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Tamaulipas closes prison in Miguel Aleman

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By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A prison in Miguel Aleman municipality in Tamaulipas state has been closed, according to an official government announcement.

In an announcement posted on the government website of Tamaulipas, the Secretaria de Seguridad Publica del Estado (SSPE) said that the Centro de Ejecucion de Sanciones (CEDES) prison in Miguel Aleman has been closed and its remaining 152 inmates transferred.

Only nine days ago a total of 12 inmates were released from the prison in an assault by 15 armed suspects.  The suspects had entered the prison during early morning hours of February 26th, held prison officials and guards at gunpoint, and released 12 inmates.  No shots were fired and no one was reported hurt in the incident.
You can read about the February 26th prison break in Miguel Aleman by clicking here.
Wednesday's announcement said that 148 inmates serving time for state charges were moved from the CEDES to another state prison in Reynosa.  Four federal prisoners were moved to another federal facility in Matamoros, also in Tamaulipas state.

Mexican Army and Policia Federal (PF) troops provided security for the transfer.

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

Chihuahua Reporter Executed Only Weeks After Launching New Website

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat
 
On December of 2012, the reporter and general director of the digital newspaper  www.ojinaganoticias.com.mx published he felt happy and very optimistic about 2013.
 
“Well people, I feel happy and cheerful because I think that this year comes strong in my goals that I’ve been wanting to achieve and with all the effort in the world, I have achieved them, thanks to all the people that read the digital newspaper”.  Jaime Gonzales Dominguez
So wrote Jaime, who officially launched the newest Ojinafa news website on February 18th.
Two weeks later, on  March 3rd, Jaime Gonzalez Dominguez, 38, became the first journalist killed during the presidency of Enrique Peña Nieto.  Jaime was executed around  6:30 pm at the intersection of Trasviña and Retes Street, downtown of Ojinaga, Chihuahua. Previously the site was named ojinaganews.com.mx
The journalist was accompanied by a woman, who wasn’t injured and according to witnesses the sicarios took the reporters camera with them when they left.

Carlos Gonzalez, spokesman of the General Prosecutor of the State (FGE), reported investigators discovered at the scene 17 shell casings of caliber 5.77 x 38 known as “cop killers”,  for the ability to penetrate bullet proof vest protectors.
Jaime Guadalupe had two Facebook accounts, in one he used his name and the account was used to give information of the community and merchants. The other account was OjinagaNews Jaime, and on that account, he announced the launching of the printed version of the newspaper with general news “Ojinaganews.com.mx
Jaime wrote this entry about his new venture; 
 “With the good news that if it is God’s design,  next week comes out the first edition of the printed newspaper of ojinaganews, with God’s will and thanks to you all that are making it possible because you are the ones that give me the energy to KEEP GOING forward with the information and to have you guys informed of the events of Ojinaga, its beautiful region Presidio and Midland,  ‘THANK YOU A LOT’ FOR YOUR SUPPORT, WHICH I WOULD HOPE THE SAME FOR THE PRINTED NEWSPAPER, TO OFFER YOU THE BEST OF THE INFORMATION AND OF ME”, he added.
Identifying the motive behind the execution is cloudy.  Especially since the reporting by Jaime was seemingly that of commerce and city events.  However one can reach a logical conclusion that perhaps Jaime was providing information to a party that his executioners wanted stopped.  The fact that the sicarios absconded with the camera strongly supports such a theory.   
 
The Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights condemned the crime.
"The Rapporteur expresses its concern and calls Mexican authorities to act with expediency to identify the motives behind the crime and use all the judicial instruments at its disposal to identify and sanction the material and intellectual authors," the Rapporteur said in a press release.

The Knights Center states; Mexico continues to be among the most dangerous countries in the continent for journalists. According to a recent interactive map from the organization Article 19, Chihuahua has been one of the most violent states for journalists in the last twelve years
Below the website announces that this will most likely be the last issue, click image to enlarge.
 

Descanse en Paz Jaime Guadalupe González Domínguez

12 Hour Nuevo Laredo Terror Leaves 11 Dead, 4 are Innocents

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

Note: the report has stood all day of seven killed, however breaking news attributed to the attorney generals office has updated the figure to eleven.  This reported by "24 Hours"....Chivis

The Attorney General and the Secretary of State for Public Security reported that in the city of Nuevo Laredo were various criminal incidents in  the evening of Wednesday 6 and Thursday morning March 7, resulting in the killing of  eleven. Of the dead, at least four were innocent by standers.
Additionally, the confrontation left nine  wounded, including 2 state police officers,  and the arrest of seven people.
Though incomplete, the following are some of the facts as related by the attorney general's office:

The first of the events was recorded at 18:22 am on Wednesday, March 6 in calle Independencia cuadra 15t, between Leona Vicario and Comonfort, Colonia Viveros, where a clash occurred between armed criminals that left three men dead, of which only one is identified.

Two of the bodies were found inside a 2004 Volkswagen Jetta, green color, without license plates, while the third was on the pavement.

Later another fact was reported in the Colonia Victoria with four dead and two wounded, all innocent civilians. In a house at 1108  Pedro J. Mendez  Street.

A 63 year old female was found dead while  while five others were injured with gunshot wounds.  The injured were taken to the IMSS Hospital.

Hours later confirmed the death of a minor,  and that of a man aged 48 and a 25 year old woman.

On the morning of Thursday, March 7 reported a clash between police officers and suspects at a home located at number 3703 Bolivar Street, corner of Riva Palacio, Colonia Juarez.

Two ministerial agents were wounded were taken to a hospital for medical attention, while five suspects linked to aggression, have been detained awaiting the Public Prosecutor of the Common Jurisdiction to determine their legal status.

Finally, other events were reported in different parts of the city of Nuevo Laredo, which prompted members of the Ministry of National Defense, Federal and State Police will implement an operation to restore order.

Mexican Army detains 21 suspected kidnappers in Durango

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By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

Mexican Army units and Durango state police agents detained 21 suspected members of a kidnapping crew in the La Laguna region of Mexico, according to Mexican news accounts.

A news report which appeared on the website of Expreso news daily said that Durango state Fiscalia General del Estado (FGE) Sonia Yadira de la Garza Fragoso held a press conference announcing the arrests.

Fiscalia Yadira de la Garza Fragoso

According to Fiscalia Garza Fragoso, the 21 suspects had operated throughout the La Laguna region including in Gomez Palacio, Ciudad Lerdo in Durango, and in Torreon in Coahuila.  The crew was allegedly responsible for attacks on the businesses and home of Gomez Palacio mayor Rocio Rebollo. 

The crew is also suspected for the kidnapping of two employees of El Siglo de Torreon newspaper, and for the murder of Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) candidate for mayor of Ciudad Lerdo, Mario Alberto Landeros Campero and his driver Cesar Almilkar Valenzuela Morales, both found dead Wednesday in Ciudad Lerdo.

Durango is currently involved in primary elections for state deputies and municipal elections to be held July 7th.

Perhaps more importantly, the crew is allegedly responsible for the murder of six traffic police agents in Gomez Palacio last week.

The detainees were identified as Julio Cesar Najera Rosales, 24, Luis Fernando Martinez, 30, Alonso Ivan Ormero, Federico Aguilar Chaidez, Ruben Hernandez, Julian Valles, Hector Gomez, Uriel Reyes, Sergio Resendiz, Jaime Ramirez, Luis Resendiz and Fernando Martinez.

Separately,  Saul Garcia, Sergio Garcia, Ramiro Hernandez, Miriam Aguilar, Hilda Mejia, Dora Luz Rodriguez, Miriam Muñoz and two unidentified minors were also detained.

The arrests also including the taking of six rifles, three machines guns, seven handguns, five bulletproof vests, telephone equipment, four vehicles and personal quantities of marijuana and crystal methamphetamine.

The detentions are the first major mass arrests since 700 Mexican Army troops were moved into La Laguna last week.  Last week an additional contingent of Policia Federal troops had also been deployed to the area.

The arrests come on the heels of another announcement by Fiscalia Garza Fragoso Tuesday which was reported on the online edition of El Siglo de Durango Wednesday, who told local press that more progress was taking place in security operations in the region.

Senora Garza Fragoso also said during the press conference that she was unaware the reasons why a Policia Federal troop contingent had been deployed to Durango city.  This admission means that neither her office nor apparently the governor, Jorge Herrera Caldera had been consulted by federal officials about the new deployment. 

The new Policia Federal deployment is in contrast with the past in which federal security officials have made a point of meeting with state and local officials to detail their security plans.  But it is also a likely break with past practices in which state officials are to take greater responsibility for their own security strategies, that federal officials will be keeping their plans secret whenever they can.

