Tuesday, March 24, 2009


From left to right: Joaquin Guzman Loera, Heriberto Lazcano, Eduardo Teodoro Garcia Simental, Fernando Sanchez Arellano

Mexico offers $2-million rewards for top drug suspects. The rewards are for information leading to the capture of the 24 most-wanted, including Joaquin 'Shorty' Guzman and Ismael Zambada, leaders of the so-called Sinaloa cartel.

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-reward24-2009mar24,0,3809308.story

From the Los Angeles Times
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

Mexico offers $2-million rewards for top drug suspects. The rewards are for information leading to the capture of the 24 most-wanted, including Joaquin 'Shorty' Guzman and Ismael Zambada, leaders of the so-called Sinaloa cartel.

By Ken Ellingwood

March 24, 2009

Reporting from Mexico City — Nab a drug lord, earn $2 million.

That's how much Mexican authorities offered Monday for information leading to the capture of the country's most wanted drug suspects.

The government offered rewards of 30 million pesos, about $2 million, each for 24 wanted figures, including Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman and Ismael Zambada, leaders of the main trafficking gang in the northwestern state of Sinaloa.

Authorities offered $1-million rewards for 13 lower-ranking suspects. The offers, involving six separate drug-trafficking organizations, were published in the federal government's official digest.

It is not the first time that Mexico has offered financial rewards for information leading to the arrest of individual drug figures. But Monday's offer was unusual because it included the country's top drug suspects on one list, organized by trafficking gang.

The offer came two days before Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is scheduled to visit to discuss the drug war, which has killed more than 7,000 people across Mexico since January 2008. U.S. officials have expressed growing worry that serious violence could spill into the United States.

Monday's list reflects the changing landscape of Mexico's drug underworld. Prominent, for example, are the Zetas, who have gone from hit men to ranking figures in the powerful Gulf cartel. Suspected Zeta leader Heriberto Lazcano has gained clout since the 2003 arrest of Gulf boss Osiel Cardenas, who was extradited to the United States two years ago.

The listing also reflects a schism in the Sinaloa-based alliance led by Guzman, Mexico's most wanted suspect. A faction tied to the Beltran Leyva brothers is listed as a separate cartel. The split stoked violence in Sinaloa last year that killed more than 900 people.

A Michoacan-based trafficking group known as La Familia is also listed as a separate cartel for the first time, officials said.

Mexico's list underscores the shifting leadership of the Tijuana-based gang once led by the Arellano Felix brothers, now dead or behind bars. Only two suspects are listed: a onetime underling, Teodoro Garcia Simental, and his main rival for control, an Arellano nephew named Fernando Sanchez Arellano.

Arrest warrants have been issued against all 37 of the suspected bosses and lieutenants, the government said. U.S. authorities have offered separate $5-million rewards for the arrests of Guzman and Zambada. Guzman escaped from prison eight years ago.

The Mexican reward offer includes two leaders of the cartel based in Ciudad Juarez, Vicente Carrillo Fuentes and his nephew, Vicente Carrillo Leyva.

ken.ellingwood@latimes.com

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White House unveils plan to fight border drug cartels
The $700-million multi-agency plan targets drug and human trafficking and money laundering and aims to curb spillover of violence from Mexico onto the U.S. side of the border.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-obama-border25-2009mar25,0,761284.story

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-obama-border25-2009mar25,0,761284.story

From the Los Angeles Times

White House unveils plan to fight border drug cartels
The $700-million multi-agency plan targets drug and human trafficking and money laundering and aims to curb spillover of violence from Mexico onto the U.S. side of the border.
By Josh Meyer

10:23 AM PDT, March 24, 2009

Reporting from Washington — The Obama administration this morning unveiled an ambitious multi-agency plan to help Mexico attack the growing problems created by powerful Mexican drug cartels, vowing to send U.S. money, manpower and technology to the southwestern border as soon as possible.

The plan, to be funded with $700 million from Congress and some reshuffling of existing monies, will bolster existing efforts by Washington and Mexican President Felipe Calderón administration to fight violent trafficking in drugs and humans into the United States. It will also tackle the southbound flow of laundered money and precursor chemicals from the United States that for years have allowed drug traffickers to flourish and created tensions between the two countries.

The plan has been in the works since even before Obama took office and reflects the U.S.' growing concern over the increasing power of the cartels and the possibility of more spillover violence and corruption on the U.S. side of the border.

A Mexican government crackdown on the cartels over the last two years has resulted in a sharp increase in violence as the traffickers fought back and battled each other over turf. More than 7,000 people have been killed since January 2008, and violence has surged in some U.S. border states such as Arizona.

The cartels also have raised alarm bells in Washington by spreading their trafficking networks into at least 230 American cities and towns. Senior Obama administration officials said the new plan is designed to reverse that trend as well as better secure the border and assist Mexico in dismantling the multi-billion dollar crime syndicates.

"The President is concerned by the increased level of violence, particularly in Ciudad Juarez and Tijuana, and the impact that it is having on the communities on both sides of the border," the White House said in a position paper disclosing the details of the plan. "He believes that the United States must continue to monitor the situation and guard against spillover into the United States. And the president is firmly committed to ensuring our borders are secure, and we are doing all we can to reduce illegal flows in both direction across the border."

The announcement was made at the White House by Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Deputy Atty. Gen. David Ogden, one day before Secretary of State Hillary Clinton leaves on a trip to Mexico.

Napolitano and Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. are scheduled to travel to Mexico next week to meet their Mexican counterparts at an international conference on weapons trafficking, and Obama himself plans to visit Mexico City in April.

In general, the plan calls for additional personnel, increased intelligence capability and better coordination with state, local and Mexican law enforcement authorities.

"This issue requires immediate action," Napolitano said. "We are guided by two very clear objectives. First, we are going to do everything we can to prevent the violence in Mexico from spilling over across the border. And second, we will do all in our power to help President Calderón crack down on these drug cartels in Mexico."

Through "strategic redeployments," the Department of Homeland Security plans to send more than 360 officers and agents to the border and into Mexico, Napolitano said. Costs across the board, totaling up to $184 million, will be revenue neutral, funded by realigning from less urgent activities, fund balances, and, in some cases, reprogramming, she said.

Many of the initiatives outlined today continue or expand on programs that already existed with the departments of Justice and Homeland Security in the Bush administration, including the $1.4-billion, multi-year plan known as the Merida Initiative. An undisclosed number of border agents, counter-narcotics agents and weapons-trafficking specialists will be sent to the border. And the Justice Department will send additional lawyers to border areas to increase and coordinate prosecutions of cartel-related cases, according to Obama administration officials.

The Pentagon also is working closely with the Mexican military, which Calderón has placed on the front lines of the battle against the cartel, especially in some parts of the country believed to be at least partially under the control of the traffickers and corrupt local law enforcement officials.

Obama also could deploy National Guard troops to the U.S. Mexico border if the violence appears to be overwhelming the response of civilian authorities, although administration officials have portrayed that as a worst-case scenario.

