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A Day in the Life of Mexico -- Our failed Hispanic Neighbor to the South

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Hisler

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Dec 23, 2009, 12:09:46 AM12/23/09
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Now what don't you understand about mexico!!!!!!!!!!!!!


http://borderreporter.com/2009/12/beltrans-floundering/
This morning, they killed the mother of the Special Forces trooper
who died in the gunbattle with Arturo Beltr�n Leyva. Killed her
while she slept along with three others, all familymembers of
Melquisedec Angulo C�rdova.

This is the Beltr�n Leyva legacy. No intelligence, no networks,
pure violence. Mr. Angulo�s name was one of the only ones published
in the media as being one of the men who went after Beltr�n. That
must be how they got his name or they would have targeted someone
who actually posed a threat, say, the commanding officer who
organized the attack. Angulo didn�t have a vendetta, he was serving
his country when he went up against them.

A story has been widely circulated in the media of the Dec. 2
murder of Edgar Bayardo, the snitch who allegedly gave up Beltr�n.
My Mexican law enforcement people are telling quite a different
tale that I�m trying to corroborate from up here but I know now
that Bayardo was not the sopl�n.

This idiocy, of killing Angulo�s mother, confirms some of that.
There�s no intel here, and I mean that in the smarts sense and in
context of information-gathering. Getting to her and the rest of
the family was a relatively simple thing. Follow the funeral to
Para�so, Tabasco and proceed from there. There was newspaper, radio
and television coverage; the Internet�s full of stories of what the
man did for his country and how he died. The funeral was yesterday.

When the acting chief of security for Mexico City was murdered in
2008, Beltr�n�s people were blamed for that assassination as well.
Inept killer, he used two guns but only one had a silencer.

The murder does nothing to further the Beltr�n Leyva name. It is
possible, of course, that some other organization, say, for
instance, the Sinaloans, did the job in order to cast a shadow on
their enemies. But the time to cast shadows and blame has passed.
Beltr�n is dead. And the Sinaloans, for all their own semblance of
viciousness, maintain relatively decent public relations (so far,
anyway). When the Beltr�n people killed the son of a restaurant
owner in a nasty shootout in Cd. Obreg�n a while back, a man came
to visit the owner and told him his son�s killing had been avenged.
The next day, three Zetas turned up dead in the canals outside the
city. I know the story because I talked to the owner and to a
journalist in the area.

Bad, bad move. They�re desperate, drowning; the cartel is headless.
But a dead cascabel will still bite.
==================================

MEXICO CITY�Gunmen mowed down the family of a Mexican marine just
hours after the military honored him as a national hero for losing
his life during a raid that took down powerful drug kingpin Arturo
Beltran Leyva.
The brazen attack happened shortly before midnight Monday at the
home of fallen marine Melquisedet Angulo in the town of Paraiso in
the Gulf coast state of Tabasco, police said.

Hit men linked to Beltran Leyva's cartel have a strong presence in
the state and are believed to be behind the slayings of Angulo's
mother, his two siblings and his aunt, federal officials said
Tuesday. Another unidentified woman was being treated at a hospital
for unspecified wounds.

President Felipe Calderon called the attack "a cowardly act" and
vowed to press forward with his nationwide drug fight involving
more than 45,000 troops.

"We will not be intimidated by criminals without scruples like
those who committed this barbarity," he said Tuesday. "Those who
act like this deserve the unanimous repudiation of society and they
must pay for their crime."

Angulo and Beltran Leyva were both killed during a shootout last
week between marines and the cartel at an apartment complex in the
colonial city of Cuernavaca, south of Mexico City.

Federal officials had warned the power vacuum left by Beltran
Leyva's death could unleash more violence.

Beltran Leyva was among the most-wanted drug lords in both Mexico
and the United States and is the


biggest trafficker taken down by the Calderon administration so
far.
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration officials said Beltran Leyva's
cartel, of the same name, has been responsible for much of the
bloodshed across Mexico, where more than 15,000 people have been
killed by drug violence since Calderon launched his crackdown in
2006.

Angulo was the only marine killed in the Dec. 16 raid that sparked
a nearly two-hour shootout with gunmen, who also launched grenades
at troops trying to arrest them. Two other marines were injured in
the grenade explosions.

More than 60 marines participated in the operation, which also left
six of Beltran Leyva's gunmen dead.

