Mexico Drug War: Decapitated Bodies Left At Posh Mall, As Body Count Reaches 47,000

Mexico

First Posted: 01/11/12 06:37 PM ET Updated: 01/11/12 08:23 PM ET

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS -- MEXICO CITY - Two decapitated bodies were found inside a burning SUV early Wednesday at the entrance to one of Mexico's most luxurious malls, feeding fears drug violence is infiltrating privileged realms previously thought safe.

Police recovered the mutilated bodies before dawn off a toll highway at a shopping mall entrance in the heart of the Santa Fe district that's a haven for international corporations, diplomats and the wealthy. The heads and a threatening message were dumped a few yards away, Mexico City prosecutors said in a statement.

Hours later, the government released a drug war body count recording more than 47,000 victims in five years, echoing independent death tolls tabulated by Mexican media.

Local media published images of the charred car and reported that a note written on hot pink paper was signed by the drug gang Mano con Ojos, or Hand with Eyes.

The victims, a man and a woman in their 30s, had not been identified, prosecutors said. They said the SUV with license plates from neighbouring Mexico state had been stolen.

Mexico's sprawling capital has been something of a haven from the brutal cartel violence that has claimed thousands of lives along the U.S. border and in outlying states. But gangs have been fighting over an increasingly lucrative local drug market for more than a year, mainly in the capital's working class outer neighbourhoods and suburbs.

The Santa Fe district has been spared much of that violence and managed to maintain its reputation as a manicured bubble built atop a former landfill on the western edge of Mexico City.

The district houses the Mexican headquarters of major corporations, Hewlett Packard and IBM among them, and Iberoamerican University, one of Mexico's top private schools. Modern, heavily guarded high-rises where wealthy Mexicans and foreigners live dot the hilly landscape.

The mall where the charred car was found is one of the country's largest and most glamorous, housing high-end retailers such as Coach, Prada, Hugo Boss, Saks Fifth Avenue and Mexican department store Palacio de Hierro (Iron Palace).

But as the fight among splintering drug cartels intensifies, brazen attackers have reached even into the country's most guarded districts.

Erubiel Tirado, a security expert who teaches at Iberoamerican University, said the attack shows the government's law enforcement strategy has not dissuaded increasingly brutal drug traffickers.

"We are talking about an area that is under 24-hour surveillance by police and private security and supposedly one of the safest in the capital and in the country, and yet they can act with impunity," Tirado said.

Roberto Herrera, a 52-year-old salesman for a bottling company headquartered in a building across the street from the mall, wasn't surprised by the news.

"We have lived with this situation for a while and we are no longer shocked because this is what's been happening in Veracruz, Acapulco and Monterrey," said Herrera, who was having lunch with a group of co-workers a T.G.I. Friday's restaurant inside the mall.

In October, the Manos con Ojos gang claimed responsibility for leaving two severed heads on a street across from the nation's top military base in Mexico City.

The gang was once part of the Beltran Leyva drug cartel, and authorities say it has killed dozens while trying to forcefully recruit local drug dealers to its ranks.

Nationwide, 47,515 drug-related killings occurred from December 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed thousands of troops to drug hot spots, through September 2011, the Attorney General's Office said Wednesday.

Drug-related killings rose 11 per cent in the first nine months of 2011, when 12,903 people were killed, compared to 11,583 in the same period of 2010, the office said.

The figures indicate that three-quarters of all homicides in Mexico are now linked to the drug war.

The Attorney General's Office found one small consolation: "It's the first year (since 2006) that the homicide rate increase has been lower compared to the previous years."

There was a 70 per cent jumped in drug-related killings for the same nine-month period of 2010 compared to January-September 2009, when 6,815 deaths were recorded.

Prosecutors said the vast majority of last year's killings occurred in eight of Mexico's 32 states.

The Mexican government had been periodically releasing the number of drug war dead, but it stopped a year ago when the number reached nearly 35,000. Mexico's freedom of information agency had said it would ask for an investigation if prosecutors didn't release the data requested by several journalists by Wednesday.

___

Associated Press writer Olga R. Rodriguez in Mexico City contributed to this report.

A War In Mexico
'Lucky'
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Raul Lucio Fernandez Lechuga, alias "Lucky," stands before the press under the custody of navy marines at the Organized Crime Special Investigations Unit (SIEDO) headquarters in Mexico City, Tuesday Dec. 13, 2011.