Obama's initiative was welcomed by congressional lawmakers from both parties, particularly those from border states most affected by the cartel-related violence and corruption.

Judiciary Committee ranking member Lamar Smith (R- Texas) said he supported the administration's efforts to address border violence, but expressed concern about the specifics of the plan.

"While I support the administration's plan to increase resources and personnel along the border, I am concerned that the redeployment may come at the expense of other critical law enforcement activities," Smith said. "The administration appears to be using border violence as an excuse to reduce interior enforcement of our immigration laws and enact gun restrictions. With hundreds of federal law enforcement officers being relocated to the border, we must ensure that we do not undercut our national security and immigration enforcement responsibilities."

Here are some additional details of the plan as outlined by the White House today:

The Treasury Department is ramping up personnel and efforts directed at the Southwest border, to track traffickers' money flows. As part of the effort, the United States also will renew its commitment to reduce the demand for illegal drugs by American consumers, whom Mexico has blamed for creating much of the drug trafficking problem in the first place.

Because the effort will have so many facets, it will be coordinated at the White House through the National Security Council and Homeland Security Council as part of the broader U.S.-Mexico portfolio, administration officials said.

As part of the new initiative, the Department of Homeland Security plans to double the number of Border Enforcement Security Task Forces (BEST) teams that incorporate foreign, federal and state/local law enforcement and intelligence officers.

It plans to triple the number of DHS intelligence analysts working along the Southwest border and increase the number of its immigrations and customs enforcement attaché staff in Mexico in support of Mexican law enforcement efforts.

DHS also plans to double the Violent Criminal Alien teams located in Southwest border field offices and quadruple the number of border liaison officers working with Mexican law enforcement entities.

Homeland Security officials will also bolster their Secure Communities Biometric Identification capabilities, increase southbound rail examinations, enhance the use of technology at ports of entry and increase engagement with state and local Southwest border law enforcement.

For its part, the Justice Department plans to more directly confront the criminal enterprises responsible for violence in Mexico and trafficking of drugs, illegal arms and bulk cash across the Southwest border through the creation of a Mexican cartel strategy, led by Ogden.

The Justice Department also hopes to work closely with federal prosecutor-led, multi-agency task forces to identify, disrupt and dismantle the Mexican drug cartels, including extraditing key leaders and facilitators to the United States for prosecution, and through the seizure and forfeiture of their assets.

The department also will sharpen its focus on investigations and prosecutions of the southbound smuggling of guns and cash that fuel the violence and corruption, and by attacking the cartels in Mexico itself in partnership with its Mexican counterparts.

Justice's Drug Enforcement Administration is placing 16 new positions in its Southwest border field divisions, forming four additional Mobile Enforcement Teams (METs) to specifically target Mexican methamphetamine trafficking operations and associated violence along the border and throughout the United States.

Justice's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives plans to relocate 100 agents and support personnel to the border in the next 45 days, to fortify its Project Gunrunner weapons-trafficking effort and its eTrace Initiative, which works with Mexican officials to forensically track weapons used in drug cartel violence.

And the FBI, also a part of the Justice Department, is stepping up its efforts along the Border by creating a Southwest Intelligence Group (SWIG), which will be a clearinghouse of all FBI activities involving Mexico. It will also increase its focus on public corruption, kidnappings, and extortion relating to border issues. It will also bolster its Transnational Anti-Gang initiative, which coordinates the sharing of gang intelligence between the U.S. and El Salvador; many of those gang members are believed to be working for the cartels.

Congress has appropriated $700 million to support Mexico's security and institution building efforts under the Merida Initiative. These funds will help Mexico to improve law enforcement, crime prevention and strengthen institution building and rule of law.

That money will provide Mexico with money to help stem illegal flows of drugs, laundered cash, weapons and smuggled humans in both directions across the border, and for training for rule of law and judicial reform efforts. It will also provide Mexico with information technology to enable its prosecutors, law enforcement and immigration officials to communicate securely, and provide funding to help Mexican prosecutors' offices develop effective witness and victim protection programs.

The money will also pay for five helicopters to increase air mobility for the Mexican Army and Air Force and a surveillance aircraft for the Mexican Navy, although that hardware might be delayed until as late as 2011, congressional lawmakers said recently.

josh.meyer@latimes.com

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Friday, March 20, 2009


Mexican drug figure's son is arrested

The arrest of Vicente Zambada, son of Ismael Zambada, deals a significant blow to drug traffickers, officials say. He allegedly oversaw operations, logistics and security for the Sinaloa cartel.
By Ken Ellingwood March 20, 2008

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."


http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-arrest20-2009mar20,0,331303.story
From the Los Angeles Times

MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

Mexican drug figure's son is arrested
The arrest of Vicente Zambada, son of Ismael Zambada, deals a significant blow to drug traffickers, officials say. He allegedly oversaw operations, logistics and security for the Sinaloa cartel.

By Ken Ellingwood

March 20, 2009

Reporting from Mexico City — Authorities said Thursday that they had arrested the son of one of Mexico's top drug lords, saying he had become a high-level operator of a powerful trafficking group in the northwestern state of Sinaloa.

Vicente Zambada, 33, was detained Wednesday in a well-to-do area of Mexico City during an operation by the army and federal agents. He is the son of Ismael Zambada, an alleged drug kingpin in Sinaloa.

Troops and agents moved in after reports of armed men in the Lomas del Pedregal section, the army said. Five other suspects, described as Vicente Zambada's bodyguards, were also taken into custody.

Authorities described the arrest as an important blow against the alliance of Sinaloa-based traffickers headed by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman Loera, who is Mexico's most-wanted fugitive.

"With the arrest of Vicente Zambada Niebla, 'El Vicentillo,' the Guzman Loera organization's ability to operate and move drugs is significantly affected," the military said in a statement. The army said Zambada had ordered the killings of police and rivals.

Officials said Zambada had been designated by his father to oversee operations, logistics and security, putting him among the top leaders of Guzman's group, the so-called Sinaloa cartel.

In that capacity, Zambada was said to have replaced Alfredo Beltran Leyva, who was arrested early last year.

The Beltran Leyva wing later broke from the rest of the Sinaloa alliance, resulting in months of internecine violence that left nearly 1,000 people dead statewide last year. The killing has tapered off recently amid reports of a truce.

Vicente Zambada is the latest member of the family captured during President Felipe Calderon's 2-year-old crackdown on drug traffickers.

In October, police arrested Ismael Zambada's brother, Jesus, who allegedly headed the group's operations in central Mexico. Authorities said he oversaw smuggling of cocaine and chemical ingredients for making methamphetamine.

The army-led offensive has roiled Mexico's drug gangs, stoking turf fights that have killed more than 7,000 people in the last 15 months. The crackdown has produced a number of high-profile arrests and major seizures of drugs, money and weapons.