Hours before she was gunned down, Angulo's mother had attended her
son's memorial service in Mexico City, where she had received the
Mexican flag covering his coffin and had been promised money from
the military.

Angulo is survived by two children, ages 3 and 16 months. The
military has said it would provide them with scholarships.

======================
When does it end COURTESY OF THE U.P.A

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLxPzTSMblc

And this is what happens when goverment dosen't have balls enough
to stop the invasion,everybody is guilty except the guilty

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NPOuj-WzAoA&feature=related

Who will govern the goverment

=======================
Amnesty push coming again � be ready
Comments 2 | Recommend 1
December 21, 2009 6:28 PM
To the editor:
http://www.jdnews.com/news/year-71048-amnesty-coming.html
Will this be the year of �amnesty?� Our community organizer is
pledging to make amnesty a priority for the coming year when he
says: �I think we can get it done.�

Specifically, he supports amnesty as a way of letting illegal
aliens gain access to taxpayer-funded health care benefits.

The organizer in chief has met one on one with advocates of amnesty
at the White House to assure them he shares their priorities.

Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano is describing
immigration reform as a �top priority for both me and the
president;� and she has met with amnesty supporters in Congress,
including Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., who is expected to take the
lead on this issue.

Members of Congress, including Rep. Luis Gutierrez, the most vocal
advocate of amnesty in the U.S. House of Representatives, are
promising special interests that amnesty is on the agenda.

According to Bob Goldsborough, head of Americans for Immigration
Control, maybe this can be stopped if enough of us will help by any
legal means possible � especially by contacting our members of
Congress.

Early in 2010, the Democratic leadership, under pressure from the
radicals, seems intent on a go-for-broke major amnesty bill � far
enough from the November election to prevent an electoral backlash.

According to John Vinson, editor of Immigration Watch, even if the
amnesty forces decline such a gamble, one can be sure they will
pursue a piecemeal strategy to pass minor amnesties and subvert our
immigration laws.

With many obstacles in front of a mass amnesty for all or most of
an estimated 12 million illegal aliens in this country, some
illegal alien advocates are considering backup plans to advance
their cause. One is Thomas Saenz, who heads the Latino supremacist
Mexican-American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

If a major amnesty bill can�t pass, he recommends efforts to pass
smaller amnesties for selected groups of illegal aliens such as
farm workers and high school students and graduates who came to the
U.S. illegally as children with their parents.

Another part of this stealth amnesty strategy he recommends is
encouraging the Obama administration to go easy on immigration law
enforcement and weaken existing laws. One is Section 287(g), which
enables state and local police agencies to help enforce immigration
laws.

Section 287(g) is a major target of the open borders lobby. At
present 77 jurisdictions in 25 states (none in North Carolina) have
signed on to 287(g) � a measure Congress passed in 1996.

The stealth amnesty strategy with respect to 287(g) is already in
motion. Defending this valuable program should be high on the
agenda of the true immigration reform movement and all who respect
the rule of law.

Sen. Schumer has claimed that it is now time to enact amnesty for
illegal aliens because allegedly we have made great progress in
border control. But the Mexican border is still far from secure.
The Justice Department admitted that vast stretches of that border
are �easily breached.� Specifically, according to the U.S. Border
Patrol, only 697 miles of the 1,954 mile-long Mexican border is
under �effective control.�

With over 10 percent of Americans out of work, we continue to admit
1.6 million immigrants and visa recipients a year. Many legal
immigrants come in under provisions that simply make no sense in
terms of national interests and needs.

In addition to the 1.6 million admissions, we have a refugee
resettlement program, significantly subsidized by taxpayers that
brought 80,000 �refugees� into the United States last year.

For your future and mine, we need to take immigration seriously.

Fred Decker


=========================
http://www.latintelligence.com/2009/11/19/breaking-mexicos-fall/

Philip Caputo paints a grim picture of Mexico�s current war on
drugs in which appears in the December 2009 issue of The Atlantic.
His pessimism reflects more than just skyrocketing murders in
places such as Ciudad Juarez, or the seeming inability of the local
police forces and courts to get to the bottom of these crimes. His
chief concern revolves around Mexico�s military.

