Saturday, March 5, 2016

The new, 'James Bond-style' assassination is the new face of crime on Mexico's Pacific Coast ...

The new, 'James Bond-style' assassination is the new face of crime on Mexico's Pacific Coast 

Posted: 04 Mar 2016 09:43 AM PST

Posted by DD material from Small Wars Journal and the Daily Mail
Thanks to a heads-up from Dr. Robert Bunker from Small Wars Journal for this story. 
Material from Daily mail is from a story by  Alasdair Baverstock In Acapulco For Mailonline

As holidaymakers sunned themselves on the golden sand of Acapulco beach, a man carrying a 9mm pistol swam up to the shore, shot a beachwear seller three times in the chest, and calmly made his way back to the jet ski where his accomplice was waiting and disappeared around the rocky headland to the west towards either Playa Tlacopanocha or Playa Manzanillo.



 The new, 'James Bond-style' assassination is the new face of crime on Mexico's Pacific Coast, where cartel killers are murdering gang rivals in tourist areas - and escape from the beach on high powered jet skis to get away from police.

The latest such execution in broad daylight is the fourth to hit Acapulco this year. Acapulco is in the midst of its worst crime wave for a decade where there were 1,600 murders last year and already 684 in 2016 - or 12 a day.  
Beachwear vendor Eduardo García, 46, bled out on the beach as the crowd and his family waited on the police to arrive on the scene. The Mexican police did not arrive for 70 minutes after the incident even though the police station was relatively close to crime scene.  His family arrived at the scene before the police even though their home is 10 times farther from the murder scene than is the police station.  Eduardo died in the arms of his family while they waited for help.
Lost: Mr Garcia (pictured, surrounded by paramedics and holidaymakers), described as a 'good, family man' by those who knew him,

There's very rarely an open and close murder case in Acapulco, but this new technique of escaping by sea has the police stumped. 70 minutes after the murder, a police boat traced the criminals' escape route for any trace of the killers, but all in vain. .(DD; kind of hard to trace a trail through water)  The killers who left the salesman for dead on the beach in front of hundreds of onlookers have still not been caught, the case buried under the unceasing daily onslaught of crime.
WARNING;  GRAPHIC PHOTOS SHOWING VIOLENCE ON NEXT PAGE


 Analysis From Small Wars Journal; 

Information related to the motivation behind this targeted killing of a beach front clothing salesmen in the tourist district of the Acapulco beach front is fragmentary at best. It is apparently the fourth incident involving sicario use of jet skis for a targeted killing in Acapulco [1] and suggests that it may be related to ongoing patterns of street taxation (e.g. extortion) by local gangs and organized criminal groups against street vendors and local businesses. The brazenness of the killing is likely meant to send a message to the other individuals and groups being extorted to either pay their monthly 15% tax to the local criminals or face the consequences. Contextually, it should be noted that the jet ski related killings have taken place during a long period of rampant crime and a high level of homicides gripping Acapulco; averaging out to 12 per day or about 650 so far this year. 
  
Vendors of beach appearal like Margarito Melio, 60, who worked alongside Garcia, have to hand over 15 per cent of their earnings to gangsters for 'protection money'.  If you don't pay they kill you (for $1.20US)
 'There are a thousand reasons you can get killed in Acapulco,' says Margarito Melio, 60, a beach salesman who worked alongside Eduardo and says he knows no reason why his friend would have become a target for the brutal local gangs.

'He was a good family man,' he told MailOnline. 'His wife and kids arrived to see their father die long before the police, and they live at ten times the distance. It was heartbreaking.'

 'Perhaps Eduardo wasn't paying his dues, or perhaps he was selling drugs on the side, or maybe one of his brothers is a gangster and a rival cartel is making his family suffer,' he told MailOnline. 

Acapulco's municipal police refused to comment on the case when approached by MailOnline.

'It was over so quickly, and I'm not just talking about the killing,' Jaime Mendez, who manages the beach furniture rentals where the crime took place, told MailOnline. 

'Ten minutes after the body was taken away, things were back to normal. Murder has become a daily fact of life in Acapulco.'
The brutal murder of Mr García, pictured here being carried away on a stretcher, was in broad daylight in front of other beachgoers. However, 20 minutes after his body was removed, holidaymakers were back sunbathing as if nothing had happened
  
 Acapulco is in the midst of its worst crime wave for a decade. A large spate of murders in mid-February was blamed on Pope Francis' five-day visit to Mexico, when the majority of the military and federal police forces that normally guard the city, were removed to ensure the pontiff's safety.

More than 100 murders took place in Acapulco during those five days - and the town's municipal police force was left in charge.

'Ironically, there was a lot of blood while the pope was here talking about putting an end to it,' said Fransisco Robles, a local crime reporter who spends his evenings following the police radios to the latest crime scenes.

