Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Judge brakes extradition to USA of "El Flaco Salgueiro" of Gente Nueva Death and Twitter in Reynosa "La Tuta" audio; I regret commanding Los Viagra...

Borderland Beat

Link to Borderland Beat

Judge brakes extradition to USA of "El Flaco Salgueiro" of Gente Nueva

Posted: 03 Feb 2015 02:12 PM PST

Translated for Borderland Beat from a Reforma Article by Otis B Fly-Wheel
"El Flaco Salgueiro"
Agency Reforma

A Federal Tribunal denied the extradition to USA of Noel Salgueiro Nevarez "El Flaco Salgueiro", leader of Gente Nueva, a group sent by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman Loera, to fight for the Ciudad Juarez Plaza.

The Fifth Collegiate Mexico City Criminal Court ordered yesterday a reset of the trial for extradition of Salgueiro, because USA representatives did not compile a third experts report on him, to remove any doubt that he is the person being sought by the USA. Thus the Amparo Court reviewed case 223/2014 based on a draft of a judgement by the Magistrate Juan Gutierrez Wilfrido Cruz, voted yesterday in the plenary session.

The presumed operator of "El Chapo", it is claimed in an arrest warrant by the Federal Court of West Texas District, El Paso, is wanted on charges of trafficking in cocaine, marijuana and conspiracy.



According to the information provided in the extradition process 7/2004 that the Federal Judge Olga Sanchez Contreras instructed the PGR, offered an expertise of identification through physio gnomic studies to assert that the detainee and the person sought by the USA are the same person.

But the defence of "El Flaco Salgueiro" offered their own opinion where the contrary is established. By the discord of conclusions, the Judicial Authority ordered that a third party conduct the study of physio gnomic change.

"El Flaco" is one of the most important players in the wave of violence that plagued Ciudad Juarez from 2008 to 2011 and that led to the city being declared the " most dangerous in the world".

Original article in Spanish at Somosfrontera part of El Paso Times

Death and Twitter in Reynosa

Posted: 03 Feb 2015 01:23 PM PST


Borderland Beat posted by DD republished from Texas Monthly.

On Oct. 16, 2014,  Chivis posted on Borderland Beat the story of the apparent murder of  Dr. Maria del Rosario Fuentes in Reynosa, Tamaulipas and a follow up on Oct.27th.  The Dr. was active on several social media sites. using the name "Felina" and even though there were several messages via her Twitter acct. that she was kidnapped and murdered, there are several different theories as to why she was killed.  Her apparent death caused great dissension among the social media users and further complicated the difficult task of getting accurate and reliable news from the cartel war torn state.  

Texas Monthly sent reporter Eric Benson to Reynosa to find out how it affected social media in the city.
 
Photo by Adam Voorhes

A mysterious murder silences citizen journalists in Reynosa.     


The truth is an elusive, much disputed, and highly valuable commodity in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, a sprawling border city fifteen minutes south of McAllen. Residents witness a shootout that leaves dozens dead, and the government reports a minor disturbance. A businessman receives a call from “kidnappers” demanding immediate ransom, then discovers there is no actual kidnapping. Fireworks are mistaken for grenades. Grenades are mistaken for fireworks. The bloody conflict over turf and power that has taken the lives of tens of thousands of people isn’t the only war going on in Mexico. There is a second conflict over the story of what is happening—a clash that involves far fewer bullets but is no less real. 

On a night early in December, Reynosa appears, at least for the moment, to be bustling but at peace. The main thoroughfare, Boulevard Hidalgo, is packed. Men lounge at roadside taquerias. After-work exercisers sweat through a Zumba class. “This used to be a ghost town,” Sergio Chapa, a Harlingen TV reporter, tells me as we zoom through the city in the back of a cab. After the Gulf cartel and its former enforcement wing, Los Zetas, went to war in 2010, Boulevard Hidalgo would often lie empty at night. Now life is returning to a semblance of normalcy. “It’s good to see it with traffic,” he says, staring out the window.

This particular night is uneventful, but Reynosans know better than to trust the calm and know much better than to trust stories about it. The Reynosa and Tamaulipas governments have an interest in understating the violence, and the Reynosa press essentially stopped reporting on the cartels years ago out of fear. (Reporters Without Borders ranks Mexico between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Iraq on its World Press Freedom Index.) It has become common practice for organized crime to infiltrate Mexican newsrooms and instruct journalists on what they can and cannot write.

This black hole of credible information has led to the emergence of new voices. Over the past five years, one of Reynosa’s most trusted news sources has been the man whom Chapa and I have come to meet: an anonymous Twitter user known as Chuy.

Chuy, who tweets under the handle @MrCruzStar, meets us at a mall a few miles up Boulevard Hidalgo, and the three of us make our way by taxi to his house. In the cab, it’s all small talk. His Twitter activities, after all, are secret. But once we arrive safely at his home, we discuss how he helps coordinate a network of three thousand or so Twitter users who report disturbances throughout the city using the hashtag #ReynosaFollow.

On any given day or night, #ReynosaFollow collects dozens of posts warning of a shootout or a blockade or a column of armored vehicles. It’s essentially a 24-hour neighborhood watch for a city of nearly one million people, enabling citizens to know where they can—and can’t—travel safely. “If we didn’t have that information, the fear would make you stay at home,” Chuy says.

But just two months before, early on the morning of October 16, #ReynosaFollow became a vehicle for spreading fear rather than assuaging it. At 3:04 a.m., a tweet was posted from the account of a much-followed user known as Felina. “Friends and family, my name is María del Rosario Fuentes Rubio, I am a doctor, today my life has come to an end,” it read, in Spanish. Two more tweets arrived over the next five minutes: “I have nothing else to say but do not make the same mistake as I did. You do not win anything.
Photo of Dr. Fuentes in tweet (from Chiis story 10/16/14 on Borderland Beat)





 On the contrary I now realize that I found death in exchange for nothing. They are closer than you think.” The final tweet came at 3:11 a.m.: “Close your accounts, do not risk your families as I did with mine. I ask for forgiveness.” Embedded in that tweet were two photographs, one of a woman, presumably Fuentes, staring impassively into a camera, another of the same woman faceup on the ground, blood trickling from her nose, apparently executed.
Photo of  "Felina" in death that was in tweet ((from Chiis story 10/16/14 on Borderland Beat)
 In a matter of hours, Chuy noticed that accounts were disappearing by the dozen. “We lost reliable sources who self-censored out of fear,” he says. “Now, if something happens, we won’t have the same panorama we had before. We’ll be missing those eyes.”

