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Law-Abiding Mexicans Taking Up Illegal Guns

Via: NPR, by 

Spencer Platt/Getty Images Police stand near the scene of a murder in Juarez, Mexico. The country suffers from drug cartel-related violence despite some of the most restrictive gun laws in the world.

In Mexico, where criminals are armed to the teeth with high-powered weapons smuggled from the United States, it may come as a surprise that the country has some of the most restrictive gun laws in the world.

Law-abiding Mexicans who want a gun to defend themselves have no good options. Either they fight government red tape to get a legal permit, or they buy one on the black market.

After an outbreak of violence, one embattled community in northern Mexico called Colonia LeBaron has begun to ask if it’s time for the country to address its gun laws.

A farming town about 130 miles southwest of El Paso, Texas, in the border state of Chihuahua, Colonia LeBaron was founded by breakaway Mormons from the U.S. who wanted to practice polygamy. Today, most residents hold dual citizenship, speak English and retain close ties to the U.S. A few still practice plural marriage.

A Community Arms Itself

The militancy of Colonia LeBaron began on May 5, 2009, when kidnappers seized a 16-year-old boy and demanded a $1 million ransom.

Though he was released unharmed, the townsfolk came together and formed an anti-crime group to take a stand against the rampant kidnappings and extortion. Their leader was Benjamin LeBaron.

But on July 7, 2009, close to 20 men showed up at Benjamin LeBaron’s house, according to his older brother, Julian LeBaron.

“They wanted to terrorize everyone into never opposing them,” Julian LeBaron says. “They dragged Benjamin out of his house, and [his brother-in-law Luis Widmar] came to help him.”

Then, he says, the criminals took the two men a couple of miles down the road and shot them.

Alex, Daniel and Max LeBaron look out over Colonia LeBaron in Chihuahua, Mexico, in front of a shack they built as a lookout against approaching criminals. The murder of two citizens galvanized this community to protect itself, Alex says.Alex, Daniel and Max LeBaron look out over Colonia LeBaron in Chihuahua, Mexico, in front of a shack they built as a lookout against approaching criminals. The murder of two citizens galvanized this community to protect itself, Alex says.

The cold-blooded murders of Benjamin LeBaron and Luis Widmar galvanized the community, Julian LeBaron says. It prompted them to take a stance that is familiar to Second Amendment advocates in the U.S., but one that is taboo in Mexico.

“I think there would be less violence if there were more guns, in the sense that I could barge in here and do whatever I want, knowing that this guy doesn’t have a gun,” says Jose Widmar, the brother of slain Luis.

Today, if the gangsters return, the LeBaron colony is locked and loaded.

They have an advocate in their cousin Alex LeBaron, a 31-year-old Chihuahua state deputy with national aspirations. He’s a burly, baby-faced politician who attended college in New Mexico and served in the U.S. Navy. His own father was killed in a carjacking.

If Alex LeBaron makes it into the federal congress, his most passionate issue will be changing Mexico’s convoluted gun laws.

“We’re Mexican citizens 100 percent, and we have the right to bear arms, and we’re going to keep fighting for that right as long as it takes,” he says.

‘Complex And Expensive’ To Buy A Gun

Alex LeBaron and some friends have gathered at a nearby gun club to plink away at steel duck silhouettes. Joining a sport shooting club is one way to avoid the aggravation of obtaining an individual permit.

Though the Mexican Constitution permits gun ownership, the government strictly limits that privilege as a response to the violence of the Mexican revolution and to uprisings in the 1960s when students looted gun stores in Mexico City.

“In the black market, it’s very easy to acquire mostly American-made weapons here in our country, but through the legal process it’s … very complex and expensive,” Alex LeBaron says.

Alex LeBaron points his gun toward a target at a local shooting club. If Alex makes it into the federal Congress, his most passionate issue will be changing Mexico's gun laws.Alex LeBaron points his gun toward a target at a local shooting club. If Alex makes it into the federal Congress, his most passionate issue will be changing Mexico’s gun laws.

