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Mexican Drug War Video Points To 18 Dead In Mass Grave

SERGIO FLORES   11/ 5/10 12:01 AM ET   AP

Mexico Drug War

ACAPULCO, Mexico — Forensic investigators searched for more hidden graves Thursday near where they had already found 18 badly decomposed cadavers that are suspected to belong to a group of Mexican tourists who were kidnapped in Acapulco.

Guarded by soldiers and marines, the investigators used long metal poles to probe the ground in a coconut palm grove in the community of Tuncingo, just east of Acapulco. An anonymous tip led police to the bodies of two men there on Wednesday.

Next to the bodies was a sign that said investigators would find the remains of 20 men – most of them mechanics – who vanished on Sept. 30 after setting out from the neighboring state of Michoacan for a few days off in Acapulco, a Pacific coast resort popular with Mexican tourists.

"We have not said that it is them, but we have not discounted that either," said David Sotelo, attorney general for the state of Guerrero, where Acapulco is located.

But he said he had asked officials in Michoacan "to put us in contact with the relatives of the people who were kidnapped so that they can identify whether the bodies are those of their relatives."

The Michoacan state government said in a statement that a group of relatives would be escorted to Acapulco on Saturday to view the bodies and that security would be provided for them.

Before the first two bodies were found, a video posted on YouTube showed two men – their hands apparently tied behind their backs – telling an unseen interrogator that they killed "the Michoacanos" and buried them in the area.

The two bodies found by police were wearing the same clothes as the pair seen in the video and were lying atop the mass grave.

A sign left between the two men read: "The people they killed are buried here." It was signed by Acapulco's Independent Cartel – a little known drug gang that has been claiming responsibility for killings in the area over the past two months.

The group is believed to be a breakaway faction of the Beltran Leyva gang, whose top leaders have recently been killed or captured. The men interrogated in the video appear to be members of a rival faction.

In the video, the two men say the killing was an act of revenge against La Familia, a powerful drug cartel based in Michoacan. Officials have not said whether the abductors killed them merely because they were from Michoacan, or because they thought they were somehow linked to La Familia. Michoacan officials have said the disappeared men had no criminal records.

The families of the 20 missing men, many of them related to each other, have said they were mechanics in the Michoacan state capital of Morelia who saved up money to take a vacation together each year.

The kidnapping was one of the biggest blows yet to tourist-dependent Acapulco, which has seen an increase in drug-gang shootouts, beheadings and kidnappings. Even Acapulco Mayor Jose Luis Avila Sanchez recently urged residents to stay indoors after nightfall, an extraordinary pronouncement in a city where the economy is built on nightclubs, bars and restaurants.

In yet more violence Thursday, four city police officers in Acapulco were shot to death in two separate attacks, authorities said.

The officers were attacked while on patrol by gunmen traveling in luxury SUVs, Guerrero state's Public Safety Department said in a statement. A fifth officer was wounded when gunmen shot him while he directed traffic in the resort city.

Mass killings have become more frequent amid raging, drug-fueled violence in Mexico. In the most horrifying attack, 72 migrants were massacred in northern Mexico near the border city of Matamoros in August, apparently because they refused to work for the Zetas drug gang.

Cartels are increasingly releasing videos of kidnapped people admitting at gunpoint to crimes ranging from extortion to murder. It is often impossible to determine the veracity of confessions given under duress, and many of the victims are soon found dead.

One recent video showed the kidnapped brother of Patricia Gonzalez, the former attorney general of northern Chihuahua state, saying his sister protected a street gang tied to the Juarez cartel and was behind several murders.

He has not been found. Gonzalez denied any links to drug traffickers and said she is sure her brother spoke out of fear. On Thursday, the federal Attorney General's Office said it was opening an investigation into the case.

___

Associated Press writer Mark Stevenson in Mexico City contributed to this report.

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ACAPULCO, Mexico — Forensic investigators searched for more hidden graves Thursday near where they had already found 18 badly decomposed cadavers that are suspected to belong to a group of Mexic...
ACAPULCO, Mexico — Forensic investigators searched for more hidden graves Thursday near where they had already found 18 badly decomposed cadavers that are suspected to belong to a group of Mexic...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mensch99
02:25 PM on 11/05/2010
More collateral damage from the War on Drugs. The War has failed the American and Mexican people but enriches a few:

Judge Jim Grey on The Six Groups Who Benefit From Drug Prohibition
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6t1EM4Onao