Separately, the newly installed  Durango state Secretaria de Seguridad Publica  Roberto Flores Mier said Tuesday that police who fail the new confidence test would be given a second chance to take and pass the tests.

According to the report 4,232 local and state police agents statewide had taken confidence tests.  According to a report by the outgoing SSP, Jesus Antonio Rosso Olguin, on February 21st, roughly ten percent of the agents had failed the tests.   Rosso Olguin was sacked the next day.
Jesus Antonio Rosso Olguin

The timing of Rosso Olguin's report is interesting, although his departure was timed just one day after six La Laguna police agents were killed in a single evening in Gomez Palacio.  Durango state officials have not elaborated the reasons why Rosso Olguin left.

At least one Durango politician has disputed that police agents who failed tests will be given a second change.

Durango city mayor Adam Ramirez Soria was quoted in a El Siglo de Durango story Thursday that while the national average for police who failed tests is about 15 percent the rate in his municipality is less than 10 percent.  He said that contrary to the earlier statement by SSPE Flores Mier, police agents who fail tests will not be given second chances.

Nationwide Mexican state SSPs are under increasing pressure by the new security strategy implemented by newly inaugurated President Enrique Pena to get local and state police agents certified by November.  In January the Mexican national Secretaria de Gobernacion (SEGOB), or interior minister Miguel Osorio Chong, who is Pena's plenipotentiary in his new security plans has told SSPs nationwide that every police agent will be certified by November or will out of work.

Meanwhile in Durango, the capital of Durango state an unidentified judge has delayed until March 23rd whether to continue detaining the 64 local police agents from Ciudad Lerdo and Gomez Palacio, according to a separate report posted on the website of El Siglo de Durango.

Seven weeks ago 159 local police agents were disarmed by the Mexican Army and detained, 64 of which were placed in preventative detention colloquially known as rooting.  Past news reports do not make clear the length of the detention,.  Typically, rooting requests are for 30 days or more.

Rooting is a legal tool used by Mexican prosecutors to place suspects in detention without charge or trial until an investigation is complete.

It is most commonly used with drug trafficking suspects but it has also been used against errant state government officials.  The maneuver is meant to keep otherwise dangerous suspects from escaping until trial.  Rooting also known as arraigo has been severely criticized in the past, but it is also a legal tool that can only be used with permission of a judge.

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

Z42 Sends Narco Manta Message to Founder of Zocalo Newspaper

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

On Thursday morning narcobanners appeared in the Coahuila city of Monclova, signed by Los Zetas cartel.  The banners were addressed to Francisco Juaristi,  the founder of the popular newspaper Zocalo. One of the banners appeared on the IMSS bridge in Monclova, while others appeared in Acuña, Saltillo, and Piedras Negras.
 
According to the banner text the message is from Z42, whose name is Óscar Omar Treviño Morales, the 39 year old brother of Miguel Treviño Morales. aka Z40, the premier leader of Los Zetas Cartel. ( Juaristi at left)
 
Text of Banner: 
 
Juaristi Do you remember me, I am "42", stop putting nonsense on Zocalo (I don't really know how to translate the cursing that well in English I am sure readers will help)
 
The only thing you are going to achieve is for me to kick your ass. Let's see if the Governor revives you, he could not revive his nephew, (reference to the murder of Lalo Moreira ,  nonetheless  you.

I have let you know through your connections not to put lies, just put what  is, keep fucking around and I will kick your ass even if you have body guards, you are not made of iron and it is not a threat, remember that you are a public figure and predictable and I am not, wherever you go I can kick your ass and it is not a threat, it is so you'll know. Remember me and if you will keep fucking around and putting lies in Zocalo, just wait for the punch.... and that who warns is not a traitor and in announce war there are not deaths"

Elements of SEMAR removed the banners.
 

Saltillo: Bodies Discovered Hanging off Bridge

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Borderland Beat as posted by "DD" of BB Forum

 
 
Five bodies found in Coahuila, three were hung from a bridge with a narcomensaje and two lying on the floor, the five bodies were wrapped in white sheets, are male. They did not carry any identification.

The bodies were found at 06:00 this morning in the peripheral Luis Echeverria Alvarez, off Golden Valley Bridge. According to local press arrived to place elements of policing, Creditable, Municipal and Research and PGJE staff to start with the pertinent investigations

There was a message left at the scene, unknown contents.

The message that was hung was removed by municipal police in Saltillo

The five bodies were blindfolded and presented as mummies and all were covered only by wrappings  that were placed throughout their body.

Police  and the army cordoned off the place where the gruesome discovery was made this morning in the capital of Coahuila.

At least two of the three bodies had their faces covered with duct tape and the other two were completely wrapped from head to toe. 

Note from Chivis:
In December there was a similar incident where four were hanging also with the wrapped mummy look, also in Saltillo.  The Narco message left at that time attributed the mummy killings to Miguel Trevino Moreales aka Z 40.  He quickly rejected that by denying involvement.   Read those posts
Here
and Here
Here is a photo from the December hangings:
 
and "Z 40's" Manta
 
 

New commander takes command of Mexican 10th Military Zone

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By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A press release by the new commander of the Mexican 10th Military zone, published in the online edition of yancuic.com, said that people near the La Laguna region can expect military checkpoints in the region.
General Lissum Foullon

Thursday, General de Brigada Georges Andre Van Lissum Foullon took command of the  10th Military Zone which headquarters are located in Durango city.  The new appointment replaces General de Brigada  Jose de Jesus Hernandez Rivera, who was appointed commander of Operativo Laguna, the new security operation began late last month.

In terms of the type of commander the newly inaugurated president Enrique Pena Nieto wants as he prepares to stand his military down from security duties in Mexico's drug war, General Lissum Foullon is as good as it gets.

According to Mexican news sources, General Lissum Foullon was born in Mexico City on May 15, 1956, and joined the Mexican Army September 1st, 1971.  He formerly held command of the Mexican 2nd Motorized Cavalry Regiment in Nuevo Laredo in Tamaulipas.  Among his other duties during that time he had conducted a weapons buyback program in the city that year.

General Lissum Foullon was promoted to General de Brigada in November 2010, and was appointed command of the Mexican 4th Military Zone based in Hermosillo, Sonora in 2011.

General Lisson Fullon was also military attache in Spain, a prerequisite for top military commands in the Mexican Army.

The general held command during the Tubutama, Sonora gunfight which killed 24 gang members in July of 2010.  Two months after the end of that bloody dual, he commented the local gang activity in his zone of operations was unlike other areas in Mexico. He commented that, "...security systems, the state and municipalities, have been working properly and that's one of the parameters that we can see."  The report began by saying southern Sonora state was one of the safest in Mexico.

During his tenure as commander of the 4th Military Zone he appeared to be the go-to guy for local news about the military, never at a loss to tout the activities and achievements of his command. 

Mindful of the civilian component of his duties the General was also quoted in a Sonora state newspaper as saying that education was the key to fighting drug trafficking, saying the rural areas are vulnerable, but adding that federal and state support for those area have improved.

But for the gun battles in Tubutama, the area of operation of the 4th Military Zone is basically a backwater.  His new command encompasses most of Durango state including the capital city of Durango as well as the Durango side of La Laguna, currently a hard case for security and one of the most violent regions in Mexico.

His holding command of the 4th Military Zone  two years, apparently his first Military Zone command since making General de Brigada, speaks well of his command since Mexican Army general staff do not appear to like trouble and prefers to keep good commanders in place to train troops.

General Lissum Foullon will have his work cut out for him as the Operativo Laguna security program gets into place.  At the moment, Mexican press is reporting that Mexican Army units will continue to cross attach with local and state police units to improve control and cross training in La Laguna.

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

An Interview With a Teen Sicario

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat
 
The following is a three part video presentation by La Silla Rota which features an interview with a 16 year old sicario.  In the candid responses the child hit man speaks of his life, family, drug use and killing.  At times he becomes very emotional.  I have translated the narrative under each video.


- I am 16 years old and I am a sicario (hitman) of the Zetas.

- I finished middle school. I started high school but I didn’t passed first semester.

Q: How long have you been a sicario?

-          I have three months and a half

Q: So it is recent? How much do you get paid?

-          6 thousand pesos biweekly

Q: Oh! Well it is more that what a teenager could earn right?

-          Yes

Q: How many people have you killed?

-          It was a policeman and an abduction that we did

Q: But how many have YOU killed?

-          Just the policeman

Q: How did you feel when you took the life away of the policeman?