According to federal authorities, Fernandez is one of the most wanted criminals in Mexico and the U.S., and is allegedly a top regional leader of the Zetas criminal organization, as well as a founding member of the Zetas. The federal government had offered a 15 million-peso reward, about $1.2 million, for information leading to his arrest.

The Zetas organization was formed by a small group of elite soldiers based in Tamaulipas state, across the border from Texas, who deserted to work for the Gulf drug cartel in the 1990s.
(AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS -- MEXICO CITY - Two decapitated bodies were found inside a burning SUV early Wednesday at the entrance to one of Mexico's most luxurious malls, feeding fears drug violence is inf...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS -- MEXICO CITY - Two decapitated bodies were found inside a burning SUV early Wednesday at the entrance to one of Mexico's most luxurious malls, feeding fears drug violence is inf...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
02:42 PM on 01/12/2012
How many of those deaths are due to our Attorney General's fantastic plan to ship guns to Mexico?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stroodle
@upcripplecreek
10:01 AM on 01/12/2012
Mexicans are uncivilized.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arturo Ramrez
01:06 PM on 01/12/2012
Posters on online forums are uninformed xenophobes. See how easy it is to generalize?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stroodle
@upcripplecreek
02:17 PM on 01/12/2012
I'm a xenophobe because I think a country who's people have murdered 75,000 in the last handful of years is uncivilized? Any country's people who did this should be considered the same. When was the last time you heard of decapitated bodies dumped somewhere in the US or Canada? Or even Europe? A person who can do this is sick and demented and I highly doubt the 75,000 killed was done by more than one.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arturo Ramrez
02:25 PM on 01/12/2012
45 000 (where did you get the 75 000 figure?) out of 120 000 000. What's the proportion? To say "Mexicans are uncivilized" you'd have to have known all Mexicans, which is impossible, or at least had a good sample.

Most Mexicans I know are nothing but hard working people that will literally sleep in the floor to house you, reduce their little food to feed you. I've traveled across Mexico due to my studies (biology) and I've met really humane, humble people most of the time. Sure there are rotten apples, but do you judge the tree because of them?

Your argument is void just by my answer, I am Mexican, I don't know what's your definition of civilized, but I'm pretty sure I'd fit it. So stop generalizing.
08:48 AM on 01/12/2012
I can`t understand why the Canadian government has not issued a travel advisory for this country. Imagine going to a country like this for a vacation-a country where the three most dangerous jobs are judge,lawyer and chief of police.Where else can this be found to be the case!
07:46 AM on 01/12/2012
Thank god this didn't happen in Canada...

Otherwise our politicians would waste countless hours to write a up a new law to make beheading doubly-illegal...

And they would certainly use this opportunity to ask for the creation of a sharp object registry!

~

You know the routine, this would have never happened if sharp objects weren't so readily available...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Warren Yuill
Jesus Built My Hot-Rod
07:23 AM on 01/12/2012
Even If we legalized drugs here, the drug cartels would still do battle to control the flow of drugs.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hjorlejf
09:03 AM on 01/12/2012
Why buy weed coming from Mexico when you can buy it homegrown?
The business would be FAR less lucrative for them.
07:16 AM on 01/12/2012
Excellent !!!! I support the mass killing of useless drug dealers and the like. They should send in sweep teams to really get the kill count up. Who needs Mexicans anyway ?
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straightuptalker
What ever happened to common sense?
05:21 AM on 01/12/2012
Enough is enough! What's it gonna take before we issue a travel ban to that hell-hole? Nobody's gonna do anything while they're still gettin' big bucks from U.S. tourists. It's clear there's no limits or boundaries for the violent and sadistic drug cartels that took over the country, overwhelming authorities who are totally inept and/or joined them in their corruption, while they peddle their wares across the border to U.S. customers. It's understandable that their own citizens want out of a country that's gone berserk, and so are willing to risk or die trying to escape.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
11:26 PM on 01/11/2012
Many who take these illegal drugs need to bow their heads in guilty shame for being part of the reason for the drug wars, those who create conditions from which people will try to escape by using illegal drugs you should bow your heads in shame also.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve Lives
The Venus Project ... look it up
12:22 AM on 01/12/2012
Wow, do you have it backwards.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
01:37 AM on 01/12/2012
Why do you say that? Do you not feel that the person who hires a murder has the greater guilt?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TwoZeroOZ
02:12 AM on 01/12/2012
Most sensible people would argue that prohibition is the direct cause of a black market.

