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  1. #1
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    18 killed in gunbattles in northeastern Mexico

    18 killed in gunbattles in northeastern Mexico
    By RICARDO GONZALEZ Associated Press © 2011 The Associated Press
    March 8, 2011, 12:15AM


    CULIACAN, Mexico — Gunbattles between rival gangs killed 18 people in a northeastern Mexican town Monday, a day after seven police officers and an inmate died in an ambush of a convoy transporting prisoners in western Mexico.

    The fighting in the town of Abasolo erupted Monday morning and left at least 18 people dead, the Tamaulipas state government said in a three-sentence statement that offered no details. It said state and federal security forces had arrived in the town to restore order and investigate.

    The shooting came a month after shootings in the nearby town of Padilla also killed 18 people, several of them innocent bystanders.

    Tamaulipas has been wracked by a turf war between the Zetas and Gulf cartels, and information on violence in some of the smaller towns is notoriously scarce. Often official confirmation does not come for hours or days, leaving residents to cower in their homes and communicate through social media.

    Tamaulipas residents sent Twitter messages about Monday's shootings hours before the government confirmed the bloodshed. Some tweets warned people to stay indoors and others demanded official information. Under constant threat from drug gangs, the Tamaulipas state media often ignore drug-gang violence completely.

    In northwestern Sinaloa state, meanwhile, gunmen swarmed a convoy transporting two prisoners, shredding three police vehicles with bullets and killing seven officers and one inmate, Sinaloa state Attorney General Marco Antonio Higuera said Monday. Six officers and the second inmate were wounded.

    Attackers traveling in about 20 vehicles caught the police convoy in a crossfire Sunday near the city of Guasave, Sinaloa state Attorney General Marco Antonio Higuera said.

    "The patrol vehicles were destroyed. It was practically a massacre," Higuera said. "Initial reports indicate there were 1,200 shell casings at the scene."

    The three state police patrol vehicles were traveling to the state capital of Culiacan when they came under fire from attackers who apparently lay in wait on a highway. Higuera said the officers fought off a first attack but were later caught in concentrated fire from a larger number of vehicles.

    Federal police, meanwhile, said a newly captured leader of the Zetas drug cartel revealed it has a non-aggression pact with three other gangs — the Juarez, Beltran Leyva and Arellano Felix organizations. While the four gangs are not known recently to have been fighting major turf wars with each other, it was the first mention of a formal truce between them.

    The alleged Zetas leader, Marcos Carmona Hernandez, was arrested Monday in the southern state of Oaxaca, said Ramon Pequeno, the federal police anti-narcotics chief.

    Hernandez, 29, allegedly took over command of Zetas operations in Oaxaca after the Jan. 17 arrest of his reputed predecessor, Flavio Mendez Santiago. Pequeno said Hernandez is suspected of several kidnappings and murders and allegedly had the collaboration of corrupt state and municipal police.

    Pequeno said Hernandez revealed the non-aggression pact to police, the latest insight into Mexico's drug underworld of shifting alliances.

    The agreement, however, appeared to be confirmation of reality more than a game-changer. The four gangs in the pact have a common enemy: the powerful Sinaloa cartel led by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, one of the world's most-wanted drug lords.

    Jorge Chabat, a Mexican expert on the drug trade, said the pact would be difficult to corroborate but was not surprising.

    "It's normal that the cartels seek at certain times to ally themselves because it would be irrational to fight against everybody," he said.

    Pequeno did not say when the gangs reportedly agreed to their truce.

    The Zetas, once a group of hitmen, have become a potent gang in their own right, their reach extending from northeastern Mexico to Central America.

    Mexican authorities say the Sinaloa and Gulf cartels made a pact last year to destroy the Zetas.

    Sinaloa, meanwhile, is fighting the Juarez cartel in the northern state of Chihuahua, a war that has turned the border city of Ciudad Juarez into one of the world's deadliest.

    Both the Beltran Leyva and the Tijuana-based Arellano Felix gangs have been on the decline since the arrest or killing of most of their top leaders. U.S. and Mexican officials say the splintering of the Arellano Felix gangs has allowed Sinaloa to make significant inroads in the border city of Tijuana.

    The Beltran Leyvas were once part of the Sinaloa cartel and bitter enemies of the Zetas. Since splitting off from Sinaloa in 2008, however, the Beltran Leyva gang has struggled to survive.

    Its remnants are believed to be fighting in several states south of Mexico City, including Guerrero, home to the resort city of Acapulco.

    Three severed heads were found Monday in plastic bags outside a tunnel that connects central Acapulco to the outskirts of the city.

    The victims were all male, the Guerrero state Public Safety Department said in a statement.

    A note left at the scene said the beheadings were revenge for the killing of a man who was shot dead during an attempted kidnapping.

    Police also announced the capture of a suspected prominent drug gang member who allegedly oversaw kidnappings, extortion, bribery and local drug distribution for the "independent cartel of Acapulco," a group that splintered from the Beltran Leyvas.

