The situation in Mexico has serious consequences for our Rights, and even our lives here in AZ and all along the Mexican border. We cannot emphasize enough how much it is in our interest to have a free, safe and prosperous Mexico as our neighbor. Many of us have family, friends there and they are our neighbor.

We strongly support the Human Rights of the Mexican people to be able to defend themselves. That means the Mexican people should once again have the rights and resources to possess, bear and use modern and effective firearms. As over 70 years of corrupt federal government and it's attending gun control have shown, the bumper sticker is so true. "If guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns". Mexico is a textbook example of the failures of gun control. While some very limited firearms are permitted on paper, and in practice, the real effect has been to disarm the good people of Mexico.
That was done by the very corrupt political party that ran a country rich in natural resources and people, into the ground to prevent a revolution, not to "control crime" as was the pretense.

As the archived reports will show, the defenseless people of Mexico have suffered way too much. They deserve much better. We need to help.

Given the gravity of the ongoing drug war in Mexico our neighbor to the south, ASR&PA has been working to monitor the border situation and it's many effects on our state and our members:

Including drug and human trafficking, with related issues of murders, kidnappings, home invasions, extortion, destruction of wildlife habitat, illegal immigration, white slavery, money laundering, expenses of incarceration and medical treatments, the list goes on and on. Also de facto cession of areas of the state to the DTO's; fugitives, cash, firearms and ammunition running south. Most of these issues could be significantly reduced by simply securing the border.

To get it out of the way, ASR&PA does support legal immigration, trade, and travel between our countries. Especially so that we and our Mexican neighbors can once again freely and safely travel to our neighboring countries for competition, training, hunting and just enjoy good company.

Friday, April 15, 2011

AZMEX UPDATE 11 OCT 2007

AZMEX UPDATE 11 OCT 2007

Mexican diplomat hails police chiefs for immigration policy

PHOENIX (AP) - A Mexican diplomat on Wednesday lauded Phoenix area
police departments for sending out what he says is a message of peace
to the immigrant community.

Carlos Flores Vizcarra, Mexican consul general for Phoenix, applauded
area chiefs of police who voiced their opposition to suggestions that
local officers conduct day-to-day immigration enforcement.

Flores said the chiefs' message, issued at a news conference earlier
this week, is a welcome one for the immigrant community, which he
described as completely overwhelmed and restless because of an anti-
immigrant climate in the state.

``This message that was put out by the chiefs of police has been
something that comes to revitalize the trust of those who are in the
shadows, those who are undocumented and who are willing to cooperate
and contribute to the community's safety,'' Flores said at a news
conference organized by immigrant-rights activists who wanted to
voice their support of the chiefs of police.

Flores said the chiefs' message is a welcome one for the immigrant
community.

He pointed to the state's new employer-sanctions law and to Maricopa
County authorities who are arresting illegal immigrants under a
controversial interpretation of a human smuggling law.
``Employers ... have already begun the process of streamlining their
own work force, and in some cases they have let off some people,''
Flores said. ``People without a job who are heads of families are
very concerned, and some of them have come to my office and said,
'This is it, I'm out of work for three weeks, this is the time to go.'''

Flores said he did not have statistics showing how many people have
left, but that there have been at least a few cases.

However, not all law enforcement officers agree with what the chiefs
announced earlier this week.

On Monday, a union for police officers called for an end to an
immigration policy that prevents officers from asking federal
immigration authorities for assistance in situations where illegal
immigrants commit civil traffic violations.

The union says the policy makes the streets of Phoenix more dangerous.

On the Net:
Mexican Consulate of Phoenix:
http://www.sre.gob.mx/phoenix/

AZMEX UPDATE 3 OCT 2007

AZMEX UPDATE 3 OCT 2007

Note: the claims on weapons need to be checked, especially the
"rocket launchers" I don't remember any such case.
"In recent years, officials have arrested drug smugglers in Arizona
carrying shoulder-fired rocket launchers. They routinely find assault
rifles. "

Cartels outrun, outgun the law at Ariz. border
Fed report details thriving business behind violent international
industry
Sean Holstege
The Arizona Republic
Oct. 3, 2007 12:00 AM

MARANA - Maj. George Harris watches from a front-row seat the
increasingly sophisticated world of Mexican drug cartels as he skims
his National Guard helicopter 200 feet above the southern Arizona
desert.

Harris commands an aviation unit for Operation Jump Start, a two-year
mission that sent National Guard troops to help secure the U.S-
Mexican border. Although stopping illegal immigration grabs most of
the public attention, slowing the flow of illicit drugs is a critical
part of the job.

Hovering above the Tohono-O'odham Reservation recently, Harris
pointed to a volcanic hill riddled with campsites where cartel
"spotters" take up key lookout positions to alert smugglers of nearby
patrols.

Such hideouts dot just about every hill Harris scouts in the 90 miles
between Marana and Why in Pima County. There are more than 100 well-
armed Mexican spotters operating in Arizona at any time, Harris and
federal agents estimate.

The camps show how pervasive the Mexican drug-smuggling operation has
become and why congressional investigators said last week that
cartels "operate with relative impunity along the U.S. border."

Mexican smuggling rings, now allied with Colombian cartels, outspend,
outgun and frequently outmaneuver government agents from both sides
of the border because of enormous revenues and cunning operations.

The drug war is a mismatch in both countries. At best, government
statistics show, one load in 10 is seized at the border, where
Arizona has become the busiest marijuana-smuggling route.

Billion-dollar business

The Government Accountability Office estimated last week that Mexican
cartels earned $8 billion to $23 billion from U.S. drug sales in
2005. The drug syndicate runs street distribution gangs in "almost
every region of the United States," investigators reported.

The U.S. government estimates that 90 percent of Colombian cocaine
entering the United States comes through Mexico. That's up from five
years ago, when two-thirds crossed the Mexico border.

With $23 billion in earnings, the Mexican cartels would be nearly the
size of Arizona's two biggest companies combined: Avnet and Phelps
Dodge. They would rank 97th on the Fortune 500 list, four spots below
the Coca-Cola Co.

The money allows cartels to buy equipment, expertise and weapons;
bribe police; or hire well-trained army deserters. The Mexican
government fired or suspended nearly 1,900 federal employees last
year on corruption allegations.

"The only thing that holds the cartels back is their imagination,"
said Ramona Sanchez, special agent for the Drug Enforcement
Administration in Phoenix.

'Like a military operation'

In recent years, officials have arrested drug smugglers in Arizona
carrying shoulder-fired rocket launchers. They routinely find assault
rifles.

"It's like a military operation," said William Newel, head of the
Phoenix office of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives. "If they can lay down suppressing fire to let smugglers
get away with their loads, they'll do it. So they want high-capacity,
high-power weapons."

Smugglers used such weapons five years ago to gun down Kris Eggle, a
park ranger at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument and a friend of
Harris, the helicopter pilot.

"It's always the good guys that get it," Harris said as he flew
through a park canyon crisscrossed with smugglers' tracks.

There are so many tracks in the park that Harris won't let his family
visit.

Technology, expertise

The cartels' money also buys technology as well as expertise.

When the National Guard built steel vehicle barriers on the Tohono-
O'odham Reservation, smugglers engineered a ramp to drive over them.

The Guard finished a triple fence at San Luis early this year, and
once-rampant illegal immigration there almost halted. But last month,
work crews discovered a tunnel 30 feet deep that ran under the fence
foundations and the water system. Authorities found 45 drug-smuggling
tunnels, some with lights and air-supply systems, under the border
from 2000 to 2006. The rate is escalating.

Spotters can camp out for weeks in one spot, with smugglers
replenishing their provisions. The spotters use GPS equipment,
encrypted satellite radios and night-vision goggles to keep smuggling
routes open.

The canyons north of Menagers Lake are a popular spot. As Harris flew
over the area, he called it the "worst place on the whole border, a
nasty little joint," because of all the smuggling violence. Just
across the barrier at the border, the driver of a blue four-wheel-
drive vehicle watched Harris' helicopter glide by and then
disappeared in a cloud of dust.

Flying north, Harris encountered a dozen abandoned smuggling trucks
in the first three miles. National Guard troops familiar with the
region say there are hundreds of abandoned trucks.

Harris' Task Force Raven has seized 108 trucks in the act of
smuggling since July 2006.

Drug war marches on

The U.S. government has spent $397 million since 2000, helping Mexico
fight its drug war. The money has gone toward DEA offices, law-
enforcement training, border-security grants and helicopters.

"Smugglers hate helicopters," Harris said.

Cartel spotters are invisible from the desert floor. But from the
air, their hideouts are betrayed by arranged rock walls and cut brush
used for camouflage. As a National Guard officer, Harris does not
have the authority to arrest smugglers, so he catalogs the hideouts
and tells the Border Patrol.

"I try and get up in the hills and harass the scouts as often as
possible," Harris said. "It takes away the smugglers' eyes."

AZMEX UPDATE 30 AUG 2007

AZMEX UPDATE 30 AUG 2007

Shots reportedly fired at security workers at border
BY SARAH REYNOLDS, SUN STAFF WRITER
August 30, 2007 - 7:57AM

U.S. Border Patrol photo
This surveillance equipment was seized from suspected lookouts for
alien smugglers near Yuma.
Gunshots were allegedly fired from Mexico on Wednesday morning at
private U.S. security contractors guarding infrastructure along the
border, according to U.S. Border Patrol officials.

