Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Marijuana seized, 55 arrested in Mexico ... President's crackdown in Michoacan aims to break up a turf war among drug gangs.


Warrior Stills
Originally uploaded by brucesingman.
"Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."

http://imdb.com/title/tt0320751
http://www.warriorthefilm.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-drugs19dec19,1,444145.story?coll=la-headlines-world
Marijuana seized, 55 arrested in Mexico
President's crackdown in Michoacan aims to break up a turf war among drug gangs.
By Sam Enriquez
Times Staff Writer

December 19, 2006

MEXICO CITY — Mexican government officials said Monday that they had destroyed 600 acres of marijuana plants and seized more than 6 tons of harvested pot during a crackdown by federal police and the military in the state of Michoacan.

Authorities also announced the arrest of 55 suspected drug traffickers in Operation Michoacan United, President Felipe Calderon's first effort to make good on his promise to combat a turf war among drug gangs that has claimed about 2,000 lives nationwide this year.

The heads of the Mexican army, navy and federal police said during a news conference that a combination of air surveillance, searches and random inspections of more than 8,000 vehicles at roadblocks over the last week also turned up 112 weapons, 300 pounds of marijuana seeds and 17 pounds of opium poppy seeds.

Officials said bulk marijuana sells for slightly less than $900 a pound at the U.S.-Mexico border, and they valued the seized marijuana at more than $10 million. Defense Secretary Guillermo Galvan said the 600 acres of plants could have yielded as much as $400 million.

News media were kept away from the operation, but government video shows soldiers pulling up foot-high plants, as well as aerial shots of small plots in the middle of natural vegetation. One shot shows plants with long spirals of mature seedpods swaying in the wash of a low-flying military helicopter.

The seizures and arrests struck at Michoacan drug gangs that are allegedly allied with the Gulf cartel. Members and associates of the cartel are locked in a war with the Pacific Coast-based Sinaloa cartel over market share and smuggling routes.

The fight for control of Nuevo Laredo, a major trucking and shipping link with Texas, has cost hundreds of lives over the last two years and triggered proxy battles among warring factions in other states.

Government officials worry the violence of Nuevo Laredo will spread to nearby Monterrey, a key commercial and industrial city. Calderon has promised to advance Mexico by attracting new investments that will create jobs.

Interior Secretary Francisco Ramirez Acuna said the anti-drug operation "reveals the government's will in using all the country's strength to recover the peace and tranquillity of society."

Michoacan, Calderon's home state, is a key transport area for marijuana and cocaine and, more recently, methamphetamine, which moves north into the United States in amounts that drug experts estimate make up a significant chunk of the multibillion-dollar market. The federal operation will continue.

*
sam.enriquez@latimes.com

Carlos Martínez of The Times' Mexico City Bureau contributed to this report.

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Monday, December 18, 2006

Mexico says suspected leader of drug cartel is in custody


Warrior Poster
Originally uploaded by brucesingman.
"Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."

http://imdb.com/title/tt0320751
http://www.warriorthefilm.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexdrugs18dec18,1,1923864.story?coll=la-headlines-world
Mexico says suspected leader of drug cartel is in custody
From the Associated Press

December 18, 2006

MEXICO CITY — The Mexican military said Sunday that it had detained a leader of a drug cartel, the first major arrest since President Felipe Calderon sent more than 6,000 troops to a western state terrorized by drug gangs.

Elias Valencia, a suspected head of the Valencia cartel, was arrested with four other people Friday at a mountain ranch near the town of Aguililla in Michoacan state, said Gen. Cornelio Casio, one of the officials in charge of the offensive.

Last week, Calderon ordered more than 6,000 soldiers, marines and federal police to his home state of Michoacan, which has seen a wave of drug-related killings and beheadings.

The violence is the result of a turf war between the Valencia gang and the rival Gulf cartel over lucrative marijuana plantations and smuggling routes for cocaine and methamphetamine to the United States.

Mexican investigators said Valencia was one of several figures running the cartel since his father, Armando, was arrested in 2003.

Soldiers found Elias Valencia and the others with hundreds of pounds of marijuana and numerous weapons, Casio said.

Aguililla, about 225 miles southwest of Mexico City, has been a key stronghold of the Valencia cartel. The winding mountain roads into the town are perfect for ambushes. Assailants have killed 10 police officers in two recent attacks.

Under the new offensive, soldiers supported by helicopters and armored vehicles with machine-gun turrets comb the area looking for drug traffickers and plantations.

On Wednesday, troops clashed with suspected traffickers protecting a marijuana crop, killing one man and arresting another. On Saturday, soldiers arrested a man accused of being a key Sinaloa cartel lieutenant in the western city of Guadalajara.

Calderon, elected in July on a law-and-order platform, wants the army to step up a crackdown on drug traffickers nationwide.

Drug violence has killed about 2,000 Mexicans this year.

Many security experts say it will take more than brute force to stop the cartels, which earn billions of dollars supplying the U.S. drug market.

Calderon's predecessor, Vicente Fox, who stepped down Dec. 1, sent thousands of troops to battle cartels, make drug seizures and arrest high-profile traffickers without significantly reducing the quantity of narcotics crossing into the United States.