Caputo suggests that the military is in cahoots with the drug
cartels today, much as they were in the past. Laying out what he
can piece together from the few wary interviewees willing to speak
to him, he depicts an independent military dismissive of human
rights in the best case, and a military turned cartel in the worst.
With both the Calderon and the U.S. government pinning their hopes
in the war on drugs on this military, either scenario is bad news.

However corrupt the military is today, there is a fundamental
difference from the earlier parallels he poses, and these
differences matter for Mexico�s future. In the 1980s the secretary
of defense was found to be working with no less than three drug
cartels, and in the 1990s Mexico�s �drug czar� was discovered to be
on the payroll of the Juarez cartel. But these incidences were part
of a larger systematic relationship between drug traffickers and
the long-standing ruling political party, the PRI. The military�s
past drug ties can�t be seen in isolation from an organized system
of control and enrichment constructed by the PRI that also
encompassed the police, courts, and politicians.

Today, it isn�t that corruption has ended. But it is no longer as
centralized and coordinated as in the past. Democratization opened
up not just the political system to different political parties,
but also the illicit economy � effectively ending the unwritten
contracts that existed for years between the PRI and particular
drug traffickers.

What this means is that corruption in the military today is more
autonomous than in the past � not linked to a larger system, not
controlled or checked by any political party, and perhaps not
coming from the top of the chain of command. For some, this may be
even worse news � well armed forces with no master. But, this shift
may also mean that it is now much more possible to attack
corruption � whether in the military or other parts of the
government. With each pocket today no longer part of the larger
functioning of an authoritarian system, a focused combination of
vetting, training, prosecution, and long-term institution building
could yield results. Mexico�s corruption remains a very difficult,
but no longer insurmountable problem. And the current democratic
political dynamic � forcing politicians to appeal to voters � may
increase the chances that the Mexican government goes down a
different road.

This better outcome is by no means guaranteed. It will take an
incredible amount of work and resources over a long period of time.
But the underlying dynamics today are quite different, and they
provide Mexico � and the United States �an opportunity so that in
ten years another journalist will not be writing a similar �Fall of
Mexico� story.
======================================
The decline of �Democratic Security?�
http://www.cipcol.org/?p=1248

That is the title of a report released two weeks ago by the
Corporaci�n Nuevo Arco Iris, one of a small handful of security-
focused think-tanks in Bogot�. It has received a lot of attention
in the Colombian media because it warns of some bad news.

For the first time since �lvaro Uribe and his get-tough �Democratic
Security� policy entered Colombia�s presidency in 2002, the
country�s security indicators are headed in the wrong direction.
Nuevo Arco Iris contends that the Uribe government�s policies are
experiencing diminishing returns after a high point in mid-2008,
when paramilitary leaders were extradited, hostages were freed, and
top FARC leaders were killed.

Here are a few points that stood out in my reading of the report.

The FARC are more active. Nuevo Arco Iris registered 1,429 actions
initiated by this guerrilla group through October 20, 2009 � more
than 30 percent more than in all of 2008. Their increased capacity
is most evident in the southwestern departments of Cauca and
Nari�o, the Orinoco-basin department of Guaviare, and the coca-
producing Bajo Cauca region in northern Antioquia department. The
guerrillas are relying ever more heavily on landmines � including
the planting of enormous minefields � and snipers. This, Nuevo Arco
Iris says, is part of the FARC�s �Plan Renacer� (Rebirth Plan)
begun after �Alfonso Cano� took over the group�s leadership in
2008.

�New� paramilitary groups are far more active. In 2008 and 2009,
Nuevo Arco Iris detected activity of �emerging criminal bands,� or
groups including elements of the now-defunct United Self-Defense
Forces of Colombia (AUC), in 293 of Colombia�s 1,100 municipalities
(counties). They estimate 11,000 people belonging to dozens of such
armed bands.