A security officer from Pinkerton Government Services notified Border
Patrol agents that he heard 12-15 shots at about 9:45 a.m. while he
and two other guards were near the U.S.-Mexico border about 30 miles
south of Wellton, keeping watch over equipment being used to build
the fence.

Immediately after the shots rang out, the guards reported spotting a
white four-door sedan driving slowly westbound along Mexican Highway 2.

By 9:50 a.m., a CBP Air and Marine Operations Yuma Branch helicopter
responded to the area and spotted the vehicle driving off-road south
of a military checkpoint in Mexico.

Mexican authorities were notified of the incident, according to
Border Patrol officials. No one was injured.

This marks the second time in a week that violence with guns has been
directed toward the United States from Mexico, according to the
Border Patrol news release.

On Aug. 23, a CBP helicopter pilot was assisting ground agents after
a suspected smuggling vehicle got stuck while escaping into Mexico
near the Colorado River. While hovering above the vehicle the pilot,
using the helicopter's forward-looking infrared system, saw an
occupant emerge from the vehicle and point a rifle in his direction.

The pilot reportedly maneuvered the aircraft away from the area. No
gunshots were reported from either the pilot or agents on the ground.

In other Wednesday Border Patrol activity, Yuma sector agents
intercepted a group of individuals suspected of conducting
surveillance in support of smuggling.

During aerial surveillance near the Cabeza Prieta mountain range
about 60 miles southeast of Wellton, a Border Patrol helicopter pilot
sighted six individuals. He alerted agents at the Wellton station of
their presence.

Agents from Camp Desert Grip responded and apprehended the
individuals, who were determined to be Mexican nationals illegally in
the United States.

During the apprehension, agents discovered those six were carrying
camouflage backpacks containing binoculars, a one-way radio, a
cellular phone and spare battery, a solar-powered battery charger, a
compass and provisions for approximately one week. One of the
subjects was also carrying a small amount of marijuana.

The group was transported to the Wellton station for further
questioning and processing, according to Border Patrol officials.

---
Sarah Reynolds can be reached at sreynolds@yumasun.com or 539-6847.

THIS STORY WAS UPDATED AT 4:26 P.M.

AZMEX UPDATE 28 JUL 2007

AZMEX UPDATE 28 JUL 2007

note: opinion on amount of border crossers compared to official count
and they still seem to have good access to ironwood

Death toll mounts for border crossers
2 more bodies put area on grim, record-setting pace
By Brady McCombs
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 07.28.2007

The discovery Thursday of the bodies of two illegal border crossers
northwest of Tucson has added to a record-breaking year in Pima
County for border deaths.
There were 152 illegal border crossers found dead in the county from
Jan. 1 through July 25, a pace that is well ahead of 2006 and
eclipses the record set in 2005, when there were 131 at this same
time, said Dr. Bruce Parks, chief medical examiner at the Pima County
Office of the Medical Examiner.
"It's scary," Parks said.
Deputies were called at 7:45 a.m. Thursday by two residents who found
a body southwest of Marana at North Trico and West Magee roads, said
Dawn Hanke, spokeswoman for the Pima County Sheriff's Department.
Deputies could not determine the sex or age of the decomposed body,
she said.
Later Thursday, deputies assisted the Border Patrol at about 3:30
p.m. after residents called to say they found a body at 5400 N. Agua
Dulce Ranch Road, southwest of Marana in the Ironwood Forest National
Monument. Muddy roads forced the deputies to travel north to Toltec
— a small town between Eloy and Casa Grande — and then take dirt
roads to reach the remote area where the body was found, Hanke said.
The 152 bodies found in Pima County this year are 21 more than in the
same period in 2005, a 16 percent increase. The total for all of 2005
was 197 deaths, Parks said.
It is also 31 more bodies that were found during the same period in
2006, a 25 percent increase. The 2006 final year tally was 174
deaths, he said.
The increased number of deaths calls into question the Border
Patrol's assertion that reduced apprehensions in the Tucson Sector —
down 11 percent from 2006 through June — indicate a decrease in
border crossings.
To the contrary, says the Rev. Robin Hoover, the founder of Tucson-
based Humane Borders, which places water tanks throughout the desert.
About 30 percent to 40 percent more people are crossing this summer
than usual, said Hoover, who travels often to Altar, Sonora, where
people come from all across Mexico and Central America to prepare to
cross in the Altar Valley.
"The economy is the biggest player, always has been and always will
be, so jobs must be picking up somewhere," Hoover said.
The other factor might be the weather, which has been harsher this
year compared with last summer when cool cloud cover was more common,
he said.
The increase demonstrates again that the Department of Homeland
Security's border enforcement strategy is part of the problem, said
Isabel Garcia, co-chair of Tucson-based Coalición de Derechos
Humanos, and Melissa McCormick, senior research specialist at the
Binational Migration Institute at the University of Arizona. The
increasing number of agents and presence of the National Guard pushes
illegal entrants into more remote routes.
"The more difficult you make it for people to cross without taking
care of the underlying issues, the more deaths we're going to see,"
Garcia said.
The Border Patrol objects to the blame and says that preventing
deaths is a top priority. The agency has 45 agents in Borstar (the
agency's search, trauma and rescue team) and brought in 14 more this
summer from California and Texas. That means there are 10 to 12
Borstar agents in the Tucson Sector per shift.
From Oct. 1 through June 30, agents had rescued 318 people in 118
incidents in the Tucson Sector, which covers New Mexico to the Yuma
County line, agency numbers show.

● Contact reporter Brady McCombs at 573-4213 or bmccombs@azstarnet.com

AZMEX UPDATE 2 11-6-11

AZMEX UPDATE 2 11 JUN 2001

Note: this is from a newspaper guy in tucson.
pretty uncomfortable.
thx

Possibly this will interest you.
http://azbiz.com/lionel_waxman/
Lionel Waxman
War is coming to Tucson

You are not going to like what I have to say today. But it must be
said, out loud. People are whispering about it now, but if we don't
face up to it, it will only get worse.

The violent incident in Cananea, Sonora, has hit the consciousness of
Tucson squarely between the eyes. Northern Mexico is in a state of
war. Who is fighting? That's hard to say. Officially, it is the drug-
and people-traffickers against each other and the government. But in
Mexico, you can't tell the players even with a program. You cannot
assume the police or the Army are loyal to their commands. Many are
working on their own.

In case you were out of town two weeks ago, about 50 armed men drove
into Cananea and killed five policemen and two other residents. The
men fled into the hills with police and soldiers in pursuit. In
subsequent gunfights, 16 more were killed.

The U.S. State Department has issued a travel announcement saying
narcotics-related "violence by criminal elements affects many parts
of the country."

It is not too much to say there is a war going on right across the
border. It's not a hot war with firefights all the time. It is not a
cold war, either, with posturing and press releases. Let's call it a
warm war. Violence breaks out from time to time for reasons unknown
to us, but completely unpredictable.

And here's the part you don't want to hear. Violence has spread
across the border and has resulted in several deaths of Americans
residents and visitors. Most such crimes are reported as isolated
incidents. But the violence in northern Mexico is not stopping at the
border. It's headed this way and a lot of Tucsonans know it.

It is crossing the border because there is little to stop it. The
Border Patrol is in virtual rebellion against its supervisors. They
have felt betrayed by prosecution of some of them for what they see
as doing their job. Union Local 2544 of the Border Patrol has
published its position of "no confidence" in supervisory and command
personnel. They have called a meeting (members only) for June 13 to
consider their options.

You can't learn about it in most media, but the whispers around town
are people saying they are thinking of getting out. It looks like war
and it's coming here. No government has acted to protect Americans
living in Southern Arizona. Our federal government is in full
collapse as far as the southern border is concerned. All we get from
them is talk. The only action we see is toward integrating Mexico
into the U.S. and Canada.

What will it mean when the border is actually abandoned and anybody
is free to enter without inspection? It will mean that Southern
Arizona, specifically Tucson, could become like Cananea and other
parts of northern Mexico. Violence will overtake local police. State
and federal authorities will look the other way.

Our local news media talks about growth and how we must plan for. But
these events will make those plans meaningless. When Tucsonans have
to risk their lives to go to work or shopping, this city will empty
out. Adequate water supplies will be the least of our problems.

The federal government should put troops on the border to defend the
United States and its citizens. The troops should be given orders to
use as much force as necessary to accomplish that task. No soldiers
should be detailed to do paperwork and forbidden to fire on
violators. This is another war and if we don't act like it, we will
lose this one too.

This war isn't on the other side of the world. This is for our homes,
our homes, our homes.

But the feds do nothing. What is happening is according to their
plan. Drop in on the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North
America's website n spp.gov n and read the plans. Watch discussion of
the so-called immigration reform bill, which contains legislation
advancing the integration of North America. It's happening whether
you like it or not. And Tucson is on the front lines.

Contact Lionel Waxman at territorial@waxmanmedia.com. Waxman's
Flashpoint commentaries are published in The Daily Territorial.

