggering numbers of murders and abandoned and / or unidentified bodies that the SEMEFO facilities , ie, the Morgue,  workers  and forensic specialists are woefully overwhelmed, understaffed, inadequate and literally overflowing. Lack of any and all types of working equipment including processing, storage and refrigeration units are overwhelmed to the point of unacceptable.

This situation is extreme in Tijuana as well as many other of the most violent areas all over Mexico and in most states and deserves its own complete Post. As we have already reported Tijuana officials are, sadly, reduced to disposing of  many of its unclaimed, unidentified and / or unrecognizable victims of mostly unsolved murders by way of mass graves.

An already overcrowded urban neighborhood surrounds the State run SEMEFO facility and there has been unending complaints from its residents for years now. I will leave the details to your imagination and / or nightmares.

Video:Toys from CJNG leader, El Mencho, given to Children on Kings Day

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Posted by Char for Borderland Beat Video from Gillonautas

Nueva Italia, Michoacán


Chivis Note: In Mexico the last celebratory day of the Christmas Holiday season is Mexico, Día de Los Reyes (known elsewhere as Epiphany) to honor the Three Wise Men denoting when they brought gifts to Jesus Christ. 

It occurs on January 6th and people celebrate by exchanging gifts. 

Seemingly, taking a page out of the book; how to win hearts and minds, reminiscent of Osiel Cárdenas Guillén, El Mencho has a toy give away.  You can see Mencho’s men with weapons, guarding the situation on the side, and hearing children thanking Mencho.

Char’s Note: 6 days ago this video was published I just found it. Cjng armed men lead by El Arabe, el Chaparrito, and maestrillo give free toys to the kids you can even hear the kids saying “Tío Mencho” “Uncle Mencho”.

Control for street drug trade pushes Tijuana to grisly new record: 1,744 homicides in 2017

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Posted by Chvis for Borderland Beat  from SD Union Tribune  Written by Sandra Dibble
 
Click on image to enlarge
W
elcome to 2018,” read the threatening and neatly penned message left early this month with the bodies of a man and woman gunned down in the outlying Tijuana development of Villa del Alamo. “The plaza is not Sinaloa’s, it belongs to Nueva Generación.”

After spiking to unprecedented levels last year, the bloodshed in Tijuana has continued at an unrelenting pace in these first days of the new year as two powerful drug trafficking organizations battle for control of the city’s lucrative street drug sales: The long-established Sinaloa cartel and a newer, aggressive group known as the cartel Nueva Generación Jalisco, often abbreviated as CJNG.

As homicides soared to unprecedented levels across Mexico in 2017, Tijuana registered one of the steepest increases in the country. The tally for the year was a record 1,744 homicides — almost double the record of 910 homicides set in 2016, according to figures from the Baja California Attorney General’s Office.

“The main issue right now with the power struggle is Sinaloa and the CJNG battling for street dealers, narcomenudeo,” said an official with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, speaking on condition that he not be named. “You have got to understand, the money that they make in Tijuana, that’s as much as crossing the border,” with smuggled drugs.

Though bullets have struck innocent bystanders, the killings have been largely targeted and carried out in the city’s impoverished and working class neighborhoods, authorities say. Close to 90 percent of the victims are low-level operatives in the local drug trade, they say.

In many cases, the victims’ bodies are unclaimed, either because they are from other parts of Mexico, or because they are estranged from family members. “There are a lot of people from outside” the region, said Gerardo Sosa Olachea, Baja California’s newly named Public Safety Secretary. “They’re sent up here to get rid of people, and to take possession of the plaza.”

Reducing the violence

Tijuana’s public safety secretary, Marco Antonio Sotomayor, believes that a key step to bringing down the violence is reducing the demand for illicit drugs by battling addiction rates. Methamphetamine is the biggest problem, followed by heroin, he said in an interview earlier this year.

Sosa said support from Mexico’s federal government in preventing drugs from reaching Baja California is essential to reducing the homicides. With drugs arriving by land, air, and water, “we need the federal presence, because they have all the equipment, planes, helicopters.”

Roberto Quijano, a political independent on the city council, has called for a series of measures—including adjustments to Mexico’s new accusatory justice system to prevent the release of suspects of serious crime; a plan by law enforcement agencies to confront the violence; and renewed federal support. “The federal government not only doesn’t send money, it’s no longer participating in operations.”

Still others say the violence can most effectively be lowered by reducing competition among trafficking groups.