A citizen who wants a permit for a weapon must apply to the Mexican military — a process that can cost upward of $10,000. Then they pay to have the permit renewed annually. The military further regulates the caliber of weapon, how many guns a person can own, how much ammunition they can buy each month, and where in the country they can take the weapon.

The government abolished the last private gun store in 1995. Today, the only legal gun store in the country is in Mexico City, guarded and operated by the armed forces.

“In Mexico, the laws effectively don’t allow you to purchase weapons,” says Dr. Oscar Urrutia Beall, a longtime member of the Paquime Shooting Club. “There are some weapons they sell in Mexico City, but the paperwork is difficult. Here, they won’t let us buy a gun, but they let us own a gun. It’s an incongruity, a failed law.”

A Gunfight With The Mexican Army

On the LeBaron family farm outside of town, workers pack red chilies for shipment to New Mexico. The family also grows alfalfa, pecans and cotton on irrigated fields bordered by the windswept foothills of the Sierra Madre mountains.

The LeBarons now have a reputation of being well-armed and not afraid to use their weapons.

One night, in October 2009, a gunfight erupted between the LeBaron brothers and a squad from the Mexican army. The LeBarons claim the soldiers came to the front gate and did not identify themselves. Fearing they were kidnappers, Alex says, the family opened fire.

“In the middle of [the] dark, sometimes, it’s better to shoot and ask questions later,” he says.

One soldier was killed. One LeBaron brother and another farmer were charged with murder, but the judge ultimately dropped the charges because the evidence had been tampered with.

These days, things have quieted down in Colonia LeBaron. Some people say it’s because of the soldiers garrisoned in town. The LeBarons maintain it’s because the criminals know the community will fight back.

And if more communities were allowed to defend themselves, says Alex LeBaron, Mexican organized crime would be on the run.

“I think Mexico’s way past that revolutionary uprising point in our history,” he says. “I think we’re ready to come into the 21st century and be part of this whole global process of modernization. And this is one of them — gun laws.”

Other Citizens Express Reservations

But do Mexicans want gun laws similar to those in the U.S., where buying an assault rifle can be as easy as buying a beer?

Basilio Sabata Salaices is the mayor of the municipality where Colonia LeBaron is located. “Here, guns are very restricted,” he says. “But I see in the U.S. many things happen because youth don’t know how to use guns. I don’t think we should make it easier to possess a weapon, as in the U.S.”

Beto Renteria is a prominent businessman in Nuevo Casas Grandes, whose wife was kidnapped three years ago and returned after he paid ransom.

“There are lots of Mexicans who have never shot a gun,” he says. “It could be dangerous putting a gun in the hands of an inexperienced person; we could hurt someone.”

Fernando Saenz is the leader of a citizen’s militia in Ascension. The town made headlines last September when a mob beat two suspected kidnappers to death.

Like many Mexicans in regions plagued by violent crime, Saenz owns an illegal, unregistered weapon — in his case, a 9 mm handgun.

I think guns are not advisable. I think what the government should do is put honest, well-trained people in jobs to impart justice.
Fernando Saenz, leader of a citizen’s militia in Ascension

“Look,” Saenz says pensively, “I think guns are not advisable. I think what the government should do is put honest, well-trained people in jobs to impart justice.”

If these three responses are any guide, the LeBarons’ crusade to revise gun laws is at odds with a certain cultural ambivalence toward firearms, at least among law-abiding Mexican citizens.

Alex LeBaron is undeterred. “I have to stress very strongly that if the federal government, the state government or the local government cannot protect you from the cartels or any criminal groups, we should be able to protect ourselves. That’s the bottom line,” he says.

Asked if the community is openly flouting federal gun laws, he replies: “Yes. We have to.”

The Mexican secretary of National Defense, charged with enforcing gun laws, declined to comment for this story.

The director of a pro-gun website called Mexico Armado said there is no popular movement at the moment to liberalize the nation’s gun laws. Perhaps, he added, that’s because anybody who wants a weapon in Mexico — be they a good guy or a bad guy — has no problem getting one.