5 reasons to end the War on Drugs from Judge Jim Gray.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=meciIVRznyU&NR=1
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Bmori
Onna Bushi
02:35 PM on 11/04/2010
Growing up I remember how safe one felt outside of Mexico City. All these resort towns like Acapulco, Cuernavaca, Cancun, etc. were a safe haven for many. There were parts that one wasn't supposed to go due to armed Guerillas and the Army but now there are no adjectives to describe the utter disaster happening. To say that this war like approach is failing is an understatement. I can't be a pragmatist about 1 human life, ONE is already too many. How many deaths will take, 6000, 10000, 100,000?
02:01 PM on 11/04/2010
I'm Hispanic I don't live in the projects, I'm not a ganster, I've never received food stamps or welfare and neither has Any of my family members. I learned English within a year of arriving to the us. I work I pay taxes and will never vote republican.
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Cutiepieblue
Just another Texas Liberal
02:34 PM on 11/04/2010
Awesome, some of my best friends are Hispanic. I enjoy the culture and the food yum!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
josephking
02:47 PM on 11/04/2010
" 18 bodies from a mass grave " ....what's your point?
01:45 PM on 11/04/2010
America gave Mexico $400 Million to help in this so called War on Drugs with no strings attached and no questions ask. Has anybody stop to ask or wonder why????? America I guess should just take Over Mexico and make a part of the U.S. since nobody there seems to be making any progress given a 20 year old girl became a sheriff.. Really... Thats a bad hit..
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
02:17 PM on 11/04/2010
How much have you spent trying to eliminate drugs? Is it making a dent?

There are two ways out of this. Either your compatriots stop buying drugs or we legalize them. Guess which one is more likely to succeed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TStringfellow
Wobbly, politically and literally
02:51 PM on 11/04/2010
Haha, no strings attached. No questions asked. Right.

No amount of millions of dollars can change the fact that the Mexican Drug War is being fought with American weapons and American drug money.
01:30 PM on 11/04/2010
Why people still buy illegal drugs knowing the suffering and death it's causing is a mystery to me. In my opinion, they are part of the hideous crimes because they fund these people. If you take drugs, just stop.
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
02:19 PM on 11/04/2010
Nice rhetoric, but meaningless. Every civilization in the history of the human race has had one or more psychoactive substances. Some people used them, some didn't. Some could handle it. Some couldn't. Only in the 20th century did someone get the silly idea in their head that all they had to do was prohibit them and the problem of those who couldn't handle it would go away.

Prohibition funds these people. Just stop it.
02:55 PM on 11/04/2010
I agree. But you still have control. Do you really need to do drugs with such a "high" cost attached to it. What if those people getting killed were your children? You don't need to live such a self centered life.
04:43 PM on 11/04/2010
Please tell me which psychoactive substances permeated the first 1000 years of Islamic civilization. The presence of drugs is not equal to a major multinational, billion dollar industry.

There is a correlation between capitalism, imperialism, and narcotics. I'm reminded of the two Opium wars in China wherein British and American colonists and imperialists played major roles therein.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TStringfellow
Wobbly, politically and literally
02:54 PM on 11/04/2010
I keep telling you people, my pot comes from an American garage. My money goes nowhere near the cartels. If people weren't facing prosecution for growing their own weed a lot of this problem would go away.
03:07 PM on 11/04/2010
I think putting people in jail for pot is a scam to weaken the United States further than it is. They want to make everything a crime so that the prison companies stay wealthy and contribute to the polititians. The drug companies don't want us to self medicate because it hurts their bottom line. Crazy isn't it?
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Hare
One day closer to Utopia
01:29 PM on 11/04/2010
To answer the comment of National vs recent immigrants. I know also for a fact there is animosity, I think its unfounded, to me they look, speak and behave the same yet Nationals want to make sure you know there is a difference. Nationals feel and treat immigrants like they are better or of higher status. The immigrant senses this too, maybe its because they are poorer, have no papers or of different tribe background afterall Nationals have been here since before the place became U.S.
01:23 PM on 11/04/2010
Drug prohibition and its continued support by Mexican and American politicians fuels these actions, give millions of $$$ to the criminal element and makes criminals out of users who were never criminals in the first place. Will it ever end, this insanity we call drug prohibition? What more will it take to finally repeal it? I suppose if we really wanted to we could in fact vote these prohibitionist out of office so in the end we only have ourselves to blame. Sad but true.
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CoastalNC
Good thoughts create good things
04:13 PM on 11/04/2010
Unfortunely it appears they have just voted a new whole bunch in...
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blitznstitch
BAZINGA!!!
01:11 PM on 11/04/2010
Don't go south of the US Border! North is beautiful - but boring.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TStringfellow
Wobbly, politically and literally
03:25 PM on 11/04/2010
I'll be in Mexico City in 2 months, then Oaxaca, then down to the coast not too far from where this happened.

Don't believe the hype. Mexico's a big place and danger is easily avoided with a little common sense.
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Cutiepieblue
Just another Texas Liberal
03:33 PM on 11/04/2010
I wish you luck an safety on your trip. A friend of mine just got back not to long ago an had a hard time trying to get back into the states.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
satanlite
If ur neibor wtchs Fox Nws wtch ur neibor
11:10 PM on 11/04/2010
But it's the kind of thing that if you make just one small error ... you're ded.
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dwill123
flexing the "golden pipes" on the day's issues
01:03 PM on 11/04/2010
Twenty-six years ago I honeymooned in Acapulco. What happened?
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
02:20 PM on 11/04/2010
Reagan's militarization of the War on Drugs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TStringfellow
Wobbly, politically and literally
03:27 PM on 11/04/2010
The closing of the Caribbean drug routes and, as drjasonmd points out, the decision to make the War on Drugs a real war.
12:55 PM on 11/04/2010
American student ki11ed in Mex.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/world/7278196.html

