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    Police catch suspect in 75 drug cartel killings

    MONTERREY, Mexico (AP) — Police in northern Mexico have captured an alleged member of the Zetas drug gang who confessed to killing at least 75 people, including many who were pulled off buses, authorities said Monday.

    Enrique Elizondo Flores told investigators 36 of his victims were bus passengers traveling through the town of Cerralvo, near the border with Texas, said Nuevo Leon state security spokesman Jorge Domene.

    Elizondo was detained Jan. 20 in the town of Salinas Victoria, but authorities delayed announcing his arrest so they could verify details of his confession, state Attorney General Adrian de la Garza said.

    Domene said the 35-year-old suspect told investigators that he had been working in the area at least three years and that he was in charge of killing members of the rival Gulf drug cartel heading to the towns of Cerralvo and General Trevino.

    Elizondo and other gunmen last January began pulling passengers off buses as they arrived at Cerralvo's bus station, Domene said. They are among at least 92 bus passengers the Zetas are accused of killing in three attacks in January and March 2011. Many the victims were originally from the central state of Guanajuato and had arrived in Cerralvo from the border city of Reynosa, Domene said.

    Elizondo was known "for torturing, maiming and then killing his victims," Domene said.

    Last year, authorities in the neighboring state of Tamaulipas unearthed 193 bodies from clandestine graves in the town of San Fernando. Security forces said they were led to the site by members of the Zetas who confessed to kidnapping and killing bus passengers traveling through the area.

    The motive for the bus abductions remains unclear. Prosecutors have suggested the gang may be forcefully recruiting people to work for it or trying to kill rivals they suspected were aboard the buses.

    Northeastern Mexico has been engulfed by a turf battle between the Gulf Cartel and the Zetas since they split in 2010.

    More than 47,000 people have been killed nationwide since President Felipe Calderon launched a crackdown against drug traffickers in December 2006.

    Global Financial Integrity, a program of the Center for International Policy, a Washington-based think tank, said Monday that its analysis found that $872 billion in proceeds from crime, corruption and money-laundering had flowed out of Mexico in the four decades from 1970 to 2010.

    In the border city of Ciudad Juarez, police officers killed three men and detained a fourth Monday after being attacked at a gas station, authorities said.

    The officers were refueling their patrol cars at a gas station a few blocks from the Zaragoza border crossing into El Paso, Texas, when they were attacked, a police statement said. The officers returned fire, killing three assailants, and they also seized two assault rifles, two handguns and a hand grenade, it said.

    Last week, messages signed by the New Juarez drug cartel and left in several parts of the city claimed Police Chief Julian Leyzaola is favoring a rival cartel. It said that one officer would be killed daily if their members continue to be arrested. Five police officers have been killed since.

    Leyzaola was not immediately available to comment on Monday's attack.

    In a public appearance over the weekend, Mayor Hector Murguia said the recent string of attacks on law enforcement officers was a response from criminals affected by Leyzaola's work.

    "Go downtown, there are no more brothels where drugs used to be sold," he said, referring to a police crackdown in downtown Juarez as part of the city's efforts to combat crime.

    As a safety measure, police officers are now required to leave precincts wearing street clothes and are allowed to take their guns home. The city also is considering plans to rent hotels to quarter all the police force.

    In 2009, then Police Chief Roberto Orduna quit after several police officers were killed and their bodies dumped along with messages saying more officers would be killed unless he resigned.

    Leyzaola is no stranger to threats. Shortly after he was hired in 2011, the body of a tortured man was left in a street with a message to Leyzaola that read, "This is your first gift."

    In April 2009, when he was police chief in western border city of Tijuana, drug traffickers took over police radio frequencies to say that if he didn't quit, many police officers would die.

    A few days after, seven officers were killed in separate but coordinated attacks. Drug traffickers took over the police radio frequencies again to say their threat had been carried out.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Juan Carlos Llorca in El Paso, Texas, contributed to this report.

