Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Monday, October 05, 2015
Juárez Mayor Forgets City’s Violent History in Absurd ‘Sicario’ Film Lawsuit Plans
As Breitbart Texas recently reported,
Enrique Serrano Escobar, the mayor of Ciudad Juárez, Mexico (just south
of El Paso, Texas) stated he aims to sue the makers of the fiction film
“Sicario” in a U.S. court for “moral damages” to the city. Escobar said
the movie depicts violent incidents that don’t currently reflect the
city, telling Mexico’s El Norte newspaper, “It hurts the image
of Juarenses.” However, Escobar seems to have forgotten that Cuidad
Juárez is still host to two major drug cartels and over 400 street gangs. Starting in 2007, the annual murder rate in Ciudad Juárez began to
skyrocket in parallel with a war between the Sinaloa Federation and the
Vicente Carrillo Fuentes Organization, a.k.a. the Juárez cartel. The war
peaked in 2010, when Juárez earned the nickname “Murder City” for its
death toll of over 3,600, per New Mexico State University researcher Molly Molloy. In the years since, the nature of the violence in Ciudad Juárez has
evolved. Federation kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán began employing
local gangs in the city, along with police forces, to do the dirty work
for him in forcing the Juárez cartel into submission. Homicides no
longer solely involved cartel members; it slowly changed into a
dangerous mix of cartel activity and local gang warfare. As the
Federation’s strategy began to succeed, the murder rate began dropping,
reaching 434 deaths in 2014 according to the US State Department.
However, those numbers are still higher than the homicides in Detroit
(300), Chicago (390), and New York City (328) during the same year. The source and manner of homicides that do occur in Cuidad Juárez is
also very similar to those in Mexican cities with higher death tolls,
and some doubt that Ciudad Juárez is really “back.” Luis Chapparo wrote
an article for VICE
in June 2014 in which he stated, “The ‘rebirth’ of Ciudad Juárez might
just be a temporary phenomenon. Some believe that before the year is up,
the war will return.” Scott Stewart, vice president of Stratfor—a
US-based intelligence and analysis firm—told VICE he agreed with this
assessment. “The border corridor of drugs between Ciudad Juarez and El
Paso, Texas, is returning to the hands of the Juarez Cartel, after a
weakening of their rivals in Mexico,” Stewart said...more
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