AZMEX UPDATE 11-6-07

AZMEX UPDATE 11 JUN 2007

note: read the fine print

Rep. Grijalva seeking to protect sensitive border lands
Associated Press
Jun. 11, 2007 11:43 AM

TUCSON - A southern Arizona congressman is pushing a proposal that
aims to protect borderland national forests and wildlife refuges from
damage caused by illegal border traffic and by security measures
taken to counter the crossings.

Generally, the bill introduced recently by U.S. Rep. Raul Grijalva
would force the U.S. Border Patrol to take steps to protect those
preserves from illegal crossers, who leave behind huge amounts of
trash and carve illegal roads in the desert, and from the agency's
trucks and other security measures that scar the land and sometimes
disturb wildlife.

The legislation's individual provisions are tilted more toward
protecting sensitive lands from security efforts than from illegal
immigrants.

"Current policy has driven crossing activity to remote isolated areas
along the border, which in Southern Arizona, represent significant
public and tribal lands," Grijalva said in a written statement.

The bill would also set up a $5 million annual Borderlands
Conservation Fund to finance projects to restore wildlife habitat
along the border, improve management of borderland species and
compensate for environmental damage there.

Environmental and conservation groups expressed support for the bill,
whose language closely matches recommendations that came out last
week in a report from 35 conservation groups, state and federal
agencies and universities.

But groups representing current and retired Border Patrol agents said
the legislation would tie the agency's hands.

"Mr. Grijalva is not a friend of the Border Patrol. He never has
been. We'd have to study the bill pretty extensively, but anything
that can help us do our jobs we are in favor of," said Mike Albon, a
spokesman for Local 2544 of the National Border Patrol Council, a
union representing patrol employees. "Anything that would restrict us
in doing our jobs, we don't like that."

AZMEX UPDATE 9-6-07

AZMEX UPDATE 9 JUN 2007

No More Deaths boosts migrant-saving efforts
Hundreds expected to assist with desert patrols this summer
CLAUDINE LoMONACO
Tucson Citizen

Seventy-five-year-old retired geologist Ed McCullough walked hundreds
of miles through the desert in the last year, carefully charting a
web of migrant trails in the hope of saving lives.
The former University of Arizona professor turned his findings into
maps for volunteers with the humanitarian aid group No More Deaths,
which will patrol the desert around Arivaca in search of distressed
illegal immigrants for the fourth straight summer.
The group kicks off its effort Saturday with an opening ceremony at
its round-the-clock camp east of Arivaca, where hundreds from around
the country, including doctors and nurses, are expected to volunteer.
New Jersey native Matt Mittelstadt, 27, recently came to Tucson to
join No More Deaths after spending a year as a volunteer with the
Presbyterian Church Peace Fellowship in Colombia.
Mittelstadt said he first heard about the dangers illegal immigrants
face crossing the border from Salvadorans he used to work with at a
restaurant.
"I'm humbled by them," he said.
For years, Arizona has been the busiest and deadliest crossing point
for illegal immigrants, who often succumb to the region's three-digit
summer temperatures and harsh, barren terrain.
McCullough put his skills as a geologist to use after his first
summer of volunteering with the group three years ago, when he found
himself largely wandering the desert.
"It was just pretty much serendipity," McCullough said. "We would
drive the roads, hoping to find people that needed help. There wasn't
any real pattern to it and you have to think, 'There's got to be a
better way.' "
McCullough focused on a series of heavily trafficked corridors, each
made up of three or four trails that weave and intersect, leading
from Mexico between the Tumacacori Mountains to the east and the
Baboquivari Mountains to the west. Volunteers go out with one of
McCullough's maps and a hand-held Global Positioning System so they
can find their way back.
"Hopefully, we will be able to get out walking these trails and find
people before they die," he said.
The U.S. Border Patrol has recorded 210 deaths of illegal immigrants
along the entire U.S.-Mexico border between October 2006 and May 2007.
No More Deaths has intensified the training of volunteers this year,
and more than 20 have taken a 72-hour emergency medical course to
become Wilderness First Responders. The group will also have bicycle
teams and a mobile unit this year to target areas with heavy traffic,
and it will continue its partnership with Sonora's migrant aid office
to staff aid stations at the Mariposa and downtown ports of entry in
Nogales, where migrants are voluntarily returned after failed
attempts to illegally cross the border. The group is seeking
donations of socks, shoes, water and food to stock the aid stations.
No More Deaths is still working out the details of its policy on
transporting ailing migrants with Robert Gilbert, new chief of the
Border Patrol's Tucson sector, said Gene Lefebvre, a retired minister
and co-founder of No More Deaths.
The group stopped transporting ailing migrants in July 2005 after
federal authorities charged two No More Deaths volunteers with
smuggling for driving three illegal immigrants to a medical clinic. A
federal judge later dismissed the charges.
For more information about No More Deaths, call 245-7560.

AZMEX UPDATE 8-6-07

AZMEX UPDATE 8 JUN 2007

ote: wonder when the pro illegal media here will wake up to them
being next.
also, from which gun show do the bad guys get the grenades?

In Mexico, where journalism is one of the last trusted institutions,
drug traffickers silence media
Chris Hawley and Sean Holstege
The Arizona Republic
Jun. 8, 2007 12:00 AM

MEXICO CITY
When hand grenades began exploding outside its subsidiary in Sonora
state, the largest newspaper chain in Mexico decided to throw in the
towel.

"For the good of all, I recognize the imperative need to make this
painful and difficult decision and announce the temporary closure of
the Cambio Sonora newspaper," Mario Vázquez Raña, president of
Organización Editorial Mexicana, told readers in a letter.

That was two weeks ago. The newspaper has not published since.

Across Mexico, a tide of drug-related violence is silencing
journalists, one of the few institutions that people still trust in
this country racked by police and judicial corruption.

Mexico was the deadliest country for journalists after Iraq in 2006,
with nine dead and three missing, according to the Reporters Without
Borders watchdog group.

The numbers of attacks have been rising since 2003, as reporters are
snatched from the street by armed men in SUVs or gunned down as they
leave their offices. Just in the past month, a reporter and cameraman
disappeared, another reporter received death threats and a newspaper
office was attacked.

The repression is hampering anti-crime efforts and threatening to
destroy Mexico's free press, which had just begun to flourish after
decades of control by the Mexican government, some journalists say.

"Before, the repression was political. Now, it's coming from
organized crime, and it's targeting the very lives of journalists,"
said Adela Navarro Bello, publisher of the Zeta newsmagazine in Tijuana.

In some cases, attackers seem to be punishing reporters for specific
articles identifying drug-smuggling and other suspects. But other
attacks, like the Cambio Sonora grenades, seem to be aimed simply at
sowing fear among the news media, said Reporters Without Borders,
which interviewed reporters for its annual report.

"Journalists on the border were telling us they were afraid to write
about local crimes," said Lucie Morillon, Washington director for the
group. "If you know the mayor or a powerful politician is linked to
drug traffickers and you've just had a baby, you won't write that
story."

Newsroom fear

In drug hotspots, many newspapers no longer write about drug-related
crime. Others bury news of shootouts and murders deep in the newspaper.

Nuevo Laredo's El Mañana newspaper stopped covering drug-related
crimes after a Feb. 6, 2006, attack on its offices with grenades and
assault rifles. Editors now review every crime story to see if it is
safe to print, editor Ricardo Garza said.

At Cambio Sonora, editors had stopped assigning drug-related
investigative articles more than a year ago, editor Roberto Gutiérrez
said.

El Imparcial, the most prestigious newspaper in Sonora, cut back on
its drug-crime reporting after one of its reporters, Alfredo Jiménez,
disappeared in 2005. Now, the newspaper won't even talk about the issue.

In the past year, there have been at least 30 attacks, threats or
attempts to silence journalists or their employers, according to an
analysis by The Republic. And the incidents are getting closer to the
Arizona border.

On April 16, gunmen killed Saúl Martínez, a reporter for the
Interdiario newspaper in Agua Prieta, just across the border from
Douglas. Police said he may have been involved in drug smuggling, a
charge his family fiercely denies.

Also in April, reporters in San Luis Río Colorado, near Yuma, filed a
police complaint alleging that lawyers for an drug-trafficking
suspect were pressuring them to change testimony about the 1997 death
of a fellow journalist.

The attackers have been picking increasingly high-profile targets.

On April 6, gunmen killed Amado Ramírez, correspondent in Acapulco
for Mexico's No. 1 television network, Televisa. On May 10, they
abducted popular television reporter Gamaliel López Candanosa and his
cameraman in Monterrey, Mexico's third-largest city.

Since 1994, 15 reporters have been confirmed killed because of their
work, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. The only
conviction came 12 years ago, and only five cases resulted in arrests.

A main reason is that murder is not a federal offense under Mexican
law and state investigators often lack the tools or desire to hunt
down journalists' killers.

When journalist killings began to accelerate last year, the Mexican
government created an Office of the Special Prosecutor for Crimes
Against Journalists to handle such cases. But of 152 complaints
investigated by the office, only two have gone to court, special
prosecutor Octavio Orellana told La Jornada newspaper on May 16.