 'It may look like paradise, but this place is hell,' says beach furniture rental manager Jaime, who came to Acapulco from Mexico City three years ago looking for a change of scene. 

  



After nearly a month Eduardo's jet-ski killers remain on the loose, his family forgotten who held their dead father in their arms forgotten, and the brutal daily average of four homicides has rumbled on unabated.

Arturo Martinez from Iguala, where 43 students went missing at the hands of local police in 2014, had unwittingly allowed his brother to bury him in sand on the same spot where Eduardo had been gunned down a month before.

'It makes no difference to me,' he told MailOnline, smiling with his family for the camera. 'If you went around Acapulco terrified of every spot where a murder had happened you'd never leave your hotel room, or maybe you'd never even enter it.'
'There are cartel lookouts on every corner, local taxi drivers get involved in kidnappings and it's better not to discuss anything concerning organised crime because you never know who you're talking to.'

'50 per cent of the murders here are cartel related,' says Fransisco, the local reporter, 

After that 30 per cent are to do with extortion. Every business in town has to give part of their earnings to the cartel, if you don't pay up, or they think you're paying less than you should, they kill you.'

'After that, about 20 per cent of murder victims simply get killed in the crossfire, wrong place at the wrong time stuff,' he told MailOnline.

'The cartels are so well equipped that it's very easy for a loose bullet to claim a second life after their target is dead.'

Despite a recent fall in tourism, millions of holidaymakers still jet off to Acapulco's idyllic shores every year. With hotels costing around £35 a night, and a two course meal with a glass of wine costing as little as £15, it was once the prime destination for Americans looking for a cheap break away.

But far from its beaches lined with holidaymakers on sunbeds, many of Acapulco's poorer residents have been forced to make their homes on the other side of the hills, in sprawling slums that have become loosely known as the 'Periphery'.

It's here, in the Acapulco the tourists don't see, that the majority of the violence occurs.
Jimena Gomez, 17, who lives in the Periphery slums, told MailOnline of the violence she witnesses on a daily basis. 

 'I sleep right through the gunfire these days and have learned to look away when I see a murder happening in the street,' she said standing outside her house that overlooks the Periphery.

'If the killers see you looking then you're likely to get a bullet for good measure.'
                        

While the security presence along Acapulco's beach is heavy, government forces in the Periphery are minimal. 

The only Mexican military soldiers permitted in the slums are those who are posted outside local primary schools to prevent the kidnap of students and teachers, a business which saw a surge when the drug cartels got hold of public school salary lists.

The phenomenon of kidnapping teachers came to a head five years ago when local criminal cartels began abducting the highest earners, demanding many year's worth of payment in exchange for their safe return.

One teacher who was kidnapped in 2015 alongside her daughter from the Carlos Carrillo Primary School in the Periphery fled Acapulco immediately following her £10,000 release, vowing never to return. 

The soldiers who now guard the school say they regularly see expensive cars with blacked-out windows driving past their posts at the school's entrance, which now more resembles a prison than a primary school, with razor wire, security cameras and 24-hour military security.

Since the death of the 'Boss of Bosses' Arturo Beltran-Leyva, and the subsequent break-up of his Beltran Leyva Cartel which once controlled the whole of south-west Mexico, Acapulco has been fought over by the CIDA (Independent Cartel of Acapulco) and the Devil's Command (AKA Barredora) cartels.

Acapulco is a valuable territory for organised crime. Guerrero state is the country's largest producer of raw opium and the majority of this, as well as the refined heroin into which it is made, arrives in southwest Mexico's largest port city before it is sent northwards to be sold to other cartels, who move the narcotics into the US.

Coupled with the local drug and extortion rackets that the tourism industry lends itself to, Acapulco has become southwest Mexico's most profitable cartel territory, and the brutality of the gang wars has come to reflect this.

'In regions controlled by a single cartel you'll generally see less brutality, but given the war for dominance in Acapulco the killers have to send a messages every time they murder,' says Francisco. 

'I generally come across more decapitations, mutilations and torture victims than straight executions in my daily work.'

'I never go further than 100 yards from my hotel, but now it seems even the beach isn't safe from the violence,' said Bryna Freidman from Toronto, 64, who says she has noticed a large drop in visitors to the Pacific resort over the 35 years she's been an Acapulco regular. 

'The authorities simply aren't doing enough.'

And for those die-hard Acapulco holidaymakers like Bryna, the toll that Acapulco's cartel war has taken on the city no longer justifies the thousands of dollars she pays to come here for her holidays.

'I still love it here,' said Bryna, as she looked out over the same ocean that has soaked up so much blood over the years, 'But only because of the memories I have of how it was before.'


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