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Gustavo Sanchez, Mexican Mayor, Stoned To Death

GUSTAVO RUIZ   09/27/10 09:41 PM ET   AP

Gustavo Sanchez Murder
The corpse of the Mayor of Tancitaro municipality, Gustavo Sanchez Cervantes, lies on the ground as policemen inspect the site in Angahua, Michoacan State, Mexico.

MORELIA, Mexico — A small-town mayor and an aide were found stoned to death Monday in a drug-plagued western state, the fifth city leader to be slain in Mexico since mid-August.

Michoacan state Attorney General Jesus Montejano said the bodies of Tancitaro Mayor Gustavo Sanchez and city adviser Rafael Equihua were discovered in a pickup truck abandoned on a dirt road near the city of Uruapan.

Montejano's spokesman, Jonathan Arredondo, said initially that the victims were hacked to death with a machete, but the attorney general said they were killed with stones.

Arredondo said police were trying to determine a possible motive.

Tancitaro, a town of 26,000 people, is in a region where soldiers have destroyed more than 20 meth labs in the last year and several police officers have been killed by suspected drug gang members.

Last year the city council chief, Gonzalo Paz, was kidnapped, tortured and killed. Then in December, the mayor and seven other town officials resigned saying they had been threatened by drug traffickers and local police were not showing up to work.

Soon after, the department's entire 60-officer force was fired for failing to stop a series of killings and other crimes, and Michoacan state police and soldiers took over security in the town. Sanchez was named mayor in January.

Also Monday in Michoacan, five gunmen and a marine were killed in a shootout in Coahuayana on the Pacific coast, the navy said in a statement. A second marine was wounded, and authorities were searching for more gunmen.

Coahuayana authorities canceled school and warned people to stay indoors.

The navy said another gunbattle across the country in the Gulf coast state of Tamaulipas left eight gunmen and one marine dead in the border city of Reynosa.

Meanwhile, the Defense Department said soldiers arrested a man suspected in the kidnapping and killing of the mayor of Santiago in the border state of Nuevo Leon. It said in a statement that Miguel Cervantes was arrested Monday.

In the border state of Chihuahua, gunmen broke into a police complex, subdued the guards and stole at least 40 automatic rifles and 23 handguns, police spokesman Fidel Banuelos said.

Banuelos said 10 officers who were in the building at the time were being questioned. He said it was not clear whether the assailants were members of a drug cartel.

In Ciudad Juarez, a border city in Chihuahua, the Public Safety Department announced the capture of a drug gang member who allegedly helped set up a car bomb that killed three people.

Suspect Jose Contreras allegedly killed a man and dressed him in a police uniform to lure federal agents to the area where the car bomb exploded, killing a federal police officer and a doctor who was helping the shooting victim.

Contreras is a member of La Linea gang, which works for the Juarez drug cartel, the department said in a statement.

Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas, has become one of the world's most dangerous cities amid a turf war between the Sinaloa and Juarez cartels.

(This version CORRECTS spelling of mayor's first name to Gustavo.)

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MORELIA, Mexico — A small-town mayor and an aide were found stoned to death Monday in a drug-plagued western state, the fifth city leader to be slain in Mexico since mid-August. Michoacan state...
MORELIA, Mexico — A small-town mayor and an aide were found stoned to death Monday in a drug-plagued western state, the fifth city leader to be slain in Mexico since mid-August. Michoacan state...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
04:19 PM on 09/30/2010
When i say decriminalize, i mean treat addiction like a disease as we do the worst drug, alcohol.  It doesn't matter what other countries do. To protect this country, we end prohibition.  Not the least reason being because prohibition of alcohol and now certain drugs, has corrupted every police force in America and has turned our country into a prison state.  I am not alright with any of that. 
05:33 PM on 09/30/2010
Nice try. Gotta be better than that, not everybody on drugs is an addict. the only real addicts are the ganstas with money addiction. The users have personal problems that caused the addiction. Solve the personal problem...
Some people are just having a good time, not all doom and gloom.
The hiding of truths is an old game that hopefully with the help of my buddy Tulka2 the world will come to realise.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
05:49 PM on 09/30/2010
Don't forget the addiction to money at the highest levels of society.  Bankers and Wall Street are laundering drug money.  Senators are accepting laundered money.  This is why common sense does not prevail. 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
05:51 PM on 09/30/2010
P.S. Google and follow the story of the Vatican's head banker being investigated for laundering money.  Whose money?  I am betting it will turn out to be Mafia money...i.e. drug money.  All is corrupted by the war on drugs which is really a war on poor people everywhere. 
03:55 PM on 09/30/2010
When alcohol was illegal it bred gansters like Jimmy 'the chin' etc
Alcohol is legal now, don't see Jimmy down my supermarket.
If all drugs were legal they'd be no drug cartels.