"More than a year has passed with no results. They haven't broken
that cycle of impunity," said Carlos Luria, Americas program
coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Setback for democracy

Press watchdog groups say the pressure comes at a critical time, as
Mexican journalists were becoming more independent and aggressive
after decades of government control.

Until democratic reforms in the 1990s, Mexican presidents pressured
the media by controlling the flow of government advertising,
manipulating unions allied with the ruling Institutional
Revolutionary Party, or cutting off newspapers' paper supply through
the state-run newsprint monopoly, Productora y Importadora de Papel S.A.

Mexicans now trust the mass media more than they trust President
Felipe Calderón, the Supreme Court, the police and nearly every other
institution in Mexico, according to a February poll by the Mitofsky
consulting company. Only universities, the Roman Catholic Church, the
army and the National Commission on Human Rights ranked higher.

Watchdog groups say the attacks on journalists are crippling
Calderón's recent efforts to crack down on drug crime in Tijuana,
Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey, Michoacán state and other hotspots.

Police corruption in these places is rampant, and journalists are
often the only source of solid information about drug lords.

"The drug traffickers are getting rid of people who tell the Mexican
people the truth, who keep them informed." Morillon said.

"You can't solve the drug problem if you don't have the proper
information."

Failing to address the drug problem will lead to more violence, she
and others said.

"It will be a very unstable situation and very dangerous, "Morillon
said. "It's terrible for Mexican civil society, and that will affect
the border states."

Silencing a giant

The May 24 closure of Cambio Sonora showed that even Mexico's biggest
newspaper chain could be brought to heel, analysts say.

"This goes beyond violence to the press," Lauria said. "It's limiting
the ability of Mexicans to communicate with each other."

Organización Editorial Mexicana, known as OEM, claims to be Latin
America's biggest newspaper chain, with 70 daily papers.

Gannett Co., which owns The Republic, has 102 daily newspapers.OEM
also owns 24 radio stations, and Vázquez Raña, the company's
president, briefly owned the U.S. news agency United Press
International in the 1980s.

Grenade attacks

The company's decision to close Cambio Sonora came after grenades
exploded in the newspaper's parking lot on April 17 and May 16.

The second grenade narrowly missed a reporter who was coming out of
the office. That attack came the same day as a confrontation between
police and drug smugglers that killed 23 people in northeastern Sonora.

OEM said it closed the newspaper because the Sonoran authorities
ignored the company's calls to put police around its office and
failed to find the perpetrators.

The company said that it did not believe the move showed weakness and
hoped that the closure would force the Sonoran government to take
action.

"The very fact that we are such a large and strong chain should
prevent people from seeing this as a sign of weakness," company Vice
President Eduardo Andrade said.

"What we are hoping is that this will make everyone reflect on the
responsibility of the authorities to provide security."

Sonoran Gov. Eduardo Bours said detectives are doing their best to
find the attackers and accused the company of overreacting.

"The two grenades are regrettable, no doubt about it, and I'm not
saying they aren't regrettable," Bours told reporters at a May 28
news conference. "But the reaction seems extremely strange to me, to
say the least."

Newspaper officials still don't know the motive for the attacks.
Cambio Sonora had not published any investigative articles recently,
said Gutiérrez, the newspaper's editor.

"We don't have the slightest idea what the attacks were about," he
told The Republic shortly before the paper closed.

The newspaper had already taken precautions to protect its reporters
after the disappearance of El Imparcial's Jiménez, he said.

Crime stories ran without bylines, and the newspaper had struck a
deal not to run investigative pieces unless all newspapers in the
region published them simultaneously.

Andrade said the newspaper's reporters will continue to be paid
during the paper's closure.

"It's worrying how they have managed to intimidate these media," said
Navarro, the publisher of Zeta.

"It's getting more serious and more widespread.

"We've lost media in the northwest of the country and some in the
center and others. We're just going to keep doing our job and hope
these gloomy statistics end."

Republic reporter Sergio Solache contributed to this article.

AZMEX UPDATE 5-6-07

AZMEX UPDATE 5 JUN 2007

Note: Is it time to demand results of traces, to really see where
most of these firearms really originate?
Not just the ones that may have come from here.
Also, what about the numerous smash and grab gun store thefts?
thx

Mexican, U.S. law agents worried about drug cartel violence
Arthur H. Rotstein
Associated Press Writer
Jun. 5, 2007 07:14 PM

ORO VALLEY - A power struggle between drug cartels in northern Mexico
is "an outright war" and its bleed-over into Arizona is a major
concern, law enforcement officials attending an annual Arizona-Sonora
police conference say.

Three weeks ago, some 50 gunmen arrived in a convoy in Cananea in
northern Sonora and killed seven people, including five police
officers, before Army troops and police pursued them, killing 16
according to Mexican authorities.

The shootings have remained a prime topic of discussion among lawmen
on both sides of the border, including at the 23rd conference of
Policia International Sonora-Arizona meeting here this week.

The conference is designed to let officials on each side of the
border get to know each other, talk about major issues and come up
with strategies to address major common concerns while fostering
cooperation.

The gunmen in the Cananea incident were identified as "Zetas," former
Mexican army elite soldiers, apparently allied with one group of drug
operatives who had lost control of smuggling operations in northern
Sonora to another group based in the state of Sinaloa.

Officials believe the slain police officers were targeted for
betraying an agreement with a cartel.

"Obviously, the Cananea thing is big, but also it's what's going on
with the drug cartels in Mexico and the effects in the U.S.," said
David Gonzales, United States Marshal for Arizona.

"The overall power surge, killings of officials and citizens to
establish their power base - it's an outright war," Gonzales said.
"And the cartels are going to go against the (Mexican) government"
and anyone in their way, he said. "They will kill and spend any
amount of money to establish" their dominance.

Public security issues and killings in Sinaloa stem primarily from
organized crime's drug trafficking and production, said Jesus Alfredo
Lopez Reyna, an official with that Mexican state's attorney general's
office.

"It's a constant battle, because the monster's so very powerful," he
said.

With the situation in Cananea, he said, "It's important that the
state give the proper and effective response to these types of
incidents."

Lopez added, "We will prevail against the delinquents."

Lt. Gerardo Castillo, commander of the Santa Cruz County Metro Task
Force based in Nogales and president of this year's police
conference, said he believes Mexico is going through "a turf battle
more than anything. They're trying to capture a major corridor."

"We are concerned as far as the bleed-over into the United States, as
far as the criminal activity," said Deputy U.S. Marshal Luis Noriega,
the Mexico investigative liaison.

"Criminals do not recognize the border; for them it's porous. So we
have to be on alert that any time something does happen of a violent
nature in Mexico, especially along the border ... that there'll be
the overflow or the bleed-over here into the United States."

Gonzales said that spillover has occurred. Drug cartels in Mexico are
coordinating and working with Hispanic-American street gangs to
smuggle guns and people, he said.

"It makes sense, because American street gangs know how the system
works through the United States, they have their contacts, they have
their routes that they use, they have their whole structure set up,"
Gonzales said.

Law enforcement officials on both sides of the border say they
believe Mexico's government will prevail in the long run in its
heightening battle with drug interests.

"The line has been drawn in the sand, and I think President Felipe
Calderon and the Mexican officials understand that if they let up and
show signs of weakness, it's only going to be worse," Noriega said.
"But in the meantime, there's going to be a lot of bloodshed and a
lot of people are going to die on both sides of the border."

Noriega said that in informal conversations with officials from
Mexico at the conference, "our impression is that they have already
had some successful operations in Sonora."

AZMEX UPDATE 3-6-07

AZMEX UPDATE 3 JUN 2007

Note: re; ironwood, no doubt that hunters and shooters are being
blamed for much of this also.

Illegal immigrants burying border in garbage
The Associated Press
Jun. 3, 2007 11:30 AM

TUCSON - After three years of cleanups, the federal government has
achieved no better than a 1 percent solution for the problem of trash
left in southern Arizona by illegal border-crossers.

Cleanup crews from various agencies, volunteer groups and the Tohono
O'odham Nation hauled about 250,000 pounds of trash from thousands of
acres of federal, state and private land across southern Arizona from
2002 to 2005, says the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.

But that's only a fraction of the nearly 25 million pounds of trash
thought to be out there.

Authorities estimate the 3.2 million-plus immigrants caught by the
Border Patrol dropped that much garbage in the southern Arizona
desert from July 1999 through June 2005. The figure assumes that each
illegal immigrant discards eight pounds of trash, the weight of some
abandoned backpacks found in the desert.

The trash is piling up faster than it can be cleaned up. Considering
that the Border Patrol apprehended more than 577,000 illegal
immigrants in 2004-05 alone, the BLM figures that those people left
almost four million pounds of trash that same year.

That's 16 times what was picked up in three years. And that doesn't
include the unknown amounts of garbage left by border-crossers who
don't get caught.

"We're keeping up with the trash only in certain locations, in areas
that we've hit as many as three times," said Shela McFarlin, BLM's
special assistant for international programs.

The trash includes water bottles, sweaters, jeans, razors, soap,
medications, food, ropes, batteries, cell phones, radios, homemade
weapons and human waste.