According to the DEA, there are five drug trafficking groups based in various parts of Mexico that are operating in the Tijuana region. Besides Sinaloa and CJNG, these are members of the Beltrán-Leyva Organization faction led by Fausto “Chapo” Isidro Meza; the Michoacan-based Familia Michoacana; and remnants of the group that once controlled Tijuana, the Arellano Félix Organization. The Arellanos are said to have joined forces with CJNG to oppose Sinaloa.

The lack of control by a single group is key to explaining the level of violence, said David Shirk, a University of San Diego professor who tracks Mexico’s trafficking groups. “There is no over-arching umbrella of control by the larger organizations that are able to establish rules of the game,” he said. “There’s confusion and disarray at the lower levels because there’s no one to call the shots.”

Key smuggling route

Tijuana, with some 1.8 million residents, has long been key to drug trafficking organizations vying for control of a critical route for smuggling marijuana, cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine to the United States, the world’s largest consumer of illicit drugs.

As in past years, Tijuana’s homicides far outnumber those of the state’s other five municipalities. State figures for 2017 show 189 for Ensenada, 157 for Mexicali, 121 for Rosarito Beach and 68 for Tecate.

Despite the spiking homicide numbers, the city’s main business districts have remained vibrant, with shops and restaurants full, and its numerous factories booming with activity. This stands in marked contrast to a decade ago, a time of global economic downturn, when Tijuana was the setting of brazen shootings in bars and busy thoroughfares, gruesome displays of bodies hung from bridges, and killings of numerous police officers.

Back then, the long-dominant Arellano Félix Organization fought off a challenge from a former lieutenant backed by the Sinaloa cartel for control of Tijuana, a critical corridor to supply the large U.S. demand for heroin, cocaine, marijuana, and methamphetamine. As top leaders of the Arellano group were killed or arrested, the group became a shadow of its former self, and Sinaloa took dominance of the plaza.

“In 2008, it was easier to explain the situation,” said an official at the Baja California Attorney General’s Office who requested anonymity because he is not an authorized spokesman for the agency. “The groups were clearly identified.”

As Sinaloa consolidated its control, the killings plummeted — from 844 in 2008, until then the city’s most violent year, to 364 in 2012. But since then, they have fairly steadily mounted.

But while homicides are up, other crimes such as kidnapping and extortion that drove many upper- and middle-class residents to move across the border have fallen significantly since 2008-2010, according to an analysis of state figures by USD’s Shirk.

Fall of Chapo, rise in violence

Shirk said Tijuana’s increase in homicides is part of a larger national picture that has to do with the rise of the CJNG, a group based in Guadalajara and led by Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as “Mencho.” The group has been growing in strength in different regions of the country, especially in areas once controlled by Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, the Sinaloa cartel leader extradited to the United States a year ago, he said.

The U.S. State Department is offering a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to the capture of Oseguera, who was indicted in 2014 in U.S. federal court in Washington, D.C. It is offering a similar reward for information leading to the capture of the Sinaloa cartel’s current leader, Ismael “Mayo” Zambada.

At the helm of Sinaloa’s operations in Baja California is Alfonso Arzate García, known as “El Aquiles,” and his brother René Arzate García, “La Rana,”according to the DEA. Both spend most of their time outside the region; the individual running day-to-day operations is an individual by the nickname "El Toro,” according to DEA.

In September, Mexican authorities arrested the man described as the leader of Tijuana operations for the CJNG, Juan José Perez Vargas, “El Piolin.” He is described in news reports as a former Sinaloa cartel operative born in San Diego. “Hopefully, he is going to be extradited to the U.S.,” said the DEA official. “Hopefully we can get him to be a witness against all the CJNG people we have indicted here in San Diego.”

Emeli, 11 years old, murdered by asphyxiation; stepfather suspected

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Translated by El Profe for Borderland Beat from Periodico Central

                     
The mother admitted that she was taken from her house to attend a party, supposedly forced by her husband, the stepfather of the girl, who was the victim of the sixth feminicide in Puebla this year.

By Edmundo Velázquez

Emeli, the eleven-year-old victim of the sixth feminicide in Puebla, was suffocated, according to the necropsy law that was stated in the preliminary investigation. So far, her stepfather is the main suspect and her mother has already testified before the General State Prosecutor's Office (FGE).

According to officials of the Prosecutor's Office in the area, the mother of the minor - sexually abused before being murdered - was initially questioned before the regional Public Ministry, but will have to go to the central building of the Prosecutor's Office in the capital of Puebla to give more details.

