Blog dedicated to reporting on Mexican drug cartels
on the border line between the US and Mexico
.

Showing posts with label police procedure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label police procedure. Show all posts

Sunday, June 13, 2010

GERI


Members of Mexico City's "Grupo Especial Reaccion Inmediata" (GERI), a police special immediate reaction group. This elite police group are at the service of the residents in Mexico City and are said to be equipped with latest technology and trained by some of the best instructors in the nation.

Members of the police GERI tactical unit train in Mexico City, on June 7, 2010. The government of Mexico City implemented GERI's personnel specific training on rescue of abducted people, as part of toughening of the fight against such crime in the city.

Members of the police GERI tactical unit patrol along a street in Mexico City, on June 9, 2010. Mexican marines helped by US intelligence sources seized more then 20 kg of explosives suitable for demolition and arrested four suspected members of the organized crime in Mexico City, the Mexican Navy reported.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Two Wounded in Attack on Police Chief

The Secretary of Public Security in Escobedo, retired Brigadier General Hermelindo Lara Cruz, survived 40 minutes of hail of bullets from sicarios in five SUVs that fired on the vehicle and the C4 municipal police headquarters.

The Jeep Grand Cherokee, with level 5 armor plus, withstood some 100 impacts from gunfire that allowed the chief Lara to take shelter in the headquarters. The rear window that as not bullet proof was totally destroyed.

Monterrey, Nuevo Leon - A soldier and a civilian were wounded in an attack by suspected cartel hit men on a police chief in the northern Mexican state of Nuevo Leon, officials said.

A group of assailants on board five SUVs fired gunshots at the vehicle in which Gen. Hermelindo Lara Cruz – the Public Safety secretary in the town of Escobedo, part of the Monterrey metropolitan area – was riding.

The assailants also fired at the city’s police headquarters, but “the general and his guards managed to warn the people who were inside and therefore all the police and civilians were able to run and hide,” an official statement from the Escobedo municipal government read.

Gunmen wielding AR-15 and AK-47 assault rifles wounded a soldier and the driver of a trailer that was parked outside the police station. The hit men also fired at patrol cars and other vehicles that were parked near the building.

178 Police in Monterrey Resign or are Forced Out

Monterrey, Nuevo Leon - Authorities in this northern industrial city said 178 municipal officers, or 40 percent of Monterrey’s entire police force, either resigned or have been dismissed in connection with anti-corruption screening carried out this week.

In a press conference Friday, Monterrey Mayor Fernando Larrazabal presented the results of five rounds of testing the officers underwent in recent days.

On Monday, Larrazabal ordered the police force’s 14 command-level officers and 600 patrolmen to be subjected to five evaluations to weed out officers suspected of ties to drug traffickers.

Larrazabal said 118 officers voluntarily resigned and 60 others with blemished records were fired.

The mayor said 76 percent of the sacked officers had been penalized by the city’s Honor and Justice Commission – an agency that processes claims against law-enforcement officials – or “denounced for actions that required the intervention of internal affairs.”

He added that 15 police failed toxicological exams, while polygraph tests determined that 12 officers were unfit for the job.

Larrazabal added that Monterrey authorities prefer a smaller, more committed police force that is less susceptible to infiltration by organized crime.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Mexican Marines Arrest 25 Acapulco Cops

Acapulco, Guerrero - Marines and federal law enforcement agents arrested 25 police officers, including three command-level officers, in Acapulco, a city in the Mexican Pacific state of Guerrero, but officials did not say why the officers were detained.

Guerrero Gov. Zeferino Torreblanca confirmed that the officers were arrested, but he did not provide any details, saying only that his government would not tolerate actions that violated the law.

The municipal police officers were taken to the 8th Naval Zone facility in Acapulco.

The officers were detained when they arrived early Tuesday at the residence of Acapulco city council secretary-general Vicente Trujillo Sandoval in response to a supposed shooting report.

The officers’ relatives went to the 8th Naval Zone base to request information about their cases.

