Acapulco Resort Shooting Leaves 16 Dead

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NATALIA PARRA | June 7, 2009 11:57 PM EST | AP

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Soldiers hold a position during a gunfight in Acapulco, Mexico, Saturday, June 6, 2009. Soldiers fought for two hours with armed men apparently holding police hostage at a house in Acapulco, leaving one soldier and 15 gunmen dead, a military official said Sunday. (AP Photo)

ACAPULCO, Mexico — It was a shootout straight from Hollywood in the former playground of its biggest stars: Outlaws holed up in a hillside mansion fought heavily armed Mexican soldiers with a rain of gunfire and grenades that had tourists cowering in hotels nearby.

Roughly 3,000 shots and 50 explosions marked the four-hour battle late Saturday that left 16 gunmen and two soldiers dead. Nine other people were wounded, including three bystanders.

More than a dozen Mexican tourists were evacuated from a neighboring hotel strip frozen in the 1950s, when Elizabeth Taylor held one of her many weddings in Acapulco and John Wayne and "Tarzan" star Johnny Weissmuller threw lavish parties at Los Flamingos Hotel less than 100 yards (meters) from where gunfire broke out.

Cindy Pelaquin and Michelle Johnson, both of Boston, were watching the famous Acapulco cliff divers less than a mile away. They saw the military roadblocks but heard nothing.

"We were just lucky I suppose," said Johnson, a Boston nurse.

One neighbor said it sounded like fireworks. But a Mexican tourist, whose group had just arrived from the Mexico City area, immediately recognized the sound of gunshots and dove under a hotel bed.

The battle erupted after soldiers received a tip that a group of armed men were gathered at a gated house in a seedy section of Acapulco where working-class homes bleed into 1950s mansions. One hotel across from the street from the shootout offers three-hour stays for 30 pesos, about $2.25.

Several gunmen tried to flee but crashed their car into a military Hummer that was blocking the gate. At one point, more armed men with grenades arrived to reinforce the men in the house, but they died in the shooting, said an army colonel, who led the operation and spoke on condition of anonymity for security reasons.

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Inside, soldiers found four men bound and shirtless who claimed they were Guerrero state police officers being held hostage. The soldiers confiscated 47 guns, grenades and ammunition, as well as several cars, including a Mercedes Benz.

Five people inside the house were detained, including the four alleged officers, the Defense Department said in a statement.

Soldiers did not know the hostages were inside when the shootout began, and the colonel said their claims to be police would be investigated.

"We found them like this, handcuffed, and they say they were kidnapped. So if they were kidnapped, as they say, then we rescued them," said the colonel, who gave reporters a tour of the house in a ski mask to protect his identity.

Military officials said they are still investigating who the gunmen are. But given the weapons stash, large home and late-model cars, it looked like the normal trappings for drug cartels. No drugs were found.

Guerrero state, where Acapulco is located, has long suffered from drug violence from cartels fighting for turf.

The Beltran Leyva cartel, in particular, has a strong presence in Acapulco. Last month, soldiers arrested a suspected cartel lieutenant as he stepped off a private plane in the northern city of Monterrey on his way back from Acapulco, where he said he'd met with cartel leader Arturo Beltran Leyva at a baptism party.

The premier resort town for America's rich and famous in the '50s and '60s, Acapulco suffered a decline as traffic and urban sprawl took over the palm-swept ambiance. It was reborn in the 1980s as a popular resort for Mexicans, and the working class now flock to the old hotel zone, where they can buy a two-night stay and transportation for as little as $50.

U.S. tourists also have returned during the past several years following construction of the new "Diamond Zone" strip of five-star hotels _ on the other side of town from Saturday's violence. Acapulco now ranks with Cancun as one of Mexico's most-visited resort cities.

While tourism is usually low this time of year, the start of the hurricane season in the Pacific, numbers are worse than usual after a swine-flu outbreak in late April that pushed hotel occupancy in Mexico to half its normal rate and prompted the cancellation of many flights and cruise ship visits.

Hotel Los Flamingos, a pink building perched on a cliff where waiters climb trees to pull down coconuts for drinks, had few guests and only two rooms with foreign visitors, according to hotel workers who insisted they had not heard the shooting the night before.

Tourism is Mexico's third-largest source of legal foreign income, after oil and remittances.

"At the resorts they basically tell you not to venture out," Johnson said.

"It's pretty shocking. It's really sad. This a huge problem," added Pelaquin, an insurance analyst whose friends already thought her trip to Mexico was risky because of swine flu. "Mexicans grow the drugs and send them to the U.S. where Americans buy them so we can't blame it just on this country."