It has been found in large quantities as high as Miller Peak,
towering more than 9,400 feet in the Huachuca Mountains, as well as
in low desert such as Organ Pipe National Monument and Cabeza Prieta
National Wildlife Refuge.

"In the Huachucas, you are almost wading through empty gallon water
jugs," said Steve Singkofer, the Hiking Club's president. "There's
literally thousands of water jugs, clothes, shoes. You could send
1,000 people out there and they could each pick up a dozen water
jugs, and they couldn't get it all."

While nobody has an exact cost estimate for removing all the garbage,
it's clearly not cheap. But McFarlin agrees with several advocacy
groups that without a tightening of controls on illegal immigration,
a guest-worker program or other reform of federal border policy, the
trash will just keep coming regardless of what's spent.

In 2002, the United States estimated that removing all litter from
lands just in southeast Arizona - east of the Tohono Reservation -
would cost about $4.5 million over five years. This count didn't
include such trash hotbeds as Ironwood Forest National Monument, the
Altar Valley, Organ Pipe and Cabeza Prieta.

Since then, Congress appropriated about $3.4 million for a wide range
of environmental remediating measures in all of southern Arizona.
This includes repairing roads, building fences and removing abandoned
cars.

The five-year tab is $62.9 million for all forms of environmental
remediating for immigration-related damage across southeast Arizona,
including $23 million for the first year.

Most of the garbage is left at areas where immigrants wait to be
picked up by smugglers. The accumulation of disintegrating toilet
paper, human feces and rotting food is a health and safety issue for
residents of these areas and visitors to public lands, a new BLM
report says.

"It's particularly serious in areas where there are livestock," said
Robin Hoover, pastor of the First Christian Church in Tucson and
president of Humane Borders, a group that puts water tanks in the
desert for immigrants and coordinates monthly cleanups of Ironwood
Monument and other sites.

"I've even found injectable drugs in the desert," he said. "It's rare
when we find that kind of stuff, but there's tons of over-the-counter
medication out there. If some cow comes along and eats a bunch of
pills, that would be a real sick cow."

The trash also isn't good for wildlife, said Arizona Game and Fish
spokesman Dana Yost. Birds and mammals can get tangled up in it or
eat it, causing digestive problems, Yost said.

But clear inroads are being made into the trash problem, said BLM's
McFarlin. Using U.S. money, various local and federal agencies, the
Tohono O'odham Tribe, the conservationist Malpais Borderlands Group
and student youth corps remove trash from the most obvious and
accessible areas, she said.

What needs tackling now are more remote areas such as wilderness,
mountains and deserts far from major roads, she said. A couple of
times, authorities have had to use helicopters or mules to haul stuff
out of such areas.

This summer, with Border Patrol apprehensions of illegal immigrants
down, the Tohono O'odham Tribe is seeing less trash on the ground
than usual, said Gary Olson, the tribe's solid-waste administrator.

"I don't know whether they're hiding their trash or whether they are
just not coming," Olson said.

But only seven weeks ago, No More Deaths, an advocacy group that
looks for injured, sick and lost immigrants, came across a 10,000-
square-foot area five miles west of Arivaca littered with hundreds
and hundreds of backpacks.

"I've never seen anything that size. It's unbelievable," said Steve
Johnston, who coordinates the group's camp near Arivaca.

Other activists from Derechos Humanos, Defenders of Wildlife and No
More Deaths say the trash piles show what happens when the federal
government deliberately drives the immigrants into the desert by
sealing the borders in cities.

"If you were going to cities, you wouldn't need to carry three days'
worth of food," said Kat Rodriguez, a coordinator organizer for
Derechos Humanos.

But a Cochise County activist who has been photographing garbage and
other signs of damage from illegal immigration for five years said
she is appalled the federal government is spending tax dollars to
pick up the garbage.

Illegal immigrants should pick up the trash themselves, said Cindy
Kolb, who helped found the group Civil Homeland Defense.

"Our mothers did not pay someone to pick up our trash," Kolb said.
"We were taught to pick it up ourselves and to practice civic pride
as law-abiding citizens."

AZMEX EXTRA 25-5-07

AZMEX EXTRA 25 MAY 2007

Note: this is a major story. problems include "without paperwork"
"Grenades, plastic explosives and rocket launchers in bulk" It would
seem that nothing is stolen.
"That's why the ATF launched Project Gunrunner in April 2005."

Arizona a growing gun smuggling route to Mexico
Sean Holstege
The Arizona Republic
May. 24, 2007 08:25 PM

A weapon seized after a drug-war massacre last week at a Mexican
border town was sold in Phoenix in another sign that southbound
gunrunning and the firepower of drug cartels have accelerated in the
last few months.

"There is a war going on on the border between two cartels. What do
they need to fight that war? Guns. Where do they get them? From
here," said William Newell, special agent in charge of the Phoenix
division of Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Last week, 22 people died near the Sonora mining town of Cananea.
Drug smugglers executed four police, fled into the mountains and shot
it out with Mexican federal authorities in an ensuing daylong battle.
Newell expects the ongoing investigation to reveal that more weapons
in the attack were sold in Arizona.

Cananea wasn't the first high-profile spasm of violence in Mexican
border lands in which Arizona guns were found. Nor will it be the
last. Other cases include the arrest of a cartel assassin and the
slaying of a high-ranking intelligence officer.

The violence, and fear that it will spill more onto U.S. soil, has
led ATF to make it a top priority to curb gun running in the
southwest. And it's led to unparalleled international cooperation and
requests for more.
"With the new administration in Mexico, we have a level of
cooperation I have never seen before," Newell said.

It's a shared problem, not just Mexico's. Often guns smuggled south
are used to smuggle drugs and people north.
"If that gun ends up in Mexico, it comes right back to you," Newell
said. "It's a significant problem."

Cartel operatives flood Arizona to buy semi-automatic assault rifles,
grenades, plastic explosives and rocket launchers in bulk. All are
used to fight rival drug smugglers and the Mexican government,
according to U.S. court records and criminal investigation reports.

"These are the same weapons you see on the battlefields of Iraq," ATF
Special Agent Tom Mangan said. "The violence on the border has
escalated in the last six months, and the number of weapons recovered
from Arizona has escalated, our investigations show."

Mexican gun runners exploit loopholes in state gun laws and
capitalize on the strictness in Mexico. Guns claim triple the price
in Mexico as in the United States because the permits there cost
about $1,500 and require the holder to surrender rights against
search and seizure.

The expiration in 2004 of the U.S. federal assault weapons ban left
some states, including Arizona and Texas, with no prohibition against
buying an unlimited number of semi-automatic rifles at once without
paperwork. Federal law requires licensed dealers to report multiple
sales of handguns, but not rifles.

Anyone allowed to buy a gun can sell it, as long as the buyer isn't
known to be a felon or otherwise precluded from buying a gun. By law,
the seller can't seek a living from such sales. So at Arizona gun
shows, it's common to see vendors describe large volumes of guns as
private collections. These are unlicensed dealers.

In nine ATF investigations of unlicensed dealers last year, agents
seized 687 firearms and $45,000 in cash. Investigators found evidence
that another 2,300 guns were sold, and they found one receipt for
$150,000. One of the local dealers had been selling guns for 20 years
without a license.

ATF cannot provide numbers on how many guns get sold illegally or
where they go, due to changes in federal law. But Newell estimates
that about half of those sold in Arizona wind up in Mexico, a quarter
find their way to street gangs in California, where the laws are
stricter, and a quarter stay with local Arizona criminals.

Smugglers will pay U.S. citizens $50 to $100 per gun to buy weapons
on their behalf. In one case, Mexican gun runners repeatedly hired
people staying at a homeless shelter, undercover investigators said.

Gun runners smuggle weapons from Arizona into Mexico the same day
they are purchased.

Just to make sure the weapons get through, gun runners often bribe
Mexican border agents, who guarantee the smuggler is waved through
the inspection booth.

Mexican officials say they seized 8,200 weapons in the first six
months of 2006. That's a sharp increase from the 10,600 for all of
2005. In 2003, the last year the U.S. assault weapon ban was in
place, Mexican authorities seized 3,100 guns. The vast majority came
from the United States, Mexican authorities reported.
"It's one or two people with four or five guns at a time, but it's
every day, all day," Newell said.

In one case from January, a suspected gun runner told investigators
he had taken 20 loads of weapons into Mexico over two months,
according to an ATF agent's affidavit.

Another affidavit reported that another suspected smuggler had
entered the United State at Nogales 10 times in a month in 2004.

Mangan and other federal agents say the cartels use the same routes
and methods to smuggle guns, people, drugs and dirty money.
"These same assassins and paramilitaries we see killing in Mexico
cross freely into this country to protect those loads," Mangan says.

That's why the ATF launched Project Gunrunner in April 2005.

Project Gunrunner joins Newell's field office with those in Los
Angeles, Houston and Dallas to investigate and break up straw
purchases, corrupt dealers and known trafficking rings. Forty extra
agents are expected in the region over the next year to help the
pursuit. In Arizona, the emphasis means a new ATF office in Yuma.
Statewide, Newell has 24 agents devoted to the effort.