Carmen Nicolas Camacho and Ema Luna Garcia, the mothers of officers Eduardo Jimenez Nicolas and Javier Luna, respectively, said their sons were mistreated by the marines and they planned to file a complaint with the Human Rights Commission.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Federales Vow to Fight Back After Deadly Attack

By Armando V. Durazo and Aileen B. Flores
El Paso Times

Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua - The ambush Friday in Juárez in which eight people were killed -- including six federal agents and a police officer -- may signal a new wave of intimidation against authorities, officials and experts said Saturday.

The attack, carried out in broad daylight by a group of hit men, solidified the resolve of Mexican federal police to fight back even though it was one of the deadliest attacks on authorities in the city since President Felipe Calderón launched the war on drug cartels.

Juárez officials said that the ambush will not deter them and that they will not be intimidated by the calculated and ruthless attack.

"They want to intimidate us. But now we are going to double our efforts to fight them," said José Salinas, spokesman for the federal police in Mexico City.

As a result of the ambush, he said, a new strategy will be used to "avoid similar ambushes."

"We will fight them," he said.

He did not elaborate on the new strategy.

Salinas said the attack on the agents was an act of desperation because authorities are winning the overall war. He also said the contingent of about 5,000 federal police agents will remain in the city indefinitely and will continue to pressure the criminals.

Monday, April 19, 2010

A Small Town Cop, Out-Gunned by Traffickers

From the Archives:
June 19, 2009

Ascension, Chihuahua - The violence got so scary that hundreds of citizens occupied the Ascension town hall in May of 2009 to demand that the Mexican army come protect them. Soldiers now rumble through a couple of times a week. Then they leave.

Jaime Antonio Chacón was on the beat here just three months when the rookie police officer stumbled upon an assassination in progress.

A couple of hitmen, known as sicarios in Mexico, were going after a local hoodlum when Chacón in his municipal police truck rolled into the middle of a gunfight last month. One of the sicarios took aim at Chacóns forehead and squeezed off a single round.

In the video (below) Chacón talks about how it feels to be a small town cop seriously out-gunned by drug-trafficking heavies with superior weapons and good aim.

There are more than 400,000 police officers in Mexico and the vast majority are municipal cops like Chacón. They are low paid, poorly trained, badly equipped.

In Ascension, the police lack the working radios, bullet-proof vests and machine guns they want. Lousy morale creates ideal conditions for corruption, which is rampant in municipal forces.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

The Forever Drug War

Inside the Mexican Drug Wars Quickly Consuming a Nation

By Tomas Kellner and Francesco Pipitone

Aguascalientes, Mexico - Just before noon on February 15, 2007, four municipal police officers in Aguascalientes, the picturesque capital of the central Mexican state bearing the same name, were called to a mundane road accident.

An overturned, black Chevy Suburban with out-of-state license plates was blocking traffic on the quiet Boulevard John Paul II that runs through the city's sleepy western suburbs.

When local police commander Juan José Navarro Rincón and his three colleagues arrived, they saw two men who did not appear to be hurt, removing AK-47 assault rifles and police uniforms from the crashed vehicle to a white Nissan sport utility vehicle (SUV) parked nearby.

Navarro Rincón called for reinforcements. He was about to arrest the pair when two other cars came to an abrupt stop just up the road. Three gunmen climbed out and opened fire with automatic weapons. Navarro Rincón was killed instantly. Three other officers also died.

The killings, dubbed "Black Thursday" by the local press, were the first shootings of police officers in Aguascalientes by drug gangs. Until then, Aguascalientes had been a quiet place, immune to the violence that was raging in cities along the U.S.-Mexico border and elsewhere in the country.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Mexican Police Deploy to Drug Cartel Turf


Valle de Juarez, Chihuahua - Mexican authorities have dispatched large numbers of Mexican federal police and soldiers to the Valley of Juarez after weeks of terror.

The surge in federal forces comes after dozens of killings, the burning of homes and the attempted torching of a church. Many residents had moved away after receiving threats to leave or die as drug cartels battle for turf.

The visible federal presence appeared to have brought a sense of calm in stark contrast to two weeks ago, when the remaining residents were afraid to step outside at night.

