Wednesday, July 27, 2011

MEXICAN TERRORIS IN OUR OPEN & UNDEFENDED BORDERS - THEIR CULTURE OF RACISM, VIOLENCE AND CONTEMPT FOR OUR COUNTRY THEY LOOT

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/07/la-raza-mexican-terrorism-teenage.html
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14 YEAR OLD MEXICAN BOY BEHEADS 4 FOR MEXICAN DRUG CARTELS!

MEXICAN TEENAGE GIRLS TRAIN AS DRUG CARTEL KILLERS!
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WHILE WE’RE SQUANDERING BILLIONS PRETENDING TO FIGHT MUSLIM TERRORIST OVER THERE, MEXICAN TERRORIST, GANGS AND THE DRUG CARTELS ARE CLIMBING UNDER AND OVER OUR BORDERS!!!

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ASK YOURSELF! CAN YOU ENVISAGE AN AMERICAN GIRL BEING TRAINED AS A COLD BLOODED MURDERER FOR A DRUG CARTEL?

CAN YOU ENVISAGE A 14 YEAR OLD AMERICAN BOY BEHEADING PEOPLE FOR THE DRUG CARTELS?
THESE ARE MEXICANS! THEY ARE THE MOST RACIST AND VIOLENT PEOPLE IN THE HEMISPHERE!
OUR JAILS AND PRISONS ARE FULL OF THEM, AND YOU’RE PAYING FOR IT!

ACCORDING TO THE CALIFORNIA ATTORNEY GENERAL, NEARLY HALF THE MURDERS IN CALIFORNIA ARE BY MEXICAN GANGS!

THE TOP TEN MOST WANTED CRIMINALS ON THE A.G.’S LIST ARE MEXICANS!
OF THE TOP 200 MOST WANTED CRIMINALS IN LOS ANGELES, 176 ARE MEXICANS (MOST THE OTHERS ARE RUSSSIANS).

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MEXICO EXPORTS THEIR CRIMINALS:

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/06/mexico-exports-criminals-and-then-they.html
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“U.S. efforts to find and deport illegal immigrants are overwhelmed by sheer numbers and hampered by public agencies working at cross-purposes. The $2 billion spent each year has little measurable effect on either crime or immigration. Most people deported say they intend to return to the U.S. – and many do. Criminals have less trouble returning than most.”
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FACTS ON MEX INVASION OF McCAIN’S STATE:
“83% of warrants for murder in Phoenix are for illegal aliens. 86% of warrants for murder in Albuquerque are for illegal aliens. 75% of those on the most wanted list in Los Angeles, Phoenix and Albuquerque are illegal aliens. 24.9% of all inmates in California detention centers are Mexican nationals here illegally 40.1% of all inmates in Arizona detention centers are Mexican nationals here illegally.”
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75 GANG LEADERS ARRESTED IN LA RAZA INFESTED CA CENTRAL VALLEY!
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Four in 10 homicides in California are gang-related, Attorney General Harris said. Those cases also account for 80% of the state's effort to relocate witnesses whose lives are in danger because of their cooperation with law enforcement, she said.

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/06/mexifornia-75-gang-leaders-arrested-in.html
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latimes.com
Mexican teenage girls train as drug cartel killers
Dave Graham
Reuters
8:50 PM PDT, June 17, 2011



* 16-year-old girls say trained as Zetas killers

* Rising unemployment helps push kids into crime

* Weak justice system failing to deter murder


MEXICO CITY, June 17 (Reuters Life!) - Dwarfed by
surrounding reporters and with her head bowed to avoid the
television cameras, the slender 16-year-old hesitated slightly
before she answered the question. "I'm a hitwoman," she said.

Maria Celeste Mendoza was among six teenage suspected gang
members arrested this week by police after a shoot-out with
authorities in central Mexico, one of the growing ranks of
young people working for the country's drug cartels.