During the arrest of Vicente Zambada, authorities seized three AR-15 rifles, three .38 Super pistols, three cars and nearly $5,000 in Mexican pesos and U.S. dollars.

ken.ellingwood@latimes.com

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Tuesday, March 17, 2009


Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times
An employee makes a pizza at a Tijuana, Mexico, parlor owned by George Norman Harrison, a San Diego County native, who was kidnapped and killed. Authorities say Mexican organized crime was responsible for Harrison's murder.

Killing of Tijuana pizzeria owner leaves family, Mexican authorities at odds
George Norman Harrison, a San Diego County native, was found with his head and limbs cut off. Authorities say he was 'keeping bad company' and considers his death drug-related; his family disagrees.

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."


http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-tijuana-drugs-beheading17-2009mar17,0,4269035.story
From the Los Angeles Times

MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

Killing of Tijuana pizzeria owner leaves family, Mexican authorities at odds
George Norman Harrison, a San Diego County native, was found with his head and limbs cut off. Authorities say he was 'keeping bad company' and considers his death drug-related; his family disagrees.

By Richard Marosi

March 17, 2009

Reporting from Tijuana — When San Diego County native George Norman Harrison opened his Tijuana pizzeria in 2007, he plastered the El Mirador neighborhood with fliers and hired a team of delivery boys to zip up and down the shanty-lined hills on motor scooters.

Business was good, and he told his family he liked the low cost of living in Mexico. But the stout, mustachioed former construction worker recognized the dangers and stashed a 9-millimeter handgun in his property, one of four weapons he owned without Mexican permission.

On Feb. 3, three gunmen abducted the 38-year-old U.S. citizen from the pizzeria and held him captive for one month, extracting two ransom payments from his family in San Diego County. Then his captors beheaded him, chopped off his arms and legs and tossed his body in a weed-choked lot beside those of two other men, with a taunting sign warning about "snitches."

The gruesome slaying has left Harrison's family and Mexican authorities at odds over why he was killed.

The Baja California attorney general's office considers Harrison's death another organized-crime slaying, one of about 800 here in the last year. They suspect the pizzeria businesses -- Harrison owned another restaurant near the beach -- were a front for drug trafficking, and they suspect that he crossed the wrong person or owed a drug debt, noting that he had a drug conviction eight years ago.

"He was keeping bad company, and was taken by people they knew," said Assistant Atty. Gen. Rafael Gonzalez.

Harrison's family says Mexican authorities have been too quick to categorize his death as drug-related. Harrison had put his conviction behind him and was targeted because of his business success, say family members who asked that their identities not be revealed for security reasons.

"Business was really good. He was really happy," said one family member. "He was always busy, running around like crazy, bringing supplies, keeping the employees busy."

If Harrison's death is drug-related, it would fit the profile of the vast majority of homicides in Tijuana: a lethal adjusting of accounts among suspected traffickers, gunmen, drug addicts and other criminals who placed themselves in the cross hairs of crime bosses battling for control of the city.

But Tijuana also ranks among the world's most dangerous cities for ransom kidnappings, a situation that has prompted hundreds of middle-class and upper-middle-class Mexican families to flee to the San Diego area.

Harrison was born in the San Diego suburb of La Mesa to a Navy veteran father and a Mexican American mother. He worked in the auto-wrecking business and construction, and moved to Tijuana about 12 years ago, telling his family he enjoyed the culture and more affordable lifestyle.

In 2000, he was arrested at the San Ysidro Port of Entry with more than 50 pounds of marijuana in his car, according to family members. It was a felony offense and he was given probation after being jailed for less than one week, they said.

Harrison dubbed his eateries Harley's Pizza, after his beloved Harley-Davidson motorcycles. The biker theme became the pizzerias' motif: On one wall, Harrison and his brother painted a mural of a motorcyclist driving through the cactus-dotted Baja California landscape.

His employees said they admired Harrison's energy and fairness.

"He was a great boss, really good people," said one. "He treated us like sons."

Family members in San Diego expressed concern about violence in Tijuana, but Harrison insisted he had things under control. Police knocked on his door for regular extortion payments and he said their actions, though corrupt, gave him a sense of security.

"I asked, 'Is everything OK?' " recalled one relative. "He said, 'Don't worry. I'm fine.' "

On the day of the attack, Harrison was carrying thousands of dollars to meet his payroll, his family said. The gunmen, armed with AK-47s, ordered everyone to the ground. Harrison was struck in the leg with the butt of a weapon and dragged out. "He seemed confused. He said, 'What's up?' " said one witness.

Over the next month, Harrison's girlfriend in Tijuana got daily phone calls from the kidnappers. They demanded that the family raise money by selling his Harley-Davidson motorcycles, cars and all-terrain vehicles.

The kidnappers chopped off one of Harrison's fingers and left it in a box at his girlfriend's house. They delivered another finger a few days later, the family said.

The family paid an undisclosed amount in two payments. Prior to the second payment, the kidnappers put Harrison on the phone. "He sounded good," said a family member. "We thought he was coming home."

The next day, the family heard that three bodies had been found near the beachside bullring. They identified Harrison's body by a tattoo. He had been strangled and his killers had dismembered the body.

To Mexican authorities, the crime scene bore signs of a retaliatory killing. The assailants left a taunting narco-message suggesting that one or more of the dead men were informants. The savage nature of the slaying also suggested that the killers were trying to intimidate rivals. Kidnap victims with no criminal ties are rarely killed, and if they are, the kidnappers typically don't make a public showing of their slayings, according to Mexican authorities.

When police searched Harrison's home and business, they found about 100 Valium pills. The family said he used the pills to ease the stress of his job. Authorities suspect that he was selling the drugs from his business.

The family is convinced that the slaying, like most others in Tijuana, will never be solved.

Since Harrison's death, his girlfriend has gone into hiding. One of his managers quit. And his family in California didn't attend the memorial service last Sunday in Tijuana for fear of being kidnapped.

In the end, one relative said, Harrison was probably wrong to trust anyone in Tijuana, especially the police he thought were looking out for him. "He felt protected by the corruption," said the family member. "But eventually it consumed him."

richard.marosi@latimes.com

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Saturday, March 14, 2009


Protesters in the northern Mexican city of Monterrey taunt riot police during a demonstration in February, one of a number in Mexico demanding the departure of soldiers deployed to deal with drug violence.

Mexico drug cartels buying public support
As traffickers recruit among the poor, their networks are being woven into the social fabric of the country.


Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."


http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-monterrey-drugs-recruits1-2009mar13,0,7828779.story
From the Los Angeles Times
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

Mexico drug cartels buying public support
As traffickers recruit among the poor, their networks are being woven into the social fabric of the country.

By Tracy Wilkinson

March 13, 2009

Reporting from Monterrey, Mexico — The small houses of the Independencia neighborhood climb a hill that rises from the bone-dry Santa Catarina riverbed. Gang graffiti proliferate the higher you go, until they completely cover the cinder-block walls with slogans, threats and declarations.

Young men in baggy pants, sweat shirt hoodies pulled tightly around their faces, populate the desolate street corners, in between vacant lots and shattered wooden stoops.

