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1904

Sicc OG
Jan 28, 2008
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#1
TIJUANA – Four decapitated bodies have been found since Monday in two locations in Tijuana.


Three were discovered early yesterday in the same spot with the same message scrawled in black marker across their backs: “We are people of the weakened engineer.”
The message apparently refers to Fernando Sánchez Arellano, who heads the once-powerful Arellano Felix cartel. He is nicknamed “El Ingeniero” – “the engineer.”

A fifth body was found with his face disfigured.

Three of the five victims have been identified.

The slayings come amid a rise in violence in recent days in the city, where law enforcement officials say criminal groups are fighting for control of the region. They follow the arrest in Tijuana last week of a suspected powerful cartel leader with San Diego connections, Pedro Ignacio Zazueta Rodríguez, known as “El Pete.”

State investigators said the three bodies found yesterday off the Vía Rápida Oriente, a highway that crosses the city, belonged to men between the ages of 30 and 40. Their hands were bound, and their heads were burned and placed near the corpses on an empty, trash-filled lot.

The Baja California Attorney General's Office identified one of the men as Herbert Garcia Isidro and another as Luis Gerardo Elizaga Morales, who had a federal criminal record that included a drug and a firearms charge.

Another decapitation victim was discovered early Monday miles away in an isolated area off of Bulevar 2000, which leads from eastern Tijuana to the coastal areas. Nearby lay the body of another victim, who was disfigured and stabbed repeatedly.

The Attorney General's Office identified the decapitated man as Ruben Romero Fierro. He has a federal criminal record, but investigators were unsure of the details late yesterday.

Yesterday's deaths brought the number of reported homicides in Tijuana so far this year to 320; 337 people were reported slain last year.

Baja California investigators gave no information about leads in the case. Rommel Moreno Manjarréz, the state attorney general, linked the recent rise in killings to a “settling of accounts” among criminal organizations after a series of key arrests.

On Friday, members of a federal task force arrested Zazueta, 35, at Tijuana's Caliente Racetrack. He also uses the identity Rubén Ríos Estrada. U.S. law enforcement officials say he belonged to a violent Logan Heights gang known as the Red Steps.

During the 1990s, Zazueta spent time in a California prison on charges of auto theft and tampering with a weapon. He was deported twice, in 1992 and 1999, said Lauren Mack, a spokeswoman with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
 
Jun 2, 2002
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#10
i dont know why i thought it was so cool to go to TJ...almost went 2 jail the first time i went, but $40 later, i was cool. that place is grimy as fuck...i feel like im walkin the prison yard or something. i just go to rosarito now, which isn't a helluva lot better, but it definitely is better...
 

mrtonguetwista

$$ Deep Pockets $$
Feb 6, 2003
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#12
New article...


MERIDA, Mexico (AFP) - Twelve decapitated bodies bearing signs of torture were found Thursday in eastern Mexico, authorities said, adding that they were still looking for the heads.

Eleven headless male bodies were found piled on top of each other and covered with blankets in a suburb of the city of Merida, the capital of Yucatan state.

Some of the cadavers also had their legs tied, an AFP photographer saw. One was completely naked, while others wore denim clothing. Some of the murdered men had tattooed arms.

A twelfth body was found in a town called Buctzotz, 70 kilometers (45 miles) northeast of Merida. Its head is also missing.

Jose Guzman, a Yucatan state prosecutor, said the bodies were found by townspeople but that the heads were still missing.

"We believe that the 12 executions were an isolated incident and not part of a strategy to destabilize the state," Guzman told reporters.

A top Mexican public security official who visited Merida recently had noted that the city had remained largely untouched by the drug war that has left more than 2,600 dead in Mexico so far this year.

Just four drug-related murders had been reported in Yucatan state this year, according to El Universal newspaper.

Decapitated bodies have appeared in southern and northern Mexico, and authorities say they are revenge killings between rival drug cartels.

In recent years, drug trafficking gangs have resorted to decapitations and dismemberments against their foes in northern and southern Mexico. Hitmen often leave notes on the bodies indicating it was a drug-related assassination.
 
Apr 26, 2006
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#15
320 and counting... It's barely going to be September. They'll easily surpass 337 of last year. I wonder what's the most, this has got to be one of the highest I'm sure. Not to mention, this is just "reported" crimes. I'm sure there are bodies they haven't found, so the figures are probably even higher than that.

I personally haven't gone to TJ like in 2 years. The closest I get is Las America's Outlets. LOL There really ain't no point, other than going to strip clubs because their better over there. If your 21, you should be here in the states.
 
#17
Mexican police find 9 bodies dumped in Tijuana 10/4

tijuana = mexican detroit

::
LMAO

TIJUANA, Mexico - Police have found nine more bodies dumped around the Mexican border city of Tijuana, where nearly 50 people have been killed in a week of violence related to the drug trade.

Municipal police found five of the bodies Saturday between two small shopping centers in the eastern part of the city. They had been beaten and had their hands bound.

The bodies of two beheaded men were found wrapped in blankets on a road elsewhere in the city, according to the Baja California state Attorney General's Office. The heads were in black plastic bags nearby.

A piece of cardboard left by the bodies read: "These are the bricklayer's people." On Monday, a message found with 12 bodies next to a Tijuana elementary school threatened "all of those who are with 'The Engineer.'"

State prosecutor Rommel Moreno has blamed the violence on warring leaders within the Arellano Felix drug gang. More than 400 people have been killed in drug-related violence in the city across from San Diego this year, including at least 49 this week.

On Friday night, two men were found shot to death in the same empty lot near the elementary school where the 12 bodies were found Monday.

Execution-style killings, beheadings and shootouts have soared across Mexico since the army and federal police intensified their fight against the drug trade nearly two years ago.

In the southern city of Oaxaca, four banners purportedly signed by the Gulf Cartel blamed another drug gang, La Familia, for a Sept. 15 grenade attack that killed eight people during Independence Day celebrations in another Mexican state capital, Morelia.

Police earlier arrested three alleged Gulf Cartel hit men accused of throwing the grenades into crowds of revelers. Messages in the name of La Familia have blamed the Gulf Cartel for the attack.

Police quickly took down the banners. Oaxaca state police commissioner Jorge Quezadas said they were handed over to federal prosecutors for investigation.