On Wednesday, caravans of federal police vehicles rolled in the streets of small towns. Soldiers with machine guns stood behind sandbags at checkpoints on the roads in the farming area that is a battleground in the war between cartels. Helicopters flew over dirt roads looking for suspicious activity.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Police Chief and two Other Officers Killed in Los Aldamas

Los Aldamas, Nuevo Leon -  Well, we have been reading a lot here on the Borderland Beat about some of the corrupt police officers. But in the northeastern part of Mexico a lot of them have been getting killed. Why do they get killed? Very few get killed while in the heat of battle, most are killed during an ambush or they get abducted and are later found executed.

That is exactly what happened in Aldama where two municipal police officers and their police chief were reportedly abducted (levantados) between Tuesday night and early Wednesday. Well, they were found executed Wednesday, their bodies dumped in a ravine in the rural part of the town.

The police chief was identified as Oliver García Peña, while the other two victim officers have not yet been identified.

As reported in the newspaper El Norte of Monterrey it was around yesterday afternoon when Pemex employees who were in the area to inspect a well of the oil company at which time they found the tree bodies.

The crime scene was full of military personnel who were there to keep the area secured. The agents of the Ministerial department as well as crime scene investigators arrived to process the scene. So there is not a lot of information yet. We do not know the cause of death.

Sometimes police officers get killed by organize crime because they have ties to rival cartels or sometimes they get killed because they are fighting the cartels. Seems like it's a "no win" situation no matter how you cut it.

"Plata o plomo?"

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Barrio Azteca Targeting Police DHS Warns

Mexican 'Assassin Teams' May Target U.S. Law Enforcement, DHS Warns.

FOXNews.com

Law enforcement officers in west Texas are on guard following an alert issued by the Department of Homeland Security warning of retaliatory killings for a recent crackdown on the Barrio Azteca gang.

March 30: Police officers escort Ricardo Valles de la Rosa, right, to a court hearing in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

Law enforcement officers in west Texas are on guard following an alert issued by the Department of Homeland Security warning of retaliatory killings for a recent crackdown on the Barrio Azteca gang.

El Paso, Texas - David Cuthbertson, special agent in charge of the FBI's El Paso division, said the paramilitary-style gang has an "open policy" to kill its rivals and may turn its sights toward local law enforcement officers.

"[They] are extremely cold-blooded and aggressive," Cuthbertson told FoxNews.com. "The killings are done really without thought and any kind of remorse."

Citing uncorroborated information, Homeland Security issued an Officer Safety Alert on March 22, advising lawmen in the El Paso sector to vary their routes to and from work and to wear body armor while on duty. The alert also suggested that officers' relatives pay closer attention to unusual activity in the area.

"The Barrio Azteca gang may issue a 'green light' authorizing the attempted murder of [law enforcement officers] in the El Paso area," the alert read. "Due to the threat, it is recommended that [law enforcement officers] take extra safety precautions."

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Massive Amount of Police Terminations in Nuevo Leon

Some 20 former police officers face criminal proceedings in the PGJE

Some 481 municipal and state police officers have been terminated from the police departments in recent months because of the failed confidence test, for their alleged complicity with organized crime and a major clean up processes driven by the governmental authorities.

At least 20 of these former municipal police officers faced several criminal charges before the Attorney General in Nuevo León from November 2009 to February 2010.

The municipality of Escobedo, governed by the PRI Carrales Clara Luz Flores, reported that a total of 142 officers were dismissed.

The mayor said that "the terminations have been for various reasons, some had resigned, others were let go due a series of drug tests and confidence tests."

Police Installation Attacked In San Fernando Tamaulipas

Two police buildings attacked in San Fernando.

San Fernando, Tamaulipas - Authorities have confirmed an attack against two police department buildings just a couple hours south of the Rio Grande Valley.

The Tamaulipas Ministry of Public Safety (SSP) confirmed an armed attack against the buildings for state and municipal police.

The SSP reported that the attack was carried out early Wednesday morning.

Nobody was reported injured but state officials confirmed that guns were fired and explosive devices were thrown.

The two buildings received damage but no further details were available.

State officials are investigating the dual attack.

Authorities have confirmed an attack against two police department buildings just a couple hours south of the Rio Grande Valley.

