BajaGeoff
 
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Tijuana Chief of Police killed 
 
 
I just learned that the Tijuana Chief of Police and his bodyguards were ambushed and killed this morning on the road due east of Playas. Undoubtedly a
drug related incident. This is getting crazy.
 
 
 
 
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JESSE
 
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My sources say it wasnt the chief, lets wait and see.
 
 
 
 
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BajaNews
 
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Matan a Subdirector de la Policía Municipal 
 
 
http://www.frontera.info/edicionenlinea/notas/Noticias/20060... 
 
Ángel Ruiz 
TIJUANA, Baja California(PH) 
 
El Subdirector de la Policía Municipal, Arturo Rivas Vaca, fue emboscado esta mañana, en la carretera de Playas hacia el Centro, a la altura del
fraccionamiento El Mirador. 
 
La balacera se registró a las 8:00 horas, a la altura de El Mirador, dejando atrapados a varios civiles que transitaban en el lugar. 
 
Una persona que viajaba en un Pointer color verde, con placas AHP6043, resultó lesionada en la balacera al igual que uno de los escoltas que
acompañaban a Rivas Vaca. 
 
El Subdirector de la policia municipal, falleció cuando era atendido en el Hospital. 
 
A las 11:00 horas la Secretatria de Seguridad Pública Municipal ofrecerá una conferencia donde informará sobre los hechos... 
 
 
  
La balacera se registró hoy alrededor de las 8:00 de la mañana en la carretera a Playas hacia el Centro a la altura de El Mirador. 
 
[Edited on 9-21-2006 by BajaNews]
 
 
 
 
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JESSE
 
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The good thing is that its not the chief, the bad news is that i went to school with Rivas. 
 
 
 
 
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Baja Bernie
 
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Jesse 
 
 
Glad you are down south!
 
 
 
 
My smidgen of a claim to fame is that I have had so many really good friends.  By  Bernie Swaim December 2007 
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SUNDOG
 
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Tijuana officials seek army intervention 
 
 
Tijuana officials seek army intervention  
  
  
         
 
 
Recent killings may be caused by drug cartel 
By Anna Cearley 
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER 
September 22, 2006  
 
 
 
Associated Press  
TIJUANA – A string of killings is plaguing Tijuana a month after U.S.  
authorities detained suspected drug kingpin Francisco Javier Arellano  
Félix, and some authorities are taking the violence so seriously that  
they have called on the Mexican army to help restore order.  
 
The latest victim was a city police assistant chief, Arturo Rivas  
Vaca, who was in his patrol car when he was gunned down about 8 a.m.  
yesterday. Jorge Eduardo Ledezma Magallon, a police officer who was  
Rivas' bodyguard, and Luis Francisco de Santiago Ferrer, a bystander,  
were injured in the attack, according to Luis Javier Algorri Franco,  
the city's secretary of public security.  
 
 
 
Associated Press 
Tijuana Municipal Police sub-director Arturo Rivas Baca was ambushed  
on Thursday, Sept. 21 in Tijuana, Mexico, while driving to work. More  
than 150 shots were fired, some by Rivas, during the shootout.  
 
  
  
  
Vaca was the fifth law enforcement official to be killed this month,  
an unusually high number for such a short time frame. None of the  
deaths has been officially linked to the Arellano Félix drug cartel.  
 
Meanwhile, homicide teams are investigating a spate of dumped bodies – 
 six on Tuesday alone. Bodies that are left along roadsides and in  
other places are often victims of drug traffickers.  
 
The developments prompted the state's attorney general to suggest  
that residents be particularly cautious, and caused Algorri to prod  
federal and state authorities to bring in the army.  
 
It's unclear what role he expects them to take, whether patrolling  
the streets or actively investigating cases. The military has been  
involved in the capture of some top Arellano members in the past,  
though it's not impervious to corruption.  
 
“The participation of the Mexican army is necessary to help the  
police agencies,” Algorri said. “We find ourselves in an emergency  
situation.”  
 
As Arellano Félix remains in custody north of the border, the cartel  
continues to function. Though other rival groups are believed to be  
trying to move into the Tijuana area, offering generous cash  
incentives, observers of drug-trafficking trends say it's more likely  
the violence is due to the cartel going after rivals and traitors,  
and cleaning up its own house.  
 