Dressed in combat fatigues and with her face hidden, the
girl from the northern border state of Tamaulipas described how
she had been trained to use Kalashnikov assault rifles and
other weapons by the Zetas, one of Mexico's most brutal gangs.

In a listless drawl, Mendoza said she was paid 12,000 pesos
($1,000) for two weeks' work, more than three times the
national average. Although she said she was trained as a
hitwoman, it was unclear if she had killed anyone yet.

As is customary in Mexico, she and the other suspects, six
of whom were women aged 21 or below, were paraded in front of
the media by police after their capture in San Cristobal de la
Barranca, near the country's second city, Guadalajara.

Rising youth unemployment, easy access to drugs and the
quick cash cartels offer recruits are all blamed for felling
the delinquency that has cast a shadow over Mexico's future.

"Organized crime has become a job provider for a section of
the population who don't have a lot of other options," said
Victor Clark-Alfaro, director of the Binational Center for
Human Rights in Tijuana on the Mexican border with California.

"Since 2000, the age at which people start getting mixed up
in organized crime has fallen," he added. "And in the last few
years, the age has dropped to about 17 or 18."

Detailed figures on the role of minors in the cartels are
scarce, but newspaper Reforma said the number charged with
involvement in organized crime jumped to 214 last year from 8
in 2007, citing data from the attorney general's office.

The arrest of Mendoza and another 16-year-old girl with
her, Isela Sandoval, is part of the trend. Sandoval also said
she had been trained as a hitwoman but that she had not killed
anyone yet, according to Mexican media reports.

Around 40,000 people have died in escalating drug-related
violence since President Felipe Calderon sent in the army to
try to crush the cartels at the end of 2006.


LIVE FAST, DIE YOUNG

Although authorities have arrested a number of teenage
hitmen in the past few years, it is highly unusual for women to
work as killers for drug gangs, said Clark-Alfaro.

"This may just be an isolated case. But it may mean a new
pattern is emerging in the world of organized crime," he said.

Last December, Mexican soldiers captured suspected drug
gang hitman Edgar Jimenez, known as "El Ponchis," a 14-year-old
U.S. citizen who the army said had admitted killing several
people while under the influence of drugs.

The vast quantities of narcotics moving across the country
towards the lucrative markets of Europe and the United States
have helped to turn Mexicans onto drugs earlier than before.

"Kids are starting to take drugs younger and younger," said
Alberto Islas, a security expert at consultancy Risk
Evaluation. "A decade ago, the average age was 14, now it's 10.
This has the effect of lowering their perception of risks."

Coupled with the fact that youth unemployment is now double
what it was ten years ago -- in a country whose growing
population is one of the youngest in the Americas -- the trends
present the cartels with a rich source of cheap labor.

"Young folk are recruited because they're potentially more
aggressive and less likely to care about the consequences than
adults. They'll take more risks," said Clark-Alfaro.

He said it is often a short career with the attorney
general's office calculating that young men who get mixed up in
organized crime will, on average, be dead within three or four
years.

The Network for the Rights of Children in Mexico (REDIM),
an advocacy group, says some 30,000 children are believed to
work for criminal gangs in Latin America's No.2 economy, where
delinquency is often blamed on high drop-out rates at school.

But even those who remain in the classroom are far from
safe from the allure of drugs, guns and crime.

A 2009 government survey of some 55,000 secondary
schoolchildren in five Mexican cities showed more than one in
five had seen classmates carry a weapon and that one in eight
would sell marijuana for cash if a friend egged them on.

Those who graduate towards the cartels can expect a brutal
schooling from their new teachers, according to the testimony
of Miguel Ortiz Miranda, a member of La Familia cartel captured
last year, whose interrogation later surfaced on Youtube.

In graphic detail, he calmly described how new assassins
were quickly put to the test with selected victims.

"We made (the new ones) kill them, and slit their throats
and quarter them and all that. So that the new people would
lose their fear of cutting an arm ... or a leg," he said.