President Felipe Calderon has deployed more than 45,000 soldiers across Mexico to battle drug violence. More than 10,800 people have died since the offensive began in December 2006.

Although foreign tourists very rarely get caught in the violence, shootouts and kidnappings have become more frequent in resort areas such as Acapulco and Cancun. In 2007, a couple from Canada was wounded when someone fired into a hotel lobby in Acapulco.

____

Associated Press reporters Julie Watson and Greg Bull contributed to this report.

ACAPULCO, Mexico — It was a shootout straight from Hollywood in the former playground of its biggest stars: Outlaws holed up in a hillside mansion fought heavily armed Mexican soldiers with a ra...
ACAPULCO, Mexico — It was a shootout straight from Hollywood in the former playground of its biggest stars: Outlaws holed up in a hillside mansion fought heavily armed Mexican soldiers with a ra...
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- drbillybob I'm a Fan of drbillybob 83 fans permalink
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I'm waiting to hear how this is our fault ... oh wait, I can see already from some of the posts. It is our fault ... we use drugs.

OK, that makes me feels better because we all know that the US is the source of all evil in the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:55 AM on 06/08/2009

#1 - We are depending on their drugs to get high so yeah their dealers will kill for their territorie­s..
#2- Their cheap labor to make our products in environmentally unsafe factories in border towns.
#3 - We are fueling them with weapons
#4 - Our FREE TRADE agreements have destroyed the cultural structure and broken own the infrastructure of the ocuntry.

So considering the above, it is the perfect recipe for violence.. Only now that the violence is seeping into the U.S. and affecting our means of comfort we are starting to take notice..
There is a price to pay for exploitation afterall..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:48 AM on 06/08/2009
- jmad I'm a Fan of jmad 4 fans permalink

As a regular traveler to N. West Guerrero, I discovered wonderful polite folks as well as jerks in the same proportion as hometown Americas. The key we need to remember is that the revolution that established the present Mexican state started only about 100 years ago and compared to the US is an unruly teenager. For me, the problem is primarily a cops and robber event, driven by endemic corruption and greed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:44 AM on 06/08/2009

Corruption implies ethics are purely solepsistic. What GOOD has 500 years of Roman Catholicism's oppressive theology done for Mexico....­.besides, to amplify an endemic tendency toward OVERPOPULATION?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:53 AM on 06/08/2009
- poster1122 I'm a Fan of poster1122 27 fans permalink

Overpopulation? Mexico has 1/3 the population of the United States while being 1/5 the size. The problem with Mexico is poor infrastructure and worse governance, not lack of resources for the population they have.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 AM on 06/08/2009

That should read: "Corruption implies ethics THAT are...." It's somewhat late.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 AM on 06/08/2009
- Prakosh I'm a Fan of Prakosh 198 fans permalink
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Corruption and Greed? Sounds like a capitalists dream/nightmare. And apparently they all had guns. Another myth broken. Everybody had guns and they still shot each other.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 AM on 06/08/2009
- Montgriz I'm a Fan of Montgriz 36 fans permalink

The real problem is America's love of drugs...Wh­at is it about our affluent society that makes us all want to take drugs to escape our lives?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 AM on 06/08/2009
- ramal I'm a Fan of ramal 72 fans permalink
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Just one more reason for the United States to legalize all drugs and make them available at cost to anyone stupid enough to want them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 PM on 06/07/2009

I'd rather go to Haiti for vacation now. They just have machetes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:31 PM on 06/07/2009
- weebils I'm a Fan of weebils 99 fans permalink

lol

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 AM on 06/08/2009

And that is funny? Since Haiti's independence in the early 1800s, the United States has has a hand in systematically destroying that country. Yeah go to Haiti, build more dams that displace poor Haitians and increased their poverty allowing HIV to permeates its population­s...
Laugh..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:53 AM on 06/08/2009
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I blame the people in this country who aren't resourceful enough to find locally grown weed. My friends - it's time to grow your own, or at least support someone in your own community who grows it... lord knows it's not that hard to do.

Large scale industrial agriculture always creates downstream costs - whether we're talking veggies, meat or reefer. Keep the money in your local community, stop the waste of fossil fuels and put an end to the Mexican bloodshed. This is insanity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 PM on 06/07/2009

A well intentioned idea, but unfortunately Mexicans will be involved whether you get you weed in Mexico of the US. Growers of legal produce in my area hire Mexicans to oversee the cultivation of said produce. It would only be a matter before growers of week would also hire Mexicans to oversee the cultivation process.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:52 AM on 06/08/2009
- JackND I'm a Fan of JackND 28 fans permalink

Between resort shootouts, blazes in preschools, and swine flu, Mexico has had one hell of a lousy spring.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:54 PM on 06/07/2009
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Aint that the truth

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 AM on 06/08/2009

So some gangsters got killed. So what? Tells me Mexico is winning their war. You could put 13 gangsters with machine guns in San Diego and it would end the same way.