San Fernando is located a couple of hours south of Matamoros, Valle Hermoso and Reynosa.

Updated news from this region is greatly appreciated.

A video of vehcles from an attack on police forces in San Fernando Tamaulipas. At the scene where traces of blood inside the police vehicles where possibly officers were either injured or killed. Also vehicles from the sicarios with the "Z" (Los Zetas) symbol were seen at the scene.



Friday, April 2, 2010

Army to Hand Over Security Duty in Mexican Border City to Police

Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua - The army will begin handing over some security tasks in Ciudad Juarez, the murder capital of Mexico, to the Federal Police as of Thursday, but it will continue to be responsible for patrols and controlling access to the city, the border and the airport, among other duties, the government said.

Some 4,500 Federal Police officers will have primary responsibility for security in Ciudad Juarez, a border city in Chihuahua state, backed by 2,800 municipal police officers and 200 state police, the Government Secretariat said.

Responsibility for security in the border city will be handed over “gradually to state and municipal (police), with the goal in the medium term of fully restoring institutional normality in Ciudad Juarez,” the secretariat said.

The army, however, will continue providing “security at the main access points to the city, at international border crossings and at air and land transportation terminals,” the secretariat said.

Soldiers, moreover, will provide support to municipal, state and Federal Police officers “in emergencies, conducting operations and jointly assisting in information and intelligence tasks, and in fighting organized crime, among others,” the secretariat said.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Another Chief Executed


Agualeguas, Nuevo Leon - The decapitated body of the police chief of a northern Mexico town and the body of his brother were found inside the chief's patrol truck Friday.

The Agualeguas municipal chief and his brother were discovered after state police received a telephone call early Friday about a patrol vehicle abandoned near a village more than 100 kilometers (60 miles) west of Monterrey, Nuevo Leon’s capital, state Attorney General Alejandro Garza y Garza said.

Forensic experts examine a police patrol car after police found the decapitated body of a town police chief and the body of his brother inside the car near the town of General Trevino, Mexico Friday March 26, 2010. The windshield and driver's door of Cerda's patrol car had 'C.D.G,' an acronym for the Gulf drug cartel, written in blood.

The body of Heriberto Cerda, the police chief in Agualeguas, was found on the bed of a patrol pickup truck, which was left on a dirt road in the nearby town of General Trevino. His head was on his lap, said a spokesman for Nuevo Leon state prosecutors who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case.

Gunmen Kill Nogales Deputy Police Chief and Bodyguard

The assistant police chief in Nogales, Sonora and his bodyguard were killed late Thursday night in a barrage of gunfire.
The deputy police chief in Nogales, Son., Adalberto Padilla Molina, and bodyguard Iván Sepúlveda Espino, were killed Thursday night when police say a small group of men in a pickup truck pulled up to the van they were riding and opened fire, according to reports in the Sonoran newspaper El Imparcial. reported. The victims were traveling in a green Dodge Caravan along the main street called Luis Donaldo Colosio about 9:45 p.m. when the shooting occurred.

Nogales, Sonora - Adalberto Padilla Molina and his bodyguard, Iván Sepúlveda Espino, were driving in a minivan in central Nogales on Periférico Luis Donaldo Colosio and El Greco Boulevard when three people in a gray Ford pickup truck opened fire with AK-47s, said Jose Larrinaga, a spokesman for the Sonora prosecutor's office.

The shooting occurred at 9:45 p.m. near a shopping center parking lot located about three miles south of the U.S.-Mexico border. A 17-year-old boy who standing outside of a nearby funeral home was injured as he tried to avoid the gunfire and is in stable condition, Larrinaga said.

Padilla and his bodyguard didn't have a chance to shoot back or avoid the attack, Larrinaga said. Padilla, who has a military background, took over as assistant police chief on Dec. 3.

Adalberto Padilla Molina, the deputy police chief in Nogales, Sonora., and his body guard were killed Thursday night in an ambush.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Dismantling Whole Police Departments

Mexico Dismantles Police Department over Crime Allegations

Veracruz, Mexico – Mexican army troops and Veracruz state police completely dismantled the municipal police department in Tierra Blanca, a city of 95,000, due to allegations that nearly 100 officers were involved in criminal wrongdoing, state officials said.