The first tweet bearing the #ReynosaFollow hashtag appeared on February 23, 2010, at 1:15 p.m. Before the night was out, hundreds of tweets had appeared. A month earlier the Gulf cartel–Zetas split had taken place, and violent clashes were now routine throughout the city. At first, Chuy says, the authorities “tried to paint us as paranoid liars.” But the violence was so bad and the evidence on Twitter so irrefutable that soon the Tamaulipas and Reynosa governments began to issue warnings about “situations of risk” on their official online accounts. 

The pioneering #ReynosaFollow users weren’t trained journalists, but they adopted a set of best practices that would fit comfortably in any newsroom. Wary of spreading rumors and misinformation, they privileged primary-source reports—“I’m seeing,” “I’m hearing,” “My mom called and told me.” But Chuy would treat even a purported eyewitness account skeptically; only after seeing three users describing the same event would he consider the information credible. Then he would try to confirm it himself before posting an update to his Twitter feed, which has more than 10,000 followers.

Early on, an inner circle of users forged a community, meeting at “tweet posadas,” essentially #ReynosaFollow barbecues. But social media is an open platform, and the drug war in Mexico has many actors with many agendas. As #ReynosaFollow grew, so did online currents of misinformation, deception, and sabotage. Anonymous accounts issued false reports via #ReynosaFollow, and bots—automatically generated accounts—published thousands of tweets bearing the hashtag, effectively burying citizen updates under an avalanche of erroneous information. Chuy also remembers seeing tweets from shadowy users who seemed to have “way too much information” about the inner workings of cartels. “They wanted us to become a mouthpiece for them,” he says.

In May of last year, after the government launched a new security strategy, which included a call for citizens to report anonymous tips on cartel members and criminal activities, another contingent made itself known. Chuy noticed a preponderance of new accounts repeating the same message: “Don’t be a coward. If you don’t help, this will never end,” and concluded that many of the accounts were, in fact, “sock puppets”: bogus citizen accounts that were created by law enforcement, military, or paramilitary interests. “The way they write, the phrases they use—it isn’t the local language or the language of the people,” Chuy tells me.

Sometimes the attacks were more personal. In December, after Chuy contributed to two articles on the website Diario19 documenting the possible paramilitary affiliation of the popular online “citizen journalist” group Valor Por Tamaulipas, a new account called Mr. Fashion Cruz (a riff on Chuy’s handle) started tweeting angrily at him. The account’s avatar was a photograph of the real-life Chuy, a chilling message that someone had identified the man behind @MrCruzStar. (Valor Por Tamaulipas launched its own attack in early January, decrying Chuy as secretly working with the state attorney general’s office and accusing him of exposing Felina’s identity before her death.)

Felina’s apparent murder occurred not only against this background of distrust but also at a time when the #ReynosaFollow community was tearing itself apart. In early 2014, according to a prominent user who goes by the Twitter name Don Alejo, a rift had developed over the direction of the group. One faction believed that the hashtag should restrict itself to informing citizens about dangerous activities. The other took a tone that aligned it closely with the state. “They wanted to denounce the criminals,” Don Alejo says, “and they got very aggressive.”

Don Alejo and Chuy were in the first camp. Felina was very much in the second. Don Alejo, who says he knew Felina personally, remembers her as “very active, very happy, very full of life.” But on Twitter her persona was ferocious. “She would say, ‘Que maten a esos perros’ (‘May they kill those dogs’).” Chuy saw Felina’s activism as crossing a perilous line. “She’d say, ‘This person does this and lives here.’ Her activities were a red flag.”

It is not clear exactly what happened to Felina. The dominant theory, first reported in the Mexican magazine Zócalo and advanced by Vice News, is that Dr. María del Rosario Fuentes Rubio, a 36-year-old general practitioner, was kidnapped after a child died in her care. Someone had wanted revenge—or at least answers—and had taken her as she left her hospital on the morning of October 15. While she was detained, Fuentes’s kidnappers—presumably affiliated with organized crime—sifted through the contents of her phone and discovered her Twitter activity. Then, says Don Alejo, “it was like killing two birds with one stone.”

Others have their doubts. Chuy’s collaborator on the Valor Por Tamaulipas articles, UT-Brownsville professor Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, says she had come to believe that Felina had paramilitary ties because of the specificity of her attacks on organized crime members and her close association with Valor Por Tamaulipas, to whose website she had contributed.  

The lack of any confirmed account of Fuentes’s death has even made Correa-Cabrera wonder whether she was really murdered. No body has been found, no details of the investigation have been released, and no criminal organization has claimed responsibility. “I would not say that [Fuentes] is not dead or that the assassination and kidnapping were not committed—that would be very irresponsible on my part,” she says. “But I have big doubts. This person who was always behind a computer—all we know about her is from other anonymous social media users. This fills me with questions, not with answers.”

Outside Chuy’s house, a festival is taking place to celebrate the Feast of the Virgin of Guadalupe. As fireworks pop around us, I ask Chuy what he makes of Correa-Cabrera’s suspicions. He says he too had noted some irregularities. For the first several years that Felina was on Twitter, Chuy regarded her activity as nothing out of the ordinary. But in late spring 2014, he observed a change. She began to post photographs of crime scenes that looked like they had been taken by someone inside the law enforcement perimeter, which led him to believe that she was now collaborating with military forces. “It was notable that she began a very active campaign of denunciations at the same time as the new security strategy for Tamaulipas was launched,” he says. But he doesn’t doubt that she was murdered. “Here in Reynosa, if you come up on a narco blockade, the first thing they do is check your phone—your photos, your contacts, your messages—so they probably found her that way,” he says.

Whatever the case, the grisly tweets of Felina’s apparent death have had the desired effect. Even Chuy says he has decreased his activity; he is now even more keenly aware of how each tweet offers a clue to anyone who wants to find him. Still, he tells me, this terrible event has had a silver lining. Some of the feuding members of #ReynosaFollow have been brought back together. “I tell two people when I’m going to meet someone at X place, and we use an app that lets someone monitor where we are,” he says. “We keep an eye on each other.”

After leaving his house, Chuy, Chapa, and I wend our way through the narrow streets and come upon rows of dancing children. They are twirling to a pulsing drumbeat while their families look on, taking pictures and drinking beer. Reynosa is still violent, but people are getting on with their lives. #ReynosaFollow, however imperfect, has helped them maintain normalcy.