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More body parts found near man’s head in Hollywood Hills park

Police discover a hand, then another, and, as they are about to end their search for the day, they find two feet below the Hollywood sign.

Search for body partsA Los Angeles Police Department helicopter searches steep, brushy terrain below the Hollywood sign, where a man’s head, two feet and two hands were found. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times / January 18, 2012)

By Alan Zarembo and Andrew Blankstein, Los Angeles Times

As the sun set over the Hollywood Hills park where police spent Wednesday searching for human body parts, they still didn’t have a name to go with the man’s head discovered there a day earlier.

What they did have were two hands and two feet. Authorities were optimistic that the hands were in good enough condition to obtain fingerprints.The homicide investigation began Tuesday afternoon after two dog walkers in Bronson Canyon Park noticed their dogsplaying with a plastic bag and went to inspect it.

PHOTOS: Body parts found below Hollywood sign 

Inside was a man’s head. His hair was graying. Police said he appeared to be in his 40s and that he probably had been dead for a day or two.

The discovery launched a massive search. More than 30 Los Angeles Police Department detectives and additional officers on horseback fanned out across seven acres of rugged parkland Wednesday.

A “cadaver dog” from the Los Angeles County coroner’s office found one hand, and later the other, in brush not far from where the head was discovered.

Unlike the head, they were not in bags.

Then, as officials were about to leave for the day, the feet were found.

Detectives believe that the killing happened elsewhere and that the body — or at least some of the parts — were dumped in the park.

“We’re hoping we can find more remains,” said LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith, adding that wild animals may have moved some of the body parts.

Without many answers, local residents were left to speculate. Some said that the body parts must have been deposited in the park after Tuesday morning.

At least 10 people walk their dogs each morning over the same terrain where the head was left, said Liam Lefevour. One of those dogs — maybe Tiger, his own 4-year-old greyhound and pitbull mix — would have found the head, he said.

Lefevour said he the whole situation was “freaky.”

Others seemed to relish playing armchair detective. Most of their crime knowledge comes from movies and television.

“It’s a real-life ‘Sopranos’ situation,” Ann Marie Spinelli said as she hiked a nearby ridge.

PHOTOS: Body parts found below Hollywood sign 

Spinelli, her sister and mother hypothesized that the killer was trying to make it impossible to identify the victim.

“We’re assuming the body would be far away,” said the sister, Karen Madigan. “There’s no other reason to cut off the head.”

The search was expected to continue Thursday morning.

alan.zarembo@latimes.com

andrew.blankstein@latimes.com

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UN gang’s key cartel contact gunned down in Mexico

The covered-up body of a dead Canadian man lies on a street in Culiacan January 16, 2012. The Canadian citizen was found dead with several gunshots to his head near a commercial area in Culiacan, according to local media. REUTERS/Stringer (MEXICO - Tags: CRIME LAW CIVIL UNREST)

CULIACAN, Mexico — A B.C. man executed in the Mexican state of Sinaloa this week was a high-ranking member of the United Nations gang who had direct contact with Mexican cartels, The Vancouver Sun has learned.

Salih Abdulaziz Sahbaz’s partly covered body lies in the road in Culiacán, the capital of the cartel-plagued Mexican state of Sinaloa. The B.C. man had taken over the Mexican end of the business after two of his associates were killed. Photograph by: Stringer, Reuters dAbdulaziz Sahbaz, 37, spent much of the last three years in Mexico and was the key cartel contact for the notorious B.C. gang, police sources confirmed.

But he also returned regularly to Surrey, where he had family ties.

Sahbaz was found early Monday at an intersection in Culiacán, the capital of cartel-plagued Sinaloa state. He had been shot in the head with a .45-calibre gun.

Sahbaz had taken over the Mexican end of the business after two other UN gang members, Ahmet (Lou) Kaawach and Elliott (Taco) Castenada, were gunned down in front of a taco stand in Guadalajara in July 2008.

