2011年6月26日星期日

BP: Don't give Gulf fail-safe device to Transocean (AP)

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By HARRY R. WEBER, Associated Press Harry R. Weber, Associated Press – Fri?Jun?24, 10:19?am?ET

ATLANTA – BP and Transocean are at odds over who should get possession of a key piece of evidence in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill investigation once additional testing is complete.

Transocean, responsible for maintaining the blowout preventer that failed to stop last year's oil spill, argues it is best equipped to preserve the 300-ton device and it wants it back.

But BP told a federal magistrate judge in a letter filed by the court Friday that the blowout preventer shouldn't be given to one of the defendants in numerous lawsuits filed over the disaster. It said the government should safeguard it at least until the end of a trial set for February related to the lawsuits.

The government has said the blowout preventer failed because of a design flaw and a bent piece of pipe. BP, unsatisfied with the analysis, got court approval for additional testing. The government has said it doesn't expect its conclusions to change, though BP and other companies could use the results of the additional testing to defend themselves in the lawsuits.

The additional testing is wrapping up at a NASA facility in New Orleans, and the court has asked the parties to weigh in on what should be done with the device.

"Transocean has the necessary expertise to transport the BOP to a location of its choosing and is willing to assume the costs associated with the related transportation," Transocean said in a letter to the court.

BP argues the blowout preventer should remain in independent hands to ensure its integrity because it is "one of the most central pieces of physical evidence in this litigation."

A lawyer for the Justice Department told the court that the government wants to retain the control pods and certain other parts of the blowout preventer, but it doesn't object to the rest of the device being returned to Transocean. However, it noted that another government agency, the U.S. Chemical Safety Board, may want to do additional testing if its own.

A ruling was pending.

Eleven workers were killed when the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded off Louisiana on April 20, 2010. Some 206 million gallons of oil spewed from a well a mile beneath the sea before it was capped three months later, according to government estimates. BP owned the well and was leasing the rig from Transocean.

___

Follow Harry R. Weber at http://www.facebook.com/HarryRWeberAP


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Transocean: BP decisions led to Gulf disaster (AP)

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By HARRY R. WEBER, Associated Press Harry R. Weber, Associated Press – Wed?Jun?22, 2:25?pm?ET

ATLANTA – The owner of the rig that exploded in the Gulf of Mexico last year largely blames oil giant BP for the disaster in an internal investigation report released Wednesday that bolsters the Swiss firm's arguments in the face of lawsuits and expected government fines.

The report from Transocean Ltd. said the April 20, 2010, Deepwater Horizon explosion and resulting oil spill was sparked by a succession of well design, construction, and temporary abandonment decisions that compromised the integrity of the well and compounded the risk of its failure. Transocean said many of the decisions were made by well owner BP in the two weeks before the incident.

The 854-page report doesn't say Transocean holds no blame for what caused the disaster, but it comes pretty close. In one of the few references to something Transocean workers didn't do correctly, the company report noted that none of the people monitoring the well, including the Transocean drill crew, initially detected the flow of oil through the well. However, the report said that once the crew did realize the well was flowing, it "undertook well-control activities that were consistent with its training." Transocean said the explosion was inevitable at that point.

Transocean said its evidence indicates that BP failed to properly assess, manage and communicate risk. On one key aspect — the failure of the blowout preventer to keep oil from leaking into the sea — Transocean seemed to suggest it takes no blame.

BP's own internal report on the disaster blamed a cascade of failures by multiple companies. Government investigations also have spread around the blame.

The findings by all sides will be argued about for months and perhaps years to come as numerous lawsuits make their way through court. The companies involved in the disaster have sued each other seeking to recoup losses or expected losses from the disaster. Fines ultimately imposed by the government could be in the billions of dollars, and the companies involved have been trying to shield themselves as much as possible.

The Transocean report said the findings don't represent the company's legal position, but they are consistent with many of the arguments the firm has been making for more than a year, and they are likely to be cited by Transocean in future proceedings.

In a statement, BP described the Transocean report as an "advocacy piece" that fails to acknowledge the significance of Transocean's role in the disaster. BP said Transocean "has cherry-picked the facts in support of its litigation strategy."

"Unlike BP, which has stepped up to its responsibilities and cooperated with all official investigations regarding the accident, Transocean continues to take every opportunity to avoid its responsibilities," BP said.

The U.S. Coast Guard has previously concluded that flaws in Transocean's emergency training and equipment and a poor safety culture contributed to the disaster.

A key member of Congress and some Gulf residents reacted to the Transocean report with skepticism.

"I would look at it with a sense of suspicion, just from the simple fact that, obviously, there's a monetary gain or loss depending upon what they show their findings to be," said Chris Roberts, a Jefferson Parish, La., Council member whose jurisdiction includes the resort island community of Grand Isle.