Critics of Fox's crackdown say it created a power vacuum in the cartels, leading to increased violence as rivals fought to replace the arrested leaders.



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Saturday, December 16, 2006

Mexico anti-drug effort mostly a bust ... New president's initiative yields little in the way of seizures and no arrests despite its high profile.


Warrior Poster
Originally uploaded by brucesingman.
"Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."

http://imdb.com/title/tt0320751
http://www.warriorthefilm.blogspot.com

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-208917617001990565&q=warrior+mexican+OR+drug+OR+cartels+duration%3Ashort+genre%3AMOVIE_TRAILER

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-drugs16dec16,1,7067876.story?coll=la-headlines-world
Mexico anti-drug effort mostly a bust
New president's initiative yields little in the way of seizures and no arrests despite its high profile.
By Sam Enriquez
Times Staff Writer

December 16, 2006

MEXICO CITY — Mexican President Felipe Calderon didn't wait long to challenge the violent drug traffickers that control parts of Michoacan, his home state.

But Operation Michoacan United, announced Monday, so far looks like a bust — and not the kind Calderon had in mind.

A week after taking the oath of office, Calderon ordered more than 6,000 soldiers, sailors and federal police to swarm towns where warring drug smugglers are believed responsible for as many as 500 killings this year. Hired assassins have added beheadings to their repertoire and recently started tossing victims from planes in an apparent effort to shock and demoralize rivals.

Despite the fanfare accompanying Calderon's anti-drug operation, which included roadblocks and air surveillance, the effort had yielded no arrests as of Friday afternoon.

The operation is concentrated in 13 municipalities in the southwestern portion of the state, an area suffering from high illiteracy and poverty rates and site of a third of the state's homicides this year.

"This operation doesn't aim to be spectacular," said Atty. Gen. Eduardo Medina. "The focus is on territory, recovering geographical space for the public."

Tons of marijuana and cocaine pass through Michoacan each year en route to the United States. Armed drug runners control many public roads, which soldiers and federal police say they are retaking.

But no kingpins were arrested and little dope had been seized in the highly touted operation, despite, according to the newspaper Excelsior, government documents with a list of local drug gang leaders and organizational charts.

One suspected cartel gunman was killed Wednesday after he fired on soldiers trying to serve a search warrant on a property in the town of Dos Aguas.

Army personnel found several hundred rounds of ammunition, cellphones and shortwave radios, 10 weapons, a police uniform and a marijuana packaging device. They also found 1,100 marijuana plants and about 30 pounds of seed.

Port investigators have had better luck. On Dec. 5, they turned up nearly 20 tons of pseudoephedrine, a key ingredient for Mexico's burgeoning methamphetamine labs. The drug can be legally imported, but the container was labeled as another product. No one claimed the shipment.

Government officials said Thursday that they planned to expand the operation to other states caught in the deadly smuggling routes tug-of-war between Pacific Coast-based and Gulf-based cartels.

The drug war is believed responsible for an estimated 2,000 deaths nationwide this year. Calderon has made public security one of his top priorities, along with reducing poverty and creating jobs.

He and advisors fear the cartels' war will scare off investors and saddle the country with an image of instability.

Analysts say Mexico has been less aggressive than the United States in battling drugs, which officials here have seen as more of a problem for U.S. addicts and their families than for Mexican citizens. But killings, including torture and dismemberment, and increased domestic drug use are changing that attitude, analysts say.

Some said former President Vicente Fox inadvertently triggered the violence by arresting a few cartel leaders and setting off a battle for market share. The conventional wisdom is that drug prices have held steady or fallen in U.S. cities, suggesting an unchecked supply despite interdiction efforts on both sides of the border.

The Calderon administration's strategy may be limited, at least for now, to warning traffickers that the government will interfere with their business unless the killings end, analysts say.

"They're not trying to end drug trafficking or drug use," said Jorge Chabat, a drug trade expert. "They're just trying to maintain a minimum amount of order.

"This is more like a father with a misbehaving adolescent."


sam.enriquez@latimes.com

Carlos Martinez and Cecilia Sanchez of The Times' Mexico City Bureau contributed to this report.




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Saturday, December 02, 2006

Making the soundtrack to Mexico's drug wars ... The killing of Valentín Elizalde draws attention to narcocorridos, folk ballads of the underworld.


Warrior Stills
Originally uploaded by brucesingman.
"Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."

http://imdb.com/title/tt0320751
http://www.warriorthefilm.blogspot.com

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."

http://www.calendarlive.com/printedition/calendar/cl-et-narco2dec02,0,6038769.story
POP MUSIC
Making the soundtrack to Mexico's drug wars
The killing of Valentín Elizalde draws attention to narcocorridos, folk ballads of the underworld.
By Reed Johnson
Times Staff Writer

December 2, 2006

MEXICO CITY — This country's rumor mill has been working overtime since Valentín Elizalde, a 27-year-old banda singer-songwriter, was gunned down near the border a week ago. Elizalde, known as "the Golden Rooster," died with his manager and driver in a shower of automatic weapon fire shortly after he finished performing at a small fair in Reynosa, across the Rio Grande from McAllen, Texas.