He is believed to have owed money to at least one cartel after losing a shipment of cocaine and was working off his debt when he was slain.

Sahbaz had been active in the UN gang since at least 2004, when he and several other Iraqi refugees were brought into the fold by former leader Clay Roueche.

Sahbaz is in an infamous photo of UN members dressed in black taken at the March 2005 funeral of gangster Evan Appell, who died of an overdose.

Sahbaz had been charged twice with trafficking drugs in Vancouver. At one point, he was boss of the UN gang’s “Kurdish Crew” that controlled the Downtown Eastside drug trade.

But he also had a falling out with associate Barzan Tilli-Choli after a Vancouver home invasion directed by Tilli-Choli targeted a friend of Sahbaz’s.

They are believed to have later patched up their differences.

A police affidavit filed in court and earlier obtained by The Sun described a 2006 New Year’s Eve party in Vancouver attended by Sahbaz and other UN gang members.

When gang squad members checked out the event at the Plush nightclub on Pacific Boulevard, they “recognized many of the males in the private gathering or party as being members or associates of the UN gang,” the affidavit said.

Roueche was at the party with Sahbaz, who was kicked out of the club, according to the document.

Officers noticed that Sahbaz was wearing “a diamond-encrusted ring with traditional Chinese characters on it.”

He allowed the Vancouver police to photograph the ring.

The characters “translate into the English language as United Nations,” the affidavit said.

The UN gang was founded in the Fraser Valley by Roueche and others in 1997. It consisted of B.C.-born men and newer immigrants — mostly from Asia — and once boasted more than 100 members and another 100 associates.

But the UN has been decimated in recent years by murders, shootings and arrests of key members in both Canada and the U.S.

Sahbaz, Castenada and Kaawach all died in Mexico. Adam Kataoka was killed in Argentina in late 2009. Diane Meyer and Michael Gordon were gunned down in the Fraser Valley in 2008. Last November, Axel Curtis was shot to death in Vancouver.

Roueche was arrested in the U.S. in May 2008 and is now serving a 30-year sentence for smuggling cocaine and marijuana and laundering millions in drug profits.

At least a dozen of his B.C. mules and associates have also been convicted in the U.S.

Tilli-Choli and five others are awaiting trial in B.C. Supreme Court for murder and conspiracy to commit murder for allegedly plotting to kill the Bacon brothers and their Red Scorpion associates.

Several more UN members or associates are before the courts on drug trafficking, attempted murder and murder charges.

Two others — Conor D’Monte and Cory Vallee — were also charged with murder a year ago, but have not been located. There is an international warrant for their arrest.

Gang expert Doug Spencer said Tuesday he is not surprised to learn of Sahbaz’s demise.

“It is more than expected,” said Spencer, a former VPD detective now with Transit police. “I knew it was coming because he was living the life and when they are living the life, they all get it.”

Spencer incorporates new gang murders into the anti-gang presentations he does in Metro Vancouver schools.

“It is an important message to get out that for these guys, there is nowhere to hide,” Spencer said.

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5 bodies found at office of Mexican student group, feared to be those of missing students

Associated Press

English: Official coat of arms of the mexican ...

MEXICO CITY — Mexicans got a rare glimpse into the rough-and-tumble student organizations at many of Mexico’s universities Thursday, after five bodies were found buried at one group’s headquarters in the western city of Guadalajara.

Jalisco state Attorney General Tomas Coronado said relatives had identified three of the dead as high school students who were reported missing along with two other people last week after they complained that the student group was demanding protection money to sell snacks outside a campus.

Police uncovered three bodies in a pit late Wednesday and two more in another pit late Thursday. Investigators were trying to determine if the latest two were a fried-dough vendor and his son who went missing with the three teenagers, Coronado said.

The vendor, Armando Gomez, his son and three of his high school friends disappeared last Friday after going to the Federation of Guadalajara Students’ headquarters, where the bodies were found. They went to complain that the student group was demanding too much protection money for allowing him to sell snacks outside a high school campus.