Look out from the top of the hill and in the distance you see the impressive skyline of Monterrey, the wealthiest city in Mexico, its fancy museums, glistening high-rises, leafy plazas and pristine palaces bathed in sunlight.

Look down, however, to the steep, potted streets of Independencia, one of the city's oldest and poorest barrios, and it's a different picture, one of stray dogs, braying burros and no jobs.

It is here that Mexico's biggest drug traffickers find an easy following of collaborators and pliable disciples.

This is the traffickers' so-called social base: people loyal out of economics more than anything else, people who peddle the drugs and eagerly turn out when the traffickers want to mount street demonstrations against the government and the army.

"There are some bad boys up the road," said a 40-year-old shopkeeper who, like most residents interviewed, would not give her name. "They do drugs at a young age and choose the easy way of life. The police used to come through and sweep them off the corners, but not anymore."

Independencia is distinctive among Monterrey's marginal neighborhoods, community activists say, because it is home to generations of small-time drug dealers, and because it has been penetrated in the last two years by agents of the Gulf cartel, one of Mexico's most notorious and violent trafficking organizations.

Those traffickers demonstrated their pull in this neighborhood last month when they paid residents to block Monterrey's major thoroughfares with hours-long demonstrations, day after day for two weeks.

Protesters included youths with their faces covered to hide their identities, the tapados (covered ones), but also their mothers and grandmothers.

It was an embarrassing turn of events for President Felipe Calderon, as protests spread to cities along the U.S. border, blocking international crossings and showcasing the traffickers' ability to mobilize crowds, even though neither politics nor ideology was really at stake.

Gripes against army

Mexicans have legitimate grievances against the army. Troops in some regions have been accused of illegal searches, abuse and unlawful killings of civilians at checkpoints. Yet most opinion surveys, including one taken in Monterrey last month, show wide support for a military presence aimed at restoring security.

Aldo Fasci, the top law enforcement official in the state of Nuevo Leon, of which Monterrey is the capital, quickly branded the demonstrations "narco-blockades."

A few days into the protests, a police commander was assassinated, more than 50 rounds pumped into him and his car as he drove to work. He had reportedly been given an ultimatum to free a detained demonstrator.

The state governor, Natividad Gonzalez Paras, blamed the unrest directly on the Gulf cartel and its paramilitary enforcement arm, the Zetas.

"These organized criminal groups use [poor] people," Gonzalez said. "We can let them kidnap our peace and our rights, or we can unite to assert a state of law and order." As evidence of the demonstrators' backing, officials pointed to the arrest of Juan Antonio Beltran Cruz, a 20-year-old resident of Monterrey who was accused of being the leader of the tapados and who, according to authorities, had in his possession school backpacks used as bribes.

Authorities did not offer proof of any ties between Beltran Cruz and traffickers. But interviews with other officials, community activists and residents of Independencia provide a more complete picture of the way traffickers recruit among the poor.

Some of the tapados were paid as little as 200 pesos, about $13, plus a cellular telephone; others received 500 pesos, about $33, and the backpacks filled with supplies. After the demonstrations, many returned to Independencia and pointed to pictures of themselves in the newspapers, bragging about their performance, residents said.

"They go to the demonstrations; they don't even know what it's about or why, they just go," said Father Juan Pedro Alanis, the parish priest in Independencia. A woman working at the church said she was offered money to attend the protests.

They go, Alanis said, because of the pay. It's a time-honored tradition in Mexico, where political parties, unions and other organizations reward people for showing up at rallies. There's even a word for it here, acarrear, which in Spanish means to transport but in Mexican slang adds the elements of payoffs and gifts.

Independencia is largely a no-go zone for police, who abandoned a station near the top of the hill two years ago. For many years, residents grew their own marijuana and marketed it, sometimes selling it openly on street corners -- "like popcorn," in the words of one local activist.

Dozens of gangs formed, most of them involved in either dealing or consuming drugs. Around 2006, the Zetas began moving in, taking over the drug operations and forcing residents to become part of their network, community activists say.

The gangs hang out on corners, stroll languidly through Independencia's streets and, by the look of things, freshen up the graffiti periodically. One gang calls itself Watts.

A group of 14- to 19-year-old boys, hanging out under a cracked sign for Carta Blanca beer, would not own up to participating in the demonstrations but showed no affection for the army.

'They stop us'

"Sometimes they stop us, search us," said an 18-year-old in a Los Angeles Dodgers baseball cap and with a huge Virgin of Guadalupe pendant around his neck.

Residents of Independencia view outsiders mostly with hostile suspicion, glaring at and refusing to speak to visitors. One man literally growled at a reporter who passed by.

"Basically you just try to keep to yourself," said a 26-year-old plumber who said he did not belong to a gang. "You don't say anything because if you speak up, they'll slap you down."

Alanis, the priest, said the generational hold makes the corruption here harder to fight, and leaves the residents vulnerable to traffickers' enticements.

"It used to be you tried to help troubled youths. Now there are entire families involved in drugs, consuming and selling," said activist Neli Valadez Macias. "And if the adults are doing it, what can we really expect from the youths? It's a disorientation of the entire family."

Valadez is part of a small church-based organization called the Program to Help Groups on the Corners. Its members minister three nights a week to the youths gathered on street corners. It is a dangerous and tricky mission, and she and her associates pray for a solid hour before venturing out, "sincerely asking for God's protection."

Amid the squalor of Independencia, next to houses that use sheets for windows, there are the occasional monuments to incongruent wealth: the salmon-colored manse with poured-concrete swans along the facade, plus copper-colored wrought iron and double-tier fountains. Then there's the sea-green, three-story house with etched-glass windows that takes up most of one block.

These are the homes of those anointed by the Zetas, so the neighborhood buzz goes; in contrast, there are large homes that have been abandoned, reputed to belong to families who wouldn't go along.

The government was slow to put down the demonstrations in Monterrey, even as they spread to the border cities of Reynosa and Ciudad Juarez and the Gulf port of Veracruz. Authorities appeared reluctant to sic the police on youths and women. Eventually, the protests died down, their organizers having made their point.

"The tapados demonstrate a less bloody, less criminal but most worrisome aspect of the drug-trafficking phenomenon: They show the strength of the traffickers and their networks, not as organized crime, but as part of the social fabric," historian Hector Aguilar Camin said in the Milenio newspaper.

"The narco is part of the landscape, and having become part of the daily life in these communities is the true force of the narco."

wilkinson@latimes.com

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Dozens arrested in Tijuana raid
In a major army-led operation, a top crime boss' alleged lieutenant is caught, and 8 state police agents are among those arrested and accused of links to organized crime.

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-drugs-raid10-2009mar10,0,2074198.story
From the Los Angeles Times
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

Dozens arrested in Tijuana raid
In a major army-led operation, a top crime boss' alleged lieutenant is caught, and 8 state police agents are among those arrested and accused of links to organized crime.

By Richard Marosi

March 10, 2009

Reporting from Tijuana — Mexican authorities on Monday announced the capture of an alleged lieutenant of a top crime boss, along with 21 other organized crime suspects, at a weekend quinceañera party.

