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  1. #1
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    Vehicles armored all over in Mexico

    http://www.signonsandiego.com

    Vehicles armored all over


    Insecurities, rash of kidnappings turn Tijuana business into growth industry

    By Anna Cearley
    UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
    June 25, 2006

    TIJUANA – The waiting room of Tijuana's longest-running car-armoring business showcases a series of multipane glass sheets that have been shot at with assault rifles.

    The glass has been distorted, and cracks emanate in a flower pattern from the point of impact. But the still-intact pieces – composed of layers of thick, reinforced glass – are a strong sell to potential customers who have the $50,000 or more required to armor their car.

    In the three years since Carlos Guerrero's Total Shield-Blindado Seguro factory opened, business has grown substantially, mostly through word of mouth, among an elite border clientele fearful of abductions.

    “About 20 percent of people who come here have been victims themselves,” Guerrero said. “They tell me about what happened to them, and I start to feel like a psychologist. . . . They feel insecure and they come here looking for security.”

    Security comes in the form of 900 to 1,300 pounds of glass and steel plates and a range of other accessories his company offers, such as a pepper-spray system to delay attackers and a nail-throwing mechanism to puncture tires.

    Barometer of insecurity
    The demand for this kind of protection is symptomatic of the problems faced by border communities in Mexico where kidnappings seem to take place on a weekly basis though many cases aren't reported to authorities.

    Some of these abductions are motivated by purely monetary gain, and others are related to drug-trafficking groups vying for power or settling scores.

    Guerrero said he can't discriminate because his clients don't share such details. He doesn't ask probing questions, he said, because his business is built on security and confidentiality.

    “One doesn't ask what they do for a living as long as they can pay for the car,” he said.

    He won't say who some of his better-known clients are. In general terms, Guerrero said he has done work for wealthy businessmen and their families, factory owners, police administrators and government officials. They include U.S. and Mexican citizens.

    His business is, in a sense, a barometer of the city's insecurity. The factory armors about 90 cars a year now, and his work force has grown from nine to 28.

    The day after Baja California's public security director Manuel Díaz Lerma escaped an attempt on his life in April that included hundreds of shots and a grenade lobbed at his armored convoy, Guerrero said business inquiries increased by about 30 percent.


    Expanding across border
    Guerrero has noted another trend: More wealthy Tijuana residents are moving to San Diego for safety. He said he is planning to open an Otay Mesa showroom in upcoming months.

    In Mexico, his factory has drawn clients from across northwestern Mexico. For years, these residents had to look far away to find a car-armoring factory, to places such as Texas or the Mexican state of Monterrey, Guerrero said.

    Total Shield-Blindado Seguro is a family business that started in Mexico City. Before opening the Tijuana plant, Guerrero, who runs stores in Tijuana that provide car alarms and other home security products, sent referrals to his family's plant in Mexico's interior.

    The factory in Tijuana initially was geared toward maintaining already-armored cars, and that provided about 60 percent of his business. Over time, he started to focus more on installing armor in new cars. That is now the bulk of the factory's business.

    Guerrero said the Tijuana factory has become specialized in armoring cars that can withstand attack from assault rifles.

    In Mexico City, he said, most of the business comes from protecting cars from robbers who use smaller-caliber guns to break windows and grab purses. Cars there are more typically armored with what is called Level Three glass in Mexico. It is 21 millimeters thick and can withstand attacks from firearms as powerful as a .357-caliber Magnum pistol, Guerrero said.

    In Tijuana and other border cities where crime is different, his company recommends at least a Level Four glass, which can resist an attack from an AK-47, he said.

    Level Five glass, which is 40 millimeters thick, resists all types of assault rifles, including firearms more powerful than an AK-47, such as AR-15s, Guerrero said.

    The level scale is based on Mexico's armored industry standards and isn't consistent with other countries' standards, Guerrero said.

    Sustained gunfire eventually will puncture even the most armored car, he said, but the higher level glass provides more time for people to escape to safety.

    Word of mouth
    The car-armoring industry in Mexico is growing in collaboration with car dealerships and with the growth of credit and loan programs in Mexico for people without the cash on hand to armor their car, Guerrero said.
    Alma Cabanillas, sales manager at Tijuana's Agencia Sema Automotriz, said the company has been putting clients in touch with Guerrero for about a year But the auto dealership is taking a low-key approach to what can be considered a sensitive matter.

    “We are adapting to the market,” Cabanillas, said. “If the client comes in and asks for this, then we provide them with the information, but we aren't promoting this with a massive campaign.”

    The agency allows Guerrero to display his armored cars, she said, which often draws questions.

    Representatives with the Tijuana Chamber of Commerce and other car industry groups weren't familiar with any other car-armoring factory in Tijuana. Guerrero said another company tried to get started last year, but it didn't last long. The car-armoring industry relies heavily on word of mouth, he said, in particular when an armored car saves someone's life.

    “So much of this is built on recommendations since this is a community where all the business people know each other,” he said, though he also has set up an English-Spanish Web site: .

    Guerrero typically sets up appointments with potential clients at his office to preserve their anonymity. Walk-ins are discouraged, and the factory, which is in an inconspicuous neighborhood near the bus station, is set up with a security system.

    Inside, workers scurry about, checking recent shipments of plated glass to make sure they aren't dented and cutting away at pieces of cars to replace the interior with steel and polyethylene, a tough plastic reinforcement. Most of the parts are imported. Their work is punctuated with grinding machinery noises and flying sparks.

    Guerrero considers his workers artisans. So much of what makes a car so secure, he said, is the touch of the delicate human hand.

    “Armoring a car requires craftsmanship,” he said. “This is not a job in which a machine puts everything in place. It's a very artistic and laborious process.”

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Anna Cearley: (619) 542-4595; anna.cearley@uniontrib.com
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at http://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  2. #2
    Senior Member crazybird's Avatar
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    Tanks I guess are pretty bad on gas mileage. Is this another new thing comming to our neighborhoods?
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    Senior Member IndianaJones's Avatar
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    A sure bet, what with all the gang violence and drugdeals. Bring 'em in on the TransTexas highway.
    We are NOT a nation of immigrants!

  4. #4
    Senior Member reptile09's Avatar
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    Guerrero has noted another trend: More wealthy Tijuana residents are moving to San Diego for safety. He said he is planning to open an Otay Mesa showroom in upcoming months.
    Just what I have been saying, San Diego has become the new home for the Mexican elite, all who have masses of money, yet still stick taxpayers with bills for all the free services they use. They all use local public education for all their kids. They all use local hospitals to deliver all their new anchor babies. They drive around in their nice new SUV's with Mexico license plates, not paying CA registration fees, they carry no CA insurance, have no CA driver's licenses, ignore CA smog requirements, etc. All the while they pay no American taxes.

    And among these elite Mexican rich livng here are the Mexican Mafia, Mexican drug cartel members, Mexican criminals, etc.

    Welcome to Mexico's Finest City.
    [b][i][size=117]"Leave like beaten rats. You old white people. It is your duty to die. Through love of having children, we are going to take over.â€

  5. #5
    Senior Member gofer's Avatar
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    The Super Highway will be nothing more than a "fast lane" for drug smuggling. With all those thousands of trucks, how many you think will be loaded with drugs??????

  6. #6
    Senior Member crazybird's Avatar
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    The Super Highway will be nothing more than a "fast lane" for drug smuggling. With all those thousands of trucks, how many you think will be loaded with drugs??????
    Oh I'm real sure they'll be checking every one. I mean with the terrorists and war on drugs you can be sure they are concerned about our safety. And the Devil is passing out snowcones.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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