Legalizing many drugs would instantly prevent another 50,000 people from dying.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
03:58 AM on 01/12/2012
Perhaps half true. How many more highway deaths would there be with more drugged drivers? I knew a druggie who smashed in he front of his VW Bug 3 times I think he said, just driving high and ran into people stopped at traffic lights. I have heard that the alcohol industry is a big opponent of legalizing drugs, though I don't know that to be true.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Payman Saqib
Engineer - UOIT
10:53 PM on 01/11/2012
That is more than all of the Afghan deaths since 2001.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Annette Hammond
Don't like it--Lump it!
10:47 PM on 01/11/2012
They can stop ALL the weed coming from mx.they want.And i hope they keep doing it.We need to legalize our own her in the USA!
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dubbleplusgood
turned off CNN, turned on CurrentTV
08:42 AM on 01/12/2012
Who smokes mexipot anyway? Utter garbage.
10:12 PM on 01/11/2012
It's the rich(USA cocaine users) what's get the pleasure....It's the poor(impoverished Mexicans) what's get the blame. It's an old story...Charles Dickens knew it well...different time, place, product, and characters...same pattern though.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Henk Bos
09:45 PM on 01/11/2012
We only have a drug problem because the North American populace are good customers. If people did not take up the habit of drug inducement than market forces will take place and the drug problem will disappear.
05:08 AM on 01/12/2012
Looks like you solved another case Gumbo. Unfortunately what you suggested is not realistic.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Henk Bos
05:55 PM on 01/12/2012
Thanks for your intuitive response. I agree my comments were never intended to be a solvable answer, rather showing the sorrowful plight of human nature. Maybe we need a gene pool change?
Again thanks for your generous input. But stick to the issue and try not to distract by using ad homenin attacks. Your intelligence seems to supercede you.
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dubbleplusgood
turned off CNN, turned on CurrentTV
08:44 AM on 01/12/2012
Agreed. So when exactly should we expect the North American populace to stop drinking alcohol so the problems of drunk driving, assault, domestic violence, workplace accidents, etc will disappear? Oh wait, you were talking about OTHER drugs, never mind.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Henk Bos
05:59 PM on 01/12/2012
Stick to the issue. What does self drug inducement have to do with., drinking alcohol, drunk driving, domestic violence, work place accidents. Or is there something you are not telling me?
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09:01 PM on 01/11/2012
Drugs go north, guns go south. The insanity will continue, and history will repeat itself as long as the 'war on drugs' continues.
10:10 PM on 01/11/2012
So we should capitulate?

Their products have ki.ll.ed far more than 47,000 in the US and Canada.
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10:41 PM on 01/11/2012
Drugs destroy lives, I get it. But, there are far better ways of dealing with the problem. Prohibition invariably leads to violence. If someone wants to do drugs, they will. As long as there is demand, someone will find a way to supply. Also, alcohol and tobacco kill a lot of people too.
The best weapon against drugs is education.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John michael Adams
08:45 PM on 01/11/2012
Meanwhile, north of the Mexican border, Democrats and Republicans are planning to make weed legal. oh the irony.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LittleSanityLeft
09:59 PM on 01/11/2012
You think weed is the drug of choice for the Mexican cartels?

Comparing weed to coke is like comparing absinthe to Coors Light.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve Lives
The Venus Project ... look it up
12:26 AM on 01/12/2012
Its their money maker. You would probably reduce the profits these guys make by 80% if you made just weed legal in the States and Canada (tho not much Mexican weed gets to us Canucks, we have our own thriving market).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arturo Ramrez
01:10 PM on 01/12/2012
Well, there's a good chance that legalizing weed would weaken the cartels, since people would probably choose to get the legal stuff and not risk jail time instead of buying the illegal stuff. Also, prices would go down, it could be taxed, and the taxes could be used in education and treatment.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opprobrious
More speech. Less Flagging.
08:32 PM on 01/11/2012
Oh but everyone I meet who goes there says it's safe. Not me. Mexico is off my list.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nete peedham
09:43 PM on 01/11/2012
So you know it all; hiding in your gated little community?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opprobrious
More speech. Less Flagging.
09:58 PM on 01/11/2012
The people I know avoid the resorts. Some of them stay in the exact town where a Canadian was found dead (home invasion) the other day. They've all told me that its perfectly safe. I tend to withhold judgment until the body count eclipses 5 figures. If you want to imagine me hiding in a gated community then that's your prerogative. Far be it for me to challenge such obvious astuteness.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LittleSanityLeft
10:02 PM on 01/11/2012
Nearly 50,000 murders in 5 years is all anyone who values their lives over siestas and margaritas needs to know.