The first three bodies were found two days after two college students in nearby Guerrero state were killed in a clash with police after student protesters hijacked buses, used them to block a highway and fought officers with rocks and sticks.

Highly organized, semiformal and often violent groups are commonplace at Mexican universities. It is a phenomenon that dates back at least to the 1950s, but swelled during student radicalization in the 1960s.

The organizations have become less ideological over the years, however, and are now often linked to, or protected by, political bosses known in Mexico as “caciques,” or chieftains. The groups sometimes act as enforcers to strong arm a politician’s rivals, or freelance in extortion or petty robbery.

Political analyst John Ackerman said Mexico’s current political atmosphere, with tension heating up before the July presidential election and a lame-duck central government distracted by the fight against drug cartels, may have emboldened such local groups.

“Cacique power is alive and well in Mexico,” said Ackerman, of the legal research institute at Mexico’s National Autonomous University. “This is another aspect in which democracy is still incomplete in Mexico.”

The Federation of Guadalajara Students, known as by its Spanish initials FEG, no longer has any formal ties to the university, but it operates at high schools affiliated with the university.

The FEG specialized in charging food and soft drink vendors to operate around the high schools, according to one university official familiar with the group. While the group was once leftist, the FEG switched decades ago to supporting the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which ruled Mexico for 71 years before losing the presidency in 2000, said the official, who agreed to discuss the group only if not quoted by name because he wasn’t authorized to speak about it.

The FEG has a website in which it describes itself as “a student political organization … teaching the promotion of Democracy and Tolerance.” It lists no phone number or email contact.

On Monday, many Mexicans were shocked by the shooting deaths of two protesters at a demonstration by students from a rural teachers college in Guerrero state, but were not at all surprised students had hijacked buses, used them to block the toll highway leading to the Pacific coast resort of Acapulco and threw stones when police tried to clear the road.

The Guerrero state prosecutors office said students from the teachers college regularly block highways or take over toll booths to raise funds, but had acted with unusual violence in Monday’s protest, which was called to demand more funding for the college.

Police called in to clear the blockade apparently opened fire on the students. Federal police have said it was state police who fired the fatal shots, while Guerrero officials released video of federal officers kicking and beating detained protesters.

Lawyers for the students and rights groups, meanwhile, are accusing authorities of planting grenades at the scene and an assault rifle on one student to try to justify the shootings.

Ackerman, at the national university, said he considered the shootings unjustified. But he added there were indications that “outside forces,” perhaps directed by a former governor, may have infiltrated the protest in an attempt to create a politically embarrassing situation for current Guerrero Gov. Angel Aguirre.

“The long-standing tradition of using student ‘golpeadores’ (street fighters) to implement a strategy that authorities can’t carry out themselves is alive and well in Mexico,” Ackerman said.

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Federal agents raid law enforcement uniform store; watch video

By Aaron Bracamontes / El Paso Times

Do you suppose it has anything to do with this?
Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Homeland Security Investigations agents confiscated hundreds of bags of items Wednesday at the Uniforms of Texas store on the 6600 block of Montana. (Ruben R Ramirez / El Paso Times)
Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Homeland Security… (Ruben R. Ramirez / El Paso Times)

›› Photos: Uniform store raid

Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Homeland Security Investigations agents confiscated hundreds of bags of items today at the Uniforms of Texas store on the 6600 block of Montana.

Two men were handcuffed and placed in the back of an unmarked truck.

Behind the store, agents piled the bags and loaded them into trucks. Confiscated items appeared to be ammunition and law enforcement uniforms, as well as flashlights and shoes.

Agents said they were executing a federal search warrant at Uniforms of Texas, a police and military uniform store that also sells ammunition and body armor.

Agents approached a man who arrived at the store in a Hummer a little after 8 a.m. They walked into the store with him.

More than 50 agents participated in the raid.

Employees of neighboring stores said they were shocked to see so many law enforcement officers around the area so early.

