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Mexican police neutralize car bomb
in border city
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexican police carried out the controlled
detonation of a car bomb Saturday in the troubled border city of
Ciudad Juarez, across from Texas.
A phone tip around midnight led authorities to a dead body in a car
in a shopping center parking lot, the federal Public Safety
Department said in a statement. In a second car, police found the
bomb.
Agents deactivated the device and removed most of the explosive
material to analyze it before safely detonating the vehicle, the
department said. There were no injuries.
Juarez is the same city where drug traffickers staged the first
successful car bombing in Mexico, killing three people in July.
There have been three other vehicle explosions in recent weeks in
Ciudad Victoria, capital of the border state of Tamaulipas.
Ciudad, across from El Paso, Texas, has been one of the cities most
affected by Mexico's drug violence. More than 2,100 people have been
murdered there so far this year — putting it on pace to surpass its
previous high of 2,700, set last year.
Across the country, more than 28,000 people have been killed since
December 2006, when President Felipe Calderon launched a military
offensive against the cartels soon after taking office.
In the central state of Morelos, police discovered nine bodies in
clandestine graves Saturday in the same area where four more were
recently found.
25 slain in Mexican city; deadliest
day in two years
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) — Gunmen killed 25 people in a series
of drug-gang attacks in Ciudad Juarez, marking the deadliest day in
more than two years for the Mexican border city, authorities said
Friday.
Thursday's toll included 15 people killed when attackers stormed
four homes in three hours, said Arturo Sandoval, a spokesman for the
Attorney General's Office of Chihuahua state, where Ciudad Juarez is
located.
In the worst of those attacks, gunmen burst into a house and killed
two young men — then killed four others for being witnesses.
Sandoval said it was the highest single-day murder toll in the city
across from El Paso, Texas, since March 2008. He did not give more
details of how many died back then, or say what day.
Two graffiti message appeared in Ciudad Juarez threatening Joaquin
"El Chapo" Guzman, the fugitive head of the Sinaloa drug cartel.
"You are killing our sons. You already did, and now we are going to
kill your families," one sign read.
Ciudad Juarez, with a population of 1.3 million, has become one of
the world's most dangerous cities amid a turf war between the
Sinaloa and Juarez cartels.
Violence has continued unabated despite the deployment of thousands
of soldiers to the city this year. Federal police, including a
special investigative unit, later took over security in the city as
part of a new strategy announced by President Felipe Calderon.
More than 2,100 people have been killed this year in Ciudad Juarez,
putting the city on pace to surpass its previous high of 2,700, set
last year.
Daily homicide tolls routinely reach double digits in Juarez; 24
people were killed Aug. 15
New Travel Warning for Mexico
WASHINGTON - The State Department has issued another travel
warning for those heading across the border into Mexico.
Officials are urging citizen to avoid unnecessary trips to several
Mexican states, including Michoacán, Tamaulipas, and Chihuahua.
They particularly want travelers to avoid driving on the Mexican
Highway 2 between Reynosa and Nuevo Laredo.
Officials say the area has seen an increase of robberies and
kidnappings with criminals targeting people in SUV's and trucks.
As of Friday, family members of US consulate workers have evacuated
the offices from Monterrey to Matamoros.
Mexican Gunmen Fire at Border
Patrol Agents
ANZALDUAS PARK - The FBI is investigating after armed men shot at
border patrol agents on the Rio Grande.
A Border Patrol Spokesperson tells CHANNEL 5 NEWS agents chased a
vehicle to the river's edge near Anzalduas Park this morning.
The driver swam to Mexico leaving behind his vehicle loaded with
drugs. As agents were removing over a thousand pounds of marijuana
armed men in Mexico began shooting at agents patrolling on boats.
The agents returned fire several times forcing the gunmen in Mexico
to flee. No injuries were reported.
Today's News was brought to you
by a grant from MALDEF, The Mexican American Legal Defense and
Educational Fund.
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