The raid Sunday by Mexican soldiers also led to the arrest of eight state police agents and may have struck a serious blow to Teodoro Garcia Simental, a Tijuana organized crime boss who for months has waged a bloody war with a rival group.

Angel Jacome Gamboa, 29, was arrested while attending the party at a banquet hall in east Tijuana. He is a suspect in the killings of 12 Rosarito Beach police officers, said Baja California Atty. Gen. Rommel Moreno Manjarrez at a news conference.

Gamboa, the reputed crime boss of the Rosarito Beach area, is also believed to be responsible for a wave of kidnappings and killings that have besieged the resort destination south of Tijuana for more than a year.

The raid, one of the biggest army-led operations in recent months in Baja California, also led to a kidnap victim's release from a safe house and the seizure of more than a dozen weapons and several hundred rounds of ammunition, military officials said.

Two state police agents were arrested at the party, the rest at unspecified locations across the city. They are suspected of being informants for the organized gang, authorities said. The authorities denied local media reports that some of the agents had worked as bodyguards for state Gov. Jose Guadalupe Osuna Millan. As a precaution, however, the governor's security detail has been bolstered since the arrests, they said.

Thirty-two other men, including busboys and members of a musical group, were arrested at the party on suspicion of links to organized crime. Many family members gathered at the army base in Tijuana to protest the arrests, saying they were merely attending the party.

richard.marosi@latimes.com

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Monday, March 09, 2009




MEXICO UNDER SIEGE
Rosarito Beach regulars won't stay away despite Mexico's drug war

Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times

A beach in Rosarito is nearly empty. Drug violence has scared away many tourists, but one visitor said, “If you’re not doing drugs, you’re not gonna get in trouble.”

Knocking back tequila shots at Iggy's Corner in Rosarito, Mexico.

U.S. tourists who enjoy escaping to this seaside city are continuing to do so despite the recent travel warnings. 'Drug people are fighting the drug people,' goes the thinking.

By Christopher Reynolds

March 9, 2009

Rosarito Beach regulars won't stay away despite Mexico's drug war
U.S. tourists who enjoy escaping to this seaside city are continuing to do so despite the recent travel warnings. 'Drug people are fighting the drug people,' goes the thinking.
Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."


http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-tr-rosarito9-2009mar09,0,5116645.story
From the Los Angeles Times
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE
Rosarito Beach regulars won't stay away despite Mexico's drug war
U.S. tourists who enjoy escaping to this seaside city are continuing to do so despite the recent travel warnings. 'Drug people are fighting the drug people,' goes the thinking.
By Christopher Reynolds

March 9, 2009

Reporting from Rosarito Beach, Mexico — The music thumps, the lights flash, the shot glasses wait for willing lips. But the bouncers are reduced to kicking at the curb, hoping somebody, anybody, will round the corner. Friday nights are slow lately in Rosarito Beach's party zone, and everyone knows the drug war is to blame.

Hundreds of corpses discovered in and near Tijuana. Some of them headless, others dissolved in barrels of lye. People hear that, and they stay away.

At least, most people do. But on this recent Friday night, just before 9, two men and a woman come striding up the street. Americans, young and thirsty; buddies since undergrad days at UC Santa Barbara. They bypass Papas & Beer. They sidestep Club Vibe and Coco Beach. They eye Iggy's and its sole customer. And then they hop on stools and order shots.

"If you're not doing drugs, you're not gonna get in trouble," explains Josh Davis, 24, of San Diego. "As long as you stay on the well-lit paths, you're OK. But then again," he adds with a grin, "my night's not over yet."

It may not be surprising to hear that as bodies accumulate in Tijuana (843 homicides in 2008, compared with 376 in the much larger city of Los Angeles), Rosarito Beach's hotel occupancy rates spiral downward. On Feb. 20, the U.S. State Department issued a 12-paragraph "alert" on the perils of travel in Mexico, especially near the border.

On March 2, the Justice Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives went a step further, warning American college students to stay away from Tijuana and Rosarito Beach during spring break. Despite deep discounting and a peso that has lost a third of its value in the last six months, this night (shortly before the ATF warning) reveals about 450 empty rooms at the Rosarito Beach Hotel.

Those who dare

But there's another side to this equation. What about the 50 rooms that are occupied? Who are the Americans who have never stopped coming down to Rosarito? What are they thinking?

In six hours of Friday-night circulating in Rosarito, a reporter and photographer come across several U.S. tourists, ages 23 to 60, none of them newcomers to Mexico.

A few of the Americans fit the traditional description of a Rosarito reveler -- college students or recent grads -- and one of these revelers is an alumna of the reality show "The Bad Girls Club." (That would be Andrea Sharples, 24, of Los Angeles, raising a glass in Iggy's with her friends Davis and Reed Clark.) But several of the other visitors are retired, and some have been driving down here for decades.

"It comes down to common sense," says Steve Howard, 60, beginning a three-day weekend at the bar of the Rosarito Beach Hotel. Howard, who has been coming here from San Diego County since 1962, says of his companion and himself: "We like our alcohol, but we don't do drugs, so it's a matter of not participating in the lifestyle."

And then there are the Pejakoviches of Sacramento, who are more worried about their financial future than they are about Mexican crime.

"Life was good until six months ago, when everything burst," says Dan Pejakovich, pausing with a cigarette at the front door of the hotel. Pejakovich, a 59-year-old construction manager and inspector, left his job late last year. He and his wife, Melana, 55, estimate that their Sacramento house has lost half its value and might take months or more to sell. And they're alarmed by the scale of the recession.

And so, after years of living well and vacationing in places such as Italy, Greece, Egypt and Turkey, they've come south to check the housing situation in northern Baja. For six days, they've been visiting upscale residential enclaves and meeting a few of the estimated 14,000 American expats who live in the greater Rosarito area; the overall population is about 55,000. Of course they've been thinking about security, and they've decided it's not a problem.

"The drug people are fighting the drug people," says Dan Pejakovich. It is "a little disconcerting" to see soldiers wearing masks, he admits. "But then you realize it's for their protection, so you say, 'OK.' "

"It's not going to affect us," said Melana Pejakovich. "Are they going to shoot up the Rosarito Beach Hotel just for the hell of it? No."

You'll hear the same argument from Randy and Gwen Graff of Missoula, Mont., who bought their condo here in 2007. They're winding up a two-month stay, their first full winter in Rosarito.

"We've always traveled around Baja," says Randy Graff, 60, a recently retired airline pilot. "We like it because it's slow, and we almost have the place to ourselves." As for the crime, "it's just amazing how the media seem to play it. It's really not that big of a problem," he says.

Most of Baja's drug-war deaths have been registered in Tijuana, about 12 miles north of Rosarito. And perhaps the most notorious case -- the January arrest of a suspected cartel associate who authorities say has laid claim to dissolving 300 bodies in vats of lye -- took place near Ensenada, about 50 miles to the south. A 2007 spate of armed robberies and carjackings against Americans played out along the same geographical lines. But Rosarito has seen plenty of its own trouble too.

