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Old 02-04-2010, 12:25   #1
Richard
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Juárez Massacre Families May Seek Safety In US

Certainly not the Juarez I remember.

Richard


Quote:
Families Of 16 Killed In Juárez Massacre May Seek Safety In U.S.
Alfredo Corchado, DMN, 4 Feb 2010

One by one, the coffins were carried out from small homes Wednesday, held carefully by grieving friends and relatives who demanded justice – but expressed little confidence they'll ever get it.

Many, instead, said they are planning to abandon Mexico and move to Texas to save their other children.

"I never even gave the United States much thought," said José Luís Aguilar Rangel, 38, as he stood over his son's coffin, which lay next to the coffin of his nephew Horacio. "But Mexico has abandoned us, betrayed us.

<snip>

Eight teens were buried Wednesday – all victims of a massacre early Sunday that left 16 young people dead, most of them university students and many of them members of a baseball team. All were celebrating a friend's birthday when a dozen or so gunmen burst into a private house after midnight and sprayed the place with bullets.

Mexican authorities said Tuesday that a top gang leader, believed to be from El Paso and a member of the Juárez cartel, was thought to be responsible for the massacre of the teens. He was killed in a shootout with soldiers Monday.

Authorities said Adrian Ramírez, known as "El Rama" or "El Doce" and a leader of the Barrio Azteca gang, was responsible for planning and carrying out the massacre.

At a news conference, police also presented José Dolores Arroyo, arrested on accusations of being a lookout for the gunmen.

Authorities went to extraordinary lengths to show that the two men were involved in the massacre, using the Internet to post photos, interrogation transcripts and a diagram of the gang organization, including other suspects, even listing their salaries as hitmen or lookouts, starting at about $200 a week.

According to the posted transcript, Arroyo told police that the gunmen believed the students were members of a rival gang known as Artistic Assassins who work for Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, purported to be the nation's most powerful drug lord and the head of the rival Sinaloa cartel.

Some officials, including Juárez Mayor José Reyes Ferriz, said the gang members probably had bad intelligence and attacked the wrong house.

(cont'd)

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...2.4bd41aa.html
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Old 02-04-2010, 13:07   #2
Bordercop
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More on Juarez...

The link: http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp...3a-xYDzkB-03ZQ



Drug hitmen suspected in party killings as parents bury dead
(AFP) – 1 day ago

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico — Hitmen working for a drug gang are the main suspects in the weekend slaying of 16 young partygoers in Mexico's Ciudad Juarez, an official said Tuesday, as families buried their dead.

Some 15 gunmen opened fire on a party packed with teenagers in the early hours of Sunday, in a particularly extreme attack in the northern border city which is notorious for deadly score-settling between drug gangs.

The majority of the dead were under 20, and most were high school or college students.

The bishop of Ciudad Juarez held mass Tuesday for the victims while some families placed altars with photographs of their deceased children and religious images in front of their homes.

"They were only at a party. They hadn't harmed anyone," one distraught neighbor, Liliana Reyes, told journalists outside.

More than 40 people died in attacks in northern regions during the long holiday weekend, but the shooting at a party of some 60 youngsters sparked widespread outrage.

Lawmakers in Congress afterwards called for a special session with top government ministers to discuss the spiraling violence.

Suspected drug attacks have marked Mexico in the past three years, with more than 15,000 killed since President Felipe Calderon launched a military clampdown on organized crime.

Calderon condemned the "cowardly assassination" of the partygoers during a visit to Japan, and Mexican authorities offered a reward of one million pesos (77,000 dollars) for information on the perpetrators.

An official from the Chihuahua state prosecutor's office, who declined to be named, said the Los Aztecas group of hitmen were the main suspects.

Los Aztecas work for the Juarez gang, which is fighting a bloody turf war against the Sinaloa cartel in the country's most violent city of Ciudad Juarez, which saw some 2,660 murders in 2009 alone, more than seven a day on average.

Authorities suspect that the party slayings were linked to a revenge attack.

"The hitmen were aiming at someone specific, according to witness statements," the state official said, adding that an unidentified man had warned the youths of the attack beforehand.

President Calderon has scored several high-profile victories against drug gangs in recent months, including the slaying of kingpin Arturo Beltran Leyva in December, and the arrest of the notorious hitman Teodoro Garcia Simental, known as "El Teo," in January.

But violent attacks remain part of daily life in some areas, particularly around the northern border with the United States.

Gunmen killed 10 people over the weekend in Torreon, in the northern state of Coahuila, after opening fire on a crowd inside a bar.

Armed attackers on Monday opened fire in a bar in Ciudad Juarez, killing five people and injuring six others, police said.

Federal police also confronted suspected members of the Los Zetas gang in two successive shootouts late Monday, which left seven traffickers and one policeman dead in Torreon.
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