Don't go to Mexico!
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Cutiepieblue
Just another Texas Liberal
01:02 PM on 11/04/2010
Homeland security has issues a warning for people not to travel to Mexico right now.
01:30 PM on 11/04/2010
And Mexico used to be such a fun beautiful place to go.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TStringfellow
Wobbly, politically and literally
03:31 PM on 11/04/2010
Homeland Security has travel warnings on a lot of other great places to travel as well. Get your information yourself and stop being a robot, I've spent 6 months of the past 3 years in Mexico and never had any trouble. Going back in January.
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JaxReader
Charity is no substitute for justice withheld.
03:18 PM on 11/04/2010
Thats sad, I liked Mexico.
12:30 PM on 11/04/2010
Welcome to the "War on Drugs" which has become the War for Drugs. So the Columbians ran out the drug dealers and they came to the Mexico which is much closer. Since the signing of NAFTA, there are thousands of ex Mexican farmers who lost there land and livelyhood to the large corporate farms, and they need work. Ergo, drug wars. The Mexican cry of "Tierra y Libertad", made famous during the Revolution of 1910, will be heard again when enough Mexicans get fed up with the situation and decide to take the land back from the corporations.
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
01:24 PM on 11/04/2010
We'll just legalize the drugs first. It's already in open debate in our government and a common subject of conversation. When prohibition ends, this war will end. It's that simple.
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Cutiepieblue
Just another Texas Liberal
02:35 PM on 11/04/2010
It won't end the war, They will just find some other form of income to mur der over.
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looneydoone
not a "cookie"
06:01 PM on 11/04/2010
drjason

It's going to be a long two years until President Calderon is out of office

posted from Mexico by a long time USA ex pat
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TStringfellow
Wobbly, politically and literally
03:34 PM on 11/04/2010
Narco News thinks Mexico is heading toward a New Revolution:

http://www.narconews.com/Issue63/article4002.html
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
05:02 PM on 11/04/2010
Narco News has a lot of dreamers writing for it. The prevailing opinion on the street here is evolution, not revolution.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GandenT
12:28 PM on 11/04/2010
Destroy their economy with NAFTA and CAFTA and then destroy their society and law enforcement with a massive escalation (of the failure) of the War on Drugs: could someone remind me why are we trying to destroy Mexico?
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
01:23 PM on 11/04/2010
Because it's so profitable and because the US can't stand the idea of a strong independent nation right on its border. They would have taken down Canada but the last time they tried they got their butts handed to them.
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Cutiepieblue
Just another Texas Liberal
02:48 PM on 11/04/2010
As much as I would like to believe that Mexico is strong an independent, the coruption is ripping the beautiful country apart. It's sad to see. People are in fear. I don't blame them some want to go home but are too afraid. They fear for their families still over there.
06:15 PM on 11/04/2010
Correct DrJason, that's the reason whit they outsource all of our own jobs to China, an enemy country instead letting all here in the zone.
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JaxReader
Charity is no substitute for justice withheld.
03:19 PM on 11/04/2010
Were still mad at Pancho Villa??
04:01 PM on 11/04/2010
That damn Pancho!
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Halsey
"There is a price to pay for speaking the truth. T
12:19 PM on 11/04/2010
It is about money. In the past, brutal murders in Central and South American were usually for political reasons; the Shining Light for example and other maoists. But THIS carnage is pure Money driven, no ideology, no religion; just plain old greed. It is such a sad state of affairs. I wish every casual user of coke or meth accepted they foment the problem.

This "war" will never ever end. People like drugs.
12:56 PM on 11/04/2010
Actually this is libertarianism in it's truest form. Not that they know it.
03:28 PM on 11/04/2010
Dear Denier,

With LIbertarianism drugs would be legal, so you have have no drug dealers, and no drug crimes.

While I share many views of libertarians, and I have lived in Holland, it is hard for me to support making drugs legal.
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
02:21 PM on 11/04/2010
The "political reasons" were just window dressing (like the War on Terror). It's always been about the money.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
11:40 AM on 11/04/2010
Now. Now. Eighteen is hardly a mass grave by recent mexican standards.
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hankashley
Catholic who votes like a citizen not a Catholic.
12:01 PM on 11/04/2010
18 human beings.
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Cutiepieblue
Just another Texas Liberal
12:27 PM on 11/04/2010
That was 18 human lives who have families an friends.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
04:21 PM on 11/04/2010
Obviously. Hence, while tragic, not unusual.
11:17 AM on 11/04/2010
I lived in Central Mexico during the 90's and there were no kidnappings, no extortions, no violence, it was extremely peaceful. Violence has escalated and come to places that had never experieced it before since calderon took office.
12:17 PM on 11/04/2010
I never lived in Mexico, but remember the happy vacations my family and I took there, it was peaceful, beautiful, and serene. It is heartbreaking to see the violence that has overtaken many parts of the country.