As he headed to a demonstration at the Louisiana state capitol by a coalition of fishermen over the oil spill wrecking their livelihoods, Byron Encalade, president of Louisiana Oystermen's Association, said he thinks "there is a degree of responsibility on all parties."

In Washington, Rep. Edward Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat and ranking member of the House Committee on Natural Resources, called the Transocean report "the newest salvo in the continuing circular finger-pointing contest" by the companies involved.

In addition to owning the well that blew out, London-based BP was leasing the rig from Transocean. Eleven rig workers were killed and the government estimates some 206 million gallons of oil spewed from BP's Macondo well a mile beneath the sea before the well was capped three months later. It was the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history, staining hundreds of miles of shoreline, hurting fishermen and businesses and prompting new rules for deepwater drilling. BP has already spent or committed tens of billions of dollars to clean up the mess and compensate victims.

The Transocean report was the culmination of work by an internal investigation team comprised of experts from various technical fields and other specialists. Transocean said the loss of evidence with the rig and the unavailability of certain witnesses limited its investigation and analysis in some areas.

Among Transocean's findings:

? BP did not properly communicate to the drill crew the lack of testing on the cement or the uncertainty surrounding critical tests and procedures used to confirm the integrity of the barriers intended to inhibit the flow of hydrocarbons from the well. A hydrocarbon is a compound consisting of hydrogen and carbon that is found in oil and gas.

? BP adopted a technically complex nitrogen foam cement program for sealing the well. The resulting cementing job was of minimal quantity, left little margin for error, and was not tested adequately before or after the cementing operation. Further, the integrity of the cement may have been compromised by contamination, instability, and an inadequate number of devices used to center the casing in the wellbore.

_Cement contractor Halliburton and BP did not adequately test the cement slurry used to seal the well.

_BP also failed to assess the risk of the temporary abandonment procedure used at Macondo. At the time of the explosion, BP was making sure the well was sealed so it could temporarily abandon the site and perhaps come back at some point in the future to produce oil from the exploratory well. Transocean said BP generated at least five different temporary abandonment plans for the Macondo well between April 12, 2010, and April 20, 2010. After this series of last-minute alterations, BP proceeded with a temporary abandonment plan that created risk and did not have the required government approval.

As for the 300-ton blowout preventer that failed to stop the oil from leaking, Transocean said its investigation determined that the device and its control system were fully operational at the time of the incident and functioned as designed. Its report said minor leaks identified before the incident did not adversely affect the functionality. Transocean blamed the high flow rate of hydrocarbons from the well for preventing the device from sealing on the drill pipe. Transocean, as owner of the rig, was responsible for maintaining the blowout preventer.

The official U.S. government investigation previously blamed the failure of the Cameron-made blowout preventer on a design flaw and a bent piece of pipe. It also suggested that actions taken by the Transocean rig crew during its attempts to control the well around the time of the disaster may have contributed to the piece of drill pipe getting trapped.

At least one outside expert said at the time that the government findings cast serious doubt on the reliability of all the other blowout preventers used by the drilling industry.

BP wasn't satisfied that the official investigation conducted all of the necessary tests to determine the cause of the blowout preventer failure. It got court approval for additional testing, which has been conducted in recent weeks.

___

Associated Press writers Mary Foster and Kevin McGill in New Orleans contributed to this report. Follow Harry R. Weber at _http://www.facebook.com/HarryRWeberAP


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Mexico sends camera into unexplored Maya tomb (AP)

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MEXICO CITY – Researchers have lowered a small camera into a previously unexplored early Mayan tomb at the Palenque archaeological site in southern Mexico, revealing an intact funeral chamber, apparent offerings and red-painted wall murals.

Footage of the approximately 1,500-year-old tomb taken by the small, remote-controlled camera show a series of nine figures depicted in black on a vivid, blood-red background. Vases and jade ornaments can be seen on the floor of the small chamber.

The National Institute of Anthropology and History said Thursday archaeologists have known a tomb existed at the site since 1999, but they had been unable to enter it because the pyramid standing above it is unstable and entering the chamber could have damaged the murals.

(This version CORRECTS that tomb previously unexplored, not previously unseen)


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Mexican president apologizes to drug war victims (Reuters)

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By Dave Graham and Miguel Angel Gutierrez Dave Graham And Miguel Angel Gutierrez – Thu?Jun?23, 9:31?pm?ET

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – President Felipe Calderon apologized to victims of Mexico's war on drugs in an emotional meeting with bereaved families on Thursday that sought to try and quell rising anger over violence sweeping the nation.

In a live television broadcast lasting several hours, Calderon sat in silence listening to accusations from grieving parents that his government was killing Mexico's youth and allowing criminals to run rampant across the country.

Some 40,000 lives have been lost since his army-led crackdown on drug cartels began at the end of 2006, and Calderon said he regretted the loss of life the violence had caused.