Once Chapa and I hop into a cab to head back to the bridge that connects downtown Reynosa with Texas, our driver peppers us with questions about what we were doing in Mexico. During a lull in the conversation, he turns on his stereo, and the vehicle is soon vibrating with a strutting bass line. I look up and see the word “Sicario” (“Hitman”) flashing across the car’s digital display. The song is a narco hip-hop track, a triumphalist anthem boasting of the exploits of the Gulf cartel and their fearsome assassins.

“Are you afraid?” I had asked Chuy back at his house. “What would happen if the wrong people knew where you lived?”

He paused. “They always ask me if I’m afraid because of what I do, and I say I’m scared as a citizen. I’ve been robbed. Sometimes people die from stray bullets in a shootout. I think everyone is at risk in this city.”
The first 2 alleged bloggers killed in Tamaulipas (photo from Chivis BB story)

DD:The Texas Monthly reporter, Eric Benson, reported in a related article that even though it is difficult, the social media sources are not the only source of news out of Taumalipas.  There is a small cadre of Rio Grande Valley–based journalists who have played an important role in reporting on the drug war, writing about events and issues that their Mexican colleagues often simply cannot for fear of retribution.

 Breaking the Silence
 Five Rio Grande Valley–based reporters talk about covering the drug war in Mexico over the past decade.

 “Tamaulipas has always been a silent state,” Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, a government professor at UT-Brownsville specializing in the Mexican drug war, told me last December. For decades, the state—which borders much of South Texas—was tightly controlled by both the Gulf Cartel and the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), Mexico’s dominant political organization—and neither entity had much interest in fostering a culture of transparency. When Tamaulipas exploded into violence in 2010, the culture of silence only got worse,with local newspapers afraid to print even news of traffic accidents for fear that a crash might involve someone affiliated with a cartel.

This left a near-total information void, but it was quickly filled. One of the most prominent new outlets was a community of Mexican citizens who turned themselves into de-facto correspondents, tweeting news of shootouts, blockades, and “situations of risk” under the hashtag #ReynosaFollow. But there was also a small cadre of Rio Grande Valley–based journalists who have played an important role in reporting on the drug war, writing about events and issues that their Mexican colleagues often simply cannot for fear of retribution.
Over three days last month, I spoke with a number of them about how they approached their dangerous, difficult, and often life-or-death beat.

THE WAR

Drug-related violence has long been a fixture of Tamaulipas, but the situation worsened in the mid-aughts and erupted in a terrible wave of shootouts, assassinations, and kidnappings in early 2010 as the Gulf Cartel went to war with its former enforcement wing, Los Zetas.  

Ildefonso Ortiz, 34, a reporter for Breitbart Texas. A soft-spoken six-foot-four former professional Muay Thai fighter, Ortiz retired from his combat career and began reporting on border violence after he “got married and wanted to do something safer:” In 2008, when I started working at the Brownsville Herald my beat was crime. I didn’t do the whole border stuff. The Herald is in the downtown part of Brownsville, and when I’d be in the office, sometimes I’d start to hear machinegun fire and grenades from across the river. I’d say, “That’s not normal.” But when I’d call over to Matamoros City Hall, they’d say, ‘Everything’s fine here. Come visit!” I’d call the police station and hear the same thing. Back then, you’d just grab a photographer or grab a camera and go over.

Enrique Lerma, 41, a correspondent for Univision, in Brownsville. Born in Matamoros, Lerma has spent nearly his entire life in the lower Valley and has worked the border beat since 2002: We used to go across at least once a week. If there was a shooting, we were there with our units and our equipment and everything. But everything started going different with the arrest of Osiel Cárdenas [the former leader of the Gulf Cartel, who was extradited to the U.S. in 2007], and especially since the fight between the Zetas and the Gulf Cartel. Different leaders were moving around trying to take over certain positions, and everything got risky for us. For the last five years, we’ve had to rely on sources in Mexico that we trust who can share with us photos or videos or information. But we can count with our fingers how many people we trust, especially in our business—reporters that are still doing their job.

Ortiz: Nobody in Mexico was reporting on the firefights. There were all these shootouts going on and everybody was flat-out lying. You’d pick up the paper in Mexico and it would be: “The mayor announces that we’re moving ahead in tourism and we’re paving new streets.”

Jared Taylor, 30, the Metro editor for the McAllen Monitor. An Iowan, Taylor has worked as a journalist in the Valley since 2007: In my experience that didn’t really become the case until 2009, 2010 when stuff got really bad. Until then, you’d see the Mexican reporters covering stuff and when we would go over, you’d feel safe because we had strength in numbers with all the Mexican reporters who were at a crime scene. But when the Gulf Cartel and the Zetas split and things got really nasty, I’d go to a crime scene, and I’d be the only reporter there. That’s not a safe place to be.

Ortiz: The media in Mexico is badly underpaid, so they’ll take money from other places. And in Tamaulipas—at least in Matamoros and Reynosa—you have what’s called a “link.” He’s basically the link between the crime reporters and the Gulf Cartel. So everybody that covers the crime beat in Matamoros and Reynosa they all talk to each other about what they can and cannot cover. The link will tell them what angle to take on things and what not to cover. There was a shootout in 2010 where a reporter was killed. I was able to confirm that that reporter was the link. Of course, he was highly praised for dying as a reporter, when in reality he was working with the cartel. I know their current link by name, but I’d rather stay away from that person. I don’t want face time with them. I don’t want to get any offers.

Reyna Luna, 50ish (“a woman never tells”), a correspondent for Estrella TV. A native of Monterrey, she reported from Mexico for various outlets until she moved to the Valley in 1989. When we met, she was on her way to report in Matamoros while wearing purple pumps: A lot of my colleagues in Mexico have gotten into trouble by selling information. If you have business with that guy, and that guy is my enemy, then you’re my enemy too. But for every journalist here at the border, it’s difficult to be doing this. It doesn’t matter if you’re here in the United States or in Mexico. They can threaten you here or threaten you there.

Lerma: Reyna, she goes across and rides along with the military. She likes that. I tell her, you’re too old for that, and she says, “Oh, no, I’m wearing this vest.”

Luna: I have been covering Tamaulipas for the last 25 years, and the criminals have tried to kill me I don’t know how many times. I’ve been kidnapped. I’ve had protection from the military outside my apartment. I’ve learned to use a weapon. You have to be very careful. At the end of the day, I value my life more than any story. Before I didn’t think that. I was a tonta—stupid! When you’re young, you have your ideals and you think you’re going to save the world. Now, I have fear, but I think someone needs to do this. And I do it with care. If the information is not confirmed, don’t write it. Don’t use one source of information or two sources of information, use three or more. I’m not releasing names. This has been my way to do things, and up to this moment here I am.

