Monday, July 25, 2011

Norway Suspect Tells Court He Wanted to Save Europe | CNSnews.- BUT WHO WILL SAVE US FROM NARCOMEX & THE MEX DRUG CARTELS? NOT OBAMA!

Norway Suspect Tells Court He Wanted to Save Europe | CNSnews.com


Like who will save us from NARCOMEX and LA RAZA SUPREMACY – THE MEXICAN FASCIST MOVEMENT IN OUR COUNTRY?

NOT OBAMA! HE’S MEETING TODAY TO CELEBRATE OPEN BORDERS WITH HIS LA RAZA PARTY BASE!


http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/mexi-can-gangs-2000-arrested-62-million.html

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NARCOmex OPERATING IN OUR OPEN AND UNDEFENDED BORDERS!
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HOW MANY MEXICAN GANG MEMBERS ARE IN OUR COUNTRY?
WHAT PERCENTAGE OF MURDERS IN MEXICAN OCCUPIED CALIFORNIA ARE BY MEXICAN GANGS?
ANSWER AT BOTTOM… REALLY WANT AMNESTY???
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US arrests 2,000 in anti-drug sting
US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents simulate a raid in their Tactical …
US authorities have arrested nearly 2,000 people on narcotics charges in a 20-month sting targeting Mexico's La Familia Michoacana drug cartel, the US Justice Department said Thursday.
The ongoing multi-agency takedown saw 1,985 people arrested, along with the seizure of about $62 million in US dollars, and more than 12 tons of drugs.
The arrests and charges were carried out in 12 states and the US capital Washington in a major operation dubbed "Project Delirium" and the announcement came just two months after Mexican law enforcement officials arrested La Familia leader Jose de Jesus Mendez-Vargas.
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It would also reveal a disheartening truth: The cartel's U.S. distribution system was bigger and more resilient than anyone had imagined, a spider web connecting dozens of cities, constantly regenerating and expanding.


http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/los-angeles-mex-welfare-capital-of.html
latimes.com
Inside the Cartel
Unraveling Mexico's Sinaloa drug cartel
As drug smugglers from the Sinaloa cartel in Mexico sent a never-ending stream of cocaine across the border and into a vast U.S. distribution web in Los Angeles, DEA agents were watching and listening.
By Richard Marosi
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
July 24, 2011
Reporting from Calexico, Calif.


Never lose track of the load.

It was drilled into everybody who worked for Carlos “Charlie” Cuevas. His drivers, lookouts, stash house operators, dispatchers -- they all knew. When a shipment was on the move, a pair of eyes had to move with it.

Cuevas had just sent a crew of seven men to the border crossing at Calexico, Calif. The load they were tracking was cocaine, concealed in a custom-made compartment inside a blue 2003 Honda Accord.

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OVER OUR BORDERS, IN TUNNELS UNDER OUR BORDERS, AND OVER THE WATERWAYS, MEXICANS COME TO LOOT!
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http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/illegals-pouring-over-our-open-undended.html

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MEXICAN TERRORIST
http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/mexican-terrorist-on-our-open.html
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Violence stemming migrant flow to U.S.
By William Booth and Nick Miroff, Published: July 1
TENOSIQUE, Mexico – For years, Central American migrants rode slow buses and freight trains across Mexico, then paid “coyote” guides a few hundred dollars for a quick run or swim into the United States.
It was a hard journey, but nothing like today.
Warring mafias have turned once-sleepy farm towns and rail crossings in Mexico into notorious junctions of kidnapping, torture and death, creating a new geography of fear spanning from the U.S. border to the most humble villages in Central America.
The soaring number of attacks on migrants in Mexico, and the widely dispersed news of their barbarity, is discouraging many Central Americans from even attempting the trip to the United States, according to immigration officials, human rights advocates and the travelers themselves.
The flow of illegal Central American migrants to the United States has been slowing since 2005, the result of the sagging U.S. economy and increased law enforcement along the U.S. border, experts say. But a powerful new reason has emerged: Today’s migrants face a far more sinister journey and many have concluded it is just too dangerous.
“This is my fourth trip, but everything is different now. They’ll kill you for nothing,” said Darling Diaz Garcia, a Nicaraguan who was spending the night at a shelter in Tapachula across from the Guatemala border.
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MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com

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