The President of Mexico should be commended for killing these thugs. They are to the point of threatening the entire country and government.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 PM on 06/07/2009
- Heyman I'm a Fan of Heyman 2 fans permalink

What war? The war on drugs is over. The United States drug users won. Face it. When there's a demand? There's always going to be a supply.
Our country is drug crazed. I know. I work with a bunch of alky's and druggies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 PM on 06/07/2009

If the Mexican gov weren't selling drugs to former blackw*ter boys to be redistrebutited in the US you might be right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 PM on 06/07/2009
- JDRNYC I'm a Fan of JDRNYC 25 fans permalink

If drugs were legalized and taxed, like cigarettes and alcohol, we would not have to deal with this type of violence. Also, it would go a long way towards balancing budgets across the country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 06/07/2009

What if Mexico taxed drug gang violence and put tariffs on the trans-shipment of drug instead? Both this proposal and your proposals share at least one similarity, they are both totally and utterly simplistic, unworkable and absurd.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 PM on 06/07/2009
- mightyhead I'm a Fan of mightyhead 8 fans permalink
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"What do we do now?"

"Quick, put your handcuffs on. Tell them we were kidnapped. Wait - flush the bribe money first!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:56 PM on 06/07/2009
- richmx2 I'm a Fan of richmx2 2 fans permalink

A couple of things. Acapulco is a major seaport (with a population of around a million) and has always had a thriving smuggling industry -- like any seaport anywhere on the planet.

Gangsters have always lived in resort areas (think of Las Vegas, founded by gangsters and still largely controlled by them) and have the money to live in the better parts of town anywhere in the world.

So, neither finding gangsters in Acapulco, nor in a house in the resort area is at all surprising. What is annoying, is that Mexicans are having to fight a proxy war for the United States... and, perhaps worse, have an administration that is willing to do so.

As it is, no one here trusts the AP to get the news right anyway. It is edited by people who know nothing of the country, and assume everyone in this country is as obsessed with the U.S. narcotics trade as the U.S. is. We're generally not.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 PM on 06/07/2009
- LeeCalif I'm a Fan of LeeCalif 72 fans permalink

Great points ! Particularly about AP.

Wish more people realized how wrong and/or biased AP usually is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:37 PM on 06/07/2009
- Montgriz I'm a Fan of Montgriz 36 fans permalink

Hate to disagree, but Las Vegas is no longer remotely controlled by organized crime, unless you include corporate America. Mexico's problems are many, but the oligarchs and the controlling families like it that way....Sti­ll, Americans seem to need drugs to deal with their ordinary day to day lives....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 AM on 06/08/2009

I would rather get swine flue in Mehico that get caught in a gun battle. Say: manjana to the tourist biz in Acapulco

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:27 PM on 06/07/2009
- kensp I'm a Fan of kensp 8 fans permalink

You mean say adios don't you? Manana means tomorrow not goodbye. Either way you are wrong. Many people are not going to be scared off that easily.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:37 PM on 06/07/2009

nothing like the sound of a bullet going past a tourist's head to breed viral bad word-of-mouth marketing. "hey, I just loved Aculp, except for the gunfights.­" adios.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 06/08/2009

The drug "war" (a real one) in Mexico doesn't get the media play like Iraq and Afghanistan, but it is real and is already spilling over into the US. And with this country's gun sales along the border, and overall drug appetite, we are helping pour gasoline over the fire. It may become our next national security threat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 06/07/2009
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Legalize all drugs, let the medical profession help those who cannot deal with it.

.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 PM on 06/07/2009
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Legalize it and impose a sales tax to offset the medical costs. This "WWar on Drugs" cannot be won, except by the cartels. We know this, yet we continue to waste money and the lives of lawmen on this elusive cause.

Those policemen found in the house could have been dirty cops. If they had been kidnapped, wouldn't the kidnappers have k*lled them when the army came?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:36 PM on 06/07/2009
- WCwill I'm a Fan of WCwill 4 fans permalink

Wasn't the Mexican government and tourism board just recently telling potential tourists that the violence has not affected the most popular resorts?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 06/07/2009
- Raster I'm a Fan of Raster 23 fans permalink

Just a tune up for battles previously unimagined yet to come.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 06/07/2009
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