Feral Jundi

Friday, November 20, 2009

Funny Stuff: Mexican City of Ciudad Juarez Calls For U.N. to Help Quell Violence

Filed under: Funny Stuff,Mexico — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:36 AM

      I apologize for laughing, but come on?  Obviously these guys have not done their homework with researching the track record of the U.N.

     You don’t bring in peacekeepers, when there is no peace to keep. The cartels and drug gangs would use blue helmets for target practice, and then go back to fighting each other and the Mexican army and police.-Matt

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Mexican city of Ciudad Juarez calls for U.N. to help quell violence

By Soraya RobertsDAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Thursday, November 12th 2009

Having the highest homicide rate in the world does not make for good advertising, and businesses in the Mexican city of Ciudad Juarez are tired of the bad rep.

Local business groups announced today that they will ask the United Nations for help in quelling the violence, reports The Associated Press.

Representatives from businesses like assembly plants and retailers plan to submit an official request for UN aid to the Mexican government and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

“This is a proposal … for international forces to come here to help out the domestic [security] forces,” said Daniel Murguia, president of the Ciudad Juarez group of the National Chamber of Commerce, Services and Tourism. “There are a lot of extortions and robberies of businesses. Many businesses are closing.”

The U.S. government has sent more than 5,000 soldiers from El Paso, Tex., but the killings and extortion have not abated.

Ciudad Juarez, population 1.5 million, has an average of seven homicides a day, with the total at 1,986 for this year through mid-October.

“We have seen the UN peacekeepers enter other countries that have a lot fewer problems than we have,” Murguia said. “What we are asking for with the blue helmets [UN peacekeepers] is that we know they are the army of peace, so we could use not only the strategies they have developed in other countries … but they also have technology.”

Mexican troops have trained local police and joined in patrolling the city, but to no avail. Rival drug gangs remain at war, and thieves have taken advantage of the atmosphere to target businesses. Thousands of stores and firms reportedly have moved or shut down as a result.

Story here.

 

Monday, October 26, 2009

Law Enforcement: DEA Announces Largest Single U.S. Strike Against Mexican Drug Cartels

Filed under: Law Enforcement — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 1:47 PM

   Awesome.  That is all I have to say.  Clean up this infestation of criminal enterprise, and do it with style I say.  I hope to watch this operation on Discovery Channel in the near future, and maybe someone at the DEA will sell t-shirts? lol  Anything to support the destruction of these cartels, is alright in my book.

    Now if Congress issued Letter of Marques again, then that would really be cool.  To use private industry to eradicate an enemy of the state (and to the world) like these drug cartels, would be an excellent use of the Letter of Marque. Plus the LoM is still on the books!  (Article 1, Section 8 of the US Constitution) Anyhoo, good job to the DEA, and happy hunting guys. –Matt

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DEA Announces Largest Single U.S. Strike Against Mexican Drug Cartels Project Coronado results in 1,186 arrests and huge drug and money seizures against one ofthe world’s most violent drug cartels

DEA Acting Administrator Michele Leonhart announces the results of Project Coronado.  Joining her to announce the results are Attorney General Eric Holder, FBI Director Robert Mueller, and ATF Acting Director Kenneth Melson.

OCT 22 – WASHINGTON – DEA Acting Administrator Michele M. Leonhart joined Attorney General Eric Holder and other federal officials today to announce the results of “Project Coronado”, a 44-month multi-agency law enforcement investigation which targeted the La Familia Michoacana drug cartel. FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III and ATF Acting Director Kenneth E. Melson also participated in the announcement.

Yesterday and today, 303 individuals in 19 states were arrested in a series of takedowns through coordination between federal, state and local law enforcement. More than 3,000 agents and officers operated across the United States to make the arrests during the two-day takedown. 62 kilograms of cocaine, 729 pounds of methamphetamine, 967 pounds of marijuana, 144 weapons, 109 vehicles, 2 clandestine drug labs were also seized in the past two days.

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Saturday, May 2, 2009

Bounties: Mexico Nabs Zeta Gang Leader On Most-Wanted List

Filed under: Bounties,Crime,Mexico — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 8:58 PM

   Right on, and good on the guy(s) that helped nab this clown. –Matt

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Mexico nabs Zeta gang leader on most-wanted list

By ISTRA PACHECO

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexican police on Wednesday arrested suspected Zeta gang leader Gregorio Sauceda Gamboa, one of Mexico’s 24 most-wanted drug traffickers.

Sauceda Gamboa appears on a list of 24 alleged drug traffickers published by prosecutors in March. Authorities have offered rewards of up to $2.1 million for each suspect. Together with a list of 13 lower-ranking drug suspects, the group covers Mexico’s most powerful cartel operators.

With Sauceda Gamboa’s arrest Wednesday at a home in the border city of Matamoros, across the border from Brownsville, Texas, authorities have arrested five of the 37 whose names appeared on the lists.

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Friday, March 27, 2009

Disaster Response: We Used PMC’s for the Katrina Hurricane Disaster, So Why Not The US/Mexico Border Disaster?

     This story below is ridiculous, and I certainly hope that this is not yet another trend that only increases do to a perceived lack of manpower or resources to fight this crap.  I have also been listening to a lot of law enforcement agencies and government officials on the news continue to complain that they just don’t have the manpower to cover this stuff. Couple that with the weapons story I just posted, and entire towns being rampaged by drug cartels, and I am just wondering when this disaster is going to be treated like a disaster?  

     To me, this is a disaster of epic proportions, and needs attention now. Arguably, the drugs and gang/border violence over the years, have killed way more people and ravaged way more communities than any muslim fundamentalists have or hurricanes have.  It is a disaster that requires attention now.  But so do the disasters in Afghanistan, Iraq, Africa, etc.

     So what is the solution, if the border needs guys with guns, and there just isn’t enough of them in the military or police? Hell, Obama just requested 4,000 more troops for Afghanistan.  And if money is an issue, or time to train up an adequate force to get on the border is an issue, then a short term or mid term solution called Private Military Companies or Private Security Companies is the answer. They were an answer during the Hurricane disaster of 2005, and they could be the answer now.   

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