-          I was nervous because I was going to commit crime. While I was approaching him I was nervous and I told somebody to ask him (policeman) directions to get to a street and then I asked the policeman for another street and while he was explaining, that is when I shoot him. I was nervous, that’s all I can say.

Q: How did you get in this or why did you decided to get in?

-          It kind of got my attention, most of all because I was curious about it, because of what I saw on TV or what was said on the newspapers. I was curious about it

Q: Did you want to kill people?

-          Well I kind of felt that I wanted to do that but until this guy invited me to join and I said yes.

Q: Is there friendship where you were?

-          Yes, there is friendship and family.

Q: And in your group?

-          We never fought, we never had any problems, and we were always together. There weren’t any problems such as I am more than you or anything like that. They didn’t allow us to drink, if we drank, they would tell us “If you do it again, you’ll see (threaten)”. There was a guy that drank about three times and they tied him up.

Q: How many under ages are in the group?

-          I am the only one.

Q: Would you do it again, would you kill somebody again?

-          I think so, if I wouldn’t be caught, I would.

Part II



- I am 16 years old and I am a sicario (hitman) of the Zetas.

Q: Do you have your parents and how is your relationship with them?

-          My relationship with them is good

Q: Who are you most close to; who would you tell everything to, you mom or dad?

-          My mom

Q: Did your friend know about what you worked on?

-          Yes, they know

Q: And what did they tell you?

-          Nothing, just to take care of myself and be careful not to get caught.

Q: Did your mom, knew about it?

-          Yes, actually, she cried every time I left to work, she would tell me to stay, she didn’t wanted me to go back to that job and told me to take care

Q: Do you have siblings?

-          Yes, I have three..................(continues on next page)

Q: Are you the youngest, middle?

-          I am the middle one

Q: How is your relationship with them?

-          I am not in good relationship with the older ones.

Q: Why not?

-          They don’t like me, I don’t know why

Q: How was your behavior from three months till now?

-          Normal

Q: What did you talked with your mom? “Hey mom I killed two today” What did you talked with her?

-          No I never talked about that. The group always told us when we got in that when we got home we should not talk about that because it was not something they should know. It was weird for you to talk about it in front of your mom because she has not seen something like it. It is weird for them. I get home and ask them how they are doing, if they need something for me to do. When I get home, they treat me well.

Q: Did they treat you better because you were giving them money?

-          No I don’t think it was because of the money. I think it was because they didn’t see me much and I didn’t cause them any trouble because before I was very intolerant. If my dad told me something, I would argue about it or talk back to him, curse at him.

Q: Did you ever got into a fight with your dad?

-          No, once or twice when he was drunk he told me to fight with him. I would say no and tell him “How am I going to fight you if you are my dad”, we never got to that. Thank God we never got to that. He would hit me as parent to son but we never got to fighting.

Q: Did your mom at some time told you to stop doing this?

-          Yes but I couldn’t because when I got in the group they told me that if I wanted to get out, they would kill me

Q: And what did you tell your mom when she asked you that, did she give you her blessings?

-          She would give me her blessings when I left, always, and told me to take care so anything would happen to me

Q: Were you aware that you could die any moment?

-          Yes, I had that in mind. I always had that in mind

Q: Were you afraid?

-          Not fear but to die and not tell my family. That was my fear.

Part III
 



- I am 16 years old and I am a sicario (hitman) of the Zetas.

The emotions  of a young sicario

Q: What would you tell a kid that have a close relationship with you? If they ask you, hey why are you with chains. What advice would you give him?

-          Not to do what I did

Q: Q: Were you aware that you could die any moment?

-          Yes, I had that in mind. I always had that in mind

Q: Were you afraid?

-          Not fear but to die and not tell my family. That was my fear.

Q: That your mom wouldn’t know?

-          Yes, my mom or my dad

Q: Do you smoke?

-          I smoke marijuana. I don’t like tobacco much

Q: What other drug do you use?

-          I consumed cocaine for about a month

Q: How often did you consume it?

-          Every time I got paid, I bought 5 or 6 passes (packages).

Q: So were you an addict of cocaine, did you like it?

-          Yes, I liked it but I was not addicted to it, in a way that I wanted to buy it all the time. I would buy one and consume it and I would not crave for another one. Then I would buy another one or two next pay check and then I stopped buying it and bought only marijuana, it is what I like more.

Q: Why do you like marijuana more, how does it make you feel?

-          The effect is good, it feel good, it relaxes you, make you calm and make you think about things, if you fight with your family and then you smoke one of it, it relaxes you and makes you think about why you did that and make you reflect about it, if you are alone but if you are with somebody, you start talking to that person in a cool way, relaxed

Q: Tell me the happiest day you’ve had?

-          My birthday. That day my family made a cookout and my friends came. They congratulated me and hugged me to wish happy birthday.

Q: What has been your worst moment that you would not like to repeat?

-          My worst moment was when I got expelled from school and my dad kicked me out of the house and I went to my brother’s house and asked him if I could stay with him and he agreed. I stayed there for a month, and then my dad, reconsidered, I guess and went to look for me and told me to go back to the house.

Q: Did your mom, knew about what you were doing?

-          Yes, actually, she cried every time I left to work, she would tell me to stay, she didn’t wanted me to go back to that job and told me to take care. She would give me her blessings when I left, always, and told me to take care so anything would happen to me

Q: Do you have a girlfriend?

-          Yes

Q: Does she know about what you worked on?

-          Yes, I was with her when her father was caught and also when her mother was killed. She asked me to get out of this. When I had two months and a half in this, she told me to get out of this.

Q: Did you lack love?

-          Yes, I lacked  love. Since I was born until I was about five

Q: Why tell me?

-          Because my dad was in cana (I think it is refer to as jail)

Q: Why was your dad in Cana?

-          I don’t know why but we used to go visit him always. I really needed him to be more with us

Q: Do you think that was a factor for you being here?

-          Might be

Q: You are going to be a long time away from your mom and you say she is the person that you trust her with your things. What are your thoughts, how do you feel?

-          I would not be able to see them

Q: Imagine that your mom is here, that I am your mom; obviously you need to try to imagine it. What would you tell her?

-          That I love her so much

Q: Let’s say that you are free tomorrow, that you have the opportunity of a new life. What would you do?

-          Study; thrust forward because what I went through, the killing, what I felt was bad. I would not like to be a hit man again.

Detonations And Blockades In Reynosa

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A Few Updates


Through social networks, users reported shootouts and grenade sounds in the city of Reynosa, Tamaulipas.
In the colony Rosalinda Guerrero, there were also reports from the citizens that there were people who wore body armor on the avenue Tecnológico.

The gunfire extended to the vicinity of the PGR.

There were also reports of a blockade of at least 30 vehicles on the boulevard Hidalgo with armed people inside and also ponchallantas (small metal stars used for blowing out tires).

Unofficial reports indicate that the circus Atayde Hermano suffured possible grenade attacks, leaving people and animals injured.

The confrontation between the armed civilians has 
still not stopped (When the article was written), and the blockades continue in the colony  Vista Hermosa, in front of Hospital Materno infantile. ElDiarioDeCoahuila



On the bridge Miguel Angel Alado del Cuartel there are military personel already clearing the way


Other reports from Valor Por Tamaulipas indicate that:

  • through the plaza de toros there were approximately 15 to 20 black vehicles with letters written on them
  • In the colony Bermudez they are starting to remove two cars to blocks away from a gas station OXXO (They are moving a blockade)
  • There was a confrontation through Hidalgo, PGR, avenida del pasito, Periférico
  • There are reports that workers of a petrol company were assaulted
  • Activities on Jarachina Norte, Muros, VillaFlorida Sector B.
  • Blockades on the boulevard Oriente
  • In the south entrance of Jarachina by el churh, there were armed gunmen with trucks that said “M3” and “CDG”
  • There was a blockade on the street rio purificacion and praxedis balboa, la Alvaro Obregón, 15 de enero
  • Entering the neighborhood 4 Hda, blocked trucks with armed gunmen were seen dragging dead people in front of OXXO in a van that was fully shot out
  •  Convoy of 15 trucks going to the center on rio purificacion, on the second turn there were 20 trucks that had the words “M3” and “M4”
  • There are reports that indicate that it is not an attack on the Zetas, rather an internal conflict is occurring
  • 5 trucks with armed gunmen and a cloned Federal Police truck was seen by el Alvaro Obregon
  • There was an alert to neighbors of loma real to not go outside because people were looking for a Commando
  • In front of Envidias there was a person who was either thrown or run over on the boulevard Morelos
  • Armed gunmen in front of cet 71 in the colony Beatty Chamacos in a black Suburban and a Silverado with the sign “M3”
  • Two trucks incinerated
  • Civilians wearing military uniforms were seen pulling 2 burned bodies
  • Reports of innocent civilians injured in the area of valle alto, entering Villa Florida, bridge of periferico
  • Users report that the shootouts started by Los Guerra, and indicated that the shootouts ended by the center of Miguel Alemán
  • Heavy precense of Soldiers, Marines, Federal Police and State Police by the street Nacional mty-laredo by the km 13
  Update from Valor Por Tamaulipas



“The situation that occurred was because of internal conflict over the leadership of the faction of the Gulf Cartel in Reynosa.  This situation had been brewing for some time and increased when M4 was executed.  They then had problems with the commander Cortez, and now with Commander Gringo.  There were also problems with the factions of Reynosa from Ribereña. 