Another key part of Gunrunner is improved cooperation with Mexican
authorities. Newell says he's seen the most serious commitment in
Mexico to tackling the gun and drug problem in his nearly 20-year
career. That is leading to Mexican and U.S. law enforcers quickly
sharing information about immediate or imminentthreats or crimes.

Four days after the Cananea slaughter, Newell met in Phoenix with the
Sonora attorney general and discussed more ways ATF can help train,
support and share intelligence with Mexican agencies.

"The level of violence I am seeing in Mexico today, especially along
the border states, is eerily familiar to what I saw in Colombia with
the Cali cartel in the heyday of Pablo Escobar," said Newell, who was
stationed in Colombia in the mid 1990s. "In Cananea we had armed
bandits take over an entire town, kill indiscriminately and strike
fear into everybody's hearts."


Contact the reporter at sean.holstege@arizonarepublic.com.

AZMEX UPDATE 19-5-07

AZMEX UPDATE 19 MAY 2007

Note: Have to wonder how long before this spills over here in a big
way.

More guns for Sonora police
Report of armed convoy alarms Naco
By Brady McCombs and Lourdes Medrano
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 05.19.2007

NACO, Sonora — A report of an armed convoy of drug cartel gunmen
heading toward Cananea and Naco sent local residents scrambling for
cover Friday as police and government officials in Sonora and Arizona
braced themselves for another round of violence.
It turned out to be a false alarm, but the mobilization of law
enforcement and the school and store closures in both Nacos
illustrated the tension, fear and uncertainty that have overtaken the
border region. Wednesday's deadly shootout near Cananea between drug
gunmen and Mexican soldiers and police left 23 dead, including five
police officers and two bystanders.
"What else can you think?" said Javier Perez, who owns a money
exchange shop and liquor store in Naco, Sonora. "Three days ago, they
killed 22 people, so I'm pretty sure they believe everything they hear."
The alert surfaced about 10 a.m. in Mexico and quickly spread to
residents across Sonora and to law enforcement officials in the
United States, who began taking steps to respond. Shortly after noon,
the State Police in Mexico issued a statement saying it was just a
rumor, and by about 2:30 p.m. U.S. officials had confirmed that no
threat was present and called off operations.
Officials and residents on both sides of the border endured tension-
filled hours as they sorted through fact and fiction.
"I didn't feel scared but I felt a little pressured," said Juan
Alberto Bracamonte, police chief in Naco. "Not for my own life, but
for the lives of my officers and the lives of the people of Naco."
At about 11 a.m., the Naco police were informed from a command center
in Nogales that a caravan of 40 vehicles traveling between Cananea
and Imuris had engaged in a gunfight with police. They were
instructed to stay away from the police station, change into plain
clothes, conduct patrols in civilian cars and prepare for anything,
Bracamonte said. About 2 p.m., the police found out it was a false
alarm, he said. They were continuing to patrol in plain clothes and
non-police vehicles late Friday afternoon.
The U.S. Border Patrol heard about the situation from a "credible"
source between 10 and 11 a.m. and began taking the steps necessary to
ensure safety, said Gustavo Soto, Border Patrol Tucson Sector spokesman.
At about 11:30 a.m., a large number of Border Patrol agents arrived
at the Naco port of entry and stood with M16s at the border and on
the roof of the Customs and Border Protection building there, said
Janet Warner, who works at the Gay 90s Bar, a few feet from the
border in Naco, Ariz. The Border Patrol wouldn't discuss the tactical
measures they took but confirmed that they took steps to ensure
safety, Soto said.
The port of entry never closed but officers were on alert, said Brian
Levin, Customs and Border Protection spokesman. For about an hour and
a half in the late afternoon Mexico closed the port of entry to
southbound vehicles but still allowed pedestrian crossings.
The Cochise County Sheriff's Office sent its SWAT team to the Border
Patrol's Naco Station at 12:15 p.m. to support the agency, said
spokeswoman Carol Capas. The Border Patrol told them its intent was
to close the port and have agents along the border, she said, and the
SWAT team was sent back to the station about 2:30 p.m. The Sheriff's
Office plans to remain on heightened alert throughout the weekend,
Capas said.
Residents in Naco, Sonora, heard about the supposed gunfight near
Cananea by radio and were instructed on the airwaves to stay off the
streets and take precautions because the gunmen could be heading
their way, said Eduardo Gonzalez, who owns an ice cream store in
Naco, Sonora. Schools there were evacuated about 11:30 a.m., said
Gonzalez, who has four children. The school in Naco, Ariz., was also
closed, said Warner.
Teacher Yogi Khalsa said: "A lot of of our students have relatives on
the Mexican side of the border, so they were very worried. Some were
very emotional — they were crying and trying to contact relatives."
All ended well, he said. Parents picked up some children, and buses
transported the rest of the students home by about 2 p.m., including
children who normally walk home.
In Naco, Sonora, many businesses closed and people were frightened
when Perez returned to town at about 11:30 from Agua Prieta. Pete
Brown, of Hereford, was making his monthly trip to Naco on Friday to
buy cigarettes at midday and said border agents told him as he was
walking over at midday, "Don't go over there without a bulletproof
vest."
"It felt like it was a Clint Eastwood movie — it's like the bad guys
are coming and you don't see kids in the streets," said Brown, who
added that at least 90 percent of the stores were closed.
About 5 p.m., some of the stores had reopened and children were back
in the streets, but local residents said they were still on edge.
"All the kids in Naco are scared," said Fernando Hernandez, 36, who
was coaching a soccer practice for a group of local boys near the
main park in town. "Because they know this about hit men."
The people in town are calm but on alert, said Cecilio Pereda, who
has a photo studio in Naco, Sonora. The attacks in Cananea hit close
to home, he said.
"We are neighbors, and you never know what kind of a reaction you are
going to see," Pereda said in Spanish.
Others downplayed the rumors and questioned why drug gunmen would
come to Naco, where they would be trapped without a way out,
surrounded by the U.S. border to the north and only one highway out
of town to the south.
"There is no way they are going to come here, because there is no way
out," said Perez, the store owner.
"The only way out for them would be the highway, so we know if they
come here they won't get out alive or we would have a major clash,"
Bracamonte said in Spanish. "But we can't be too confident, because
this type of bad buy — forget about it."
Meanwhile the death toll from fighting between the gunmen and Mexican
forces rose with the discovery of another suspect's body in the
mountainous region of Arizpe, the death toll involving the convoy of
armed assailants that burst into Cananea shortly after midnight
Wednesday rose to 23 — five police officers, two civilians and 16
suspects.
Mexican officials have attributed the violence to a fierce turf
battle between rival drug cartels — and the government's crackdown
— continued to take its toll in Northern Sonora.
In Hermosillo, a state police commander was gunned down about 9 p.m.
Thursday, said José Larrinaga, a spokesman for the Sonora Attorney
General's Office.
The commander, Pedro Emigdio Córdova Herrera later died at a
hospital, Larrinaga said.
The commander was shot twice in the head and once in the upper body
by a suspect or suspects riding in a white sedan, the spokesman said
Thursday.
The commander had been a target once before, while serving in Navojoa
last year, Larrinaga said.
Meanwhile, El Imparcial newspaper in Hermosillo reported Friday that
one of the suspects arrested after the Wednesday shootout near Arizpe
between law-enforcement agents and members of the convoy is an active
member of the municipal police in the state's capital city.

●Contact reporter Brady McCombs at 573-4213 or bmccombs@azstarnet.com.

AZMEX UPDATE 18-5-07

AZMEX UPDATE 18 MAY 2007

Note: 6,000 gun shops?
Selling machine guns and grenades?
thx

BORDER NEWS
Body found in wake of attack by cartels in northern Mexico
By OMAN NEVAREZ
The Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 05.18.2007

ARIZPE, Mexico - Police and Mexican army troops found a body in the
search Friday for members of a drug cartel assault force that overran
a town near the Arizona border and killed seven people, including
five police officers.

Wednesday's invasion of Cananea by a heavily armed caravan showed the
brashness and power of Mexico's ruthless organized crime gangs.

After the attack on Cananea, about 50 assailants, pursued by police
and army troops, fled to the hills, ditched their vehicles,
commandeered horses and forced ranch hands to serve as guides,
according to an account from a man abducted by the armed gang.

Sixteen assailants, including the one whose body was found Friday,
were killed in the ensuing gunbattles in the rugged desert mountains
outside Arizpe, 60 miles south of the U.S. border.

Authorities say they have arrested four suspects.

Mexico is struggling to tame drug gangs responsible for a recent
spate of executions, and has sent thousands of police and army troops
to several states.

The nation's top police official said Thursday that drug gangs are
relying on a flow of arms from the United States and using terrorist
strategies learned from al-Qaida to hit back at the government.

Mexican Federal Public Safety Secretary Genaro Garcia Luna complained
of "a large flow of weapons ... many of which came from the United
States," noting authorities have seized assault rifles, .50-caliber
machine guns and hand grenades from the gangs.

"Just in the U.S. border zone, just over the bridge, there are 6,000
gun shops," Garcia Luna said. "That represents an opportunity for
drug traffickers."

