Mexico’s gov’t aiding drug/human smuggling.

LilOlLady

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Apr 20, 2009
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MEXICO’S GOV’T AIDING DRUG/HUMAN SMUGGLING.
(Extreme Drug Smuggling)
Extreme Drug Smuggling_Documentary 2011 - Video Dailymotion

Drug cartels has method of smuggling drugs that is impossible for Mexico’s officials not to know about. They are transporting drugs by sophisticated submarines, boats with containers attached to the bottom of the boats, ladders attached to vehicles carrying vehicles transporting them over border fences, hiding drugs in the bellies of dogs and transporting them across the border and sophisticated tunnels. Thing impossible to hide. As they get more sophisticated, our system of catching them must become more sophisticated. We are giving aid to Mexico that aids drug and human smuggling. More aid we give Mexico the more sophisticated they get in smuggling. We are not losing the war against drug smuggling because we are so afraid of offending Mexico’s government. Same reason we do not enforce our immigration laws. Mexico’s is a bigger threat than Iraq or Afghanistan.

Fourteen Border Patrol agents have died since 2006. Agent's death a reminder of U.S.-Mexican border violence - USATODAY.com

And some of those gun where from guns walking from Right wingers gun right advocates gun sales. And the Right want to hang Holder for one of them? If guns kill then the Right wing gun right advocates have a lot of blood on their hands. If guns kill then Bush has the blood of over a million innocent Iraqis and Afghans on this hands. That makes Bush the biggest mass murderer since Hitler and Right wing gun right advocates.




PS.
Energy independent America is not cost effective. That is the reason we are not energy independent.
Romney? “Big business is doing just fine.” Isn’t that the same as “private sector doing just fine?”
 
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Focusing in on American drug cartel hub cities...
:eusa_eh:
U.S. cities become hubs for Mexican drug cartels’ distribution networks
6 Nov.`12 - Jack Riley is a special agent in charge of the Chicago field division of the DEA. The DEA and other federal and local police are targeting Mexican drug cartels in Chicago, and throughout the United States.
A few miles west of downtown, past a terra-cotta-tiled gateway emblazoned with “Bienvenidos,” the smells and sights of Mexico spill onto 26th Street. The Mexican tricolor waves from brick storefronts. Vendors offer authentic churros, chorizo and tamales. Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood is home to more than 500,000 residents of Mexican descent and is known for its Cinco de Mayo festival and bustling Mexican Independence Day parade. But federal authorities say that Little Village is also home to something else: an American branch of the Mexican Sinaloa drug cartel.

Members of Mexico’s most powerful cartel are selling a record amount of heroin and methamphetamine from Little Village, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. From there, the drugs are moving onto the streets of south and west Chicago, where they are sold in assembly-line fashion in mostly African American neighborhoods. “Chicago, with 100,000 gang members to put the dope on the street, is a logistical winner for the Sinaloa cartel,” Jack Riley, the DEA’s special agent in charge of the Chicago field division, said after a tour through Little Village. “We have to operate now as if we’re on the Mexican border.”

It’s not just Chicago. Increasingly, as drug cartels have amassed more control and influence in Mexico, they have extended their reach deeper into the United States, establishing inroads across the Midwest and Southeast, according to American counternarcotics officials. An extensive distribution network supplies regions across the country, relying largely on regional hubs like this city, with ready markets off busy interstate highways.

One result: Seizures of heroin and methamphetamine have soared in recent years, according to federal statistics. The U.S. government has provided Mexico with surveillance equipment, communication gear and other assistance under the $1.9 billion Merida Initiative, the anti-drug effort launched more than four years ago. But critics say that north of the border, the federal government has barely put a dent into a sophisticated infrastructure that supports more than $20 billion a year in drug cash flowing back to Mexico.

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The 'Disappeared' of Mexico...
:eusa_eh:
Mexico’s crime wave has left about 25,000 missing, government documents show
November 29,`12 — Mexico’s attorney general has compiled a list showing that more than 25,000 adults and children have gone missing in Mexico in the past six years, according to unpublished government documents.
The data sets, submitted by state prosecutors and vetted by the federal government but never released to the public, chronicle the disappearance of tens of thousands of people in the chaos and violence that have enveloped Mexico during its fight against drug mafias and crime gangs. Families have been left wondering whether their loved ones are alive or among the more than 100,000 victims of homicides recorded during the presidency of Felipe Calderon, who leaves office Saturday.

The names on the list — many more than in previous, nongovernment estimates — are recorded in Microsoft Excel columns, along with the dates they disappeared, their ages, the clothes they were wearing, their jobs and a few brief, often chilling, details: “His wife went to buy medicine and disappeared,” reads one typical entry. “The son was addicted to drugs.” “Her daughter was forced into a car.” “The father was arrested by men wearing uniforms and never seen again.” The documents were provided by government bureaucrats frustrated by what they describe as a lack of official transparency and the failure of government agencies to investigate the cases.

The leaked list is not complete — or, probably, precise. Some of the missing may have returned to their homes, and some families may never have reported disappearances. But the list offers a rare glimpse of the running tally the Mexican government has been keeping, and it confirms what human rights activists and families of the missing have been saying: that Mexico has seen an explosion in the number of such cases and that the government appears overwhelmed. “What does the government do? Nothing or almost nothing. Why? There is a paralysis,” said Juan Lopez Villanueva of the group United Forces for Our Missing in Mexico. “The state has failed us.”

According to the National Commission on Human Rights, more than 7,000 people killed in Mexico in the past six years lie unidentified in morgue freezers or common graves. The commission’s numbers suggest the government count might be accurate. From 2006 to mid-2011, the commission reports that more than 18,000 Mexicans were reported missing. Calderon’s spokesman declined to offer a reason why the numbers have not been made public during his tenure, and the attorney general’s office did not respond to questions about the list that its staff members compiled.

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