About the circus, there was aggression, some reported grenades being detonated.  The situation is still not clear yet or how many people were injured.  It was reported that there was a tiger that escaped, but people who were there do not mention anything regarding an escaped tiger.

Tomorrow (Monday) Reynosa will be on red alert.  There were reports that innocent people were affected. 

I think that we are in many ways like in 2010, when federal authorities let criminals face each other, and went out after half an hour after, to “control the situation”.  Although in this case we aren’t sure how they could have maneuvered, with the magnitude of fighting, and more for it being an internal conflict.  Once again Reynosa is exposed, like in the jail of Nuevo Laredo with the execution of 5 criminals.  The people who control what occurs in our state are the criminals, not the government.”

Update #3 Valor Por Tamaulipas around an hour ago (  ~16:00)



"Sunday March 10- Two young men, who work for the IFE (Federal Electoral Institute) in Ciudad Victoria, were surrounded by eight trucks when these young people were doing their work in the colony of Moderna.  They were interrogated, beaten, and also threatened not to return to that place.  Today (Monday), Soldiers are in the offices of the IFE, possibly to take action regarding these events."

"Armed gunmen entered a house and there were gunshots heard, that is all that is known.  There are also trucks outside of the house.  This occurred in Bugambilias (Located in Reynosa, Tamaulipas).  Other reports mention that there were some revisions going on by a local cartel."

"Armed gunmen were seen at Tec. De Jarachina Sur (a technical University); apparently there are soldiers by the university also."

"A lot of movement with trucks and cars with armed gunmen moving.   Apparently they have things in the back of the trucks.  This also occurred in Bugambilias.  Apparently it’s some members of the Gulf Cartel moving into this location."

"It is correct that they are busting businesses and properties of the faction of the Gulf Cartel members that lost the battle yesterday (The ones who were following El Gringo and El Commandante Puma who controlled Olmo."




ElHeroico
Update
Photos Sent in By Facebook users for Valor Por Tamaulipas







Taking refuge in a movie theater














Video of the shootout

5 prison inmates die in Nuevo Laredo

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A total of five prison inmates died Sunday in a Nuevo Laredo prison, according to Mexican government news releases and press accounts.

The Centro de Ejecucion de Sancciones (CEDES) in Nuevo Laredo was the scene where a brawl erupted among inmates using handmade knives Sunday afternoon.

The dead were identified as Alejandro Flores Charles, José Torres Garcia, Gerardo Javier Colunga Padron and José Juan Antonio Carvajal.  News accounts say three inmates had claimed alleged responsibility for the deaths.  They were identified as Pablo Zamarripa Guerrero, Oscar Velez Andrade and José Angel Vazquez Presa.

The four victims had entered the prison only one day before they were killed.

A second incident at the prison involved a female inmate identified as Adriana Yacare del Toro Lopez, 23.  Toro Lopez was found hanged in her cell Sunday afternoon.  She had entered the prison only one day before her death.

The CEDES in Nuevo Laredo has seen a large increase in the number of prison inmates as prisoners from two separate prisons in Tamaulipas state were closed and heir inmates transferred to the Nuevo Laredo CEDES.

March 9th the CEDES in Ciudad Mante was closed with its 179 prisoners moved to the CEDES in Nuevo Laredo late last week, while the CEDES in Miguel Aleman was closed just a few days before.

The Miguel Aleman prison was closed only days following a mass prison break where armed suspects forced the release of 12 inmates at gunpoint.

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

Mexican marines rescue 104 kidnapped migrants in Nuevo Laredo

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Five alleged kidnappers detained by Tamaulipas state cops

A total of 104 kidnap victims were rescued by a Mexican Naval infantry unit in Nuevo Laredo Sunday, according to Mexican news accounts.

According to a news account which appeared on the website of El Diario de Coahuila news daily, the military unit had been dispatched to a residence in 150 Aniversario colony in Nuevo Laredo where marines found the victims, 91 men and 13 women.  A total of 102 victims were from Honduras while two originated from El Salvador.

Meanwhile, a raid in Nuevo Laredo netted a total of five alleged kidnappers.

According to an account which appeared in a separate item on the website of El Diario de Coahuila,  the raid came after investigations began following an armed confrontation between armed suspects in Nuevo Laredo March 7th.  The gunfight involved Tamaulipas state Policia Ministerial, Policia Estatal Acreditable and Mexican Army units.

According to the report, the gang was responsible for at least 60 murders, as well as robberies and other violent crimes.

The detainees were identified as Fernando Araujo Flores, Carlos Aguilera Romano, Raul Murillo Fraga, Adriana Yacare del Toro Lopez, and José Juan Antonio Carvajal.

It is worth noting that  José Juan Antonio Carvajal and Adriana Yacare del Toro Lopez died in the Nuevo Laredo Centro de Ejecuciones de Sancciones (CEDES) only a day after entering the prison.  Antonio Carvajal was stabbed to death in a prison brawl while  Toro Lopez was found hanged in her cell.

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

Zócalo Gives Into to Pressure by Z42 Narco Coverage Will Cease

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

Zocalo the popular publication based in the Mexican northeast state of Coahuila announced  today that they will cease all coverage of narco related news.  They concede the decision is due to concerns of security.
 
The newspaper Zócalo is distributed in cities such as the municipalities of Monclova , Piedras Negras , Acuna and Saltillo.

Statement by the editor:

"Given that there are no security guarantees for the full exercise of journalism, the editorial board of the newspaper Zocalo decided, as of this date, refrain from posting any information related to organized crime,"
 
"The decision is based on our responsibility to ensure the integrity and security of over a thousand workers, their families and ours. We hope that soon  true peace will  reign in our beloved country, " said the statement by the publisher.  
 
On Thursday, the newspaper's editor, Francisco Juaristi, was threatened by narco banners placed by suspected members of organized crime in different municipalities of the State of Coahuila.
 
The banner was placed in cities throughout Coahuila and signed by Z42.  Z42 is Omar Trevino Morales a leader of the Zetas cartel and brother of the premier leader Miguel Trevino Morales aka Z 40.

Mexico remains one of the most dangerous nation's to work as a reporter.  At least 127 reporters have been killed, or kidnapped in the past 12 years 
Recent threats and attacks include five against the Coahuila publication of El Siglo, based out of Torreon.  The attacks have included detonation of explosives.
 
On March 3rd,  Guadalupe Jaime Dominguez, director of a digital news website was gunned down and his camera taken in  the city of Ojinaga, Chihuahua.
 
 
Text of Banner:
Juaristi Do you remember me, I am "42", stop putting nonsense on Zocalo
The only thing you are going to achieve is for me to kick your ass. Let's see if the Governor revives you, he could not revive his nephew, (reference to the murder of Lalo Moreira) ,  nonetheless  you.
I have let you know through your connections not to put lies, just put what  is, keep fucking around and I will kick your ass even if you have body guards, you are not made of iron and it is not a threat, remember that you are a public figure and predictable and I am not, wherever you go I can kick your ass and it is not a threat, it is so you'll know.
Remember me and if you will keep fucking around and putting lies in Zocalo, just wait for the punch.... and that who warns is not a traitor and in announce war there are not deaths"
 
Read administrator "DD's" post on Borderland Beat Forum

REYNOSA: The Truth of The Government...and the Real Truth

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

There is a scary new reporting policy forming in Mexico.  Beginning with the announcement of President Enrique Peña Nieto that the Calderon style of reporting  will cease.  No more video footage or still shots of military and police operations and captures, ditto to the perp presentations.
 
He requested that states follow suit, though states have an autonomy similar to the United States, one would expect those states governed by PRI party loyalists to comply with the example of the new president's murky style of reporting.
 