Meanwhile, the leader of a state investigative police team was shot
and died Friday in Hermosillo, the Sonora state capital about 200
miles south of Cananea.

Jose Larrinaga, a spokesman for the state attorney general, said
their was no information connecting the killing with the violence in
Cananea and Arizpe.

But the news of another police killing weighed on officers searching
the desert for the Cananea assailants.

"We don't know what's going to happen next, what reprisals can
happen," said an officer, who asked his name not be published out of
safety concerns.

AZMEX UPDATE 14-4-07

AZMEX UPDATE 14 APR 2007

Border fence construction stalled
By Jonathan Clark
Herald/Review

BISBEE — An effort by the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps to build a
border fence at a private ranch near Bisbee Junction has been stalled
for the past three months due to a shortage of funds and volunteer
manpower.

Landowner Richard Hodges, who invited the MCDC to build a 14-foot,
double-layered security fence on his ranch last fall, said the
civilian border watch group stopped working on the project in
January. "They're waiting for more donations," he said.

Al Garza, the MCDC's national executive director, said that his group
has now generated the necessary funds to finish the 9/10-mile fence,
but is focusing on its April border-watch campaign in the Altar
Valley before sending volunteers back to Hodges' ranch.

"The donations have been coming in again, and the only reason we have
kind of avoided that area is because we are concentrating on securing
the border right now — which means spotting and reporting," Garza said.

The materials for the fence are in hand, Garza said, and he expects
work to start up again within two weeks.

Hodges said that he has noticed an increase in illegal border-
crossers since the Minutemen stopped working at the ranch.

"When the Minutemen are there, we have almost nobody going through.
When they're not there, then we've got a lot of people," said Hodges,
who estimated that between 30 and 60 illegal immigrants now cross his
372-acre property on a typical day.

The Minutemen, with help from a local contractor, have so far managed
to plant a row of 14-foot posts along all but one 300-foot stretch of
Hodges' border-facing land. Galvanized-steel meshing connects
approximately half of the posts.

Plans call for that fence to be fronted, eventually, by an additional
8-to-10 feet of sensor-equipped, fiber-optic meshing. A roadway will
run between the two fences to allow for vehicular access.

Despite the recent construction slowdown, Hodges says he has no
regrets about inviting the Minutemen to build their fence on his
land. "I'm very confident they will finish it," he said. "They have
every intention of doing so."

JONATHAN CLARK can be reached at 515-4693 or by e-mail at
jonathan.clark@bisbeereview.net.

Minutemen say border-crossers 'swarming' through Sasabe area
BY Jonathan Clark
Herald/Review

BISBEE — Volunteers from the Minuteman Civilian Defense Corps have
spotted more than 700 illegal border crossers since beginning a
vigilance campaign in Arizona two weeks ago, a spokesman for the
group said Friday.

According to Al Garza, the MCDC's national executive director,
Minuteman volunteers operating in the Altar Valley have called the
U.S. Border Patrol to report sightings of 728 illegal immigrants —
234 of whom were later apprehended. Garza said that the flow of
illegal immigration through the desert around Sasabe is heavier than
the numbers suggest.

"They're actually swarming through there," he said.

The MCDC is engaged in a sort of cat-and-mouse game with human
smugglers, Garza said, in which the smugglers constantly change their
routes as they probe for unguarded areas.

The Minutemen respond by sending special scout teams comprised of ex-
military to locate the latest routes and establish observation posts.

"We're having to work by moving back and forth," Garza said.

"Then we wind up three or four days later right back where we started."

The MCDC launched its third annual April border watch campaign in
Arizona with a rally in Three Points on March 30. The group is
conducting similar month-long campaigns in Texas, New Mexico,
California and Washington state.

The number of volunteers in Arizona has fluctuated between 35 and
150, Garza said.

JONATHAN CLARK can be reached at 515-4693 or by e-mail at
jonathan.clark@bisbeereview.net.

AZMEX UPDATE 13-3-07

AZMEX SONORA UPDATE 13 MAR 2007

Drug killings in Sonora reflect new smuggling
Tuesday, March 13, 2007 9:55 AM PDT

Dynamics
By Jonathan Clark

A recent surge in drug-related violence in Sonora is a result of new
pressures affecting a group of loosely affiliated cartels known as
"The Federation," which controls the state's lucrative smuggling
routes, U.S. officials and analysts say.

Organized crime

At least 20 killings related to organized crime have been registered
in Sonora in 2007, according to Stratfor - a Texas-based private
security consulting firm - as new crime-fighting efforts in Mexico
indirectly drive the violence.

Shortly after taking office in December, Mexico's President Felipe
Calderon sent more than 24,000 soldiers and federal police to areas
ravaged by drug violence, including Acapulco, Tijuana and the western
state of Michoacan. Those deployments, said the Stratfor analyst, who
asked not to be named due to safety concerns, have sent unsavory
characters looking for safer ground - a move that Sonora Gov. Eduardo
Bours has called "the cockroach effect."

"Sonora has generally been fairly quiet, mainly because it was
controlled by the federation of cartels," the analyst said. "And
where you have one group firmly in control, it's quiet. But now you
have these outside guys moving in, and that's where you see some of
the sources of violence."

But it's not only outside competition that upsets the federation,
said Ramona Sanchez, a special agent with the Drug Enforcement
Administration. The alliance is also susceptible to internal disputes.

The federation

The federation formed when kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, whose
operations are centered in the northwestern state of Sinaloa, teamed
up with other regional drug lords, including Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada
and Juan Jose "El Azul" Esparragoza.

United by their common interest in smuggling drugs into the United
States, the independent organizations forged a relatively peaceful
coexistence. "It's very business-like," Sanchez said. "They might not
like each other, but they're doing it for the common objective."

But as U.S. anti-smuggling enforcement increases along the Arizona-
Sonora border, Sanchez said, the organizations may be turning on each
other as viable routes become fewer and more hotly contested.

Interdiction

"When there are tougher interdiction efforts at the border, we know
that smuggling prices go up," she said. "And the truth ... is these
organizations have identified their own routes, and if anyone
interferes with those routes, they will use whatever means they can
to protect their turf."

Another potential source of tension, Sanchez said, is the phenomenon
of rip-off groups who lurk in the Arizona desert and try to hijack
other gangs smuggling drugs or undocumented immigrants across the
border. Sanchez also acknowledged that the arrest last December of
alleged Naco, Sonora, drug baron Carlos "El Calichi" Molinares might
contribute to the local violence.

"The arrest of a leader causes a vacuum, and when you have a vacuum,
this is when these competitor organizations are most volatile," she
said.

"The organizations are vying for control, they're desperate because
of an increase in interdiction, and now there are these rip-off
teams. It's squeezing them and it's putting pressure on them."

Several of the most recent targets of organized-crime-related
violence in Sonora have been police officers.

On Feb. 26, the head of public safety in Agua Prieta, Ramon Tacho
Verdugo, was shot and killed by unknown assailants as he left his
office. Two days later, a member of the federal preventative police
force was shot and killed in Magdalena de Kino, approximately 60
miles south of Nogales.

On a recent Monday night, an officer with the state police was shot
and killed in the state capital of Hermosillo. On Tuesday, a city cop
in Cananea was shot dead in his patrol car, and the tortured body of
an Hermosillo municipal policeman was found outside the city, bound
and gagged with several bullets in his head.

Interpretation

The police killings are difficult to interpret, the Stratfor analyst
said, because of the high level of corruption in Mexican law
enforcement. A police officer might be killed because he is too
effective at fighting crime, but he might also be killed for aligning
himself with the wrong criminal group.

"Since some cops work for the cartels, you can have guys in cartel A
using a bunch of cops as their enforcers," the analyst said. "Then
some guys from cartel B catch up with these enforcer cops and kill
them."

A handwritten note attached to the body of the Hermosillo cop found
Tuesday might indicate such a scenario. It read: "Look, jerks, the
problem is not with the government, it's with (Sinaloa federation
members) Arturo Beltr‡n and 'La Barbie.' All judicial and municipal
police who are with them are going to die."

Drug-related

Mexican officials believe a recent wave of drug-related violence in
the state of Guerrero, where Acapulco is located, results from a turf
war between two groups: the Arturo Beltr‡n group, whose main operator
is Edgar "La Barbie" Valdez, and the Zetas, the enforcement arm of
the Gulf Cartel, which is based in the northeastern state of Tamaulipas.

The Sinaloa and Gulf cartels have been locked in a bloody turf battle
in the city of Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, across from Laredo, Texas.

In 2005, President Calderon's predecessor, Vicente Fox, sent the
Mexican army to that city in an effort to stem the violence.

The note found on the Hermosillo cop, therefore, may suggest that
among the groups now pressuring the Sinaloa federation in Sonora is
its most hated rival, the Gulf Cartel.

(Editor's Note: Sierra Vista Herald/Review reporter Jonathan Clark
may be reached at (520) 515-4693, or by e-mail at
jonathan.clark@bisbeereview.net.)

