Migrants willing to pay up to $30,000 to reach US

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Apr 20, 2011
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MEXICO CITY - X-ray machines at checkpoints in southern Mexico are capturing the ghostly outlines of a clandestine business worth billions a year, people packed tighter than cattle and transported like consumer goods in tractor-trailers to the United States.

The machines, in place for less than two years at two state police checkpoints, have led to the two largest hauls of migrants, who pay anywhere from $7,000 to $30,000 for passage, depending on where they start.

The United Nations estimates that smuggling migrants across Mexico's border with the U.S. alone is a $6.6 billion business annually, compared with an estimated $10 billion to $29 billion in illegal drug running.

The migrant-smuggling estimate doesn't include another $1 billion paid by thousands of non-Mexicans to cross from Guatemala and travel north, according to a 2010 U.N. report on transnational crime.

The 513 people apprehended Tuesday in two trailers in the state of Chiapas, bordering Guatemala, represented at least $3.5 million in cargo.

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Migrants willing to pay up to $30,000 to reach US

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Hmmm? They're supposed to be poor. Where did these assholes get the money? Think America: Out of your banks!!
 
Ranch massacre leader caught...
:cool:
Guatemala Seizes Suspected Leader of Ranch Massacre
May 24, 2011 - Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom says authorities have caught the suspected local leader of a group of drug gang hitmen accused of killing and beheading nearly 30 field workers on a ranch near Mexico's border.
Mr. Colom told reporters Tuesday that the person in custody appears to have been responsible for directing the group that killed the workers. Authorities have identified the suspect as Elder Estuardo Morales Pineda. The massacre took place in Guatemala's Peten province earlier this month. Officials have blamed Mexico's Zetas drug gang for the incident, which has been described as one of Guatemala's worst mass killings in a generation. Police have said most of the victims were beheaded.

In response to the massacre, Mr. Colom last week declared a "state of siege" in the Peten region. The move, which suspends constitutional guarantees, was put into effect to give authorities time to track down the killers. Authorities have said that of the various Mexican drug gangs operating in Guatemala, the Zetas seem to have made the most inroads. In Mexico, the Zetas have been hit hard by the military and federal police since President Felipe Calderon took office in late 2006 and began a crackdown on organized crime groups.

In another development, Guatemalan authorities say officials have found the chopped up body of a local prosecutor - a killing also blamed on the Zetas. Last year, a U.S. State Department report said entire regions of Guatemala are now essentially under the control of the Zetas. The Zetas began as a Mexican military unit that defected and began working with the Gulf cartel. The Zetas split from the cartel last year and the two groups are now fierce rivals.

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