Pages - Menu

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Chihuahua Deputy Instructs Prosecutors to Give Life in Prison for Cartel Members Who Burn Bodies of Victims

 "MX" for Borderland Beat; KRQE

Chihahua deputy Jorge Nava Lopez 

The top prosecutor in Juarez is vowing to seek life in prison for criminals who burn or dismember their victims — a scare tactic toward rival gang members. The warning comes as police in this Mexican border city have found nine charred sets of human remains in the month of August alone.

The latest find took place Monday before midnight on a dirt road off the highway leading from the border crossing at Santa Teresa, New Mexico to the town of Nuevo Casas Grandes. Three bodies inside an abandoned Dodge Durango SUV were so badly burned that police have been unable to determine gender, age or cause of death. Last Friday, the bodies of two men were located inside a cemetery in the southern part of the city, set on fire after apparently being doused with fuel.

“These are, no doubt, intended as a message of intimidation from one criminal group to another,” Chihuahua Deputy Attorney General Jorge Nava said on Tuesday. “We are seeing homicides being committed with extreme cruelty and brutality … mutilations, decapitations and now the use of fire.” Nava attributes the growing number of homicides in Juarez — nearly 1,500 in 2019 and more than 1,000 so far this year — to a battle to control street drug sales in the city.

With a surplus of drugs like inexpensive-to-manufacture crystal meth, drug cartels are selling in Mexico whatever product they’re unable to cross into the United States, drug experts have told Border Report. The fight for domestic drug sales is taking place in working-class neighborhoods in Juarez, where most of the killings have occurred and where gangs are paying young addicts as little as $150 to go kill off rival drug dealers, Nava said.

“We are seeing a breakdown of our social (conscience). There is a need to make young people aware that what they do will have consequences,” the deputy attorney general said. That’s why he has instructed his prosecutors to seek life in prison for those accused of killing people and burning the bodies to conceal evidence or sow terror among rival gangs. “We will be pursuing life in prison for those crimes,” he said.

The deputy attorney general said a drug motive is also suspected in last Saturday’s murder of a Cuban asylum seeker in a neighborhood south of Downtown. The migrant so far only identified as Felix, a man in his early 50s, came to Juarez a year ago alleging persecution in Cuba and seeking protection in the United States, KTSM reported.

Thousands of migrants from Cuba and Central America who have come to the U.S.-Mexico border since 2019 have been placed by the United States in a program called Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), which forces them to wait in Mexico for a resolution of their asylum case in the U.S.

Advocates in the United States say many of these asylum seekers are victimized by criminals in Mexico during years-long waits. The Cuban migrant was gunned down by unknown assailants in front of a market and day laborer gathering point known as “Los Herrajeros,” Juarez police said.

Another Cuban migrant, Osmany Balderrama Pavon, 40, was stabbed to death in a run-down apartment complex near the same market in July 2019. A fellow migrant, Osvel Napoles Robaina, was arrested in connection to that murder and allegedly admitted to authorities he stabbed Balderrama after an altercation.

22 comments:

  1. Fuck that. The death penalty for any cartel crime.

    ReplyDelete
  2. https://twitter.com/i/status/1296653969444364288

    ReplyDelete
  3. https://youtu.be/ETjR6oaXyhI

    Off topic but isn't this also the voice of el mencho

    ReplyDelete
  4. Death is not a deterrent in their world

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. oh yes it is! especially being put in gen pop w/o protection

      Delete
  5. God Bless you. Mexico need tough guys like u.

    ReplyDelete
  6. This is a good idea. Life without for burning people alive or chopping them alive. This would apply to almost every cartel member top to bottom because they all have done it.

    ReplyDelete
  7. They should try the death penalty instead

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @9:36 how does my comment make me a pu$$y if you would happily take the death penalty over life in prison. Sounds like you’re the one that a scared pu$$y. The Imminent fear knowing that your days are numbered is better than giving your pu$$y ass time to repent.

      Delete
    2. Neo-porfiristas putting themselves above the rest of the people with their death penalty are in reality putting themselves below the criminals they condemn...Mátalos en caliente was Don Porfirio's order and the Ley Fuga was applied liberally to all suspects and inocentes, because dead men don't talk and dead dog gets cured of the rabies.

      Delete
  8. Death penalty to him for stealing the people's money

    ReplyDelete
  9. Give life in prison to la cruz roja for lying about people having COVID-19.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 9:51 The logos only or the ambulances too?
      The science was not up to the problem, you make it worse...

      Delete
  10. I'm sure we will see a lot of death penalty comments. But life imprisonment is already difficult for prosecutors to agree to in Mexico today. Asking for a legislature change including death penalty is even more difficult.

    A few years ago Mexico's Ecologist Green Party of Mexico (PVEM) asked for death penalty for kidnappers. The National Regeneration Movement (MORENA) has asked it for feminicides too so it isn't necessarily a rare ask.

    We shall see what happens.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. El Bronco Rodriguez, alias "la mula bronca" governor of NL, campaigned for president of México on a proposal to cut off burglars' hands...
      --Now as a governor he has been caught stealing from the public trough, i am sure he has changed his mind.

      Delete
  11. Why do people even think death penality is a punishment? There's nothing after death, one moment and you gone, it's all over. It's not a punishment, it's the easy way out.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Forget punishment but deterrent? I don't think so.

      Delete
    2. How do you know you won’t burn in hell??? You been dead before???

      Delete
  12. This will do nothing good. How about life imprisonment for corrupt politicians, judges and AGs. Lets start with Calderon and Nineto.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Mexico seriously need to consider doing what the Chinese does. One bullet to the head, bill the family for it. There ain't a rehab in the world that can fix these peoples.

    ReplyDelete
  14. The real problem he will not get the support of the Politicians

    ReplyDelete

Comments are moderated, refer to policy for more information.
Envía fotos, vídeos, notas, enlaces o información
Todo 100% Anónimo;

borderlandbeat@gmail.com