The recent capture of the Sinaloa cartel boss of sicarios known by his moniker of "El Fantasma"    turned into a keystone cops version of reporting as people scrambled to get confirmation and photos. 
 
It was eventually confirmed by the state sans photos or footage and a photo of Fantasma that each of us familiar with what he looks like knew the photo was clearly not him.  The little photo mix-up and the story behind the photo was not as frustrating as the lack of transparency surrounding the incident.
 
From that point on it was apparent that there is a new method of reporting in Mexico rendering the only reliable and truthful reporting has been reduced to social networks generated by organized groups of brave citizen reporters, and individuals on the ground. 
 
They tweet reports,  Facebook updates, videos and photos from cell phones out to the masses, to inform but more importantly to warn of areas of danger.
 
And above all...to get the truth out.
 
On Sunday the devil was front and center in Tamaulipas, Mexico, as reports of violence and clashes between organized crime groups in several cities with the hardest hit being the NE city of Reynosa.  
 
The Reynosa conflict lasted for three to four hours, yet if one was to search mainstream media on both sides the border, or announcements/warnings from government agencies you would come up empty. 
 
As for EPN it would appear he does not know that there is a state in Mexico named Tamaulipas that experienced severe violence that resulted in dozens of deaths, because there has been no word from his office.
                                                                             [Click image to enlarge]
New Video Below

 
State Attorney Office...The Big Lie
Yesterday the Tamaulipas State Attorney's office issued a statement that if were it not such a disgusting outrage  it may have been  funny.  Here it is translated into English:
Child killed and father shot through the neck
"Staff Attorney investigating these facts, states that at 23:00 pm on Sunday, received report of a collateral victim of the clashes in Hidalgo and Avenida Cima Boulevard, at the entrance to a convenience store along to a gas station.

This is a child who was hit by a bullet that killed him when he was traveling with his father in a private vehicle. The victim's father was also with neck injury caused by firearm shot. His health was reported as stable by doctors who treated him.

Later, at 23:23 pm and reported on the Bypass to Matamoros, across the bridge Peripheral, the death of a taxi service worker whose body was found inside a Nissan Tsuru 2009 model, with 1443VSL plates. He was identified as Jose Luis Vargas Hernandez, 37 years old. It had a bullet wound in the neck, then the bullet went through the windshield of the taxi he was driving.

The mobilization of security forces allowed the assurance of 22 vehicles and the arrest of seven people linked to the established facts, same that were made available to the delegation of the Attorney General's office in Tamaulipas"
 

And Now for a Taste of the Truth as Reported Yesterday in the McAllen Texas Monitor  [and was translated into Spanish and republished countless times on social networks):

Fear and panic filled the streets of Reynosa on Sunday night as rival gunmen battled during a three-hour firefight that saw automatic weapons and grenades used. Surprisingly, Mexican authorities were absent for most of the melee.

 The opening clashes were reported just before 9 p.m. Sunday, when rival factions of the Gulf Cartel consummated what appeared to be a yet another rift within the criminal organization.

During the protracted gunbattle, dozens of gunmen were killed, but authorities Monday would only confirm the deaths of two bystanders and the injury of a third.
 
A Tamaulipas law enforcement official, who asked to not be named citing security reasons, confirmed that the death toll was about three dozen, however the exact figures were not known because cartel gunmen picked up their own people’s bodies during the struggle.
 
In a news release, the Tamaulipas Attorney General’s Office, known as the PGJE, confirmed that the two slain bystanders were a taxi driver and a teenager who was riding a vehicle with his father. The release confirms one person was injured and seven gunmen arrested, and it states that authorities seized 22 vehicles that were used in the melee, but it doesn’t mention any gunmen dying.
 
The Tamaulipas law enforcement agent called the new release issued by his superiors an insult to common sense.
 
“There were four trucks filled with bodies that (members of organized crime) picked up,” the official said. “That is not counting the (bodies) that were left behind.”
 
The news release doesn’t mention a bullet-riddled SUV that was left along Boulevard Hidalgo, one of the city’s main avenues, just south of Vista Hermosa Avenue near the local headquarters of Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office, known as the PGR. Inside the truck, four bloodied bodies could be seen from a distance hours after sundown Sunday. Just north of that location near the Fiesta Inn Hotel along Boulevard Hidalgo, another bullet-riddled vehicle could be seen with three bodies inside.
 
Most of the city’s main avenues had been blocked off with hijacked trailers or buses, and road spikes were littered in other areas to stop traffic.
 
MEDIA BLACKOUT
While online the shootout in Reynosa has become common knowledge, mainstream news media have remained mum about it, said Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, chair of the Government Department at the University of Texas at Brownsville.
 
“This has me very worried because this blackout is coming from both sides,” Correa Cabrera said. “Not only are we seeing organized crime shushing the media but now we are seeing the government at all levels put a lid on the media where you now have virtually no mainstream coverage of a battle of this magnitude.”
 
TAKING CARE OF STRANGERS
 
In a city where the constant threat of extortion by criminal organizations has caused citizens to be wary of their own shadow, when the shots started flying Sunday night, the community came together in an effort to protect bystanders.
 
While social media users began pointing out the areas of potential danger, average citizens took matters into their own hands to warn the public. In a gated community along Boulevard Hidalgo, a man stood by the gate warning residents to stay inside because of the ongoing firefight.
 
In the Wal-Mart store just a few blocks away, also along Boulevard Hidalgo, store employees locked the doors and asked their customers to remain calm as gunmen chased each other up and down the road.
 
“Please don’t go out, young man,” an employee said in Spanish to one patron. “It’s really ugly out there and it’s been going for more than 30 minutes.”
 
In a shopping plaza called Soriana Periférico near the city’s Southwestern side, the customers were also asked to stay inside for more than three hours until the roads cleared.
“It was a very long night,” said a Reynosa teenager who refused to give his name. The teen had gone to the movies with his friends but was not able to leave. “I already called my mom so she won’t worry.
 
“What the hell is going on?” he exclaimed.
 
GRILLING
As gunmen battled it out in the streets Sunday night, Ramiro Hernandez was busy in his garage. The maquila supervisor didn’t have work the next morning, so he was firing up the grill to cook a few steaks.
 
“What can you do?” Hernandez said in Spanish. “I’m not going to go out there right now. (My family and I) are all here so I might as well just go on and enjoy my day off.”

"El Gringo" Rumor Still Persistent:
 
No confirmation on the rumor that El Gringo was killed in the clash.  This is the third time that the rumor of his death spread.  However, this time it was fast and furious.  One would think a killing of El Gringo the government both federal and state would at least confirm via statement.   Alternatively, a manta as done  by United ZTAS when Tormenta was killed.


 
See Administrator "DD's" post on forum

Enrique Peña Nieto Reduces The Number of Soldiers Combating Narcos

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Source: La Policiaca

With the rise to power of Enrique Peña Nieto, the Ministry of National Defense (SEDENA) reduced the number of elements involved in combating drug trafficking and organized crime, compared to the staff assigned to these duties during the administration of Felipe Calderón.  During the past six years, more than 50,000 elements were engaged daily in the war against drug trafficking, unlike today where there are only 32,253 elements.

According to official data, with the reduction of the number of soldiers that participate in the ongoing campaign against drug trafficking and the implementation of the Federal Act of Firearms and Explosives, in the current administration it also decreased, on average, the number of detainees, as well as the seizures of guns and drugs, with regard to 2006-2012.



Without even having a combat strategy defined, the Secretariat of National Defense (SEDENA) also ceased “High impact operations” and instead made “25 operations to reduce violence.”

According to information gathered, a total of 9 soldiers died from December 2012 to January 31—it’s the only data available on this from the SEDENA website.  Within the context of fighting against drug trafficking: 6 by attacks with the use of a firearm, 2 by accident, and one who drowned.  Of these, one was a special force sergeant who died in the state of Sinaloa.

Meanwhile, from December 2006 to December 2012, 224 soldiers died during the war on drugs, of which 171 were killed by firearms, 31 were executed, 6 who were run over to death, 12 who drowned, and four more from electric shock.


Within the two months of Peña Nieto’s administration, the average number of soldiers who died with the use of the implementation of the Act of Firearms and Explosives was 4.5 per month.  During the 6 years of the Calderón administration, the average was 3.1 per month.

The information from the SEDENA claims that within the three months of the current administration, soldiers have arrested a monthly average of 625 criminal suspects.  During the previous administration the figure was 706 per month.