Others end up as drug dealers, fixers or watchmen but those
safer jobs do not always pay as well, according to Beatriz
Hernandez, 21, one of the other women arrested with Mendoza,
who said she earned 4,000 pesos every two weeks as a look-out.

With Mexico struggling to clean up its justice system or
create more decent jobs, some young people see gangland murders
as a real career option.

"This is about the impunity here," Islas said. "Because of
it, the perception of risk attached to committing this kind of
crime is very low. Murders are not solved in Mexico."
(Additional reporting by Mica Rosenberg; Editing by Kieran
Murray)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/1738432/posts FBI Crime Statistics - Crimes committed by illegals.
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FOURTEEN YEAR OLD MEXICAN BOY BEHEADS FOUR NARCOMEX RIVALS - Mexican Culture of Violence

http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/05/mexican-gangs-14-year-old-mexican-boy.html
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http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/06/more-beheadings-in-narcomex-mexican.html
Edgar Jimenez Lugo, who authorities said was born in San Diego, was wanted on suspicion of killing rivals — allegedly beheading some — as part of his work for a violent drug-trafficking cartel.
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Youth sought in Mexico killings arrested

Edgar Jimenez Lugo, who authorities said was born in San Diego, was wanted on suspicion of killing rivals — allegedly beheading some — as part of his work for a violent drug-trafficking cartel.
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December 03, 2010|By Tracy Wilkinson, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Mexico City — A 14-year-old boy who says he's been killing or working for drug cartels since he was 11 has been captured by the Mexican army after a monthlong hunt, authorities said Friday.
Edgar Jimenez Lugo, who authorities said was born in San Diego, was wanted on suspicion of killing rivals — allegedly beheading some of them — as part of his work for an especially violent drug-trafficking cartel.

Jimenez was attempting to board a flight for Tijuana with two sisters Thursday night when authorities detained him in Morelos state south of Mexico City. They were apparently planning to flee the country after the boy's alleged exploits made headlines last month.
"I've killed four people by chopping off their heads," the boy reportedly said after his capture. "I just cut off their heads; I never went and hung the bodies from bridges or anything like that."
Jimenez, alias El Ponchis, was quoted in media reports as saying he had been forced to work for a faction of the Beltran Leyva drug cartel under pain of death ever since henchmen from the group kidnapped him three years ago. He said he was usually high on drugs as he killed.
Marco Antonio Adame, the governor of Morelos, said in a news conference that Jimenez was a U.S. citizen by virtue of his San Diego birth.
The story of the boy had become something of a cause celebre here when it first emerged several weeks ago. Rumors abounded that he was a ruthless decapitator and that some of his work had been videotaped. (Initial reports erroneously put his age at 12.) Mexican media immediately dubbed him "the boy killer" and "the hit boy."
Photographs from Morelos on Friday showed a skinny Jimenez, dressed in baggy cargo pants and a black sweatshirt, standing between two well-armed soldiers in camouflage. His hands are stuck in his pockets and his head barely clears their shoulders.
The drug gang he allegedly worked for, the so-called South Pacific Cartel, has been locked in deadly battle with another Beltran Leyva faction for control of the city of Cuernavaca and other parts of Morelos — a dispute that erupted following the killing of drug boss Arturo Beltran Leyva by Mexican forces a year ago. More than 300 people have been killed in the conflict.
Jimenez reportedly ran with a group of boys and men ages 12 to 23 and represents a trend of ever younger Mexicans working for the cartels as killers, mules and enforcers and in other capacities. If judged guilty, the boy would be the youngest cartel killer known to be in prison.
His age poses a legal dilemma for Mexican authorities, who on Friday were scrambling to figure out which laws and agencies would handle a minor suspected of such egregious crimes.
Also Friday, in another setback for Mexican attempts to put away drug traffickers, a judge acquitted the nicknamed "Queen of the Pacific" of numerous drug-related charges. Sandra Avila Beltran has been in jail since her capture in 2007, accused of serving as a key link between the Sinaloa cartel and its Colombian counterparts. A rare woman in the world of reputed drug lords, Avila remained in custody because of an outstanding extradition request from the United
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Another Well Documented Crime Against U.S.A. Civilians