“It looked like a crime scene,” said Jesse Acevedo, who works at Lucchese Factory Outlet.

Several customers who arrived to shop at the store were turned away by agents.

Video by Ruben R. Ramirez / El Paso Times

 

 

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Mexican army kills 11 gunmen near US border, seizes 73 rifles

Washington Post

English: The Merida Initiative, a U.S. Counter...

MEXICO CITY — The Mexican army said Monday 11 suspected drug cartel members were killed and a soldier wounded in a shootout just south of the Texas border.

Soldiers began engaging with the gunmen Saturday after they opened fire from a building where they had holed up in city of Valle Hermoso, south of Brownsville, Texas, the Defense Department said in a news release.

The army patrol later seized the building, finding 11 dead gunmen and 73 rifles inside. Two suspects were arrested.

The wounded soldier was taken to a hospital for treatment. His condition was unknown.The Gulf and Zetas drug cartels operate in the area.In Veracruz, a Gulf coast state bordering Tamaulipas to the south, unidentified assailants tossed an explosive device into a building where a cockfight was being held early Sunday, state prosecutors said in a statement.

One man was killed and nine others slightly wounded, the statement said. The wounded were treated at hospitals and released.

State prosecutors did not specify what type of explosive device was involved. They also did not say if they had arrested any suspects or uncovered a motive for the attack.

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10 people executed in the Comarca Lagunera

Borderland Beat
Ten execution style murders were reported Wednesday afternoon in the tri-city area of northern Mexico’s highland basin, the Comarca Lagunera. The three adjoining cities of Ciudad Lerdo and Gomez Palacio in Durango and Torreon in Coahuila are another front line in Mexico’s drug war.The Sinaloa cartel and Los Zetas are stalemated in the fight for this important transhipment point for drugs heading north to the U.S. border. Torreon, a relatively affluent city, is also a thriving retail drug market.

The organized crime division of power is divided roughly along the state line, with street gangs affiliated with the Sinaloa cartel controlling activities on the Durango side and Los Zetas controlling the Coahuila side.

The incidents Wednesday were highlighted with the discovery at approximately 4:00pm of seven bodies killed by gunfire in a VW Jetta in an industrial park in Gomez Palacio, not far from the Rio Nazas dividing line between that city and Torreon.

The bodies of four men were found in the interior of the vehicle and the bodies of three women were found inside the Jetta’s trunk.

One woman found in the interior of the vehicle was found alive and in critical condition. The survivor was said to be a Gomez Palacio police woman.

At 5:30pm, in the adjoining city of Ciudad Lerdo, a municipal police vehicle was attacked by gunmen. Another police woman was killed in this attack and her partner was critically injured.

South of Torreon two “encobijados” (murder victims wrapped in blankets) were found Wednesday morning. Both male bodies exhibited signs of torture and multiple gunshot wounds.

The killings in the Comarca occurred 24 hours before the first leg of Mexico’s premier soccer league playoff championship series between the Torreon team of Santos Laguna and Los Tigres of Monterrey. The match kicked off promptly tonight at 8:30pm at Torreon’s Territorio Santos Modelo stadium.

Pre-game inspection of Torreon’s TSM stadium by federal police before tonight’s match.

Security by the Army, federal and state police was exceptionally heavy and no pre-game incidents were reported.

The TSM stadium was the scene of a panic and stampede by fans this past August when a shootout between gunmen and police occurred outside the stadium during a match between Santos and Monarcas.

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Mexico earns a rare victory against crime with Qaddafi son’s capture

Christian Science Monitor

The capture of Saadi Qaddafi, who tried to escape to a Mexican resort with his family, stands in stark contrast to the impunity with which many international criminals are able to operate in Mexico.

Has Mexico become a major player in unraveling international plots?

Al Saadi Gaddafi, the third son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, reacts to a question at a news conference in Sydney in this 2005 file photo. Tim Wimborne/Reuters

The Mexican government today is touting its role in helping thwart an attempt by Saadi Qaddafi, one of the sons of the late Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi, to enter the country under a false name and take up residence in a wealthy resort on Mexico’s Pacific coast.