His body wasn't even in the ground before the innuendo started flying across newspapers, televisions and websites. And although many details of his slaying remain murky, the incident has opened a narrow window onto the sub rosa world of narcocorridos, the immensely popular folk ballads that chronicle and celebrate the lives, loves and illicit achievements of Mexico's powerful drug lords.

That world apparently was known to Elizalde, though how well known is hard to say. He was born in Sonora, the son of a famous musician and a champion of norteño music, the accordion- and 12-string-guitar-based hybrid of polka, waltz and corrido (narrative sung poetry) that has thrived for generations across Mexico.

While corridos have been used to address a wide range of subject matter — romantic yearnings, revolutionary ideals, farmworker struggles — one of the most successful subgenres for roughly the last 30 years, particularly in northern Mexico and the southwestern United States, has been narcocorridos. The best of these controversial tunes, such as "Contrabando y Traición" (Smuggling and Betrayal), written by Ángel González and turned into a monster hit by the master corridistas Los Tigres del Norte, are classics of sustained mood, wit and narrative concision.

Elizalde had written and performed several of these musical homages, at least one of which was dedicated to Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, the on-the-lam leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel, based in the Pacific coast state of that name. Elizalde opened and closed his final, fateful performance with another song, "A Mis Enemigos" ("To My Enemies"), which can be interpreted either as a righteous musical mini-autobiography, à la "My Way," or an angry taunt.

So far, no evidence has emerged linking Mexico's drug wars to the death of Elizalde, who left three young daughters. It's possible that the singer, whose funeral procession drew thousands of mournful fans, was entirely innocent and tragically in the wrong place at the wrong time. But given the ruthlessness that has marked the ongoing turf battle between the Sinaloan and rival Gulf cartel, based in Matamoros and Reynosa, it's not surprising that Saturday's triple slaying (a fourth man was badly wounded) is being characterized by many here as a gangland reprisal.

It's also not surprising that the killers haven't been identified, even though dozens of people reportedly witnessed the attack. Parts of Mexico today, particularly border areas such as Nuevo Laredo and Tijuana, are virtually paralyzed with tension. Crimes go unreported for fear of retaliation. Regular citizens watch their backs whenever they step outside their homes. Some Mexican newspapers along the frontera have stopped covering the drug wars altogether after their reporters and editors were threatened or killed.

The police, who've been as bloodied and intimidated as anyone, have been reluctant to elucidate last Saturday's massacre. "I don't want to say. I like my life too much. You should too," one investigator told the San Antonio Express-News.

Elijah Wald, a Los Angeles-based music journalist and author of the book "Narcocorrido: A Journey Into the Music of Drugs, Guns, and Guerrillas," cautions against drawing premature conclusions about what befell Elizalde. While "it's not inconceivable" that the singer was killed by drug cartel assassins, Wald says, "it's equally possible that he fooled around with the wrong woman."

"There's nothing that Mexican corrido fans love like conspiracy theories," he adds.

Wald points out that over the last 15 or so years there has been only one case of a high-profile corridista being gunned down: Chalino Sánchez. Sánchez had been a marked man: After being shot at during a concert in Coachella in January 1992, he was found dead in May of that year after performing in Culiacán, Sinaloa. The case never has been solved. "I spent quite a lot of time running around Sinaloa asking people about Chalino's death. Nobody gave you the same answer," Wald says.

To their admirers, narcocorridos are a vibrant popular art form and a kind of "living newspaper" whose roots reach to medieval Europe. To their critics, the songs are part of an elaborate cultural camouflage that idealizes criminal behavior and exploits the suffering of others. What began as a harmless novelty in the 1970s, they say, has grown uglier, more partisan and more provocative as the drug trade itself has become viciously polarized.

Though evidence is understandably hard to come by, some narcocorridistas allegedly have been paid commissions by drug dealers to write songs lionizing their exploits. Several Mexican states have tried to ban narcocorridos from the airwaves.

But the songs' continuing popularity testifies to the way that a significant number of mainly poor, working-class Mexicans regard drug traffickers as Robin Hood-style folk heroes, standing up to Mexico's indifferent ruling elites while defying the notoriously corrupt Mexican police and the hypocritical, drug-bingeing gringos across the border. The melancholic-bravado tone of many of the songs is deeply romantic and redolent of the patriotic ballads of the Mexican Revolution.

The same worshipful, retro-nostalgic attitude toward the outlaw/rebel figure can be found in contemporary gangsta rap, as well as in many traditional U.S. folk ballads about Jesse James, John Hardy and others of their ilk. Just listen to the ornery cheer that goes up in the famous, live Folsom Prison recording when Johnny Cash sings, "I shot a man in Reno just to watch him die."

While Mexico newspapers have reported that people identifying themselves as members of the Sinaloa and Gulf cartels have posted threats of retaliation against rival singers on YouTube.com in the days since Elizalde was killed, Wald suspects these are posturing music fans rather than actual gang members. "I hope I'm right in saying that I don't think we're going to see a spate of killings," he says.

Many of the genre's core followers probably don't know or care much about the music's darker undertones. They just know it's great to dance to. But the music no longer can be viewed as a quaint little slice of folklórico. Like the drug industry itself, the narcocorrido biz has gone corporate and high-tech.