In February 2008, Daniel LaPorte, 27, of San Diego and a 28-year-old woman named Libey (also known as Libe) Craig, of La Mesa, Calif., were killed in an apparent soured drug deal that also left three Mexican nationals dead on the outskirts of Rosarito Beach. Authorities said all of the dead had drug-related arrest records except LaPorte, a suspected marijuana smuggler whose remains were found in a barrel of chemicals.

Since September, at least eight Rosarito Beach police officers have been killed, more than two dozen have resigned, and the town's main street, Benito Juarez Boulevard, has been the scene of at least two shootings. In one, a drive-by assailant shot and killed a 15-year-old boy and three others in a pet store.

In November, one drug cartel apparently tried to kill a gunman from a rival cartel outside a Rosarito taco stand. Soon after, authorities said, five members of the first cartel were found, their bodies dismembered, in cars outside the same taco stand.

Few of the fatal cases involved Americans -- which leads the State Department to phrase its cautions with extreme care. Officials warn of "serious risks" to American travelers in northern Baja, citing "a notable spike" in "robberies, homicides, petty thefts and carjackings" in the last year. They also urge travelers to visit "only legitimate business and tourist areas during daylight hours," and carry cellphones that work with international networks.

To some this might amount to a stay-away warning -- "but that's not the case," said a spokesman at the U.S. Consulate in Tijuana. The idea, he said, is just to provide information "so that travelers can make their own informed decisions."

So Rosarito's boosters persist, hoping for a spring break surge, pushing its broad beaches and low prices, the movie props at the Foxploration theme park, the surfing contest coming April 3-5, the Rosarito-Ensenada bike ride April 18. And Ivan Barron and Blanca Martinez of National City, Calif., have heard the call.

They huddle in beach chairs by a fire ring, enjoying the full attention of two waiters. Barron, 33, wears a cowboy hat and clutches a Miller beer can. Martinez, celebrating her 36th birthday, sips a margarita. For about $150, Barron says, they have three nights in an ocean-view room at the Rosarito Beach Hotel, along with three free dinners and three free margaritas each.

"I told her they must have made a mistake or something," says Barron, laughing.

The killings?

"My parents live right here in TJ, so I come every weekend anyway," Barron says. "Those guys who are getting killed are getting killed for a reason."

'Food, clubs, girls'

Up on the main drag at El Nido restaurant, Ryan Griffith, a 23-year-old cook from Carlsbad, Calif., and Denis Mikhailenko, 24, a business major at Cal State San Marcos, have no family in Mexico, but they're thinking along the same lines.

"Food, clubs, girls, cheap liquor," says Mikhailenko. "You can live like a king for way cheaper than you ever could in a place like San Diego. And you feel wanted here."

After perhaps a dozen visits over the last two years, Mikhailenko says he and Griffith figure they're safe as long as they treat everyone with respect, break no laws and don't go down any unfamiliar streets. And the rest of their Friday evening?

"Depends on where the night leads us," says Mikhailenko, heading out to the street.

As the evening wears on, Barron and Martinez tiptoe back from the beach to their $50-a-night ocean-view room. The Pejakoviches head out to dinner at the Rosarito Applebee's. At Iggy's, the UCSB gang of three hangs on until around midnight.

As for Griffith and Mikhailenko, let their story show that even in dire times there are happy endings, of a sort, to be had in northern Baja.

"We actually drove to Ensenada," Mikhailenko reports later via e-mail. "We watched some live music and ate good food. We then finished the night at a strip club."

christopher.reynolds @latimes.com

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Friday, March 06, 2009


Tourists weigh Mexico drug violence
Mexico's rampant drug violence has put the issue of safety front and center for would-be vacationers, and put the country's publicity-sensitive tourism promoters on the defensive.

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-travel6-2009mar06,0,7157441.story
From the Los Angeles Times
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

Tourists weigh Mexico drug violence
Mexico's rampant drug violence has put the issue of safety front and center for would-be vacationers, and put the country's publicity-sensitive tourism promoters on the defensive.

By Ken Ellingwood

March 6, 2009

Reporting from Cancun, Mexico — Buried under two months of winter in Buffalo, N.Y., Kim Kramer could take no more.

"I came home and said, 'I've got to get out of here,' " said Kramer, a 44-year-old teacher. Two weeks later, she was awash in sunshine here on Mexico's Caribbean coast, sipping a midday Hurricane and looking pleasantly thawed.

Before Kramer got on the plane to Cancun, though, she made sure to check: Was it dangerous to go there? She reviewed the State Department's travel advisory for Mexico and decided that the answer for Cancun was no.

"I didn't see it as a hotbed of violence," she said.

Mexico's rampant drug violence has put the issue of safety front and center for would-be vacationers, and put the country's publicity-sensitive tourism promoters on the defensive. Tens of thousands of foreign visitors are expected to hit Mexican beaches such as Cancun for spring break, which lasts through April.

The University of Arizona has warned students to take extra care if traveling to Mexico during spring break because of "a marked increase in violence recently."

More than 6,000 people were slain in drug-related violence last year, with daytime shootouts, bodies dumped in piles and beheadings. The grisly news has given pause even to veteran visitors, who have curbed travel to troubled spots on the U.S.-Mexico border, like Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez.

Cancun and other beach resorts have escaped increasingly somber State Department warnings about Mexico. The latest travel alert, issued Feb. 20, describes fearsome conditions on the U.S. border and in northern Mexico, where shootouts have killed bystanders and left U.S. citizens "trapped and temporarily prevented from leaving the area."

"Robberies, homicides, petty thefts and carjackings have all increased over the last year across Mexico generally, with notable spikes in Tijuana and northern Baja California," the alert said. Ciudad Juarez, a city on the Texas border where more than 1,600 people were killed last year, is of "special concern."

The violence stems from feuds among rival Mexican drug traffickers and their confrontations with the police and army. It does not appear to be directed against tourists.

Mexican officials say their country is safe for travelers, but they fear more bad news could batter tourism, one of Mexico's top sources of foreign income and a sector that has been growing despite the bad news and bad economy.

During a visit to Cancun last month, the Mexican tourism minister, Rodolfo Elizondo, scolded the news media, saying the focus on crime was hurting the nation's image. Officials have tried to minimize the damage by noting that killings have been concentrated in three states: Chihuahua, Sinaloa and Baja California.

Mindful of Mexico's image troubles, promoters in the Cancun area are turning to a novel tactic: Don't mention what country it's in. Officials say they will downplay Mexico in advertising the beach zone, which has been relatively untouched by the violence.

"The Mexico brand, in terms of tourist marketing, has weakened," Sara Latife Ruiz, tourism secretary for the surrounding state of Quintana Roo, told the Reforma newspaper.

"This wave of insecurity has been a blow."

Tourism earnings grew by 3.4% last year, to $13.3 billion, despite the violence and global economic downturn, according to figures from the federal government. Mexico drew 22.6 million foreign visitors, an increase of 5.9%.