So far there is a key witness, her brother, 15 years old. The young man has provided important information about the events. Unofficial versions indicate that the teenager was not in the house because his stepfather ordered him to leave and arrange a stand where they sell vegetables every Sunday. This fact also leads to the stepfather being the main suspect of the feminicide.

The mother of the child initially reported that she called her daughter at eight in the morning and since she did not answer, she went to look for her in her room, where she was found lifeless.

In the extension of the statement, the mother admitted that she was taken from her home to attend a party, supposedly forced by her husband, stepfather of the girl. When she returned, she noticed that Emeli had been attacked.

The Attorney General of the State has ruled out one of the lines of investigation that focuses on the sale of the virginity of the eleven-year-old girl by the stepfather, as some of the regional media have handled it.

Emeli is seen off with white balloons in Tulcingo del Valle

More than one hundred people attended Emeli's wake, where her mother, Maribel Ramírez, was present, who demanded that the person responsible for the murder of her daughter be punished.

As reported by the newspaper, Cambio, the girl was laid to rest by neighbors and relatives. Her body was veiled in her grandparents' house on Monday, January 15 and [on January 16] the funeral mass was performed with her to be buried in the pantheon of Tulcingo del Valle.

Her funeral was attended by more than 100 people who carried white balloons.

This is the Central Periodico and Página Negra interactive map tracking feminicides:

The bloody battle for the Veracruz Plaza

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Proceso article

Subject Matter: Veracruz, Los Zetas, CJNG
Recommendation: Read this article by BB forum contributor Mica


Reporter: Noe Zavaleta
In the first 12 days of January, a dozen human heads were abandoned in the insides of four vehicles, with the advertisement that a " criminal cleaning" was going on in the southern zone of the State. The dismembered corpses of the victims, alleged criminals, according to the governor Miguel Angel Yunes Lineares - were left in black garbage bags, the same were found inside of cars in Tlacotalpan, with five bodies, Sayula de Aleman with four bodies, Minatitlan two bodies, and Cosoleacaque with one. The macabre photos from the scenes were circulated in national and international media.

The capital saw a night of terror this past Saturday the 13th, when alleged sicarios of Z-35 ( old school zetas) left nine dismembered corpses in the inside of a minivan, as well as three cartulinas threatening the Secretary of Public Security, Jaime Tellez, and his Director of Operations, Gerardo Guzman, whom were responsible for "not respecting our agreement".

"More united than ever, the people respect", was the phrase that they left in the three messages. In the morning a man had been kidnapped in the Laureles colonia and executed with 14 bullets in front of the Judicial power base of the State.




In the last trimester of 2017, the CJNG left hundreds executed in the towns of Tuxpan, Tierra Blanca, Martinez de La Torre, Chacaltianguis, Tlacotalpan, Sayula de Aleman and Cosoleacaque, as well as in the principal urban areas of Xalapa and the port of Veracruz. In the capital, human remains were abandoned near the historic center and one block from a public security checkpoint and in the vicinity of the bus station.

IN Coatzacoalcos, the place where the Zetas were settled, violence intensified following the arrest in  Cardenas, Tabasco of regional boss Hernan Martinez Zavaleta, El Commandante H, and the taking down of Bernardo Cruz Mota, El Nino Sicario, and of Elias Aguirre Sanchez, El Metro. His subordinates maintaining an internal fight for control of the plaza, with the consequent executions of various members.

While in the south of the State, the CJNG warns that it will take control of the plaza and annihilate, Los Zetas, kidnappers, assailants and extortionists. In the north of the State, in the Huastec region, Grupo Sombre of the CdG have been trying to win a hearts and minds of the population with various festivals in public places.

On social networks, a video was circulating with sicarios from Grupo Sombra distributing toys in La Concordia Park, in the municipality of Panuco, while giving toys and other items to children, youths and mothers dressed in tactical vests with FEGS (Fuerzas Especiales de Grupo Sombra) shouting Arriba el Grupo Sombra, while the recipients replied with Arriba  viva la Sombra.

In Veracruz, the headache for Miguel Angel Yunes Linares in his first 13 months of government has been security, which in his campaign he promised to sort out in 6 months.

According to statistics from the Executive Secretariat of the National Public Security System, in this period there have been 2414 murders and 178 kidnappings. In this regard, Yunes has assured that 70% of those crimes involve organized criminals and their associates.

The SESNSP does not include the alleged criminals killed by State or Federal Police forces, as these are not counted as homicides.