Today, narcocorridos form a large, profitable, well-connected industry centered in Los Angeles. Its stars sign with big record labels. Their gigs draw sponsorships from beer manufactures and other major companies. (Earlier this month, Elizalde was named "soloist of the year" at Los Premios de la Radio awards at the Gibson Amphitheater in Hollywood.)

Success can breed caution as well as recklessness. Many recording artists, with their eyes on booming sales figures, carefully tailor their lyrics to make them as broadly accessible as possible, so that any aspiring jefe de jefes might adopt one of their songs as his personal anthem, Wald says. "By and large, the singers are pretty cagey about what their songs are about.... Most of the guys that we're aware of are recording for major labels based in Los Angeles and have no interest in offending multi-millionaires."

Still, pressure on the drug industry on both sides of the border continues to grow, particularly since the Sept. 11 attacks prompted a crackdown on illegal trafficking of humans and contraband. In a climate of suspicion, paranoia and escalating violence, the narcocorridistas increasingly may find themselves on "a very slippery slope," says Carlos Vélez-Ibáñez, chairman of the Department of Trans-border, Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies at Arizona State University. "I think either they have to fish or cut bait," Vélez-Ibáñez says, "and you can't have it both ways."

reed.johnson@latimes.com

'There's nothing that Mexican corrido fans love like conspiracy theories.'

— Elijah Wald

Music journalist
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"the action adventure fantasy feature film 'Warrior' ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."





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Valentin Elizalde and two others are killed leaving a concert. It's another apparent gangland ambush as drug cartels claim more victims.


Warrior Stills
Originally uploaded by brucesingman.
"Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."

http://imdb.com/title/tt0320751
http://www.warriorthefilm.blogspot.com

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexdrugs26nov26,1,3230020.story?coll=la-headlines-world&ctrack=1&cset=true
Mexican pop singer gunned down
Valentin Elizalde and two others are killed leaving a concert. It's another apparent gangland ambush as drug cartels claim more victims.
By Héctor Tobar
Times Staff Writer

November 26, 2006

MEXICO CITY — A popular singer, his manager and his driver were gunned down Saturday in an ambush after a concert in the border city of Reynosa in an apparent gangland hit, as unabated drug-related violence continued across Mexico.

The singer, 27-year-old Valentin Elizalde, was killed about 20 minutes after he performed at a fair. Elizalde was a mainstay of the accordion-based norteno music variously known as banda or grupero, and was also known as "the Golden Rooster."

According to media reports, two vehicles chased Elizalde's black Suburban as he left the concert and opened fire with automatic weapons before dozens of witnesses. As many as 70 spent cartridges were found on the street around Elizalde's SUV. According to media reports, Elizalde was hit as many as eight times.

The singer often toured in the United States and recorded several albums for Universal Music. Among his biggest hits were "Vete Ya," "Ebrio de Amor" and "Soy Asi."

He also penned lyrics honoring one of Mexico's most notorious drug lords, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, leader of the Sinaloa cartel. Last year, he sang one of his narcocorridos, ballads honoring the exploits of drug dealers, to a crowd of more than 3,000 convicts at the Puente Grande prison in the central state of Jalisco.

Guzman escaped from a neighboring prison in 2001 and remains at large.

More than 2,000 people have been killed in the continuing war among competing cartels and the police over Mexico's lucrative trade in illicit drugs, according to media reports.

On Saturday, the toll included a federal prosecutor gunned down in the northern city of Monterrey, and a police chief and city councilman in the Monterrey suburb of Santa Catarina.

Baltazar Gomez Trejo of Santa Catarina was the sixth police chief killed in the northern state of Nuevo Leon this year.

He had been in office for 23 days and had purged the city's drug-enforcement unit, according to the newspaper El Universal.

In a ceremony this month at the Gibson Amphitheatre in Hollywood, Elizalde received the "soloist of the year" prize at Los Premios de la Radio awards for regional Mexican music. He was depicted in a mural in Pico Rivera, a Southern California center for norteno music, in December.

The son of a musician, Elizalde was born in the northern state of Sonora. Once a law student, he began recording in the late 1990s.

According to the Guadalajara newspaper Mural, the convicts at Puente Grande joined in with Elizalde on "Clave Privada" (Secret Code), a song celebrating Guzman's exploits, when Elizalde performed a Mexican Independence Day concert there in 2005.

Guzman's Sinaloa cartel is battling the Gulf cartel and other criminal groups for control of key smuggling points across the U.S.-Mexico border.

In a 2005 Spanish-language interview with the Associated Press, Elizalde defended narcocorrido songs.

"In no way do I think they should be banned, because they are part of popular expression, what the people sing and what they want," he said. "All we do is sing them, like minstrels."


hector.tobar@latimes.com




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"the action adventure fantasy feature film 'Warrior' ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."





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Tunnels act as highways for migrants ... The subterranean smuggling routes breed chaos along U.S.-Mexico border.


Warrior Stills
Originally uploaded by brucesingman.
"Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."

http://imdb.com/title/tt0320751
http://www.warriorthefilm.blogspot.com

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-tunnel19nov19,0,1619996.story?coll=la-home-headlines
Tunnels act as highways for migrants
The subterranean smuggling routes breed chaos along U.S.-Mexico border.
By Richard Marosi
Times Staff Writer

November 19, 2006

NOGALES, MEXICO — One mile deep into the drafty tunnel under this hilly frontier city, a flashlight beam cuts through the pitch-black darkness and illuminates a yellow line painted on the concrete wall: the U.S.-Mexico border.