Just a thought, those police could do other police work then without the fear of a gansta with an investment to protect because they wouldn't have any investments to protect. Polititions know this so we must assume they have a different reason to keep the status quo.

Answers on a postcard
11:08 AM on 09/30/2010
What a horrible way to go.
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12:50 AM on 09/30/2010
One clear message sent by the Mexican drug lords: Mexican government is NOT in charge. They are.

It's rather obvious that the government in Mexico has become a worn-out scarecrow.
12:09 PM on 09/29/2010
I think its time to invoke that blunt instrument - the law - in its harshest form.

I know they are actually doing it partially by sending in Marines/etc., but the government needs to exert control and clean house. Martial law in select districts with expedited executions. Don't turn it into a circus. The state needs to exert control or it serves no purpose other than administering the herds that feed the drug mafia.

Its a bloody business and mistakes will be made, but sometimes its better to pay butcher's bill up front.

Let this be a lesson to those who think violating laws of sovereignty, etc., are no big deal. Things can unravel quickly once a tipping point has been reached. 'Righting' the ship - if possible - then requires overcompensation.

Good luck Mexico!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jeremyfive
11:33 AM on 09/29/2010
My tax dollars need to be going to fight this drug war in our neighbor Mexico, instead of shot like confetti in the air in places like Iraq.
05:59 AM on 09/29/2010
Legal eyes.
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MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
04:55 AM on 09/29/2010
Lots of stoned Americans die every day.
10:45 AM on 09/29/2010
Untrue on all counts... a failed attempt at being funny, gramps.
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ZeroCoke
HP COMMUNITY BARTENDER
03:40 AM on 09/29/2010
this is the epitome of 'living in fear'
03:01 AM on 09/29/2010
Hardcore n/t.
02:54 AM on 09/29/2010
I wish I could say that Mexico's about to hit rock bottom, but I still think that point's a long way off. I don't know what, if anything, can realistically drag them out of the hole they've been slowly sinking into. The sad part is that things will probably get much, much worse before they get any better.
05:39 AM on 09/29/2010
Maybe we could stop being the market for their drugs by legalizing and regulating. I don't know.
lmb21
Riding a gravy train with biscuit wheels
08:03 AM on 09/29/2010
You want to legalize meth?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Candide33
I heart Bernie Sanders
07:26 AM on 09/30/2010
capitalism killed Mexico, it made a handful of billionaires, who withheld resources from 90% of the country... those people forced into poverty turned to crime to make a living.
The same thing will happen here.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eric Sarnoski
02:46 AM on 09/29/2010
My sympathy goes out to all the honest Mexican people who are struggling to do the right thing and find themselves caught up in this horrible bloodbath. I'm not a big advocate of foreign aid but this is a country that needs whatever help we can give them.
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PDinCA
Clarity has reared its ugly head again
04:45 AM on 09/29/2010
The best thing we could do is legalize marijuana.
10:49 AM on 09/29/2010
F&F
09:33 PM on 09/30/2010
Most of the marijuana sold in the U.S. is grown right here or in Canada.
02:36 AM on 09/29/2010
Stones doesn't kill people.
People kill people.
02:22 AM on 09/29/2010
Is Calderon still more concerned about Arizona's immigration policy or the taking over of Mexico by its drug cartels? Someone tell el Presidente he has a domestic problem he needs to address!
03:05 AM on 09/29/2010
He is obviously addressing his domestic problems and hence the backlash from the drug cartels.
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straightuptalker
What ever happened to common sense?
06:59 AM on 09/29/2010
I agree, but we need to take the big step by imposing a travel ban. They'll only get serious and wake up from their siestas and actually do something if we hurt them in the wallet. Restrict travel to Mexico and their posh resorts where they enjoy American tourists's dollars. I find it hard to believe that Americans are still choosing to vacation there, while the drug pushers and thugs are killing citizens or cutting off their heads. And Calderon has the unmitigated gall to preach to us about AZ's immigration policy, when he can't even control his own people. No way should Americans spend money in a country that has reverted to the days of Mexican banditos who are obviously running things their way.
10:10 AM on 09/29/2010
Of course Mexico is taking some measures to keep under control our domestic problems, by the other side U.S. could help improving your borders and control the arms sales... Do you know that american people buy guns for the mexican narco?
Do you think that we could take a "siesta" when our streets are in a war? I think that you are just talking with out knowing about the real problem...
And if your solution is to "Restrict travel to Mexico" be aware about it, because just to remember you, in Mexico mostly of our posh resorts are from American investors...
It's up to you people!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dagmaclugh39
Nomen est omen.
01:59 AM on 09/29/2010
I understand Michoacan is probably the most beautiful state in Mexico. I always wanted to visit it, but think I'll defer my dream for awhile. An Eden, turned to Hell. Pity....