Last June, in a frank declaration of the battle against organized crime, Yunes Linares assured that the SSP and the FGE, in coordination with Federal Forces had 300 criminal specific objectives, but to date they have given no figures for those arrested or killed on the list.

Through communications it is known that Ricardo Pachecho Tello, El Quino, head of the CJNG in the Gulf of Mexico was killed. However, several of his subordinates continue to commit crimes in Veracruz and have expanded to the Sotavento region, Papaloapan Basin, south zone and in points bordering Oaxaca and urban areas of the State of Puebla, according to an intelligence report from the Attorney Generals office.

Zeta decline

Commandante H was arrested in Cardenas, Tabasco, but the Los Zetas leaders and subordinates in the southern zone of Veracruz, some of foreign origin, continue to fight for control of illicit activities, according to an intelligence report called "Coatzacoalcos Criminal Structure", carried out by the SSP which states that there are still 17 targets in that town among narcotics distributors, Piso bosses and head of halcones.

In the presidency of Javier Duarte the criminal gangs of Gente Nueva, Mata Zetas, Los Zetas and CJNG predominated, and with Yunes Linares there is a maelstrom of adjustment of accounts between Los Zetas cells, CJNG, Antrax, Sinaloa Cartel, Grupo Sombra, Cartel del Golfo and the independent groups of huachicoleros.

Members of Morena, like the legislator Amado Cruz and the state leader of the party, Manuel Huerta, have insisted that Veracruz urgently needs a federal commissioner in matters of security, as Michoacan had in the past, in order to stop the criminals.

But the PAN legislator Maria Josefina Gamboa Torales assures that there are advances in terms of security, because today with Yunes, she says, they are not hiding those killed, as happened in the sexenio of Javier Duarte.

"I do not despise the security issue, there are challenges to be achieved. When we arrived we only had 180 patrols, in a few months we will have 600, but I believe that before the government deceived the SESNSP, and only reported 3 homicides even if it was a 100, and that has been reflected in the fosas that are being discovered today, those bodies were not killed yesterday, they have been in there for years", he said.

Gamboa Torales assures that crimes against humanity were present with Duarte, and a clear example are the massive demonstrations and uprising of young people of Xalapa, Veracruz Port, Ursulo Galvan and Coatzacoalcos, to mention a few.

The new governors are blaming the past but that is nothing new, and PAN responds, " you arrive at a destroyed house, in which there are leaks, in which the pipeline does not supply, there are holes in the floor, and there is a demand to instantly fix it, but we have to first put the foundations back in place, before we can move forward, you can not start from a lie, and in telling the truth, the institutions have been destroyed."

In a meeting of the Coordination Group of Veracruz, held in recent days, Yunes Linares stressed that recently there was a capture of 400 kilos of cocaine in the Port of Veracruz and 90 kilos more in the Federal Police station in Papaloapan basin, and he insisted that, after analysis of the five regions of the state, the security situation is much better already.

He also stressed that he wanted to make it clear that the police are not there to care for criminals, if criminals engage in criminal activities, they they have to accept those risks. In addition and on repeated occasions he has insisted that he is only concerned about the safety of "good people".

Video: "The Chase" the evolution of the Mexican Drug War

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By Chivis Martinez video production from WMR


How the Mexican Drug War evolved to where it is today.

The mutilated body of DEA Agent Enrique Camarena sparks the largest manhunt in DEA history. Suspected in the murder the Padrino [Godfather] Former police agent and the Mexican drug lord himself, Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo. El Padrino controlled drug trafficking in Mexico, until he made a momentous error in judgement by ordering the murder of Camarena. The first U.S. agent killed on foreign soil, The hit on Camarena was “a settling of scores” as Camarena brought down the massive Buffalo Ranch marijuana farm.  Costing Gallardo billions.  Gallardo was not satisfied in simply taking Camarena’s life, he ordered a physician to bring him back from the brink of death, so he could once again be tortured. Multiply times.
Gallardo served as the body guard to Sinaloa Governor
Gallardo until that point operated  all border trafficking, and changed the dynamic of trafficking when demanding the Colombians pay for usage of Mexico’s drug routes not only by cash but also by cocaine, expanding Mexican trafficking from heroin and marijuana to include cocaine.
The subsequent Camarena homicide investigation also exposes widespread corruption and a cover-up within the highest levels of the Mexican government. It would take a special unit of investigators, a battalion of Mexican soldiers and months of undercover work by the DEA to bring the killers of their fallen comrade to justice.