GETTING INFORMATION 

Knowledgeable sources are important to all good journalists, but this holds especially true in Reynosa and Matamoros, where official statistics and reports are often incomplete or nonexistent. The lack of transparency has led the reporters to rely on their longtime personal connections—Ortiz, Lerma, and Luna were all born in Mexico—to find sources they can trust.

Ortiz: Looking at it from a historical point of view, smuggling has been a part of life in this area for eighty years—and maybe more. At one point or another, a lot of the older families in this area have been involved in liquor, tobacco, grain, weapons—it’s just part of this area.
So pretty much anyone who is local is bound to know somebody. Oh, my neighbor is a used car salesman, and he knows this guy who used to launder money through another used car lot, and that guy might know this other guy who is in homebuilding. That’s pretty much how my sources have developed. And growing up here, like I did, some of your friends from school will end up being the good guys, some will end up being the bad guys.

Lerma: I was born in Matamoros, but raised in Brownsville. So I’m from both sides. My parents have good friends who used to be in public positions in Mexico, and I know them. So I have a little structure of sources, close sources. It’s not just people that are on the streets.

Ortiz: Before 2008, I was living in Ciudad Victoria, [the capital of Tamaulipas], and I was fighting Muay Thai professionally and I was teaching Brazilian jiu-jitsu and MMA. Doing that, I got to meet a lot of law enforcement guys—cops and cops who switched sides eventually. So I was able to kind of develop a little network there just because I was teaching them combatives. I didn’t plan on being a reporter. It just happened. My degree is in business.

Lerma: I have people in the Emergency Department, EMS, PGR [the Mexican Attorney General’s Office], and the morgue. I remember there was an incident at a jail, and the official line at the beginning was that there was a fight but it was already under control and nothing had happened. At around two in the morning, I heard that bodies were starting to arrive at the morgue. “Where are they coming from?” “Oh, the fight that they had during the day at the jail.” “What jail?” And then we started matching everything up, and we were able to go against that official report.

Luna: In Tamaulipas, I know a lot of people—a lot of people. I have friends on the official side. I have journalist friends who are covering it in a good way, but maybe they cannot say everything but they have information. But it’s bien difícil. I have sources that I’ve known for a thousand years, and that’s why I trust them. And sometimes they talk to me in code. Sometimes I don’t even know what they’re saying. Sometimes, this is like paranoia, you know?

Lerma: I used to have lots of exclusive stories through my sources. But my station, they don’t like too much the exclusive stories any more. They’re worried about being the one targeted. So this is something that I have done: I share information with our colleagues on this side, Ildefonso or The Monitor, so it can be a group of people posting the story at the same time. If I just run it as an exclusive story, my station says, “Why are you the only one having it. Do you trust your sources?” When I share it, they’re like, “Oh, you’re talking about the story the newspaper is running?” “Yeah, the same one.” It’s a different way to work. They want to see it in a different media outlet so they can be on the safe side.

Ortiz: There’s no real way to know how bad things really are. If you look at murder statistics from Matamoros, they’ll say, “Oh, there’s eighty dead for the year.” And I’ll say, Really? We did a story and the AP did a story about the cartels picking up their bodies after the shootouts. There’s not going to be a registro or any sort of paperwork for that.

Taylor: Beyond that, Tamaulipas has always had a culture of no transparency. When Ciudad Juárez was getting all the headlines [for having the highest murder rate in the world], part of what helped feed into that was the local and the state police there actually did keep pretty good statistics on body counts. That just doesn’t exist in Tamaulipas. Absent those statistics or any semblance of statistics, when you send a reporter in, you just have a bunch of color, but you can’t quantify it. That’s where you see a lot of roadblocks and a lot less coming out of Tamaulipas as far as stories.

CROSSING THE BORDER

As the violence spiked in Tamaulipas in 2010, many news outlets in the Valley forbid their reporters from crossing into Mexico. In order to continue reporting, some journalists snuck across, went on their days off, or relied more heavily on their Mexico-based sources to be their eyes and ears.
Sergio Chapa, 39, a reporter for KGBT, the CBS affiliate in Harlingen. Chapa grew up in Austin but reported from the Valley for seven years before recently taking a job at the San Antonio Business Journal. He remains an active member of the #ReynosaFollow community: At our station, we can’t cross the border. We’re not insured—neither our equipment nor us as individuals. We can only go on our off time.

Taylor: We haven’t actively covered the scene over there for years. At our paper, there’s not an outright ban on going to Mexico, but if you’re going to send a reporter over for any reason, it has to be sent all the way up to the CEO of the company.

Ortiz: Yeah, when I was with The Monitor, I used to sneak out every once in a while on my own time to visit friends, family—and talk to people.

Lerma: I go to Mexico on my personal time. I’m not afraid of anything. But our station says you can’t go and cover any stories because of the insurance, the policy—whatever. They don’t want to be responsible if anything happens. If you want to go across on your personal time it’s up to you, but you’re not representing the station.

Ortiz: It used to be that if you ran into some trouble over there, you could be like, “Hey, I’m a reporter from the U.S., I’m going to make my way back home. Bye.” But now these guys last a few months or less in their positions. You have guys in their twenties taking orders from a guy in his thirties, and who knows what they’re going to do? Older, more experienced cartel guys don’t want that attention. The younger guys—they might not be there by the end of the month, so they won’t care.

Lerma: I was telling Ildefonso, we don’t have to cross anymore. All these cartel members have been in U.S. court. All their family members are there. All their guards are here.

Ortiz: In 2010, the Feds caught “El Apache” [cartel leader Oscar Castillo Flores] over here in Brownsville and charged him with illegal reentry. At his trial, I was the guy with the notepad in the courtroom, and he was there giving me the stink eyes. It was kind of unnerving to have a guy known for beheadings staring you down. He only got two years, and after those two years, I ran into him at a kids’ restaurant at the salad bar. I looked up, and I was like, ‘Shit!’ and he just smiled at me. A couple weeks later they killed him in Mexico.

Luna: Someone sent me preachers to give me una bendición—to pray for me and give me a blessing. The preachers came here to Edinburgh to say, “I know that you’re going to do something very dangerous, and you’re going to die maybe, so we have to give you our bendición.” The strange thing is that I was in a place where I was not going as journalist. [The cartels] know who you are. They know where you live.

THE END?