     
    • Marco  •  Los Angeles, California  •  24 days ago
      Both edits.
    • Kenneth  •  Guamuchil Centro, Mexico  •  24 days ago
      (Read all this with an open mind before you post a reply) To the ones that say the churches help Mexicans only because they need to boost their membership and I should help in America instead of Mexico, You know nothing about churches; you do not even attend one. The churches I travel to in the states, the English speaking ones, have very few Mexicans in their congregations because of the language, not that they are not welcome. The Spanish speaking churches are just the opposite for the same reason. The legal immigrants and the Latino Americans do not like the illegals being in the states either, not because of hate like you but because most believe in the law and it makes more racist hate towards the honest ones. The wish the illegals would do it the right way like ones that did it themselves. Do not get me wrong, there are racists in the Mexicans as well, but a lot of it is brought on by the hate they receive from others.
      I help the Mexican poor in Mexico through the churches there so they are legal in their own country. I help sometimes in the states when I am there also thought American churches. I would do more up there but I can not afford it as I am a volunteer and live off my social security and as you mentioned the economy is way down because of the government's poor management, I can live down in Mexico on my monthly check and even pay the medical, but in the states I would have to have the handout you scream about to live, been there, done that, but do not like it.
      My traveling some of you say makes me have no time to be in church, wrong I attend the services at what ever church I am picking up or delivering clothing, blankets and food to. Why do you not get off your hate trip and get out and do something to help, if not for the Mexicans you hate then the other poor people and take some of the burden off the tax system as most the volunteers do.
    • The one who didn't go ...  •  Houston, Texas  •  22 days ago
      Mexcooo,ready for capital punissshment agaaainnn.Cowards.
    • I Woke Up This Way  •  25 days ago
      I thought I was the only one that wasn't fond of busses and the fumes they emit when stopped at red lights, but those drug gangs seem to really hate busses.
    • Bill  •  Kansas City, Missouri  •  24 days ago
      :)
    • Kenneth  •  Guamuchil Centro, Mexico  •  24 days ago
      Flush, I challange you again, come on down and I will introduce you to many people who help down, neither they nor I am dead, though you probably wish I were. If you want to really get facts, like I said come on down if you have what it takes.
    • John  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  24 days ago
      The Mexican authorities performed a great investigation and arrest. They confirmed information before charging the suspect and will take this killer to court the way things are supposed to work in a fair legal system. - Now we will read hundreds and hundreds of juvenile comments and racist comments on this blog. It is sad that the world reads these comments and conclude that we are a nation of juveniles and racists.
    • Arnold  •  25 days ago
      Hey, they fixed the headline that read "Police suspect in 75 drug cartel killings" before they added "catch"....in other news they also wiped away any posts about the prior headline....
    • DaveC  •  Mannford, Oklahoma  •  25 days ago
      say hello to my little friend. watch the movie, its the only way to thin em out.
    • Mikel  •  25 days ago
      that means i can take 2 1/2 months off work?
    • Art Fert  •  Chandler, Arizona  •  25 days ago
      yes and i bet some politicians fam or them.
    • AKANDE RAIMI  •  Lagos, Nigeria  •  24 days ago
      A good catch, he should be made to count for his accomplices.
    • DIM WIT  •  25 days ago
      to understand this
    • Kip  •  Denver, Colorado  •  25 days ago
      I bet he killed more rival gang members then the Mexican police. But as I read some victims were innocent. Mexican people are brave to live in a society where you have people who are wanted or have killed 50+ people. Just roaming the streets.
    • ac  •  Poway, California  •  25 days ago
      AYYYYYYYYY GINA!!!!! THATS OK,ANOTHER QUAALUDE,SHE'LL LOVE ME AGAIN...
    • privy  •  25 days ago
      So they solved one out of 60,000 murders. Yea. Hip-hip hooray.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Los Angeles, California  •  25 days ago
      I suppose he MAY be on probation
    • tiredofthewashingtonbs  •  Waterloo, Illinois  •  25 days ago
      bet his momma is real proud of him starting to be another disgusting culture (devil doing a good job)
    • Eldon  •  Kansas City, Missouri  •  25 days ago
      I hope they turned the cameras off this time for his "confession"
    • Art Fert  •  Chandler, Arizona  •  25 days ago
      the politicians in usa
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