During this administration, the average monthly number of rifles, handguns, and grenades secured was 738 (rifles), 341 (handguns) and 126 (grenades) while during the previous administration the figures were 1,055 (rifles), 693 (handguns) and 146 (grenades), respectively.



Overall, in the previous administration the military arrested 50,897 suspected criminals and secured 75,974 rifles, 49,943 handguns, and 10,583.

With regard to the operations that replaced the “high impact”, the SEDENA realizes that it now carries out the following:

Michoacán
Coordinada Chihuahua
Culiacán-Navolato-Guamúchil
Noreste, in Nuevo León, Tamaulipas, Coahuila and Veracruz
Laguna Segura, in Durango and Coahuila
Istmo, in Oaxaca, Veracruz and Tabasco
Veracruz Seguro
Aguascalientes-Zacatecas
Villahermosa
Morelos
Acapulco Seguro, Hurundal and Guerrero I, in Guerrero
Dragón, Valle de Bravo and Valle de Toluca, in the state of México
Mixteca, en Oaxaca
La Barca and Bloqueo, in Jalisco
Frontera México-Bélice 10-2012 and Frontera México-Bélice 1-2013, in Quintana Roo and Campeche
Maravilla Tenejapa and Tapachula Seguro, in Chiapas
Triángulo de la Brecha 1-2013, in Guerrero, Michocán and the state of México
Sierra Madre III in Sinaloa and Durango.

In information collected through requests, the SEDENA was questioned about changes in strategy with the arrival of Peña Nieto against organized crime and drug trafficking, which the government agency who heads General Salvador Cienfuegos Zepeda said:

 “It is made aware that the document that guided the activities of all of the national institutions involved in the fight against drug trafficking, within the context of the authority of the National Security Council, including the armed forces, during the previous administration was the National Development Plan 2007-2012, that “suggest channeling your request to the liaison unit of the Presidency of the Republic in order to provide the corresponding answer to your request."

Details About the New Chapo Photo

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat

It was on March 9th or 10th when I received an email from a reader saying there was a new to us Chapo photo.

I tweeted the photo, which was retweeted many times and featured on twitter pages such as #MexicoRojo among others.  Today I see that some of the other narco blogs are now running it.  The truth is it was not something sent exlusively to BB nor Mundo nor any other blog it was published on a Facebook page. 
 
That said, I made a post on the 10th titled "New Chapo Photo?  You Be the Judge", and I added a little poll and thought that would be that.  However, I continue to get emails and comments sent in about the "new Chapo Photo" which tells me most of our readers did not check it out on forum, hence I will post here on mainboard for your enjoyment and discussion. 
 
I will tell you that at first I was on the fence about its authenticity, but as I dug deeper clearly there are not only landmarks that are identical such as eyebrows and lower ear lobes, but I also ran in through software to see if it had been "photo shopped".
click on images to enlarge

From what I know...which is not a lot, I did covert the photo to ELA looking for obvious tampering. at first I spotted 2 areas and DUH it was my drop in of BB2013...after getting a clean photo I converted it and all that comes up are the uniform grids (see directly above) indicative of conversion from Jpeg to another format like PNG.  It looks clean and uniformly broken down as will occur  in each time a copy is made.  
 
Jpeg uses YUV coloring so certain colors will remain prominent such as purple, orange green among others.  

Maybe someone else knowing more than I do can take a look but what little I know it looks clean with no rain bowing and the grid looks uniform indicting the photo has gone thru same number of compressions throughout.   I had two friends very knowledgeable, one a professional look at it and deemed it with no detectable add ins.  So the question is....is it Chapo?  I can say in my opinion this is the first photo produced that my vote says "yes".  It is supposed to be taken around 2006-2007.
 
Jumping on the ban wagon, blogs such as Mundo, added some other pitiful photos attempting to pass them off as new Chapos, one in a swimming pool, that  BDN tried to pass off as Chapo in 2010 when they first ran it. 
 
This was published in 2010 as a new Chapo and has resurrected this week

 Another known photo of Chapo:
Exactly one year ago a cell phone video surfaced with claims it was Chapo Guzman.  I am posting that video below.  It was accompanied with a letter, see below.  A reader sent Buggs a comparative side by side photo of a known Chapo photo and a screen shot from the video, see below.

Letter:

There is also a letter dated February 28, 2012 that makes reference of El 50 - M-1, El Fantasma - M-Z and Bravo - Chapo. It is signed by Licensiado Damaso. It ends with "Note - Do not forget to filter "El Bideo" (video) and "las fotos" (photographs)

Letter translated by a BB reader:
"Valued friends Today is a day with lots of advantages for what we have planned the big bosses are very stressed and must feel trapped we are the only ones with any authority talk to your boys(people).we have very little time left i have been insisting on our plan for a long time don't forget you are the one's that made them big those who now only enjoy pleasures and betray us.  This is always more disturbing ,lets see if now you believe me, remember who will betray who: 50-M1, Fantazma to MZ , Bravo-Chapo PS don't forget to filter video and pictures or blog"



A big thank you to the BB reader who  gave me the heads up on this story...you wanted to remain anonymous so I will just say "Thank you S" :)

Mexican Drugwar Ghost Pueblos

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Borderland Beat

OUTSIDE SAN LUIS DE LA LOMA, Mexico — Don Polo's heavily armed convoy wound its way through the hills above the lush coastal plain of Guerrero state, its groves of slender palm trees now far below him.

The two-lane country road twisted eastward, and upward, for miles. But around each bend, there were no campesinos, no burros, no dogs, no cars barreling down toward the Pacific. Fields of yellow grass, grown taller than a man, covered the landscape, animated only by the wind.

This, though, was no vision of tranquillity. This was the road to the pueblos fantasmas, the ghost pueblos.

"There used to be hundreds of heads of cattle here," Don Polo said. "But now there are no cattle to eat the grass, because the farmers can't live here anymore.

"All of this is due to organized crime."

Leopoldo "Polo" Soberanis, a 54-year-old fruit-packing impresario whom most here respectfully address as Don Polo, said he wanted the world to see what had happened in this swath of Guerrero state set between the famous beach resorts of Acapulco and Ixtapa.
Thanks to a retinue of police bodyguards provided by the Mexican government, which has declared him to be in "imminent danger," Don Polo was able to give a rare tour of the no-man's-land created by the drug war here.

It consists of more than 20 pueblos, Don Polo said, which have steadily been emptied of residents. Those who have fled tell of mistreatment by the Mexican army and of persistent threats and violence carried out by a small group of armed men, perhaps no more than 100, who claim to be members of the Knights Templar drug cartel.

The people say that masked men come down from the mountains where clandestine fields of poppies grow. Wearing paramilitary uniforms and carrying AK-47s, they demand loyalty, as well as a "tax" for the privilege of staying in one's home or running a business.

Sometimes they force residents to leave without giving them time to gather their belongings. Sometimes they burn down the houses of those who decline. Sometimes they simply kill.
A few miles up the road, the convoy of pickup trucks rolled to a stop at La Palapa, once a settlement of about 60 people, now a clutch of abandoned homes hugging the road. A quartet of burly bodyguards jumped out ahead of Don Polo, assault rifles drawn. But there was no one to aim them at.

Come and get a picture of this, Don Polo said, pointing to a green house that had belonged to his cousin. He walked past the chained door of the community store and through the open one to La Palapa's single-room school, where no one had bothered to pack up the textbooks. He sifted through heaps of them strewn on the floor. Come and take a picture, he said.

The next town, El Huamilito, was bigger, and just as empty. Don Polo stopped at an attractive lime-colored ranch house. He pointed to an iron gate with painted flowers. It was pocked with bullet holes.

"Cuerno de chivo" — "goat's horn" — he said, using the Mexican nickname for an AK-47.
Farther on, he pointed to a dusty corral. This, he said, was where they had killed his nephew, a cattleman named Jose Luis Garcia.

They came for him on the morning of July 14, 2011, while he was milking cows. He ran up the hill, Don Polo said, but they caught him, and they slit his throat.

In recent weeks, residents of other towns in Guerrero have generated headlines by forming vigilante groups in an effort to protect their communities. But in this long, sad and bloody chapter of Mexican history, it has been more common, and perhaps more sensible, to flee.
More than 1.6 million Mexicans left their homes because of drug violence from 2006 to 2011, according to the Mexico City polling firm Parametria. They might be considered lucky, if only because they are not among the 70,000 Mexicans slain in the drug war.

But the reward for survival is often financial hardship and heartbreak. Don Polo estimated that 1,500 people had fled to his hometown, San Luis de la Loma, while others had settled in a slightly larger city farther down the coast. Neither city has the jobs or the social services to support them.