PDThttp://www.immigrationshumancost.org/text/crimevictims.html

Sister Helen Chaska was murdered in late summer 2002 by being strangled with her rosary beads — the beads were found imbedded in her neck. She was also raped, as was another nun who accompanied Sister Helen during walking prayers. Both women were in Klamath Falls, Oregon, doing missionary work when the crimes occurred. Her accused murderer is Maximiliano Esparza, who is in the United States illegally, and was convicted in 1988 of robbery and kidnapping in Los Angeles. He was sentenced to six years in prison, was released in 1992 and was on probation until 1995. By law, this man should have been deported to Mexico after his release in 1992. Instead, the INS allowed him to remain in the United States and commit even more heinous crimes. In this article, Michelle Malkin notes the Esparza crime and other examples of INS standard procedure of "catch and release" in violation of law. Sentencing Update: On April 8, 2003, Esparza was sentenced to life in prison without parole. The sentence was a deal worked out with the prosecution to avoid a trial with the possibility of the death penalty. Klamath County District Attorney Ed Caleb said that he wanted to avoid forcing the other nun who had been attacked to testify. In addition, Caleb sent a bill to the Mexican consulate for the cost of investigating and prosecuting the case. Not much chance of getting any money, but it is a reasonable gesture.

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Illegals Committing Heinous Acts Against Children & civilians in U.S.


PDThttp://www.immigrationshumancost.org/text/crimevictims.html

EXAMPLE #1 : • What sort of monster could murder three children in the most brutal manner — one child was beheaded and the two other were nearly decapitated. They also suffered a variety of injuries including blunt force trauma and asphyxiation. The victims, residents of Baltimore, (l. to r.) were siblings Alexis Quezada (10) and Lucero Quezada (9) and their cousin Ricardo Espinoza (9). The two men arrested for the crime were also relatives: Policarpio Espinoza, 22, brother of the father of the two siblings, and Espinoza's cousin Adan Espinoza Canela, 17. The accused are illegal aliens as are the parents of the murdered children. Apparently the arrests were based on DNA/blood evidence.


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http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2011/06/judicial-watch-mexican-gangs.html
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JUDICIALWATCH.org
Mexican Gang Charged With Terrorizing Blacks
06/07/2011 - 3:54pm
To demonstrate its loyalty to the notoriously violent Mexican Mafia prison gang, an affiliate Latino street organization has worked to cleanse a southern California city of black residents by terrorizing, threatening and intimidating them.
Details of the decades-long genocide operation in the Los Angeles County city of Azusa are laid out in a huge grand jury indictment issued by the Department of Justice this week. More than 50 Latino gang bangers, many of them surely in the U.S. illegally, have been charged for targeting blacks by beating, robbing and threatening them.
The goal was to drive blacks out of the predominantly working-class Latino city of about 46,000. The crimes were committed by members of the Azusa 13 gang, which runs a sophisticated criminal enterprise financed with lucrative drug-trafficking proceeds. The gang also taxes the area’s drug dealers and shares some of the money with the Mexican Mafia, according to the 112-page indictment.
Latino gangs have for more than a decade targeted blacks in the sprawling southern California County, which is an illegal alien hotbed that has long offered sanctuary. In the last few years alone, dozens of Latino gangbangers have been charged with murdering, harassing or attacking blacks in the area, the feds say in their indictment.
As far back as 1999 the Azusa 13 was targeting blacks in the area, prosecutors say. That year a 17-year-old member named Ralph “Swifty” Flores murdered a black teenager and was sentenced to life in prison without parole. In 2008 an illegal immigrant from a different gang murdered a Los Angeles high school footballs star shortly after completing a prison sentence for a separate felony.

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