Just beyond the boundary a graffiti-message believed to have been scrawled by U.S. law enforcement warns intruders: "USA Tunnel Rats. Este lugar es de nosotros" — This place is ours.

Not exactly.

Inside the largest known tunnels on the border — two passages that make up an enormous drainage system linking Nogales, Mexico, with Nogales, Ariz. — migrants stumble blindly through toxic puddles and duck low-flying bats. Methamphetamine-addicted assailants lurk. And young men working as drug mules lug burlap sacks filled with contraband.

There are shootouts and rapes. Rising floodwaters sweep people to their deaths. U.S. Border Patrol agents pursue smugglers in frenzied chases, insults and threats echoing as they go. And tangles of rebar metal — points sharpened by smugglers — gouge people who get too close to some walls.

"It's another world down there," said Pat Thompson, a police detective in Nogales, Ariz. "You don't know what to expect."

As the United States prepares to fence much of the border above ground, the situation below ground could grow increasingly chaotic. Authorities have discovered dozens of illegal tunnels in recent years, including a nearly half-mile passage connecting Tijuana with San Diego.

Illegal immigrants have breached drainage systems all the way along the border, from El Paso to San Diego. Most of them are of the claustrophobic crawl-through variety that prevents large-scale incursions.

The Nogales tunnels, by comparison, are superhighways.

Once open waterways, today they stretch for miles under the traffic-clogged downtown streets of both cities, zigzagging roughly parallel to each other.

In the smaller one, called the Morley Tunnel, an ankle-high stream of raw sewage and chemical runoff from factories in Mexico usually flows. The neighboring Grand Tunnel is up to 15 feet high and wide enough to fit a Humvee. Dozens of illegal immigrants can travel through it at one time.

Above ground, fences, sensors and stadium lighting clearly separate the two cities. Underground, they remain linked of necessity by the system built decades ago to channel monsoon rains.

The tunnels doubled as smuggling routes from the beginning. For many years, gangs of children took control of the passages. Nogales police once encountered Mexican soldiers on the U.S. side, prompting a brief but tense standoff.

In recent years, the U.S. Border Patrol has had some success stemming the underground flow of illegal immigrants and drugs by installing heavy steel doors, surveillance cameras and sensors. But when heavy monsoon rains this summer triggered floodwaters that tore down the gates, smugglers ripped down the cameras and shattered the lights and siren used to discourage incursions — and the chaotic human flow resumed.

From July through October, agents apprehended 1,704 illegal immigrants in the tunnels, a nearly five-fold increase from the previous six months. Agents seized more than a ton of marijuana from tunnel arrests during the same period. In July, bandits raped two women from Oaxaca, Mexico, in the tunnels on the Mexican side.

This summer, five people are believed to have drowned after being caught in floodwater.

Two others fell into a sewage drain branching off one tunnel and were carried nine miles before being found alive in a shaft near a sewage treatment plant.

Imelda Guevara Lopez, 17, said she survived by never letting go of her friend's hand as she struggled to keep her head above the flow of raw sewage. Lopez, whose backside was shredded by the concrete walls, told workers at a migrant shelter in Mexico that she would never again enter the underground.

"I prefer working in the fields and being poor but alive," said Lopez, who went home to Hidalgo, according to an account in a Mexican newspaper.

Patrolling the tunnels is a tactical nightmare for law enforcement on both sides of the border, mainly U.S. Border Patrol agents and Grupo Beta, Mexico's migrant safety force.

U.S. agents often can't go into the Morley Tunnel because overpowering ammonia and chlorine smells leave them nauseated and dizzy. On the Mexican side, some stretches of the tunnel are so low that Grupo Beta agents ride their all-terrain vehicles lying on their stomachs.

Teams of U.S. agents enter the Grand Tunnel daily, sometimes toting M-4 assault rifles. But their high-tech night vision goggles are rendered almost useless in the tunnel's black hole-like reaches.

"It's so dark, you feel vertigo — like the walls are coming in on you," Agent Scott Wencel said.

A distant flicker of flashlights — sometimes half a mile away — usually signals an approaching group. They could be drug traffickers or bandits or illegal immigrants. Some have walked one mile already after descending from Avenida Reforma in Nogales, Mexico, taking advantage of the cracked grate in front of Elvira's Bar.

"They climb down every day … people from all over Mexico," said 62-year-old Sebastian Flores, an auxiliary traffic police officer in Nogales, Mexico.

The groups cross the yellow line in complete silence — the only sounds the distant hum of traffic, the chirping of crickets, the scurrying of rats. Sometimes the tunnel itself seems to be alive, producing from the humming and air flows a pulsing, low groan.

The darkness is so thick that migrants sometimes cross within an arm's length of U.S. agents without noticing. That's the agents' preferred tactic: lying in wait, pressed against the walls, letting groups pass before pouncing and cutting off any escape back to Mexico.