"These people have lived in the countryside forever," Don Polo said. "They've lost their way of living."
Don Polo's uncle Serafin Hernandez Garcia, 63, was among them. He had come along for the tour of the ghost pueblos and he wore the evidence of the living he had lost on his feet. His dusty white cowboy boots were holdovers from his days as a cattleman, on his 500-acre ranch near the town of Los Toritos. Now, he said, he was in the city, working on a road crew, just scraping by.

He said the masked men had come to Los Toritos about two years ago and called a town meeting.

"They said, 'Help us, or we will kill you,'" Hernandez recalled. He didn't like either option. So he left.

Don Polo showed so much intellectual promise as a boy that his family decided to send him to Mexico City for schooling. He became a petrochemical engineer, living in the cosmopolitan capital and traveling the world before moving back, two years ago, to Guerrero. He wanted to shift gears, he said, and live a slower, less stressful life.

So he reinvented himself as the owner-operator of a mango and coconut packing company. Today he seems comfortable in his role of tropical country squire, his raspy voice quick to issue a command, his ruddy face typically shielded by the floppy brim of a simple straw hat.
But he could not shield himself from the troubling stories coming out of the mountains. Members of his extended family and other refugees told him not only of cartel terrorism, but also of wanton crime by Mexican soldiers who were supposed to be keeping the peace. Some, they said, were stealing furniture and appliances from abandoned homes, or worse.
In early September, soldiers killed six young men in the still-populated town of El Tule. 
Government authorities said the young men had fired on the troops. Don Polo didn't believe it. One of the dead had been in a wheelchair.

On Sept. 10, Don Polo organized a protest on the coastal road, with banners blaming the army for unjustified executions. A month later, soldiers raided his packing plant, according to a complaint he filed with the state attorney general's office. The soldiers lined up his employees, said they were waiting on an order to kill them, and searched the place for marijuana bales. They came up empty-handed, Don Polo said.

On Nov. 7, more soldiers raided his home, overturning boxes of business papers in a hunt for evidence linking him to organized crime, according to a complaint he filed with the national human rights commission. Again, he said, they found nothing.
Don Polo says he has nothing to do with the drug gangs. He interprets the raids as a warning to keep out of the army's business.
The narcos, he said, have threatened him too, since he founded the area's first human rights group a few months ago. In San Luis, he showed the bullet holes in the group's modest offices. The place had been shot up one evening while it was empty.
He assumed, from the descriptions given by neighbors, that the shooters were cartel members.

"We think they were trying to scare us away from opening this place," he said.

Such is the fog of modern Mexico: A self-appointed human rights advocate is suspected, by the army, of being a drug dealer. The army, sent into the streets to protect the people, is accused of robbing them and of killing the innocent. The federal government pays the salaries both of the soldiers and of the federal police who must be sent in to protect against the soldiers' alleged threats.

Meanwhile, the Knights Templar cartel argues — between extortion attempts and violence — that it is protecting the common folk from a corrupt federal government.
Perhaps the sole unassailable fact is that most people who once lived in the pueblos are gone.
Farther along the road, in the town of El Cuaulotal, Don Polo stopped in front of an empty orange house adorned with a hand-painted mural of the Virgin of Guadalupe. Inside, he pointed to a shrine that someone had left behind on a living room wall. It memorialized his nephew Luis Soberanis and the nephew's brother-in-law, Federico Fernandez. Their names were painted on a pair of wooden crosses.

They were also killed here, Don Polo said.

Today, at least, El Cuaulotal was not totally abandoned. Two men were standing in a yard, with a burro and a rifle: Gumersindo Soberanis, 68, a campesino married to Don Polo's cousin, and his friend Cosme Acosta, a weather-beaten 73-year-old rancher in a cowboy hat.

Acosta said his house was up the road, but he didn't live there anymore. He was just here to check on his land, he said. But he couldn't stay long.

He pulled a small pistol from a pouch. It wasn't safe here anymore, he said. The army treated him like he was in with the cartel. The men from the cartel had come a few months earlier, and set his house on fire.

Why?

"We don't know," he said.

The convoy motored farther into the mountains to El Banco, where it came across Acosta's charred home, high grass outside and blackened bed frames within. Don Polo pointed out the details as if he was a dejected real estate agent: Spacious kitchen. Stunning countryside view. Light fixtures like one might find in a U.S. suburb
.
"This place was almost a paradise," he said. "People had their cattle. They weren't rich, but they lived well."

In a town called Ojo de Agua, Don Polo's uncle Hernandez showed the ruins of a ranch house and told how two men he knew had been hanged from its exposed rafters.
Nearby, in La Cienega, there was a closed-up church, and little red tomatoes on the ends of unruly vines, and another burned-out house on a hill. The men were pretty sure it had belonged to the sheriff, now long gone.

They traipsed through an empty home containing unpacked luggage, laid open on unmade beds, and a home with drinking glasses lined up neatly in a cupboard, as if someone would be returning that night. Did you get a picture of that? Don Polo asked.

There was one more charred house that Don Polo was eager to show. But one of the bodyguards rushed over, a pistol in his right hand.

"Engineer," he said, sounding worried. "There's a little truck up there." He thought maybe they were being watched. "We need to hurry up."

In the yard of the smoke-scarred house was a guanabanatree, and a sweet lime tree fat with fruit. Nearby, blazing ripe oranges had fallen in piles in the grass and dirt.

Don Polo stooped, gathering what he could.
After all, who else would?


Cecilia Sanchez of The Times' Mexico City Bureau contributed to this report.

24 inmates transfered following riot in Altamira Tamaulipas

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By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A total of 24 inmates were transferred from a prison in Altamira to other prisons in Tamaulipas state following a riot which took place last Sunday, according to Mexican news accounts.

According to a news account which appeared in Milenio news daily, the transfer took place Monday morning with tight security provided by Tamaulipas state police, Policia Federal Preventiva (PFP) and Mexican Army troops.

The report quoted a presumed security official, Maria Gonzalez Flores, saying that a brawl had taken place Sunday in the Centro de Ejecuciones de Sancciones (CEDES), which closed the prison to visitors for six hours.

A total of 19 inmates imprisoned for state crimes were to be transferred to the CEDES in Reynosa, while another five inmates serving time for federal crimes were to be transferred to a federal facility in Matamoros.

The Milenio report goes on to note that Tamaulipas' Secretaria de Seguridad Publica del Estado (SSPE) had released a statement on the disturbance. A statement had been released on the Tamaulipas state official government website by he SSPE last Monday, but only a mention of the reason for the transfer being the prevention of violence, not that a disturbance had occurred closing the prison to visitors for six hours.

The Milenio report also notes that no one was hurt in the disturbance and no weapons were used.

The prison transfer is the third action taken by Mexican Federal authorities of problems inside Tamaulipas prisons.  Tamaulipas state is one of Mexico's most violent with an ongoing war entering its fourth year between the nascent Los Zetas drug cartel and their former employers, the Gulf Cartel.

Actions taken by the new federal government headed by President Enrique Pena Nieto indicate the security officials intend to regard Mexico's prisons as another battleground in the drug war.

Actions taken by government officials, or by drug cartels in prisons include:
  • The closing of the Centro de Readaptacion Social (CERESO) Numero 2 in Gomez Palacio, Durango a day after a bloody attempted prison break in which 24 inmates were gunned down by prison guards last December.  The action to close the prison taken by the Mexican federal Secretaria de Gobernacion (SEGOB) or interior ministry, has left Durango state with the nearest prison to Gomez Palacio being in Durango city, the capital of Durango state, hundreds of kilometers to the west.
  • Earlier in March the CEDES in Miguel Aleman was closed and all of its inmates transferred to a CEDES in Nuevo Laredo after a mass prison break.  Fifteen armed suspects entered the prison and held prison staff at gunpoint as 12 inmates were freed late February.
  • Last Sunday the CEDES in Ciudad Mante was closed with all of its state prison inmates transferred to Nuevo Laredo as well.
  • Five prison inmates in the Nuevo Laredo CEDES were killed in a brawl last Sunday, including two who had been in the prison less than 24 hours before they died.
Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

Self-Defense Groups Claim That They Disarmed the Knights Templar Cartel In Michoacán

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By: Rubén Mosso



The relatives of the 34 people who were detained by the Mexican army for allegedly being linked to organized crime by acting as community guards for the community Felipe Carrillo Puerto (La Ruana), in Michoacán, requested for the intervention of President Enrique Peña Nieto to release the detainees, because they say that they are innocent. 