The news comes less than two months after Mexico announced it had helped foil a plot that included an Iranian-American man allegedly reaching out to drug traffickers in Mexico to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the US.

This is not the Mexico that most of its citizens know. In fact, impunity rates are over 90 percent, and it is precisely the lack of functional institutions and transparent investigations behind Mexicans’ worry that its violent fight against organized crime will stubbornly remain on their doorstep, as we detailed in this week’s cover story.

As it remains mired in its drug fight, the government sought a boost from news today of Saadi’s capture. “Thwarting the illegal entry of Saadi Qaddafi in our country represents, without a doubt, yet another demonstration of the capacity of the institutions of Mexico to safeguard the integrity of the national territory,” said Mexico Interior Minister Alejandro Poire this morning at a press conference.

The plan to sneak Saadi and his family into Mexico on private planes using false identification was a multi-country affair, involving Mexican, Canadian, and Danish suspects, with a Canadian woman allegedly at the head of the operations.

But Mexican intelligence agents began unraveling the plot in September, after the ouster of Muammar Qadaffi from Libya. Dubbed “Operation Guest,” the plan involved flights between Mexico, the USCanada, and Kosovo, as well as countries in the Middle East. Suspects were arrested in November for falsifying documents, opening bank accounts with the documents, and buying safe homes for the family, Mr. Poire said.

To be sure, the Mexican government should be commended for catching an international criminal. But some Mexicans saw it as another example of Mexico being a haven for criminals and fugitives.

“The fact that he thought he would be safe in Mexico shows the collapse in institutions in the first place,” says John Ackerman, a law professor at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

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Honduras journalist slain, 17th in past two years

Honduran journalist Luz Marina Paz was shot dead by gunmen Tuesday along with a mechanic traveling with her, police said, in the latest in a series of attacks targeting news media.

She was killed in an attack outside the capital and became the 17th journalist killed in the Central American nation since a 2009 coup.

She had worked for Radio Globo, linked to ousted president Manuel Zelaya, before joining the Cadena Hondurena de Noticias or CHN broadcaster.

José Manuel Zelaya Rosales, President of Hondu...

Image via Wikipedia

Last year, 11 journalists were killed in the country – one of the most violent in the world – and where public safety has deteriorated since the June 29, 2009 military-backed coup.

Honduras has become a transit point for cocaine from South America heading into the United States. Drug gangs are better armed than the police, and have cash to bribe law enforcement and politicians.

By the end of 2011 Honduras is likely to have the highest murder rate in the world – 86 per 100,000 inhabitants, according to the Violence Observatory in Tegucigalpa, a UN-backed monitor. On average there have been 20 violent deaths a day in 2011, 85 percent of them caused by shootings.

A 2010 report by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) found “an alarming pattern of impunity” in Honduras as shown by the “inability or unwillingness” of authorities “to take obvious steps to investigate the crimes and arrest the perpetrators.”

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Slaying revealed drug informant’s secret life

 

His family learns the truth after shootoutBy DANE SCHILLER, HOUSTON CHRONICLE

Until his violent and public death on the edges of Houston, Lawrence Chapa’s mission as a confidential informant was just one of the government’s many secrets in its battle to combat Mexico-based cartels pushing narcotics into the United States.

There was no flag-draped casket or official recognition for the Houston-born truck driver many people knew as “Chap,” killed in a shootout by supposed cartel gunmen as he moved a load of marijuana in an undercover sting.

Behind the hard voice, bald head and a large gray mustache was a civilian willing to be on “Team America,” said one federal law enforcement source. “As far as we are concerned, he was acting as one of us, and very well could have been one of us.”

The 53-year-old career trucker could carry himself in shady circles and had a string of arrests, including for cocaine possession, resisting arrest, and assault for an August incident in which he threw punches and a tire at a store clerk.