Some illegal immigrants are so startled that they run smack into the walls, agents say. During one sweep last December, when smugglers heard them coming, agents yelled out: "Somos migra!" — Border Patrol. They ordered the group to stop.

"Migra go home!" came the shouted reply as the people ran back into Mexico.

If the migrants manage to evade agents in the tunnels, another huge challenge remains: getting out. People pop up from manholes into the middle of busy streets, sometimes stopping traffic.

Curb storm drains are often too small, so smugglers use hydraulic jacks to pry them open so people can squeeze through.

Some grates have been opened so often that Nogales city workers have placed huge boulders and concrete blocks on top of them. At a park, one manhole was covered with a steel plate and a bench to prevent breaches. One curb storm drain downtown was pried open so often that the sidewalk buckled, leaving a telephone pole listing over parked cars near a furniture store.

Now many migrants walk a mile past where the border is marked underground to reach the open end of the drainage tunnels. Outside again, they climb an embankment to waiting cars.

Border Patrol agents hope to regain control of the tunnels after the rains stop and they are able to repair the gates and cameras at the border. But Mexican authorities doubt that it will make much of a long-term difference.

The migrants, they say, are willing to brave anything to get through. Every day, they see the evidence of the risks the illegal immigrants take: the scattered clothing, letters and family pictures left behind by bandits rummaging through migrants' stolen backpacks; the prayer books and offerings left behind by illegal immigrants in a tunnel nook fashioned into a shrine to the Virgin of Guadalupe.

Enrique Palafox, the Nogales director of Grupo Beta, was shot in the chest by bandits years ago in a tunnel battle.

He still patrols the passages every day. "I like it down here. It's so quiet, and I know that when I'm here, the migrants are safe," he said.

But Palafox's force can't patrol the tunnels 24 hours a day. A message for migrants has been spray-painted on the wall just before the yellow line marking the frontier. Believed to have been written by Beta agents, it reads: Cuidense — Be careful.

*
richard.marosi@latimes.com

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The Continuing Sordid History of the Treatment of the Esselen Indians


Warrior Stills
Originally uploaded by brucesingman.
Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://imdb.com/title/tt0320751
http://www.warriorthefilm.blogspot.com

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."