Crisis in Medell�n. While a few years ago Medell�n had reduced its
murder rate to 32 killings per 100,000 residents, this year the
murder rate has shot back up to 73 per 100,000 residents. Nuevo
Arco Iris attributes the rise to violence between gangs,
narcotrafficking groups and re-forming paramilitary groups, all of
them trying to fill the vacuum left by the boss who had dominated
the city�s criminality for much of the 2000s: paramilitary leader
Diego Fernando Murillo, �Don Berna,� extradited to the United
States in May 2008.
�
New� paramilitaries are also increasingly active in Bogot�,
especially poor and working-class neighborhoods in the city�s west
and south. They appear to exercise significant influence in the
city�s main food wholesaling and distribution center, Corabastos,
and over the city�s semi-legal markets in untaxed and often
counterfeit goods, known as �Sanandresitos.�

Judicial actions in cases of �false positives� or extrajudicial
executions. Nuevo Arco Iris reports that Colombia�s Prosecutor-
General�s Office (Fiscal�a) is currently investigating more than
2,000 members of Colombia�s armed forces on charges of killing
civilians and presenting them later as civilians killed in combat.
Of this number, 476 are detained, a few serving jail terms and most
awaiting trial.
===================================
http://www.myfoxphoenix.com/dpp/news/local/marijuana-taped-to-body-
12-21-2009
Mexican Boy Caught Smuggling Marijuana
Updated: Monday, 21 Dec 2009, 7:32 PM MST
Published : Monday, 21 Dec 2009, 7:33 PM MST

DOUGLAS, Ariz. - U.S. Customs and Border Patrol have caught a 13-
year-old Mexican boy trying to smuggling marijuana across the
Douglas port of entry.

CBP officers say the boy was wearing loose clothing and had the
marijuana taped to his leg.

The boy was identified as a resident of Agua Prieta, Sonora,
Mexico.

The marijuana weighed about 1 pound and had an estimated street
value of over $1,700.

The marijuana was seized and the boy was returned to the custody of
his mother.
=========================
DO WE GET THE GET OUT OF JAIL CARD TOO
http://www.myfoxphoenix.com/dpp/news/local/brewer-release-non-
violent-illegals

Brewer: Release Non-Violent Illegals
Releasing non-violent prisoners would save money
Updated: Monday, 21 Dec 2009, 6:50 PM MST
Published : Monday, 21 Dec 2009, 11:56 AM MST

PHOENIX - Gov. Jan Brewer says Arizona could cut its budget deficit
by millions of dollars by taking nonviolent illegal immigrants out
of state prisons and turning them over to federal authorities for
deportation to their homelands.

This approach to cost-cutting has been used in Arizona, the busiest
illegal gateway into the United States for illegal immigrants,
since 2005.

Brewer, who ordered the state's prison director to turn over as
many nonviolent criminal immigrants as possible to U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement for deportation, said the federal
government has failed to fully reimburse Arizona for the costs of
incarcerating illegal immigrants convicted of state crimes.

"The federal government refuses to secure our borders and allows
criminal aliens to enter our state, and then Arizona taxpayers pay
for the prosecution of these criminal aliens. And then the federal
government sticks us with the bill for their incarceration," Brewer
said. "We cannot afford to be their host."

The Republican governor discussed the handovers and other cost-
cutting measures at a cabinet meeting Monday that was focused on
confronting the state's budget crisis. Brewer said Arizona is
facing some of the worst financial days in its 97-year history,
with prospects for the coming year looking bleak.

Even after the Legislature approved a budget bill over the weekend,
Arizona still faces a $1.5 billion deficit in an $8.4 billion
spending plan this budget year and a projected $3.4 billion
shortfall in the budget year that begins on July 1.

The bill contained $193 million in funding cuts and other changes
that set the stage for agencies to reduce services and cut state
employee pay. It included a midyear 7.5 percent cut for most
agencies and sweeps dollars from more than 100 special purpose
funds to prop up regular budget spending.

The bill, which Brewer said she intends to sign in the coming days,
said state agencies may cut employee compensation by up to 5
percent.

Brewer instructed a state official Monday to begin the rule-making
process necessary for carrying out such a pay cut. But Brewer
spokesman Paul Senseman later said the process was started as a
contingency.

The governor said the release of criminal immigrants from state
prisons will reduce the state's costs and that she would work with
state lawmakers to come up with tougher penalties for such
offenders who sneak back into the country after their release from
prison.

Under state law, the state may release a criminal immigrant to
federal authorities if it gets a deportation order and the inmate
has served at least half of his or her sentence, typically for
crimes like drunken driving and lower-level drug offenses.
Prisoners convicted of murder or sex offenses aren't eligible for
release.

Barrett Marson, spokesman for the Arizona Department of
Corrections, said state law allows for such releases 90 days before
the end of a prison sentence. Marson said state prison officials
were working to transfer several hundred criminal immigrants to
federal authorities.

