No. 2 police officer in Mexican border town shot dead; gunmen kill reputed drug lord's son
By MARINA MONTEMAYOR,
AP
Posted: 2008-05-10 21:32:24
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) - The No. 2 police officer in a
Mexican border city across from Texas was shot dead Saturday, the
latest high-ranking official killed in an onslaught of attacks
blamed on gangs resisting a crackdown.
Gunman sprayed Juan Antonio Roman Garcia's car with bullets
outside his home in Ciudad Juarez, officials said. The attack came
months after his name appeared at the top of a hit list left at a
monument for fallen police officers.
Mexico has been shaken by a wave of drug-related violence as
gangs battle security forces and each other for control of
trafficking routes north.
The son of suspected Sinaloa cartel chief Joaquin Guzman was
killed in a shootout Thursday in another northern city. The same
day, Mexico's acting federal police chief, Edgar Millan Gomez, was
gunned down in front of his Mexico City home.
President Felipe Calderon said Friday that the attacks against
police showed weakened gangs were trying to counter his fight
against drug trafficking. Since taking office in 2006, Calderon has
sent more than 25,000 soldiers into states throughout Mexico to
combat drug gangs.
More than 200 people have been killed this year in Ciudad
Juarez, a Chihuahua state city of 1.3 million across from El Paso,
Texas, that is home base for the Juarez cartel. The government
deployed more than 2,500 soldiers and federal police to Chihuahua
in March.
Several people on the hit list have been killed, and none of the
perpetrators have been caught. Government officials displayed video
footage of the list at a news conference Saturday, with Roman
Garcia's name at the top.
"His death has plunged the city into mourning because he was an
exemplary officer with an impeccable 20-year record who fulfilled
his duties until his last breath, despite the dangers," said
Ciudad Juarez Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz.
Although he vowed his government would not be intimidated,
Ferriz said all police officers had been ordered to take added
precautions. "We know that organized crime will keep up the
violence," he said.
More than 2,500 people have died across Mexico this year in
crime and drug-related violence.
Joaquin Guzman's son, Edgar, was shot dead in the Sinaloa state
capital of Culiacan on Thursday, according an official with the
federal Attorney General's office who was not authorized to be
quoted by name.
Mexican media reports said gunmen opened fire on Edgar Guzman in
the parking lot of a shopping center. About 500 bullet casings from
AK-47 rifles were found at the site, El Universal and Reforma
newspapers reported.
Also killed in the attack was Arturo Meza Cazares. Meza is the
son of Blanca Margarita Cazares, whom the U.S. has identified as a
key money launderer for the cartel.
Joaquin Guzman escaped from prison in 2001 and allegedly started
a turf war that has killed hundreds of people. He is one of
Mexico's most-wanted fugitives, and U.S. authorities have offered a
US$5 million (3.2 million) reward for his capture.
Associated Press writer Alexandra Olson contributed to his
report from Mexico City.
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05/10/08 21:30 EDT