small town takedown

Re: small town takedown

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Re: small town takedown

Yeah, I gave up after 5 minutes of that incredible excitement. All starts off with sharing a bag of "white powder", then take down anyone who comes near, enter buildings and shoot, and don't forget to keep the red-lights flashing on the vehicle. Makes it look more "officialler".
 
Re: small town takedown

I have been following the escalation of the violence by the mexican cartels over the past three years in part due to the first story i heard and could not get out of my head. It was the kidnapping of an 8 year old boy who recognized his captors and consequently they injected sulfuric acid into his heart and buried him about six inches deep. i had a word to follow
"gulf cartel" so i have been googleing and following them ever since. the best two clearing houses on all info cartel are www.borderlandbeat.com and www.blogdelnarco.com usually i will see a report on these sites and it take anywhere from a week to never before national news will report about it.

so for example this is cnn's take on this cartel attack on a small unarmed town.


(CNN) -- Chilling video captured by a security camera shows more than a dozen armed men carrying out a shooting spree in broad daylight that left eight people dead last month in Mexico's Chihuahua state.

In the video obtained by CNN on Saturday, the men -- believed to be hit men for a drug cartel -- are seen opening fire with assault rifles into nearby vehicles and a housing complex.

A 14-year-old girl was among the eight victims of the March 15 killings in the town of Creel, according to Carlos Gonzalez, a spokesman for the state attorney general's office.

"We don't know what group these hit men are part of, but here in Chihuahua there are two warring groups: the Sinaloa Cartel and Juarez Cartel," Gonzalez said. "We're working on trying to figure out which group was responsible."

Gonzalez said there is no evidence to suggest that the victims were involved in drug activity, adding that the motive for the shootings is unclear.

He said the video -- captured by a state public security camera -- is "important" evidence in the investigation.

"This is evidence to identify these people and it's part of the ongoing investigation to find them," said Gonzalez, who is the lead investigator in the case.

In the video, gunmen are shown approaching the passenger side of a vehicle to receive what appears to be an order for the killings. A man holding a large gun in the passenger seat also is seen taking a white substance and putting it in his nose several times.

Another portion of the video shows two gunmen intercepting a car and sequestering the driver. Later in the video, the men shoot two people in an SUV.

In some of the most shocking footage, armed men are seen running across a field before reaching the doors of a housing complex and opening fire into the doors and windows of the residence.

The shootings happened over a period of an hour early on March 15, Gonzalez said.

"There are very few authorities in this area to police this kind of activity," Gonzalez said.

The images of the gunmen operating freely in the mountainous northwest part of Chihuahua highlight just how lawless rural parts of Mexico have become as the country works to combat an increasingly violent drug war.

In January, in a case of mistaken identity, 15 people, mostly teenagers, were killed when gunmen attacked a house party in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

And late last month, 10 children, youths and young adults between the ages of 8 and 21 were gunned down, presumably by drug traffickers, in the northern Mexican state of Durango.
 
Re: small town takedown

Follow up on this slaughter.

"Chihuahua, Mexico (April 16, 2010) .- The Attorney General of Chihuahua began searching for members of the Sinaloa cartel after national coverage of a video which shows gunmen who seized the town of Creel and undertook a massacre in which eight people were executed.

A month after the events, the Attorney General Patricia Gonzalez Rodriguez released the identity of the leader of the assassins that for more than an hour blocked access to the tourist town of Creel and massacred eight people, including two women.

The leader, identified as Enrique López Acosta, "El Cumbias", was identified thanks to the public security cameras that were placed in the village, after an initial slaughter occurred in August 2008 and in which 13 people were killed.

Investigations were also initiated against state and municipal police, found in the area and monitoring the situation but did not act to protect the population."
farckle somebody teach me how to post a article with photo! anywho this is the link with photo

http://narconews.blogspot.com/2010/04/buscan-sicarios-por-matanza-en-creel.html
viernes, abril 16, 2010
Buscan a sicarios por matanza en Creel

Chihuahua, México (16 abril 2010).- La Procuraduría General de Justicia de Chihuahua inició la búsqueda de integrantes del Cártel de Sinaloa tras la exhibición en cobertura nacional de un video en el que se muestra a sicarios que se apoderan del pueblo de Creel y emprenden una matanza en la que ocho personas resultaron ejecutadas.