Farmers who demonstrated outside the Assistant Attorney General's Office for Special Investigations on Organized Crime (SIEDO) reported that the firearms that their relatives had were seized from the Knights Templar Cartel, who live within the community and have also committed a series of abuses against the community.

 The wives, mothers, sisters, and other relatives warned that in case they don’t receive support from the president, they will take matters into their own hands by arming themselves in order to defend their community from various criminal groups operating in the area of Michoacán.

“Release the guys that you brought, they’re innocent, they are people like us, lemon harvesters, who left their family, wives to their children.   They seized the weapons in order to defend us from the Knights Templar Cartel, simply because it was too much what they were doing,” said one woman.


--What were they doing?

--“They increased the price of tortillas and meat.  They were charging us for each box of lemons that we packed, they would take a portion.  We would work three days a week, with those three days, do you think that we were going to be able to support our children and apart from that they would take away our money.”


The complaint mentioned that the owners of the trucks that would transport the lemons had to pay “Los Templarios” 200 pesos per car, a situation for those who would harvest lemons, their payments would go down, plus they also had to pay to work.


--Who gave the weapons to the guys?

--“They took them from “Los Caballeros”.  In La Ruana, we caught “Caballeros”, when we started to rise up in arms we were all saying: there lives a guy; he’s a “Caballero”.  We would all go and take their weapons away.”

They commented that the municipal and state police in those zones are “leaders” of the Knight Templar Cartel, so they decided to go and also take their weapons, bullet-proof vests, and trucks away.


--“The weapons that the guys had belong to the Knights Templar Cartel.”

The complainants say that their families do not have a lawyer, or even a public defender.  They were informed that they would be transferred to jails in Matamoros, Veracruz, and the state of Mexico.















Last week at a press conference, both officials from the Secretariat of Governance (SEGOB) and the PGR said that the detainees were armed by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación), a group linked to the drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.



Family members have not determined whether they will be staying at the outskirts of the SIEDO, but they do ensure that they will insist federal agencies for the release of those detained, as they called it an outrage.

Knights Templar Mantas Announce a Withdrawal of Sorts in Michoacán

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Borderland Beat

In several parts of Michoacán, narco banners appeared directed to the state and federal authorities, which were removed by the Army, Navy and Federal Police.
The banners were placed in Morelia, west region, the coast, Tierra Caliente and Cienega; all of them had the same message

and were placed during dusk and morning of this Wednesday.
On the banners, signed by The Knights Templar, they announce that they will withdraw to leave the safety of society in hands of the municipal, state and federal government.
 
At the same time, they demand the termination of the sham of the community police and expel from Michoacán, the scourge and abusive criminals and establish conditions so the society of Michoacán can live peacefully and can develop fully.

The message that appeared in four cardinal points of Morelia, such as exit to Salamanca, road to Patzcuaro, street to Mil Cumbres, freeway Morelia-Quiroga and exit to Charo. It also was placed in the municipalities of Zamora, Sahuayo, Zitacuaro, Uruapan and Lazaro Cardenas, among other points.
 
Text in English:

The message was written as below:
“We remind the society of Michoacán that our mission is to protect and improve the quality of life and we have always worked to achieve this purpose, we don’t want to be an excuse so that the government establishes an alliance with cartels of other states and come to trample the rights of the people of Michoacán, for that reason we decided to withdraw and not intervene in social problems and focus only in the protection of the territory of Michoacán, we want to make it clear, under any circumstance we are going to allow that scourges of other states establish in our territory. Michoacán is of the people of Michoacán and we are willing to defend it.
So as of today, we leave in hands of the municipal, state and federal government the safety of the society, all of the denounces or complains will be taken care by the competent authorities, we ask the government to exercise all the public force so there is respect and maintain a state free of robberies, kidnapping, extortions, rapes and other federal offenses and also free of scourges and abusive criminals; also establish the conditions so that the Michoacán society live peacefully and can develop fully in the social, labor, economic, educational, political and spiritual field.
If the government achieves this purpose, we will always support them, we have never been against the government, on the contrary, we have support them in the tasks and they have not been able or did not wanted to make it happen. Michoacán and its people deserve a government of quality, for that reason we demand that they do their job with capability and efficiency; hold to the law and apply it fairly for everyone.

Humbly, the templar fraternity apologizes with the Michoacán society for all the mistakes that were made and for the abuses that might generated, we never agreed with them and we punished the people responsible, we will continue protecting our state and we wish this decision will be for good, in any case we will be aware of any petition that, as society, will be made in case it is required our intervention”.

Meanwhile this video surfaced showing the damage the Templarios created after torching a gas station and  lemon packing company.  In the video people express their anger that Templarios continue to affect them personally such as the destruction resulting in an economic consequence .  This is a new video

 
the infamous plastic helmets
 



The following is the manta text in Spanish:
 

“Le recordamos a la sociedad michoacana que nuestra misión es protegerlos y mejorar su calidad de vida, y para lograr este fin hemos trabajado siempre, no queremos ser pretexto para que el gobierno establezca alianza con carteles de otros estados y vengan a pisotear los derechos de los michoacanos, por ellos hemos tomado la decisión de replegarnos y dejar de intervenir en problemas sociales y enfocarnos únicamente a la protección del territorio de Michoacán, que quede claro, bajo ninguna circunstancia vamos a permitir que vengan lacras de otros estados

a establecerse en nuestro estado, Michoacán es de los michoacanos y estamos dispuestos a defenderlos.
Así que a partir de hoy, dejamos en manos de los gobiernos municipales, estatales y federales el cuidado de la sociedad, todas las denuncias o quejas son con las autoridades competentes, al gobierno le pedimos que ejerzan toda la fuerza pública para hacer respetar y mantener un estado sin robos, secuestros, extorsiones, violaciones y de más delitos federales y delincuentes lacras y abusivos y establezcan las condiciones para que la sociedad michoacana vivan en paz y puedan desarrollarse de maneras plena en el ámbito social, laboral, económica, educativo, político y espiritual.

Si el gobierno logra este propósito nosotros los apoyamos siempre, nunca hemos estado en contra del gobierno, al contrario, lo hemos apoyado en las labores y no han podido o no han querido realizar, Michoacán y su gente merecen un gobierno de calidad, por ellos exigimos realicen su trabajo con capacidad y eficiencia y sujetasen a la ley y aplíquenla de manera justa para todos.
Con toda la humildad que se puede tener, la hermandad templarios se disculpa con la sociedad michoacana por todos los errores que se hayan cometido y por los abusos que se pudieron generar, nunca se estuvo de acuerdo con ellos y se castigó a los responsables, y seguiremos protegiendo nuestro estado y deseamos que esta decisión sea para bien, en caso contrario estaremos pendientes a cualquier petición que como sociedad se haga en caso de que se requiera nuestra intervención”, concluye”.
 
A big thank you to the reader who sent me the links to this story yesterday!
 Sources: Proceso and Narco Rojo

Tamaulipas: Mexico's Most Censored State: Tweeting the Drug War

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Chivis Martinez Borderland Beat
To a casual observer relying on mainstream media the Mexican state of Tamaulipas would appear very safe, because according to the media, no violence occurs in "Tamps".



This is a video of  interactive discussion at the Austin Texas Film and Music Festival.  The discussion is headed by a panel of three.  This event was sponsored by The Texas Observer who brought  the issue to an international audience in Austin and titled the event 

Life on the Line: Tweeting the Drug War highlighted the bravery of citizen reporters living in Tamaulipas,the most censored state in Mexico.

 Discussed is the media blackout in the state of Tamaulipas on the Texas-Mexico border where reporters have been killed, kidnapped,  threatened and the offices of the Mexican news outlets bombed.
Tamaulipas is the most censored but also the birthplace of citizen reporting which since 2010 has become a phenomenon and the trail blazer for other "hot" regions in Mexico, made so because of organized crime activity and turf wars. Initially beginning on Twitter as #ReynosaFollow and remains the place to access to access real time news.
The panel speaks of Tamaulipas being the country's most innovative when circumventing the media blackout as citizen reporters in Reynosa became anonymous pioneers in creating systems using social networks to collect and share information of shootouts, blockades, and conflicts that would be unknown otherwise.
The day following this conference all hell broke loose in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, and almost like proving a point the Mexican media did not report on the clash that killed up to 50 people, reported by citizens, and journalists off record. 
The following day the Tamaulipas Attorney General announced through a statement that a conflict had occurred that took 2 lives and injured 1. 
Below is a video of the Austin conference, it runs a little slow at first but becomes very interesting and informative especially for those readers that can't understand the reality of a black out media state, which Tamaulipas is. 

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