Mexico could benefit from belt-tightening in the U.S. by offering travelers relative proximity and, for the moment, a tantalizing exchange rate: around 15 pesos to the dollar.

"For Cancun, it's ideal," said Jesus Almaguer Salazar, president of the Cancun Hotel Assn.

Hotels in Cancun, the country's top beach resort, expect nearly 1 million foreign and Mexican visitors during the 10 weeks of spring break. The largest number of foreigners come from California. In late February, occupancy was about 90% and bookings normal, Almaguer said.

It's hard to break a tradition as durable as spring break in Cancun. The flip flop-wearing college students are returning -- though many only after persuading parents who are more jittery than ever about Mexico.

"They said, 'Stay in the resort. Don't go downtown,' " said Cody Seguin, 20, a university student from Toronto.

On a recent day, he and two friends ditched the parental warnings and ventured downtown. They sipped beer and Coke at a market while other vacationers shopped for mementos, all without incident.

"When you get here, everybody's going downtown," Seguin said. "And coming back safe."

ken.ellingwood@latimes.com

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Thursday, March 05, 2009



MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

20 killed in riot at Ciudad Juarez prison
It takes security forces nearly three hours to contain the unrest among members of three gangs. All of the dead are gang members, authorities say.
By Tracy Wilkinson and Cecilia Sánchez
March 5, 2009

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-prison-riot5-2009mar05,0,511766.story
From the Los Angeles Times
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

20 killed in riot at Ciudad Juarez prison
It takes security forces nearly three hours to contain the unrest among members of three gangs. All of the dead are gang members, authorities say.
By Tracy Wilkinson and Cecilia Sánchez

March 5, 2009

Reporting from Mexico City — A fierce battle between rival drug gangs at a prison in the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez on Wednesday left at least 20 inmates dead and three critically wounded, authorities said.

It took guards, police and military reinforcements nearly three hours to contain the unrest. Black smoke drifted from the cinder-block prison and helicopters patrolled overhead as anxious families waited outside for news.

Most of the victims had been beaten or stabbed to death.

The violence comes as the ravaged city is being placed under military control. Ciudad Juarez, just across the border from El Paso, has been the epicenter of Mexico's raging drug war. More people have been killed there than anywhere else -- 1,600 last year and 250 just last month.

In recent weeks, the city's police chief was driven from office by powerful drug traffickers who began slaying cops to underline their threat. The state governor was ambushed; he survived but a bodyguard was killed.

President Felipe Calderon ordered the deployment of additional troops and police officers to Ciudad Juarez, nearly tripling the number, in an attempt to restore law and order.

On Tuesday, city officials announced that the military would also take command of the local, corruption-ridden police force as well as transportation and city prisons.

Wednesday's prison uprising took place at a state facility that was not slated to go under military authority.

Warden Cesar Martinez Acosta stressed that the fighting did not target guards or security forces, and was not part of a breakout attempt. He denied reports that two federal agents were among the dead.

The brawl, which erupted around 6 a.m. at the end of overnight conjugal visits, pitted the Aztecas gang against the Mexicles. Also fighting was the Mexicles' ally, Artistas Asesinos (Murdering Artists).

The Aztecas work with the so-called Juarez cartel, the trafficking syndicate that has controlled Ciudad Juarez for years. It is now locked in deadly competition for the area with the Sinaloa cartel.

All of the dead were from the Mexicles and Artistas Asesinos gangs, authorities said, suggesting that the Aztecas started the fight. One report said members of the Aztecas stole a guard's keys and were able to free their cohorts and begin a rampage into parts of the prison controlled by their rivals.

Police with tear gas backed by the army eventually put down the riot.

At one point, inmates could be seen on the roof of the prison, torching mattresses. Witnesses said they saw bodies being hurled from second-story windows.

Carlos Gonzalez, spokesman for the state public security ministry, said the exact causes of the brawl were not yet known, but that bad blood between the Aztecas and Mexicles runs deep. They fight over control of drugs, guns and other contraband in the prison.

"There have been conflicts between these two gangster groups for a very long time, and there have been fights in the past," he said in an interview. He said guns and sharp instruments were used in Wednesday's melee.

Meanwhile, the military buildup in Ciudad Juarez has continued. An additional 3,200 troops arrived last weekend and more are on the way, officials said Wednesday.

The troops will patrol the city and set up nighttime checkpoints aimed at preventing the free movement of traffickers.

The office of Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz issued instructions to citizens to approach roadblocks with care, turning on the lights inside their cars and rolling down their windows so that soldiers can identify passengers easily.

Eventually the army will also take up positions in rural areas around Ciudad Juarez to block traffickers from fleeing to neighboring states.

wilkinson@latimes.com

Sánchez is with The Times' Mexico City Bureau.

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Tuesday, March 03, 2009


Mexico sending more forces to Ciudad Juarez
The government is deploying 1,000 more federal police officers as part of a wider effort to restore order in the nation's most violent city. Thousands of soldiers are also being sent.
Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
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http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-juarez-police3-2009mar03,0,3698853.story
From the Los Angeles Times

Mexico sending more forces to Ciudad Juarez
The government is deploying 1,000 more federal police officers as part of a wider effort to restore order in the nation's most violent city. Thousands of soldiers are also being sent.

By Ken Ellingwood

March 3, 2009

Reporting from Mexico City — The Mexican government will deploy 1,000 more federal police officers as part of a wider effort to restore order in Ciudad Juarez, the nation's most violent city, officials said Monday.

Some of those uniformed federal officers began arriving in the border city Monday, two days after about 2,000 soldiers landed there in a related military buildup. Those soldiers were the first of an expected 5,000 additional troops who will be sent to help perform basic police functions.

The military reinforcements will bring to more than 7,000 the number of soldiers in Ciudad Juarez.

The nation's public safety chief, Genaro Garcia Luna, said that along with the soldiers, he planned to dispatch the additional 1,000 federal police officers, Notimex news agency reported.

About 425 federal officers already had been posted in Ciudad Juarez, where the death toll last year exceeded 1,600, the highest in a country racked by drug-related violence.

The border city is in the throes of a vicious turf war between a local drug-smuggling organization and rivals from the northwestern state of Sinaloa. The feud, and the Mexican government's 2-year-old crackdown on organized crime, has sent killings soaring.

The city's police chief, Roberto Orduna Cruz, resigned almost two weeks ago after several of his officers were shot to death and anonymous signs appeared warning that an officer would be killed every 48 hours unless he stepped down.

Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz, who has also been the subject of anonymous handwritten threats, said last week that the army would take over basic policing duties, such as patrolling the streets.

ken.ellingwood@latimes.com

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A side of Cancun not seen during spring break
The killing of a newly-hired security official and two others raises questions about the drug trade's impact on the popular resort, especially with suspicions falling on the ex-police chief.

Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://www.warriorthemovie.com
http://www.warriorthemovie.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul in the State of Nayarit and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major movie studio music score and spectacular cinematography ..."


http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-cancun-drugs2-2009mar02,0,3847189,full.story
From the Los Angeles Times
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

A side of Cancun not seen during spring break
The killing of a newly-hired security official and two others raises questions about the drug trade's impact on the popular resort, especially with suspicions falling on the ex-police chief.