A un mes de ocurridos los hechos, la Procuradora Patricia González Rodríguez dio a conocer la identidad del líder de los sicarios que durante más de una hora bloquearon los accesos al pueblo turístico de Creel y masacraron a ocho personas, entre ellas a dos mujeres.

El líder, identificado como Enrique López Acosta, "El Cumbias", fue identificado gracias al gran acercamiento que logró una de las cámaras de seguridad pública que fueron colocadas en el pueblo, luego de una primera masacre ocurrida en agosto del 2008 y en la que 13 personas perdieron la vida.

También se iniciaron averiguaciones en contra de policías estatales y municipales que, no obstante encontrarse en la zona y estar monitoreando los hechos, no actuaron para proteger a la población.
 
Re: small town takedown

I've been in Creel 6 times. No plans to go back. It's on the main road north of the Copper Canyon where lots of drug activity is. One time while taking a break after crossing the Batopilas river down in the canyon a train of 8 mules came by, all loaded with drugs.
 
Re: small town takedown

As reports from Creel trickle out it reminds me of the people who want to remove a bandage slowly cause they think its less painful.
Believe me this analogy does not work here.

Father Javier Avila Aguirre "get used to the violence"

somebody please post the photo of the woman cradling the dead man/ boy husband /son

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/04/questions-of-impotence-in-creel.html

Questions of Impotence in Creel following the latest executions.
Creel, Chihuahua - Creel Residents expressed their repudiation of the way a convoy of gunmen arrived to town in plain daylight hours and also question how it's possible for the police authority station in the area not to be able to see the caravan of 16 trucks that arrived to execute seven people with no regards that some of victims were young girls or women. This was the exact same scenario that was played out in the massacre of 13 people in Creel in August 16, 2008,

For his part, Father Javier Avila Aguirre lamented about the residents of the area saying they need to prepare and to get used to the violence, He was unwilling to elaborate further on the subject but said that he talked with some residents of Creel and that the incident happened so fast that it has not yet sink in.

On that dreadful day that the sicarios planted fear among anyone they came in contact in the usually busy main street in Creel, no one dared to ventured out of their homes, not to mention the tourists industry that despite it was a public holiday, they were nowhere to be seen. With a tinge of sadness in his voice, "El Padre Pato" pointed out that everything is forgotten almost immediately as life has to go on.

After the bloody events of that early morning, residents of San Juanito and Creel continue with their lives. "El Padre Pato" said that despite what happened, everyone has to continue with their normal lives, going to school, working, shopping, and perhaps the town will be again calm and feel just a bit safer.

How come none of the checkpoints operating in the area catch them? Or the Cipol who are stationed in the area? , These are the questions locals from San Juanito are asking who declined to give their name for obvious reasons. the entire town could hear the burst of gunfire from the gunmen for at least 10 minutes while they were executing people. The 10 minutes of loud gunfire echoing in the walls of Creel seem to last an eternity, but no police authority came to the aid of the victims who were being mowed down. This is part of the suspicious reality that is prevalent in the community.

Meanwhile the injured survivors of the massacre remain fearful in a hospital in Cuauhtémoc because there was a rumor circulating in the city that a commando wanted to abduct or finish off the rest of the wounded, said the mayor of the city, Gerardo Hernández Arzaga.

At times there was fear among the staff of the hospital where the survivors were receiving medical care and where there has already been one execution. To this point this is just a rumor said the mayor and fortunately we have not had any recent violent acts in the clinic.

It was finally decided for security reasons that in such cases where patients of gunshot wound were brought in, such as the ones from Creel, would be transported to the hospital in the state capital where they have the adequate security in their hospital.