“Normally, when the head of a cartel is detained, these things  
happen,” said Jorge Chabat, a drug trade expert at the Center for  
Economic Research and Teaching in Mexico City. “You would have to  
wait to see if this continues to see if this is a war between  
cartels.”  
 
Other clues have emerged in recent weeks that some see as indicators  
of the Arellanos' involvement in the killings. Some of the dumped  
bodies have been left with unusual messages that suggest the victims  
were targeted as traitors.  
 
The violence also has involved people with no connection to the drug  
world. Last week, a waitress and a U.S. citizen died when assailants  
opened fire on a group of law enforcement officials eating at a  
restaurant.  
 
Official statistics, however, don't show a dramatic upswing in  
killings. During the first 20 days of September, 27 homicides have  
been recorded. Since 2003, the number of killings per month has  
ranged from 18 to 57, according to statistics from the state attorney  
general's office. What makes the situation unusual is the kind of  
violence and who is being targeted.  
 
Top Mexican law enforcement officials in Baja California will speak  
only in general terms about the killings' possible connection to the  
detention of Arellano Félix.  
 
“It could be the case ... but it's not something I can confirm,” said  
the state secretary of public security, Víctor de la Garza Herrada.  
 
Algorri, with the city of Tijuana, noted during a Mexican radio  
program last weekend that more mercenary groups were operating in the  
area.  
 
“We have information that armed groups have come here from the  
interior of the country to Tijuana,” he said.  
 
He named specifically the Zetas, a shadowy group of elite ex-military  
officers who have become enforcers for drug gangs.  
 
Experts in drug-trafficking trends said it appeared the Arellanos  
were contracting with the Zetas and other mercenaries to target  
snitches and enemies.  
 
The Zetas are suspected of being recruited originally by drug  
trafficker Osiel Cárdenas, who is in a Mexican prison.  
 
Cárdenas' gang, known as the Gulf Cartel, is battling with rivals  
over the control of drug routes in the eastern portion of the U.S.- 
Mexico border, south of Texas.  
 
The Arellanos and the Gulf Cartel have the same enemies, and there  
have been suspicions in the past that they were sharing resources,  
such as the Zetas.  
 
Police are targeted because drug traffickers require their  
cooperation to ensure that drug loads get through with minimal  
interference. Sometimes officers are killed because they stand up to  
traffickers, but often the reasons are more complex. Officers who  
receive money from the Arellanos are expected to fulfill certain  
obligations, and to not take money from other drug groups.  
 
Yesterday, during a news conference to confirm the death of Rivas,  
who was one of two assistant directors under the police chief,  
Algorri refused to take questions from reporters. With a grim face,  
he said Rivas had worked 20 years for the Tijuana police department,  
and that two of his children were also police officers with the  
agency.  
 
He called the recent killings “unusual and condemnable acts of  
organized crime.” 
 
 
 
---------------------------------------------------------------------- 
---------- 
 Anna Cearley: (619) 542-4595; anna.cearley@uniontrib.com
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Hook
 
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Condemnable........but certainly not unusual. 
 
So, doesnt this call for military intervention echo the request of the businessmen of Rosarito only a couple months back? 
 
Question.........if we are allowed to operate military units in countries like Peru and Colombia in the pursuit of drug cartels, why not Mexico? 
 
I mean, if someone wants military intervention, who's better at it than us??  
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Hook
 
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 | Quote: |  Originally posted by lencho 
 | Quote: |  Originally posted by Hook 
Question.........if we are allowed to operate military units in countries like Peru and Colombia in the pursuit of drug cartels, why not Mexico? 
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Uh, I'll answer that with a question:  why are we allowed to operate military units in countries like Peru and Columbia? 
 
--Larry   |  
  
 
It's a fair question............isn't the answer to everything 
 
M O N E Y !!!!!        
 
Well, not the spoken answer........... 
 
[Edited on 9-22-2006 by Hook]
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Dave
 
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Your friend died a violent death 
 
 
 | Quote: |  Originally posted by JESSE 
the bad news is that i went to school with Rivas.    |  
  
 
Know two guys who were four cars behind. Said that Rivas was shot by automatic fire at close range. Started at his pelvis and went up. Split the guy
in two. 
 
Reports are that he received a flower garland at his office four weeks ago.
 
 
 
 
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