    Benjamin Flores Reyes, alias "The Godfather," was arrested Sunday after a six-month investigation, the federal Public Safety Department said in a statement.

    Flores studied criminal psychology for a time during 15 years he spent living in the United States, the statement added. He returned to Mexico about three years ago and allegedly signed up with the organization formerly led by Edgar Valdez Villarreal, known as "La Barbie," who was arrested last year.

    The government of President Felipe Calderon has brought down an unprecedented number of cartel bosses since launching a military offensive against drug traffickers in December 2006.

    However, violence has soared as Mexico's drug cartels have become increasingly splintered and aggressive. More than 35,000 people have been killed nationwide in the past four years.

    ___

    Associated Press writer E. Eduardo Castillo in Mexico City contributed to this report.

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/ ... 61590.html

  2. #2
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    Mexico City focuses on CCTV to combat crime

    The upheaval has produced a wave of killings, both within crime organisations, as members jostle to fill power vacuums, and between them as various criminal groups fight for control of smuggling routes into the US.
    http://www.alipac.us/ftopic-230650-0-da ... rasc-.html
    Join our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & to secure US borders by joining our E-mail Alerts at http://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  3. #3
    working4change
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    FLOOD OF CALLS TO UTAH

    ALIPAC
    ALIPAC President or Administrator



    Joined: Nov 10, 2004
    Posts: 38355
    Posted: Tue Mar 08, 2011 8:00 am Post subject: Treason in Utah: Flood of Calls Our Only Hope

    "I felt like a lot of people up here turned their backs. I don't know who to trust anymore up here. I really feel like there's a disconnect on this hill like there is in D.C." -- Rep. Chris Herrod, R-Provo, Utah


    Friends of ALIPAC,

    The resort industry in Utah just weighed in telling Governor Herbert how happy they are about this new guest worker Amnesty program on his desk. Why wouldn't they be? The bill would virtually nullify all other state and federal laws aimed at deterring illegal immigration.

    Brave Americans like you are interrupting your day for a whole 5 minutes to call, but Governor Gary R. Herbert's office is ready for you with assistants who merely say they are 'counting your vote'. You can bet the illegal aliens and their supporters are calling over and over again.

    Our only hope is for enough of you to understand that it is going to take a deluge of thousands upon thousands of calls coming into these offices from Utah and every other state in America to have a chance at stopping this AMNESTY legislation.

    Allied organizations are also responding and we all must work together. Please take this seriously. Please call today and help us increase the volume of calls opposing Amnesty!


    Step 1: Make Your Call

    Pick up the phone, any phone, and spend the few pennies on long distance if necessary. Call 801-538-1000 or 800-705-2464. Deliver your own distinct version of our sample message.

    Your calls must be firm and professional but not over the top if you want to help our cause.

    "I'm calling to ask Governor Herbert to veto the illegal alien Amnesty bill on his desk. Utah does not have the Constitutional authority to stop the enforcement of America's popular existing immigration laws. If Governor Herbert does not stop this unconstitutional Amnesty bill that would hurt innocent Americans workers, students, taxpayers, and voters then I will support lawsuits and boycotts against Utah and I will make it my personal priority to throw every politician that supports this Amnesty bill out of office in the next elections."

    Step 2: Reinforce in writing.

    Send in a copy of your own brief and distinct message opposing "Utah's Amnesty for Illegals" via fax, email, or letter.

    Governor Gary R. Herbert
    350 North State Street, Suite 200
    PO Box 142220
    Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-2220
    Fax 801-538-1528
    Email Link
    http://www.utah.gov/governor/contact/index.html


    Step 3: Magnify your efforts

    Once you have completed your calls and followed up in writing, you should then approach friends, family members, neighbors, and online associates to follow your lead immediately.

    Each one of you is quite capably of magnifying your impact by getting at least 3 others to do the same.

    This email forwards easily. It can be posted in online forums. You can circulate or share this request on Facebook, you can tweet it, you can text others "Hey go to alipac.us and call Utah to stop Amnesty NOW!". You can call your daughter and ask her to help. You can walk over to your neighbor's house and ask them to help.

    Don't go it alone. Rally Americans to this crisis. You will not be properly informed, forewarned, or directed by the media.

    It's Americans vs. Traitors in Utah today.

    You can post your comments, version of our message, questions, feedback, pushback, etc... At this link where our ALIPAC activists stand ready to assist and encourage you...


    Let's go ALIPACers!

    Sincerely,


    William Gheen and The ALIPAC Team
    www.alipac.us



    PS: Special thanks to each of you who made our first funds drive of 2011 a success. We reached our minimum goals in the final 24 hours before the deadline. You all deserve more thanks than we can offer right now due to the intense fighting in the states. We know you all want us focused on the fight, so please accept our heartfelt thanks and appreciation for all of you who have sacrificed and donated to keep us in the battle.

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