Tierra Blanca officers are believed to have been involved in kidnappings and extortion, among other crimes, the Veracruz state Attorney General’s Office said.

Soldiers, Public Safety Secretariat personnel and Veracruz Investigations Agency, or AVI, agents disarmed and detained 98 officers in Tierra Blanca, located about 380 kilometers (236 miles) southeast of Xalapa, the state capital.

Of the 98 officers arrested, 44 were released almost immediately, but without their weapons, due to lack of evidence that they committed crimes, Veracruz Attorney General Salvador Mikel Rivera told Efe.

Only 13 of the officers will be charged, the AG said.

Over 90 Police Officers Detained

Mexican police implicated in killings, kidnappings.

Scores of police officers — including the entire department of one town — have been detained in Mexican probes of killings and kidnappings.

Mayor Alfredo Osorio of the Gulf coast town Tierra Blanca said Monday that about 90 city policemen were being held for questioning about the kidnapping of undocumented Central American migrants.

The officers — the town's entire local force — were detained by state police and soldiers and taken to the capital of the Gulf coast state of Veracruz for questioning. No formal charges had been filed.

The police allegedly kidnapped the migrants to shake them down for money. Central Americans frequently are robbed or abused by police or by drug gangs as they cross Mexico to seek work in the United States.

In the central State of Mexico, prosecutors announced the arrest of two policemen and two former officers on charges they participated in 11 killings related to robberies.

The officers, ex-officers and a fifth man posing as a police office, had been assigned to two towns on the outskirts of Mexico City. They were detained over the weekend.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Two Police Commanders Executed

Two Police Commanders Slain in Southern Mexico.

Chilpancingo, Mexico – Two command-level police officers were killed here Wednesday, bringing to eight the number of law enforcement agents slain over the past five days in the southern Mexican state of Guerrero.

Heraclio Rodriguez and Reynaldo Martinez were fatally shot while driving through Chilpancingo, the state capital, the Guerrero Attorney General’s Office said.

Six police officers were gunned down last weekend in several separate incidents in the Guerrero municipalities of Petatlan and Ciudad Altamirano.

Drug lord Arturo Beltran Leyva’s death last December in a shootout with Mexican marines ignited a fierce battle for control of his organization and much of the violence has taken place in the Pacific coast state of Guerrero.

More than 17,000 people have died nationwide since December 2006 in violence arising from the cartels’ internecine struggles and the efforts of the Mexican police and armed forces to crush the drug traffickers.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Two Mazatlan Officers Executed

Two municipal police officers were killed in a confrontation against sicarios.

Mazatlán, Sinaloa.-  The shooting occurred at 7:25 pm Tuesday when the two officers were on patrol in vehicle # 57. The driver of the police unit was Maximino Garcia Ortiz, alias "El Coyote," who held the position of chief operating officer of the South district and his passenger was officer Julio Cesar Trujillo. Several Sicarios that were on board a gray SUV Nitro pulled next to the officers and began firing at them.

Trujillo got out of the police vehicle to attempt to engage the sicarios but was shot numerous times. He fell to the ground and was hit by a city bus launching him several feet away. Trujillo was killed instantly from the gunfire.

Garcia Ortiz continued to drive away but lost control forcing him to veer off the road. He then was shot from the front of the vehicle and died instantly while sitting inside the vehicle. Both officers sustained fatal gunshots to the body and head.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Mexico's Drug War 2010, 6, 7

From the Archives.
BBC



Originally aired on 10 Feb 2010.

Ciudad Juarez, Chih - Violence is running out of control in Mexico as rival drug cartels battle over the smuggling routes to America. Mexico's president has declared war on the gangsters but the only result appears to be an escalation of the killings.

Katya Adler journeys deep into the heart of a shocking conflict, uncovering the human stories behind the seemingly random and disturbing violence. She asks whether the continuing freedom of the world's most powerful drug runner, Joaquin 'Chapo' Guzman, is evidence that the Government's war is toothless.