About 200 criminal immigrants are released early from prison in
Arizona each month and turned over to federal authorities. Eighty
percent of those are immediately deported to Mexico, while the rest
are sent to federal detention centers, said Virginia Kice, a
spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Under a previously approved program Brewer now wants implemented,
about 1,300 prisoners would be turned over to ICE in the coming 18
months, saving the state about $5.7 million.

Republican Sen. Russell Pearce of Mesa, the Legislature's
staunchest advocate for tougher immigration enforcement, said he
will help pursue legislation to impose tougher sentences on
criminal immigrants who sneak back into the United States.

"If they return to the state of Arizona, they are going to have
white hair when they get out of that prison," Pearce said
========================
http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/mexico-106560-protect-
ayala.html
Protect norteno singer Ramon Ayala

December 20, 2009 10:34 PM
By JARED JANES, The Monitor
Mexico�s National Human Rights Commission asked federal prosecutors
to ensure the safety of Grammy-winning norte�o icon Ramon Ayala
while he being is detained.

The commission stepped in after it received worried phone calls
from Ayala�s wife and lawyer over his detention following a
military raid Dec. 11.
Ayala, a 64-year-old Hidalgo resident, was detained at a Christmas
party allegedly thrown by the Beltran Leyva cartel.
He has been held in Mexico since Dec. 11 along with his band, Los
Bravos del Norte.
A spokesman for Mexico�s attorney general said this week that the
Mexican accordionist can be held at least 40 more days at a
government detention center pending an investigation into the
party.
Ayala�s attorneys insist that he does not have ties to the cartel
and was only at the soiree because he was hired to play there and
did not realize it was hosted by suspected members of the Beltran
Leyva cartel.
Mexican Attorney General Arturo Chavez told reporters Thursday that
any possible charges against the musician would be determined by
the investigation.
Chavez said the band�s musicians provided conflicting statements
that compelled prosecutors to target them in the investigation.
Los Bravos del Norte was performing at a mansion party in
Tepoztlan, Mor., outside Mexico City. Marines raided the
narcofiesta, or drug party, killing three in a shootout and
detaining 11 others.
Arturo Beltran Leyva, the suspected leader of the cartel, was
killed in a shootout with the military five days after the party.
Ayala, who attended every posada this decade before missing it
Wednesday, has not been charged with a crime.
The human rights commission has the authority to issue binding
recommendations.
==============================
http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/ecstasy-106610-seized-
brownsville.html
U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers have seized more than
600 ecstasy pills at a Brownsville Port of Entry.

The seizure occurred at the B&M Bridge where authorities discovered
620 pills hidden underneath the clothing of 23-year-old Oscar
Javier Rodea, of Brownsville.

Authorities said Rodea attempted to cross the bridge on Saturday.
He was sent to a secondary inspection area where the officers found
the drugs hidden under his clothing.

The ecstasy pills have a street value of $12,400.

Rodea was taken into custody and later turned over to the Cameron
County District Attorney�s Office for processing, Customs and
Border Protection said in a press release.
========================
http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/-106526--.html

Police: Prostitution may have prompted day care shooting
Comments 8 | Recommend 0
December 19, 2009 2:01 PM
By JEREMY ROEBUCK, The Monitor
EDINBURG � A 76-year-old man who shot a romantic rival at an adult
daycare center Thursday may have believed his victim was paying a
health care provider for sex, police said.

A note found on gunman Jose Molina�s body expressed outrage that
the nurse � in whom he shared a romantic interest � had accepted
$50 from Eugenio De Los Santos for sexual encounters, according to
investigators.

Molina�s rambling, two-page missive, addressed to the health care
provider, goes on to say that he originally intended to kill her
but decided to shoot De Los Santos instead, authorities said.

Police officers fatally shot Molina minutes after he opened fire
about 9 a.m. at the Pride & Joy Adult Day Care, located near the
intersection of East Cano Street and South 13th Avenue in Edinburg.
At least six rounds were fired at the septuagenarian when he
refused to drop his weapon under orders from authorities, Police
Chief Quirino Mu�oz said.

While investigators have not confirmed any of the details from
Molina�s note, it could explain his motivation for the rampage.

The home health care provider in question � whose name authorities
have not released � denied having sex for money with either Molina
or De Los Santos during interviews with investigators Friday. But
she allegedly told police she was aware of other nurses who are
involved in prostitution with their clients.