The Continuing Sordid History of the Treatment of the Esselen Indians

Originally this article appeared in The Monterey County Post, October 1996,
and is reproduced with kind permission
Es-wa'ti...Xinkone Inux Hu-ya-mis-in-pi-si-in-unse
(Esselen native language translated)
Go--Walk on the Road of the Medicine Lodge
"Long ago, it was said that Eagle, Hummingbird, and Coyote watched from the mountain tops the water recede after the great flood. Eagle, the Chief, sent Coyote to look below, and asked him what was there. Coyote said that there were many, many people who were dead. Coyote went forward and seized some earth and from it came his wife. The children from the union of these super-natural beings became many and the first Indian people of central coastal California.
The land provided a rich natural environment for all of the animal birds, fish and people to live in harmony within their shared universe.
Their universe was irrevocably altered by the advent of Hispano- European Empire in 1769, and continued to be devastated by the later American conquest of California. Of the estimated 1.5 million people who inhabited California in 1769, less than 20,000 would be identified by the turn of the century.
During the 1870's came a religious movement combining both aboriginal and Euro-American beliefs. The Kuksu and Big Heads were once again called upon to bring order to an ever collapsing and insane universe. This religious movement was called by some the 'Ghost Dancer or Sound House' (Medicine Lodge) religion because it was believed that the dead would rise, all disease, famine and suffering would end, and all non-lndians and non-believers would be swallowed up by the earth.
In spite of the past two hundred and forty years of 'European Civilization' devastation, broken promises and genocide, we continue to walk on this road. The Inux or Road serves as the only path toward reestablishing balance to our universe. This path links both the upper spirit world with the earthly world that we live in today.
(This story was shared by two elders in 1902, Jacinta Gonzales and Maria Viviana Soto, of the surviving Ohlone/ Costanoan-Esselen peoples who once lived on and owned all of the lands surrounding the greater Monterey Bay region. Artist: Loretta Escobar Wyer, Chairwoman - Ohlone/ Costanoan-Esselen Nation, Concept Contributors: Rosemary Camabra, Chairwoman, Muwekma Ohlone Tribe, and Alan Leventhal, Ethnohistorian, College of Social Sciences, SJSU.)
The Esselen Nation of Monterey County
Contributed by Sandy Baldinger
The Beginning
The Esselen Indians were here first, thousands of them lived from Big Sur to Moss Landing, from the beaches of Carmel to the plains of Soledad, wintered in the caves of Cachagua, and summered in the meadows of Castroville. Complex chiefdoms were organized within villages and communities.
The land was rich, the men and woman hunted together, farmed,fished, and took only the natural resources they needed to sustain their livelihood. The Esselens were peaceful and lived in harmony with the different clans of the Esselen Nation. Esselen means from the rock, and each tribe would greet each other with the gI come from the rock, meaning they were one family, one nation, one tribe. The differences clans intermarried and shared the same familial culture.
The Disappearance
In 1848, over 150,000 Indians lived in Northern California. Then the "Gold Rush" brought the Europeans, the explorers, the settlers, and a different way of life.
By the 1920s, only 20,000 Indians remained (Indian Field Service Report to Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 6/23/1927). Now there are approximately 250 known Esselen Indians residing in Monterey County. Genocide - disease - starvation - how can that many Indians disappear in such a short period of time?
The Missions
The Spanish Catholic padres formed many missions in Northern California, and their purpose was to "save the souls" of the Indians. The Spanish authorities also had another mission - to take the land from the Indians.
Spanish land grant regulations stipulated that Spanish men were to marry Indian women in order to obtain a land grant (Spanish Land Grant Record, Land Notes & Papers, Marriage Regulations 1774) it was a simple difference of philosophy and culture.
Europeans believed in "owning" land, "selling, and buying" land. The Esselens believed that the land was theirs only to occupy - to take care of and to nurture.
The Esselens also believed the land they occupied was their family's share of the community. Thus, if you married into the family, you shared the land. The Spanish men would marry the Indian women, apply for a land grant to the King of Spain for the family's land. Any children borne of the marriage were baptized in the Catholic mission and became Spanish citizens. Only the padres referred to the children as "half-breeds, the rest of the citizenry considered them, and their Indian mother, as Spanish. Extensive records were kept by the missions, and the Spanish officials of the intermarriages, the offspring, and the relations. (Over 140 years later, these very records are needed to establish the Esselen Nation as a federally recognized tribe.)
The Esselen Nation
For example, in the late 1700s, Father Junipero Serra of the Mission San Carlos Borromeo in Carmel arranged a marriage between 46-year old Manuel Butron, and Esselen Indian, 15-year old Margarite Domingez. The husband then applied to Spain for a land grant based upon his marriage to the young Indian maiden, and received what is now a large portion of Carmel Valley! (Spanish Land Grant Records, Vol 1, pgs 177-180, Missions and Missionaries of California, James H Barry Company 1913, Vol 3. pgs 640-643)
Under the Spanish rule, Indians could not legally be evicted from their land, and if so, provisions would have to be made for the landless Indians. (Hildago Treaty 1849) This meant the Indians had no choice but to seek shelter at the missions. There they were forced to build the missions, raise crops, fish, hunt, raise cattle, make tallow, cook, clean, and to supply the Catholics with food and bounty. In return, they were sheltered, fed, and somewhat protected from harm. Indians were being murdered and slaughtered at an alarming rate, and if they wanted to leave they ; missions, they were hunted down and forced to return. The Esselens fled to the caves in Cachagua and survived in the rugged terrain. Then the Tassajuar area became known as the "Clan of the Ancients," because the Indians sought refuge in the wilderness, and were never found by the Spanish.
The United States & The Esselens
The United States took over California in 1846, and the Esselen Indians suffered a worse fate than before. In 1850, they were required to register with government agencies, surrender their lands, and believe in lineage or marriages. Most of the Esselens were terrified of the white man. Few escaped the brutality of the white man in search for land - and in search for gold.
During the Gold Rush era, treaties between the Indians and the government became hidden, secreted by the government. Reservation lands promised to the Esselens were never granted, services were never provided; and many of the Indians starved to death or were murdered. (Ranchos of Monterev County, Donald M Howard. Esq. 1978 pg 26; 1928 BIA Application #8123, #10946)
In the mid 1800s, Helen Hunt Jackson, a Bureau of Indian Affairs Matron, wrote of the fear of the Indians. They were afraid of death by the white man, their land being taken away, and the slavery of their children.
In 1928, the United States ordered all of the Indians to register again, and each Indian that did so was assigned a number - a numbering system that continues today. The government forms were complex, confusing and without their completion, the Indians were denied any government or public service. (Lands Claim Act, 1928) ) (1919 Annual Narrative Statistical, Section 6, Report)
Did you know that Indians only had the right to vote since 1949?
Did you know that until 1970 Indians were not allowed to hire a private attorney to represent them in a court of law? "Pitt River Tribe v U. S. Government" is such an example. The tribe sued the government for failure to honor the treaties providing land and services to them. The Federal Court refused to allow the tribe's attorney to participate in court, and ordered the U. S. Attorney General to represent the tribe. In essence, the case became the government versus the government!
Did you know that the Civil Rights Act does not cover Indians? There is a separate Indian Civil Rights Act on the books - and it is not the same.
Did you know that there are separate and complex laws that govern Indians? Every other person in the United States operates under the same federal laws - with the exception of the Indians. Code of Federal Regulations, Indians, 25, (revised as of April 1, 1991), Codification of documents and general applicability and future effects with ancillaries is one of the governing documents. The Bureau of Indian Affairs governs the Indians.
Did you know that only 40 tribes in California are officially recognized by the United States Government?
Did you know the Esselen Nation is trying to be officially recognized? In order to receive services or the reservation promised to them in 1848, the Esselens are now being ordered to prove that they are indeed an Indian tribe. To do so, the Esselens have to request copies of documents that the U.S. has in its archives, and then submit them back to the proper Government agency, BAR (Bureau of Acknowledgment Research). The government is making them spend money to provide them with their own records! This procedure is costly, time-consuming, and exhausting. Why are they now submitting for official tribal recognition? Years of research and perhaps millions of dollars spent for what?
The Esselen Future
The future of the Esselen Indian nation rests with this generation, most in their 40s-50s and 60s. It is the last generation that can make the government enforce the promises under the treaties; reservation land and government services. It is the last generation that would have the Indian blood quota required by the government to obtain services. It is important because a federally recognized tribe has the same rights as any State in the United States! Rights to land, water, health services, and the rights we take for granted every day as non-lndians.
It is the first generation of Esselen Indians that can put aside their fear of the white man's government. Loretta Escobar Wyer, Chairwoman of The Esselen Indian Nation, explained, "The way we live is who we are as Indian people." She told of the private nature of the Esselens in today's society, the family cohesiveness, the cultural differences that still exist.
"Men and woman work together as partners - it is a work ethic. Women are respected as equals. They direct the hunts, help butcher the game, raise the children, work in the fields. Women recommend and nominate the chiefs, and work as men. Men, work beside the women, sharing with all the tasks. It is a culture difference that is sacred. Families are very important, and any Esselen is considered to be family."
The land promised to the Esselens was Big Sur - something similar will do.
In the meantime, the Esselens formed an alliance with the Hoopa Tribe to ask for government buildings at Fort Ord. The buildings would be used for drug rehabilitation for Indian and local non-lndian youths. (Ironically, the US government allotted $1.5 million for Indian youth rehabilitation, but had no buildings to service the program.)
The alliance with the Hoopa Tribe was necessary since the Hoopas of Northern California are a recognized tribe. If their request is granted by the Department of Defense, it will be the first time Indian children and young adults can be rehabilitated in their native state of California. Indian youths now have to go to the Plains states for treatment facilities.
Hopefully, the land and buildings at Fort Ord will be utilized for the Indians. It's not much to give after taking so much away. In the meantime, Loretta and the Council of Esselen Indian Nation will continue their quest for federal recognition of their culture, their history, and their rights.
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"the action adventure fantasy feature film 'Warrior' ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."