Because of the decision to murder Camarena, and the arrest of Gallardo,  drug plazas were divided and a capo appointed to each plaza by Gallardo.  This set the stage for eventual warring of cartels.

This excellent video by WMR productions should be viewed by anyone interested in the Mexican Narco War as a good base of knowledge.

Video: Sicarios attack in Salvatierra Hospital, Guanajuato

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Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Esnoticiasdeveracruz article

Subject Matter: Sicarios storm into hospital to finish off injured person
Recommendation: No prior subject matter knowledge required

Five killed in Guanajuato, sicarios return to kill a survivor wounded in an earlier shootout


An armed commando of no less than four subjects broke into the General Hospital of Salvatierra this morning in Guanajuato, to execute a patient and the police who had him in custody.

According to preliminary reports, the gunfight was registered around 08:00 am Wednesday morning. The victim had been taken into hospital the night before after surviving another armed attacked in a house in the La Hacienda colonia where five persons lost their lives.

The information portal Agora, published a video that showed the moment when the assassins broke into the lobby and fired at the inhabitants of a particular room. At this time the identity of the victims are unknown, and the authorities have established a security perimeter around the area to carry out the corresponding investigations.

In 17 days, organized crime responsible for 90 murders in Chihuahua

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Translated by El Profe for Borderland Beat from La Jornada
                
Photo: Regeracion.mx
The number of alleged homicides committed by organized crime groups rose to 90 in Chihuahua during the first 17 days of the year, according to a newspaper account prepared based on reports from the State Attorney General. The 11 most recent murders in this area occurred between Tuesday night and Wednesday.

An attack on Wednesday left three dead and one wounded, after men armed with high-powered rifles fired at their victims at the corner of 55th and Rosales street, in the neighborhood Popular, of the capital of Chihuahua. The assailants fled in a vehicle. 


Also in the Chihuahua capital, a young man was shot to death in Teófilo Borunda street in the Santo Niño neighborhood. Another young man was injured in the attack and the identity of the victims is still unknown.

In the Juanita Luna neighborhood of Ciudad Juarez, a man dressed in women's clothes was killed early Wednesday. In addition, the body of a man with signs of torture and gunshot wounds was found on the road that leads to the town of Anáhuac, municipality of Cuauhtémoc.

In the early hours of Wednesday morning in the plaza of the community of Santa María, municipality of Villa López, in the south of Chihuahua, Efraín Guadalupe García Reyes, 24 years of age, was found dead with gunshot wounds.


In Camargo, Chihuahua, Juan Carlos Leal Gamboa, a teacher from Juarez, was attacked near a bar in an attack in which another person was killed. 


Lastly, a woman lost her life in Delicias, Chihuahua, after being shot several times by her assailants. At the scene, her partner was injured, but minutes later he was murdered when being treated at a regional hospital. 


The violent day in recent hours left 11 homicides in four states of the country. Of the total, five were in Guanajuato, three in the state of Mexico, two in Baja California and one in Morelos, according to police reports. 


CJNG Narcomanta: "We have arrived" and "The Governor of Puebla is protecting Los Zetas"

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Guest reporter "LR"  for Borderland Beat Translated and Republished  from Proceso 

PUEBLA, Pue. - Suspected hitmen of the Jalisco Cartel Nueva Generation (CJNG) hanged a Narcomanta in Puebla. The Narcomanta launches a direct threat against Governor Antonio Gali Fayad, and his Secretary of State Security Jesús Morales, whom they accuse of protecting The Zetas.

The Narcomanta, hung on a bridge on the 16th of September warns: 
"... the government gave entry to the filthy Z ... The population is asked not to cooperate with them since everyone who is detected will be executed, whoever it may be, especially you Gali and Chucho Morales who protect the Bukanas and the Cachetes”

CJNG warns that it will go against El Bukanas, Jorge Aduna, and El Cachetes.  The message refers to Roberto de los Santos, El Bukanas, considered the leader of the Huachicoleros who operate in the area of ​​the "red triangle".  And businessman Othon Muñoz Bravo, El Cachetes, who after being arrested for allegedly  selling stolen gas [huachicol] at his gas stations it  was discovered that he was also linked to the Moreno Vallismo.

The Narcomanta ensures that there was a quick intervention to protect and free Muñoz Bravo, and businessman Jorge Aduna, both related to criminal acts and who finally obtained their freedom with virtually no charges.

The CJNG assures in its message that it has arrived in Puebla to cleanse the government, and that this will include the San Miguel prison.
"Government, respect me and if you do not want to cooperate,  do not intervene in our work," it concludes.
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