Many in Tamaulipas say that the worst of the drug war is over. But in an area where official statistics are widely distrusted, many reporters remain skeptical of claims about a decrease in violence as they continue to see its grisly reality up-close.

Chapa: There was a time when that kind of stuff was really prominent and in really high demand online. People just wanted to know about it. I remember in 2010, 2011, we’re talking about throwing grenades at police stations, rocket launchers—all kinds of crazy stuff. And you’re like, ‘Damn, this is happening right south of us, and here we are eating at Chili’s and going to Whataburger.’ But there’s not the volume of gun battles that there was back in say 2012 or 2011 or 2010. And now, with these stories, the writing’s been on the wall so long it’s kind of faded, you know? They don’t get the same interest. You can tell the drug war is kind of winding down. [Ildefonso] might tell you different.

Ortiz: Look, the difference is that now people over there have gotten used to the violence. So they’re starting to move on with their normal lives. But from the investigative part, if you start poking around over there, you’re going to find ugly things. And that’s where [Chapa] and my views differ. Yeah, it’s great to go have tacos over there. But if you’re going to be over there asking questions and snapping photos, it’s not going to be pretty, and it’s not going to be safe.

Lerma: My station is changing a lot. Sometimes they say, “Change topics, Enrique. I don’t want to hear about the cartels until maybe next week.” And I’ll say, “But this is a good story.” And it’s “no, no, no, you already ran a couple stories.” But every day there is a shooting. Every day somebody is being found shot execution-style. Every day. So nothing is changing. What’s changing on my side is that I don’t do a daily story about it anymore.

Ortiz:  I just happened to be out in Reynosa visiting some friends at a barbecue on a Sunday night in 2013 when all hell broke loose. It was the mother of all firefights. You had two factions of the Gulf Cartel fighting it out. It was a massacre. I saw bodies everywhere. If you were by Boulevard Hidalgo, you could see forty trucks going down one side and another thirty trucks coming down the other side and clashing in the middle—four or five gunmen in each truck spraying the hell out of the streets. Grenades here, grenades there. Something that you know you see it and you still can’t believe it. As I was writing that story, I was tearing up. It was the altruism of the people that got to me. In the Walmart, they were holding people back, and saying don’t go out. In the mall and the movie theater, just a random guy was blocking the doors—Get down, don’t go outside now. That’s what the police should be doing, but it was just normal citizens. Sometimes you lose your faith in humanity covering this, but that restored a bit of it.

DD;  The biggest thing Mr. Benson left out of his reporting how the news is aquired from the border is the readers of Borderland Beat that send us stories and tips about what is happening which we publish here on Borderland Beat.

"La Tuta" audio; I regret commanding Los Viagra

Posted: 03 Feb 2015 11:38 AM PST


Translated for Borderland Beat from a Michoacan 3.0 by Otis B Fly-Wheel

Morelia Michoacán

Servando Gomez alias "La Tuta"
In his latest audio recording, Servando Gomez alias "La Tuta", says that he regrets commanding Los Viagra, in an audio recording posted to the Facebook page " For a free Coalcoman".

In the material that runs for 6 minutes and 53 seconds, the last leader of the cartel named The Knights Templar, assures that Los Viagra have no loyalty and are dedicated to activities like robbing and kidnapping, "The are delinquents and worse than me".

He said that, " The Santana brothers known as Los Viagra, do not support Hipolito Mora founder of the autodefensas, they don't even support their mother", he said.

                                       Santana Sierra sisters also are involved especially Bety far left

Criminal History Of Los Viagra

Nicolas and Carlos Sierra Santana, known as Los Viagra because of the way they slick their hair with gel, have been accused of being an armed wing of La Familia Michoacan, and later of The Knights Templar.


With the rise of the self defense forces, leaders like Jorge Vasquez Valencia, have accused Los Viagra of wearing the cloak of autodefensas, while seeking alliances with CJNG.

After the formation of the Fuerza Rurales, los Sierra Santanas formed a special group within the Rurales called G-250, a cell of the Corporation formed specifically to search for La Tuta and other CT leaders in the Tierra Caliente, an operation that has shown no results.
At this meeting Tuta was still unaware of Viagras jumping to CJNG, but was becoming suspicious

For his part, Servando Gomez ordered ex-templars to work in peace, and not work for delinquent organizations that " have no organization", La Tuta insisted that he is a narco-trafficker and does not kidnap, or rob, or extort people. He encouraged his ex subordinates to pick a side, and "work in peace".

Finally he said that this will be his last audio tape, not for fear, or that they will catch or kill me, but because I have to take stock, and decide what to do next.

The audio is in Spanish and is 6 minutes long. I have posted it up here for Spanish speakers. English speakers will have to wait for a full translation of the audio into English.



Original article in Spanish at Michoacán 3.0

Monday, February 2, 2015

Americans should be deeply concerned about the chilling effect a Government controlled Internet could have on speech!

Protect Internet Freedom


Dear Conservative,

“We now have a court order. We’ll eradicate Twitter. I don’t care what the international community says. Everyone will witness the power of the Turkish Republic,” Prime Minister of Turkey, Tayyip Erdogan.

Senator Ben SasseTurkey isn't alone. During the "Green Revolution" in 2009, Iran implemented a widespread crackdown on the Internet. China has censored information for years. And Russia made Facebook take down content that was critical of Putin last year. 

These are just a few examples of what can happen when Government takes total control of the Internet. That's why I'm writing today. I need your help to keep the Internet open and free.

On November 10th, 2014, President Obama called on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to re-classify the Internet as a public utility. He proposed dusting off a law that’s nearly 80 years old (and about unrelated technology) and using it to give the Federal Government power to police the Internet. 

I know many people do not love the big Internet providers (count me as one of them) and just want to make sure that consumers are not stuck with slow access speeds and bad service. That’s a good goal. 

But the solution is not to get Government in this space with expanded powers to police the Internet. Internet freedom is just too precious to hand Washington new regulatory powers over the Internet without oversight. 

You see, if President Obama gets his wish, instead of the “light touch” approach that has allowed the Internet to flourish for years, Government bureaucrats would be put in charge of a new heavy-handed regulatory scheme. 

Worst of all, Americans do not fully understand the implications of how far this could go because it’s all happening so fast. Instead of Congress having a public debate out in the open where the American people can listen and Congress is held accountable, the Executive Branch is rushing to pre-empt Congress and jam this new regulation through while the American people are not really paying attention. (If this reminds you of Nancy Pelosi’s “We have to pass the bill to find out what’s in it” statement about ObamaCare a couple years ago, it should.) 