Family ‘disturbed’

Some of Chapa’s family are confused about his death and don’t see glory in him being an informant.

“It really disturbed me. What is so good about it? He is gone now,” his older brother Armando Chapa said.

Authorities won’t publicly acknowledge Lawrence Chapa’s contribution with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, saying it can neither confirm nor deny whether he had been an informant.

But his brains and rough background were assets.

“He was a good guy, a good guy who had hard times,” the law enforcement source said of Chapa.

“His surroundings were somewhat limited. He’d been doing this truck driving thing for the longest, and was trying to make some extra money,” the source continued. “These guys aren’t priests. If they were, they wouldn’t make good informants.”

Those who knew him said he’d traveled a long road in life. He was the son of a Pentecostal preacher, and sang and played drums in a traveling church band as a young man.

He apparently started informing a decade ago.

Most recently, he was able to pose as a driver willing to risk hauling drugs from the Mexican border to Houston, long a major hub for sneaking narcotics, cash and guns in and out of the U.S. He didn’t have to troll borderland bars for trouble, like many informants hustling to help authorities make a case.

Instead, he went about his business as a trucker and waited to be approached by traffickers with offers of good money for sneaking cargo past Border Patrol highway checkpoints.

He was a regular along the border, as he drove north with loads of sand pulled from the ground by oil companies digging wells.

In it for the cash

He was leading law enforcement authorities further into drug distribution networks on U.S. soil. Unlike many informants, who work to get criminal charges dropped or bust their competitors, Chapa was an informant just for the cash.

“Unless you are talking about white-collar crime, (the informant) is not going to be a pin-striped-suited Wall Street banker,” said Larry Karson, a retired Customs Service agent who is now a criminal justice lecturer at the University of Houston-Downtown. “It is going to be somebody who associates with these kinds of people, which tends to include people with criminal records.”

In the job that would be his last, Chapa was driving a load of pot up from the border as officers and agents shadowed him.

On Nov. 21, shortly before Chapa was to have delivered the load to waiting traffickers, the tractor-trailer rig he was driving was attacked in northwest Harris County. At least three vehicles carrying members of what investigators said was a cartel-related hit team came with guns blazing.

After the truck careened off the road and came to a halt, the attackers yanked open the passenger cab door and repeatedly shot Chapa, whose hands had been raised in the air.

He was tossed to the street as the startled attackers were soon swarmed by dozens of law enforcement officers.

During the heat of the battle, a plainclothes Harris County sheriff’s deputy was shot in the leg, apparently by friendly fire. Houston police said at least one of its officers fired a weapon during the ordeal and as a matter of policy, the incident is being reviewed by internal affairs.

4 suspects charged

Four suspects, including at least three born in Mexico, were charged with capital murder within 24 hours.

Javier Pena, head of the DEA’s Houston division, said authorities are going to do whatever it takes to capture others who might be responsible for the attack, which surprised law-enforcement officers for its brazenness.

The motive also is under scrutiny, with authorities evaluating whether the attackers intended to just steal the load of marijuana or if someone knew Chapa was an informant.

“The DEA needs to determine whether or not a cartel source sold out the details of the undercover operation to the bad guys,” said Fred Burton, of Stratfor, an Austin-based global intelligence company that monitors the drug war. “If so, the internal leak needs to be found before other drug operations are jeopardized.”

For now, the sheriff’s office is tight-lipped.

“For us to speculate about anything on such a complex and delicate investigation would be unfair, negligent and, frankly, unprofessional on our part,” said Christina Garza, a spokeswoman for the sheriff.

In search of answers

Chapa’s brother said he questions whether police should have had more backup to keep his brother safe.

“There are a lot of questions I’d like to ask,” Armando Chapa said. “Why was he trying to help them?”

Karson, the retired Customs Service agent, said the dead informant had to know what he was doing could get him in trouble.

“In dealing with major narcotics traffickers, everyone involved recognizes there is a risk, whether it is the informant, an undercover agent or the people handling these individuals,” he said.

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