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Esselen Indian Tribal History


Warrior Stills
Originally uploaded by brucesingman.
"Competing Mexican drug cartels are destroying each other ... and that's where 'Warrior' begins ...."
http://imdb.com/title/tt0320751
http://www.warriorthefilm.blogspot.com

"the action adventure fantasy feature film "Warrior" ... about the son of a divine force ... is a story of a young man's quest to find his true identity set against the twin backdrops of Native American folklore and the treacherous Mexican drug trade and a portrayal of the classic confrontation between "good and evil" ... filmed in the exotic jungles of Costa Azul and the urban grit of Puerto Vallarta in the State of Jalisco, Mexico .. with action, adventure, romance, comedy, a multi-ethnic cast, a major studio movie music score and spectacular cinematography..."

Esselen Indian Tribal History

Esselen, A tribe of Californian Indians, constituting the Esselenian family, most of the members of which on the founding of Carmelo mission, near Monterey, in 1770, were brought under civilizing influences, resulting, as was the case with the Indians at all the Californian missions, their rapid decrease (see California Mission Indian Missions). A portion of the tribe seems to have been taken, to the mission at Soledad, for Arroyo de la Cuesta (MS., B. A. E.) in 1821 says of an Esselen vocabulary obtained by himself, "Huelel language of Soledad; it is from the Esselenes, who are already few." The original territory of the Esselen lay along the coast south of Monterey, though its exact limits are diversely given. Henshaw (Esselen MS., B. A. E.) states that they lived on the coast south of Monterey, in the mountains. The Rumsen Indians of the present day at Carmel and Monterey state ( Kroeber, MS., Univ. Cal.) that the Esselen originally lived at Agua Caliente (Tassajara springs), which is near the head of Carmel river, in a line between Sur and Soledad. Powell's map (7th Rep. B. A. E.) makes the Esselen territory comprise Sur river, the head of Carmel river, and the country about as far south as Santa Lucia peak, which is probably approximately correct. In any case the Esselen territory was confined to a limited was bordered only by Salinan and Costanoan tribes. La Perouse's statement that it extended more than 20 leagues east of Monterey is incorrect. Almost nothing is known of the mode of life and practices of the Esselen, but they were certainly similar to those of the neighboring tribes. What little is known in regard to the Esselen language shows it to have been simple and regular and of a type similar to most of the languages of central California, but, notwithstanding a few words In common with Costanoan, of entirely unrelated vocabulary and therefore a distinct stock.
Taylor gives a list of Esselen villages connected with San Carlos mission, namely: Chitchat, Coyyo, Fyules, Gilimis, Jappayon, Nennegtn, Noptac, Santa Clara, Sapponet, Saccorondo, Tebityilat, Triwta, Tushguesta, Xumis, Yampas, and Yauostar. He mentions also Xaseunl, 10 leagues from Carmelo, in the sierra, and Pahepes near Xaseunl, among the Esselen. He gives still other names, such as Excellemaks and Eslanagan; but none of the settlements named by him have been been proved to he Esselen and not Costanoan.

Esselenian Family. A small linguistic in he stock in w. California, first positively established by Henshaw (Am. Anthrop., iii, 45, 1890). At the time of the Spanish settlement, this family which has become extinct, consisted of a single group, the Esselen.

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Handbook of American Indians, 1906

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