Americans should be deeply concerned about the chilling effect a Government controlled Internet could have on speech. Recent actions taken by foreign governments should make every American nervous when thinking about a Government controlled Internet. 

That’s because the Internet is not just a more efficient way of engaging in commerce; it’s the greatest threat to tyrannical Governments in the world today. Autocrats like Putin do not want a free and open Internet. They want a “small I” Internet that runs more like their own personal intranet that they can control. America must remain a global leader for a free and open Internet and continue to tell countries like Iran, Russia, and China “No” on regulating the Internet access of their people, and their right to free speech. 

Both Republicans and Democrats agree that maintaining a free and open Internet is the goal. But more Government intervention will not help us reach that outcome. It will restrict the dynamism that has fueled the greatest revolution since Henry Ford invented the Model T, and choke political speech. 

I believe this truly is a slippery slope scenario where years in the future, another Administration could use power over the Internet to censor speech and intimidate political opponents. 

I know there will be those who try to dismiss this concern out of hand…But after the way our Government has operated over the last six years, does anyone really think we should just give Washington control over something as precious as the Internet? 

Do we really want the same type of people who brought us the IRS scandal--where they targeted political opponents of the Administration--making decisions about political speech online? 

Should the same type of people who were responsible for the utter failure of the Veterans Administration be in a decision-making position on the future of the Internet? Can the same group of “tech experts” responsible for the roll out of Healthcare.gov really be entrusted with maintaining transparency and access online? 

It’s up to us to preserve the Internet for our kids and grand kids as the one of the greatest forces for freedom the world has ever known. A Government-controlled Internet is not the right choice. 

The FCC votes on February 26th. They need to hear from you today.

Please, join me today in calling on the Obama Administration and the FCC to keep the Internet open and free. 

For Internet Freedom, 

Sen. Ben Sasse
Republican--Nebraska 

P.S. We don’t have much time left to tell the FCC “NO” on taking over the Internet. You need to make your voice heard today if you want to keep the Internet open and free.



© 2015 Protect Internet Freedom


CAN PRESIDENT OBAMA BE TRUSTED WITH FOREIGN POLICY IN THE MIDDLE EAST? ... NOT!!!

One Citizen Speaking...


CAN PRESIDENT OBAMA BE TRUSTED WITH FOREIGN POLICY IN THE MIDDLE EAST?

Posted: 31 Jan 2015 08:03 PM PST

According to leaks that appear to be originating from those anonymous officials who cannot speak on the record, President Obama appears to be relaxing his policies on Syria – no longer calling for Assad to step aside and quietly telling the military that Syrian military targets are off the targeting radar.

Unfortunately, the broader implication of the Administration’s actions is that they may be bowing to Iran – considering Syria is a client of Iran –  in order to obtain some agreement on the Iran nuclear talks. It appears Obama is desperate when it comes to getting some type of agreement, even if that agreement is a photo-op and a meaningless statement, to secure his legacy and validate a Nobel Peace Prize that was awarded without any accomplishment on his part. Something that has become a laughingstock issue in Washington.

There is little doubt that Iran sees itself as the savior of the minority Shia Islam (10%) and the counterbalance to the majority (90%)  of the Sunni world that views the Shia as apostates to be ethnically cleansed.

Iran’s influence and/or dominance now extends to four nearby nations who are little more than proxies. (Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, Palestinian Territory)

Congressional Cowardice …

The Congress of the United States refuses to name our Islamic enemies and place them on notice that further aggression will not be tolerated. In effect, ceding great power to the President of the United States and then decrying his actions when they appear to provide material aid, support, and comfort to those who do not wish us well.

Campaigning for funding …

Once again, we are seeing the President of the United States, as well as various members of Congress, campaigning in such a manner as to solicit the sub rosa flow of foreign money into an American political race. Namely, those who are trying to reverse the trend line on America’s newfound energy independence and kill anything related to fracking and transport pipelines. All with a significant impact on a Middle East that relies on the flow of oil money to mollify its population, support arms acquisition, and keep their militaries loyal. One might even question the extent to which the American taxpayers are subsidizing the sales of arms to hostile Muslim nations?

Arming the Kurds …

Why does President Obama refuse to directly arm the pro-American Kurds and insist on funneling weapons through Iraq – even though it is known to be a direct pipeline to Iran?

Providing leadership to the Taliban and enemy combatants to the continuing fight …

President Obama appears totally oblivious to the ongoing battle with radical Islamism and its Muslim terrorists. How else can you justify his release o enemy combatants from Gitmo … including the five top Taliban commanders exchanged for the deserter Bowe Bergdahl?  Yes, we know he promised to shutdown Gitmo, but is he really willing to release fighters who will most definitely go on to kill Americans or their allies. Where is the progressive socialist battle cry “if it only saves one life …” that is used to justify their outrageous attempts to thwart the Second Amendment?

Bottom line …

obma-h

Whether or not Barack Hussein Obama is a Muslim, a pro-Muslim president, or is simply incompetent, he is putting the Middle East and the rest of the Western world at significant risk should Iran obtain a nuclear weapon. Appearing to allow Iran to continue its regional power plays in return for an specious arms agreement that can be touted at home as a foreign policy victory in spite of the fact that Israel is still under an existential risk. The fact that it might take Iran 3-6 months longer to produce a bomb is insignificant when measured against the potential risk to the region and United States interests.

First, because Iran is not going to announce a single weapon, they will announce when they reach ten or more.

Second, because Iran has promised to destroy Israel and perpetrate the next holocaust; and there is no reason not to take them at their word.

And third, because Iran could disperse weapon among various terrorist groups to perpetrate a multi-prong attack on America, America’s allies, and other European targets.

Should Iran go nuclear on Barack Obama’s watch, it would be the duty of Congress to impeach, try, and convict him – as well as strip him of all presidential payments, perks, and privileges.

Here is a President who thinks, incorrectly, that if he parses his words and divides the Islamic world into factions  nobody will notice that Boko Haram, Hamas, Hezbollah, the Taliban, ISIS, the Muslim Brotherhood, al Qaeda, Yemen, Syria and Iran are all part and parcel of the radical Islamist existential threat facing Western civilization in the same manner as Nazism posed an existential threat leading to WWII.

-- steve

Aiding and abetting: Obama crushes First Amendment to prevent anti-jihadist articles

Aiding and abetting: Obama crushes First Amendment to prevent anti-jihadist articles

Sunday, February 1, 2015

And all along, you thought Keystone Pipeline opposition was from radical environmentalists !?!