The relationship between the provider and the daycare center
remains unclear. Representatives of Pride & Joy did not return
calls on Friday for the second straight day.

Police continue to investigate reports that Molina had previously
served time in a Mexican prison for shooting a police officer there
10 to 15 years ago.

"All we heard is rumors," Mu�oz said. "We were given that
information, but we have not confirmed it."

About 20 other daycare patrons were in the center at the time of
the shooting, but no other injuries were reported.


Monitor staff writer Ana Ley contributed to this report.
===========================
http://www.kvoa.com/news/arivaca-murder-suspects-could-face-death-
penalty/
TUCSON - Three people accused of murdering a nine year old girl and
her father appeared in court Monday. Now prosecutors have the green
light to push for the death penalty.

Shawna Forde, Jason Bush, and Albert Gaxiola are accused of barging
into a home in Arivaca back in May looking for cash and drugs.

Nine-year old Brisenia Flores was shot and killed along with her
father, Raul.

One of the suspects, Shawna Forde is the national head of Minutemen
American Defense.

After a new ruling earlier this year, the suspects were back in
court for Pima County's first mandatory hearing to determine if the
prosecution can push for the death penalty.

Only one witness took the stand, and through that witness we got
our first look at what happened the night of the murder.

Detective Juan Carlos Navaro interviewed Gina Flores, the lone
survivor of the attack. She told him how the alleged trigger man,
Jason Bush, shot her husband multiple times, then her. As she laid
on the floor acting like she was dead, Bush then turned to nine
year old Brisenia.

Talking about this interview with Gina Flores Detective Navaro
said, "Brisenia was asking 'why, why, why (did) you shoot my dad
and shoot my mom'." Then she heard Brisenia was shot.

Navaro said Bush shot Brisenia twice in the face, once from such
close range, the gun was actually touching her. He said, "The
second shot was a contact shot. It was Brisenia's left cheek."

Detective Navaro also was the one who interviewed Bush after he was
arrested. He said, Bush admitted was Forde was the mastermind but
she did not appear in court for the hearing.

Navaro said, "Bush said prior to making entry into the home that
Forde said not to leave any witnesses behind."

We were not allowed to show video of Gina and her family but the
testimony brought nearly all of them to tears.

Bush is set to go to trial next October and both Forde and Gaxiola
will have their trials in January of 2011.
=========================================
http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_14046330?source=most_viewed
Americans arrested after pot discovery
Daniel Borunda / El Paso Times Staff
Posted: 12/22/2009 12:00:00 AM MST


Two U.S. citizens were arrested in Ju�rez after a Mexican military
patrol allegedly found them with two suitcases filled with
marijuana, officials with Joint Operation Chihuahua said.

Shohn Erich Huckabee, 24, and Carlos Guillermo Quijas Ruiz, 36,
were acting suspiciously when they spotted a military patrol on
Friday night while parked at a convenience store on Avenida Abraham
Lincoln near the Bridge of the Americas, officials said. Soldiers
found 115 pounds of marijuana in the suitcases. The men were turned
over to federal authorities.

========================
http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_14030438?source=most_viewed
Mexican army finds 3 tons of marijuana in truck
Daniel Borunda / El Paso Times
Posted: 12/19/2009 12:00:00 AM MST


The Mexican army this week seized 3 tons of marijuana in a tractor-
trailer headed to the U.S. at the Zaragoza Bridge, officials with
Joint Operation Chihuahua said.

More than 6,018 pounds of marijuana was found in boxes in a
trailer, labeled "Southwest," that was carrying a variety of items.

The contraband was found Wednesday evening during a routine check
by soldiers of the 4th Artillery Regiment. The truck driver, Rene
Botello Lopez, 27, of Chihuahua City, was arrested.

http://www.globalgulag.us

jaf

unread,
Dec 23, 2009, 3:19:46 PM12/23/09
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"Hisler" <His...@cocks.net> wrote in message news:hgs8mr$4jn$1...@news.eternal-september.org...

> Now what don't you understand about mexico!!!!!!!!!!!!!
>
>
> http://borderreporter.com/2009/12/beltrans-floundering/
> This morning, they killed the mother of the Special Forces trooper
>


Coming soon to a neighborhood near you.


John

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