AZMEX REFUGE ISSUES 26-3-07

AZMEX Refuge issues 26 Mar 2007

Note: answer is always to punish the public, also no mention of
people not wanting to go out
where they could come into contact with drug runners et al.
thx


Refuges 'only guess' on border woes
Illegal entrants' habitat damage now a mystery
By Tony Davis
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 03.26.2007


In 2003, a study found that trails blazed by illegal border crossers
had denuded vegetation on 279 acres of the Buenos Aires National
Wildlife Refuge, and that more than half of 1,315 miles of makeshift
paths lay in habitat of an endangered cactus.
Today, refuge officials want to do a follow-up study, but they don't
have the money, refuge Manager Mitch Ellis said.
This is one of many examples of how federal budget cuts have crimped,
in some cases severely, the operations of Arizona's nine national
wildlife refuges, the refuge managers say.
Overall, the cuts are severe enough that the refuges no longer meet
their federal mandates to protect, preserve and manage natural
resources under their control, managers of the Cabeza Prieta, Buenos
Aires and Cibola refuges said last week.
In the Southwestern states of Arizona, New Mexico, Texas and
Oklahoma, all wildlife refuges and the regional federal office
supervising them have lost 17 full-time job positions since 2004.
Under a just-released budget-cutting plan, the refuge system in this
region will lose another 43 jobs by 2009, including 38 biologists,
managers, planners, a maintenance worker and a law enforcement staffer.
Arizona's refuges will lose 12 positions, or 16 percent of their work
force, between now and 2009. Jobs will be lost by attrition, with no
layoffs expected. The largest refuges, such as Buenos Aires and
Cabeza Prieta, will lose few or no staff members, although they
already have lost some since 2004. Midsize refuges, such as San
Bernardino and Cibola, will lose the most.
The reason for the cuts is that budget increases for the National
Wildlife Refuge system in the past five years have gone mainly into
specific programs such as border security and maintenance — not into
routine daily operations, federal officials say. While the entire
system's budget of $383 million is up from $300 million in 2001, the
refuges' general operating budgets haven't matched continuous
increases in salaries, utility bills and day-to-day expenses, said
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which runs the system.
The service's new operating plan for the system requires these staff
cuts to hold salaries to no more than 80 percent of refuges' total
operating costs.
"Being a land manager is a pretty expensive prospect these days,"
said Tom Harvey, who manages the Southwest's refuge system from
Albuquerque. "There are uncontrollable expenses: chemical costs, fuel
costs, utilities, personnel costs, benefits, health costs and
mandatory training. Even if our budgets stay flat and don't increase,
they are in a sense declining.
"When you couple that with deficits we are in, and the fact that we
are going to be in for some rigorous times, it makes sense to try to
get our house in order as best we can," Harvey said.
But these cuts have meant that bird and mammal surveys, firefighting
capabilities, restoration work, invasive-species control, trail
maintenance and, above all, monitoring and combating problems caused
by illegal entrants and U.S. Border Patrol vehicles pursuing them
have been cut back, refuge managers say.
"We're over our heads here," said Roger DiRosa, who manages Cabeza
Prieta, southwest of Ajo. "Say the refuges had more resources in the
form of biologists and technicians. That wouldn't make any difference
to controlling illegal activity on the border. But it would help us
know what the impacts are and what we have to do to mitigate the
impacts. In this case, we can only guess."
Some specifics:
● The Buenos Aires refuge, southwest of Tucson, lacks an adequate
staff to remove much of the fencing put up when the refuge was a
cattle ranch decades ago. Staffers don't have time to repair all the
water tanks and levees that blow out during monsoon rains. They do
probably half the wildlife surveys and habitat monitoring that
officials want done, Ellis said.
Although the refuge has lost only one staffer out of 15 in recent
years, the existing work force can't keep up with those tasks and
deal with the overwhelming pressures caused by illegal immigration,
he said.
● Cabeza Prieta, which borders Mexico southeast of Yuma, has lost
one of its two biologists in recent years, and it devotes 60 percent
to 70 percent of its staff's time to border-related problems.
Biologists spend their time recording border-related damage, DiRosa
said, and they're almost ignoring invasive buffelgrass and other
plants that are migrating up from Mexico.
While the refuge is trying to bring back the endangered Sonoran
pronghorn, DiRosa said he's not able to answer the questions he
regularly gets from the media and outside groups about how much
damage the refuge habitat suffers due to illegal-migrant traffic.
● Buenos Aires and Cabeza Prieta have eliminated youth programs due
to lack of staffing. Children used to come to the refuge and maintain
trails and fences, pick up trash and do groundskeeping work under the
supervision of full-time staff members.
● The San Bernardino Refuge, near Douglas, has no biologists, with
three such vacancies unfilled. Monitoring of the endangered fish
species that the refuge was formed to protect has decreased by 50
percent since 2004, the refuge manager said. Not being able to count
wildlife populations is like "putting air in your tires without
putting in a pressure gauge once in a while," Manager Bill Radke said.
"It's like fighting a tide," Radke continued. "You can build that
castle against the tide for a while — if you have enough people that
you can shore it up and make it work. But if you lose those
positions, tide will overwhelm."
Since 2001, the federal government's emphasis on homeland security,
fighting terrorism and the war in Iraq have all contributed to budget
pressures that are now hurting the refuges, said Harvey, the
Southwest system manager.
"Refuges are so good at doing more with less," Harvey said. "The
refuge managers and refuge staff are very creative at partnering,
seeking private donations, nongovernmental organizations, volunteers,
matching grants, surplus equipment and collaborative partnerships.
This is the time to say we are going to do less with less."
Linda Barber, president of Pima County's Republican Club, said that
right now, maybe the refuges don't need so many people because the
federal budgetary pot is not infinite.
"There are priorities to set, and the major priority is to protect
the borders of this country," said Barber, who added that she is not
averse to having wildlife refuges, because both she and her husband
are hunters and "we don't want to see these animals disappear."
But if cuts continue, border-area wildlife refuges eventually will
have to cut off public access, said Jenny Neeley, Southwest associate
for Defenders of Wildlife, an organization dedicated to protecting
native wild animals.
"We protect these refuges because of the long-term benefit to us, our
children and grandchildren," Neeley said. "These are things we'll
never get back if we keep cutting."
U.S. Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., believes one way to address the
problem of tight refuge budgets is to make sure the federal
government doesn't acquire more land until it has the money to
properly manage what it has, said Matthew Specht, Flake's press
secretary.
But the comments of Arizona refuge managers are in line with those
given by managers across the country who answered a recent survey
from a national environmental group, said Daniel Patterson, southwest
director for Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.
Ninety-four percent of the more than 160 refuge managers who
responded to the survey said their refuges' operations were
deteriorating. Nearly two in three who responded said the refuge
system isn't currently accomplishing its missions, the survey found.
Seventy-two percent of the respondents said that staffing levels have
fallen below the refuges' basic needs.

● Contact reporter Tony Davis at 806-7746 or tdavis@azstarnet.com.

AZMEX Weapons 12-3-07

AZMEX Weapons  12 MAR 2001  

March 12, 2007 

Gun smuggling to Mexico on the rise

Gary Grado, Tribune

While a surge of humans and drugs flows north across the border, assault rifles and other high-powered weapons flow south.

And leaders of the human smuggling and drug smuggling organizations in Mexico are getting their guns from the same places that law-abiding Arizonans are getting theirs: licensed gun dealers and gun shows, according to court documents. 

"There's an iron river of guns flowing to Mexico," said special agent Thomas Mangan, spokesman for the Phoenix Field Division of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. 

Search warrant affidavits outlining recent ATF arrests allege that "straw purchasers" — people with clean records who buy guns for criminals or others who aren't allowed to possess them — buy high-powered weaponry from legitimate dealers in cities from Tucson to Scottsdale and Apache Junction to Avondale. 

The straw purchasers then turn the guns over to smugglers who sneak them across the border, usually in cars with hidden compartments, for a few hundred dollars. They return with thousands of dollars for the criminal organizations. 

Agents with the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested Cedric Lloyd Manuel and Miguel Apodaca, both of Phoenix, with nine assault rifles as they went through inspections Jan. 21. 

The day before, three brothers, Lucio, Rosendo and Marcos Aguilar, had bought the guns from EAU Sales, 1678 W. Superstition Blvd. in Apache Junction; Bear Arms, 10269 N. Scottsdale Road in Scottsdale, and Shooters Vault, 3202 E. Greenway Road, in Phoenix. 

The straw purchasing crew included other Aguilar family members and some unrelated people. Between November and the Jan. 21 arrests at the border, the crew bought 66 assault rifles. 

"Manuel stated that he had taken probably about 20 loads of firearms into Mexico over the past couple of months," ATF special agent Heidi Peterson wrote in the affidavit. 

The Aguilar family, Manuel and Apodaca and the accused ringleader, Blas Bustamante, have been charged in U.S. District Court with gun violations. 

Mangan said the value of guns triples across the border. 

He added the Mexican crime organizations use the same infrastructure for smuggling humans and drugs north as they do to move the guns south. 

ATF is working on a number of Arizona gun trafficking investigations while they also work with Mexican authorities to trace guns used in crimes across the border. 

One such crime was the shooting of Ramon Tacho Verdugo, the 49-year-old police chief of Agua Prieta, Sonora, who was gunned down as he left the police station Feb. 26. 

Mangan said ATF is helping to solve that killing.