 


 

Wife of Iguala Mayor Abarca is the head of Guerreros Unidos Cartel ...

Borderland Beat

Link to Borderland Beat

Wife of Iguala Mayor Abarca is the head of Guerreros Unidos Cartel

Posted: 31 Jan 2015 06:51 PM PST

Translated for Borerland Beat from Reforma by Otis B Fly-Wheel



The head of the PGR, Jesus Murillo Karam, revealed that Maria de los Angeles Pineda, wife of the ex Mayor of Iguala, is the real Boss of the Guerreros Unidos cartel responsible for the disappearance and killing of the 43 students of Ayotzinapa.

Karam also revealed that her husband Jose Luis Abarca the former Mayor was second in command of the cartel, this made it more difficult to find evidence against them.

The Lady, like a good cartel boss, is making it very difficult for the PGR to bring organized crime charges against the pair and the cartel.

"However we've conducted investigations, which included taking statements from convicts in US prisons, we have testimony that clearly puts them at the reins of Guerrero Unidos, with links to the mother, father and two brothers."
He also acknowledged that the communication strategy had not been good.

Original article in Spanish at reforma

Seido target hit men in BCS part 5 Internal conflict in FEDD

Posted: 31 Jan 2015 12:32 PM PST


Translated for Borderland Beat from a Zetatijuana Special Report by Otis B Fly-Wheel

Internal Conflict in the Fuerzas Especials de Damaso



After the mistaken murder of an innocent bystander in the colonia Revolucion, the people of "El 28" and "El Pepillo", started an internal conflict in the Fuerza Especiales de Damaso of La Paz.

After six months of participating together in, kidnapping, executions, gun battles  and dismembering in the city of La Paz, Baja California Sur, the head of the Fuerza Especiales de Damaso, entered into an internal conflict on the 18th of January.

The cause of the conflict is because of an innocent man who was killed in error.

Shot four times while he relaxed inside his home in Calle Bernaldo Maldonado between Luis Barajas and Enrique Von Borstel in the colonia Revolucion in La Paz

According to the primary investigations of the PGJE, the hit men wanted to kill the three sons of the Victim, Humberto Juarez Lucero, 54 years of age.


The testimony explained that on the night of the attack, around 10 pm, one of the hit men entered the victims property armed, and walked up to the front door. The victim answered the door, and the hit man asked for Humberto Juarez, the father answered "that's me", the hit man then fired four shots into the victims chest with a .45 acp caliber pistol, then asked for the other two brothers.

The victims wife, Gabriela Mora Angulo 35 years of age, answered "none of our sons are in the house", for who the hit man was presumably searching. The person he had killed was their father*, on realizing his mistake the killer left the property.

The body of Humberto Juarez, a fishing official, was where he had fallen, wearing black jeans and a green shirt. At the scene of the crime, the PGJE found four fired cartridges in .45 caliber, with entry wounds in the victims chest, and exit wounds in the victims back.

The killers wanted to kill the three sons of the victim, their names are as follows:

- Josue Humberto Juarez Mora "El Pollon", 26 years of age.

- Jose Carlos Juarez Mora "El Pala", 24 years of age.

- Jonathan Omar Juarez Mora "El John", 23 years of age.

After the crime, the Government initiated an investigation to search for the aggressors, and while searching the area , the State Preventative Police, intercepted a Cherokee Jeep in which were the following persons:

- Eduardo Martin Alvarado "El Kumi".

- Eduardo Hernandez Mendoza "El Condor".

The two subjects, according to an informative report, saw the patrol and accelerated immediately trying to flee, but they were caught and the vehicle subjected to a search. In the interior of the vehicle, the Police found 23 wraps of crystal meth, and some others containing Marijuana.

The detained and the drugs were put at the disposition of agents of the Public Ministry for Center of Strategic Operations ( COE ).

The Denunciations


During the interrogations, Eduardo Martin Alvarado "El Kumi", made a series of contradictions as to what he was doing close to the scene of the crime, on the night in question, and finished with him confessing that he had been participating in the crime because the sons of the victim, Josue, Jose and Jonathan, had not wanted to align with them in the sale, distribution and transit of drugs in this zone of the city, even though they had been part of his cell for a long time.

"El Kumi" said he worked for the people of the south zone, more explicitly for Alejandro Sanchez Trejo, "El Frank", "El Frane", or "El Peinado", and his right hand man Jose Fernando Torres Montenegro alias Jose Francisco Ojeda Torres "El Pepillo".

When the interrogating agents asked what had been his participation in the killing, he said that he had fixed the three brothers location at the house, had posted hit men outside the house, and had gone in an killed the wrong man by mistake, had left, then was intercepted by the State Police.

Without being pressed, "El Kumi" revealed that this killing was practically the first of a strong internal conflict between the Fuerza Especiales de Damaso, because "the people of El 28 were offering drugs cheaper and of better quality than any of the dealers of "El Pepillo", and that some dealers had already began to deal for "El 28", like the three sons of the victim.

"El Kumi" said that this had been annoying "El Pepillo", so he put all his people on alert to find the location of the traitors so he could "fuck them up", " there is a lot of tension right now in the city because "El 28" had sent warning that anyone not on his side would be "rolled up", as they had been doing with the people of Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada.

He also said that for this reason "El Pepillo" withdrew the logistical and economic support to the hit men of "El 28" who then sent a hit man cell to fight for the plaza belonging to "El Pepillo", and Rolando Gonzalez Moreno "El Compadron", and Luis Antonio Montoya Beltran "Montoya", "La Artista", or "Don Carlos".

In his testimony, "El Kumi" said that "El 28" was not Victor Marraza Martinez "El Vidal" or "El Victor", but a much heavier individual, and gave a full account of the criminal boss.

The information was given to the investigative branch of SEIDO.

The revelations of "El Kumi", are, for members of the Group for Coordination very worrying, because from his perspective "we have opened a new battle front", This is to say that the fight for the plaza is going up a level, because we have three groups in the battle, they are:

-Alejandro Sanchez Trejo "El Frank", Jose Fernando Torres "El Pepillo",  their armed wing is headed by Edgar Amilcar Acosta Reyes "El Rayo".


- Rolando Gonzalez Moreno "El Compadron", who has as leader of his armed wing Luis Antonio Montoya Beltran "El Artista" or "Don Carlos".


- "El 28" up until this moment his identity and that of his criminal structure remain unknown.