By Ken Ellingwood

March 2, 2009

Reporting from Cancun, Mexico — The suspect cruised around in an SUV that had been reported stolen. He toted corrido music glorifying drug smugglers and hit men, and allegedly helped them operate in this beach resort.

And until a few weeks ago, he was Cancun's police chief.

Now Francisco Velasco is in custody in Mexico City while federal authorities investigate whether he took part in the killing last month of a retired army general who had been hired to revamp the city's police force.

The 57-year-old Velasco, who was in his fourth stint as Cancun's police chief, has not been charged. But federal officials say they believe he protected seven people accused of kidnapping and killing Gen. Mauro Enrique Tello and two others.

The trio disappeared in downtown Cancun late on Feb. 2. Their bodies, riddled with bullets, were found the next morning beside a highway, 15 miles away. The general's arms and legs had been broken, apparently as a result of torture. Authorities believe the slaying was the work of the Zetas, much-feared enforcers for drug-smuggling gangs.

The murky case has hit Cancun like one of the tropical storms that lumber in off the Caribbean, setting off charges that a police force touted as one of the most trustworthy in the nation is rife with corruption.

A high-profile killing in the country's signature beach resort is the last thing Mexico needs at a time when drug-related violence has scared away visitors from areas such as Baja California. More than 6,000 people were slain last year, predominantly in areas near the U.S. border, while President Felipe Calderon has struggled to root out corruption in law enforcement at every level.

"The reality is that Cancun, like the rest of Mexico, is at war," said Cesar Muñoz, an editor at Novedades, a daily newspaper in Cancun that has closely followed the Tello case. "It's at war with the drug cartels."

The slayings are raising uncomfortable questions about how deeply corruption has infected the city's government. The director of the Cancun jail and head of the city's traffic division also have been detained, according to news reports. There is no sign, however, that Mayor Gregorio Sanchez, a self-styled reformer elected last year, is under investigation.

"There is corruption," Cancun's new police chief, Maria Esther Estiubarte, the first woman to hold the post, conceded in an interview a few days after taking the job. But she said it was limited. "It doesn't put the tourist destination at risk," Estiubarte said.

The incident does not seem to have spooked spring break vacationers, who already are pouring into the palm-lined beach region. The killings took place miles from the sprawling resorts and high-rises, where security is strict and crime against tourists is rare.

The surrounding state of Quintana Roo remains relatively tranquil compared with other states where drug violence has exploded. The state registered about 20 homicides last year.

But although roadside billboards welcome visitors to "paradise," Cancun has long had an unsavory side that looks nothing like the brochure pictures of sugary beaches and deep-blue waters.

The area is a well-established transshipment point for cocaine smuggled by air from South America or overland through Central America on its way to the U.S. A former Quintana Roo governor, Mario Villanueva Madrid, awaits extradition to the United States on charges that he took payoffs in exchange for helping Mexican traffickers move tons of cocaine through his state.

In August, a pile of 11 decapitated bodies turned up in the neighboring state of Yucatan, in what was believed to be an organized-crime hit. A 12th headless body was found the same day in a separate spot. The killings were attributed to the Zetas.

Many residents worry that the killings augur a menacing new phase for Cancun. Apart from the main tourist zone, drug sales flourish on the streets of the shabbiest barrios, where prostitutes beckon from the shadows and fear of gang members keeps residents from venturing out more than a few blocks at night.

A stream of job seekers from Mexico's impoverished south means business for flophouses that charge as little as $50 a month, but it has strained the city's resources. Along rutted streets on the edge of town, squatter families inhabit stick shacks that are lighted by electricity stolen from nearby utility lines.

The fast growth has turned this other Cancun into a traffic-clogged city of about 750,000 -- big enough, some say, to serve as cover for the drug syndicates that operate elsewhere in Mexico.

"This is the moment. Cancun has grown a lot and now looks like a good cave, a good hiding place, for these activities," said Father Rafael Ruiz, a parish priest in a graffiti-spattered part of what he calls the "Mexican Cancun."

Around town, mystery cloaks the case of the slain general. Tello's body, along with those of army Lt. Getulio Cesar Roman Zuñiga and Juan Ramirez Sanchez, who was the mayor's nephew, were found in a pickup next to the road to colonial Merida, which sits across the Yucatan peninsula about 175 miles from Cancun.

They were seized apparently in downtown Cancun hours after Mayor Sanchez introduced Tello to other municipal staffers as his new security advisor, with the task of creating a separate elite police squad.

Former top infantry commander of the Mexican army, Tello had completed a command tour in the western state of Michoacan as part of Calderon's military-led offensive against drug traffickers. He had arrived in Cancun in late January.

Sanchez had asked Tello, known as a well-trained and tough commander, to organize a SWAT-type team of 100 former soldiers that would answer only to the mayor; essentially a parallel force above the reach of then-Police Chief Velasco.

The mayor said he wanted a new force that would remain "outside the contamination" of the 2,000-officer police department.

"We don't want to put all our eggs in the same basket," he said in an interview.

Sanchez said he did not suspect Velasco of wrongdoing, but believed that there were dirty cops on the force, despite months of culling.

A popular businessman who ran as candidate of a leftist coalition, Sanchez has cultivated the image of a reformer in less than a year in office. He announced a "zero tolerance" policy on corruption and has fired 150 suspect cops. In December, Sanchez said, the federal government named Cancun's force the third-most trustworthy in the country.

Skeptics point out that it was Sanchez who hired Velasco, a balding, old-school cop with a push-broom mustache and the nickname "Viking." The mayor also continued to back his pick after investigators in the Tello case began to focus on the chief. If Velasco was up to no good, residents ask privately, how is it possible the mayor didn't know?

On Feb. 11, a week after the killing, federal authorities said they had arrested seven members of an alleged Zetas cell in Cancun. They included a former soldier and an active-duty Cancun police officer.

Federal prosecutors said they had received testimony that Velasco offered "protection and aid" to the cell and had been seen meeting with its leaders. Velasco is under a 40-day detention during the investigation.

After Velasco was hauled off to Mexico City for questioning, Quintana Roo prosecutors said a vehicle check on his Nissan Armada, painted with police logos, indicated that it had been reported stolen in Mexico City in 2006. Inside were CDs with narcocorridos about the Zetas. Songs included "Z Dynasty," "Pact of Honor" and "Eagles Go Alone."

The motive for the killing is unclear. One theory is that Tello was set up by drug traffickers he battled in Michoacan. Another holds that the Zetas saw him as a threat to operations in Cancun.

Mayor Sanchez said he was committed to creating his SWAT force once he found someone to run it. But the general's killing has left many in Cancun uneasy about the dark forces working in their midst.

"There is a lot of fear," said Ruiz, the parish priest. "We know that these people, who have little sense of morality or justice, are among the people."

ken.ellingwood@latimes.com



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