At the close of this edition, the PGJE have executed an arrest warrant against "El Kumi", for being one of those responsible for the death of Humberto Juarez Lucero, victim of mistaken identity.

The Crimes


One day after the assassination of the Fishing Official, a new crime tainted the city of La Paz

This time, the report was of one person dead thrown onto a dirt road which goes to a Municipal Public Security Bureaux, between the colonias of Perla del Golfo and La Fuente in the capital of the state.

After the discovery, the PGJE, found the dead body of Hermenegildo Garcia Mendoza, 30 years of age, originally of La Paz, at the scene of the crime they found 6 spent cartridges of .45 caliber. The victim had a coup de grace shot at the base of the skull which exited through his mouth.

The ballistic report said that the weapon used was the same one which had killed Humberto Juarez the day before, the investigative agents commented that he was one of "El 28's" people.

With these murders, the homicides linked to organized crime in La Paz is now 62, 53 of those were in 2014 and 9 in 2015.

This week the violence has slowed, but according to an agent of the Group for Coordination for Public Safety, " with three criminal groups fighting for the plaza, the spate of killings in the capital of the state will reach fever pitch.

Changes in the SSPE

Juan Pablo Noriega Rangel
A little less than six months of the end of the administration of the Governor of the State of Baja California Sur, Marcos Alberto Covarrubias Villasenor, amid a wave of violence rocking the peace, and after a series of condemnations, there was a change in the Department of State Security ( SSPE ).

From instructions from the Governor, the Secretary General of the Government, Andres Cordova Urrutia, gave the post to Juan Pablo Noriega Rangel in substitution of Martha Cecilla Garzon Lopez.

The new head of Public Safety, was the Director of the Interdisciplinary Institute in Criminal Sciences, and Director of Preliminary Investigations for the PGJE. According to his CV he graduated in Law in the year 2000 at the Autonomous University of Aguascalientes.

Noriega has an enormous task to restore the reputation and credibility of this noble institution, marked by and let down by agents, with commanders and officials who, according to some preliminary investigations, have been linked with criminal groups responsible for the wave of violence in La Paz

Today the former Assistant Secretary, Martha Cecilla Garzon Lopez, was the penultimate link of the group that had over run the institution in the services of organized crime.

The last link is the Commissioner of the State Preventative Police, Francisco Javier Camacho Manriquez, and some agents and commanders investigated by SEIDO

Original article in spanish at Zetatijuana

Link to part 4 of Seido Target Hit Men in BCS
Link to part 3 of Seido Target Hit Men in BCS
Link to part 2 of Seido Target Hit Men in BCS
Link to part 1 of Seido Target Hit Men in BCS

How a Wisconsin Hunting Trip Resulted in a World Record Yellow Perch | OutdoorHub

How a Wisconsin Hunting Trip Resulted in a World Record Yellow Perch | OutdoorHub

Good Thing To Know! From The Mayo Clinic.

Info from Mayo Clinic
Good Thing To Know! From The Mayo Clinic.

 
How many folks do you know who say they don't want to drink anything 
before going to bed because they'll have to get up during the night!!

 
Heart Attack and Water - Drink 1 glass of 
water before going to bed avoids stroke or
heart attack! I never knew all of this! 
Interesting...

 
Something else I didn't know .... I asked 
my Doctor why people need to urinate so
much at night time. Answer from my Cardiac Doctor:

Gravity holds water in the lower part of your body 
when you are upright (legs swell). 
 When 
you lie down and the lower body (legs and etc) seeks level with 
the kidneys, it 
 is then that the kidneys remove the water because it is 
easier.

 
I knew you need your minimum water to help flush the toxins out of 
your body, but this was news to me.

 
Correct time to drink water... Very 
Important. From A Cardiac Specialist!

 
Drinking water at a certain time maximizes 
its effectiveness on the body:

 
2  glasses of water after waking up - helps activate internal 
organs

 
1 glass of water 30 minutes before a meal - helps 
digestion

 
1 glass of water before taking a bath - helps lower blood 
pressure

 
1 glass of water before going to bed - avoids stroke or heart 
attack

 
I can also add to this... My Physician told me that water at bed 
time will also help 
 prevent night time leg cramps. Your leg 
muscles are seeking hydration when they cramp and wake you up with a Charlie Horse.

Mayo Clinic on Aspirin -

 
Dr. Virend Somers is a Cardiologist from the Mayo Clinic who is the 
lead author of 
 the report in the July 29, 2008 issue of the Journal of the American 
College of Cardiology.

Most heart attacks occur in the day, generally 
between 6 A.M. and noon. Having one
during the night, When the heart should be 
most at rest, means that something unusual
happened. Somers and his colleagues have 
been working for a decade to show that sleep
apnea is to blame.

 
1. If you take an aspirin or a baby aspirin once a day, take it at 
night.

 
The reason: Aspirin has a 24-hour "half-life"; therefore, if most 
heart attacks happen in the wee hours of the morning, the Aspir
n would be strongest in your system.

 
2. Aspirin lasts a really long time in your medicine chest; for 
years. (when it gets old, it smells like vinegar).

 
Please read on.

 
Something that we can do to help ourselves 
- nice to know.

 
Bayer is making crystal aspirin to 
dissolve instantly on the tongue.  They work much 
faster than the tablets.

 

 
Why keep Aspirin by your bedside? It's 
about Heart Attacks -

 
There are other symptoms of a heart 
attack, besides the pain on the left arm. One
must also be aware of an intense pain on the chin, as well as nausea 
and lots of sweating; 
 however, these symptoms may also occur 
less frequently.

Note: There may be NO pain in the chest during a 
heart attack.

 
The majority of people (about 60%) who had a heart attack during 
their sleep did not wake up.

 
However, if it occurs, the chest pain may 
wake you up from your deep sleep. If that
happens, immediately dissolve two aspirins 
in your mouth and swallow them with a bit
of water.

Afterwards: - Call 911. - Phone a neighbor or a 
family member who lives very close by.

 
Say "heart attack!" - Say that you have taken 2 Aspirins. - Take a 
seat on a chair or 
 sofa 
near the front door, and wait for their arrival and 
.....

DO NOT LIE DOWN!

 
A Cardiologist has stated that if each person after receiving this 
e-mail, sends it to 10 
 people, probably one life could be 
saved!

I have already shared this information. What about 
you?

 
Do forward this message. It may save lives!
 
"Life is a one time gift"
(Let's forward and hope this will help save some!)
 

 

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Vast reservoir expected to prevent Everglades pollution

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