"As a father, as a Mexican and as president, I am deeply aggrieved by Mexico's pain," he said in a hall inside Chapultepec Castle in central Mexico City. "We must ask forgiveness for the people who died at the hands of these criminals, for not having acted against these criminals."

The drug war has hit support for Calderon's ruling National Action Party and polls suggest the center-right grouping will be ousted in a presidential election due in July, 2012.

Thousands of people have joined peace marches organized by poet Javier Sicilia, whose son was killed by gunmen in March and who urged Calderon at the meeting to renounce his strategy.

But the president refused to apologize for taking on the heavily-armed cartels with the armed forces.

"If there's anything I regret, it's not having sent them sooner," he said as the interior minister, attorney general, public security minister and other top officials looked on.

However, he conceded that the war was no longer only about drug cartels in Latin America's second biggest economy.

"It all started with drug trafficking, but the problem for me isn't about drug trafficking, it's about organized crime and violence," Calderon said in an often impassioned address.

Members of the bereaved families were not won over, and one by one they took turns to attack Calderon for failing to address rampant corruption and impunity afflicting Mexico.

RAVAGES OF WAR

By the time Interior Minister Francisco Blake invited Maria Elena Herrera to speak, the middle-aged woman could barely contain herself as she told Calderon and his aides how the state had done nothing to find her four missing sons.

"I'm here representing the pain of all the Mexican mothers and all the people without support who suffer the ravages of this war. My sons are honest workers who were victims of this war," she said with tears streaming down her face.

Alongside the thousands killed in the drug war, many more are missing after being kidnapped by the gangs.

"There are thousands of cases like this. Mr. Calderon, this all demonstrates the government cannot safeguard justice. The only option the government leaves our sons is to condemn them to die because of this war," Herrera said, her voice breaking.

Calderon rose to console Herrera after she spoke, putting an arm around her as she continued to cry.

Though unusual, the event was not the first time Calderon has met with victims of crime and drug war violence.

The 2008 kidnapping and murder of Fernando Marti, 14, son of a well-known businessman, sparked an outcry that prompted Calderon to hold a national, televised meeting with ministers and state governors in which he pledged to stop the violence.

Calderon staged a similar event last year in Ciudad Juarez, the city that has suffered the most violence in the drug war.

Javier Oliva, a security expert at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), said it was risky for Calderon to have taken the step and it showed him in a favorable light.

"But if there's no change in strategy, it's going to be a major problem for the Mexican state, not the government. The social, institutional and media damage that they're exposing the armed forces to is very serious," he said. "They are one of the few institutions which most Mexicans still respect."

(Additional reporting by Robin Emmott; Editing by Paul Simao)


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US, Mexico win to set up CONCACAF Gold Cup final (AFP)

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HOUSTON, Texas (AFP) – The United States reached their fourth consecutive CONCACAF Gold Cup final thanks to a Clint Dempsey goal which secured a 1-0 win for the hosts over Panama.

Dempsey struck in the 77th minute following a pass from Landon Donovan to avenge the Americans' 2-1 loss to Panama in the group stages earlier in the tournament.

"It wasn't our best game but at the end of the day we kept going and got the goal needed to win the game," Dempsey said. "All I had to do was put my foot on it."

The Americans will play Mexico in Saturday's championship match at the Rose Bowl in Los Angeles. The Mexicans defeated Honduras 2-0 in the other semi-final on Wednesday.

Freddy Adu helped set up the winning goal with a long pass to Donovan at the Reliant Stadium.

Donovan, playing his 27th straight Gold Cup match, then played an inch-perfect pass across the Panama goal to Dempsey, who applied the finishing touch.

"We know that when we apply our game we are a pretty hard team to beat," said 22-year-old Adu.

"I think we showed our quality in being able to grind out a result," said Dempsey.

Panama's loss was their fourth consecutive defeat to the Americans in the knockout stages.

Panama coach Julio Dely Valdes said the Americans had more energy Wednesday.

"It was a very intense game, very few chances for both teams," Dely Valdes said. "I'm pleased with my team's performance, they fought until the very end."

Panama were without forward Blas Perez, sent off in his team's quarter-final victory over El Salvador.

The US were missing forward Jozy Altidore with a strained hamstring.

Altidore had scored two of the Americans' six goals in the tournament.

He was injured in the ninth minute of the 2-0 victory against Jamaica at the weekend.

Dely Valdes said there was more parity in the tournament this year.

"The gap between the great teams and the up-and-comers has shrunk significantly," he said. "Panama showed a very competitive level."


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Canada, Australia back Carstens to lead IMF (Reuters)

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OTTAWA (Reuters) – Canada and Australia are backing Mexico's Augustin Carstens to head the International Monetary Fund, they said in a joint statement on Friday in an apparent bid to end Europe's traditional lock on the position.

Carstens, currently central bank governor in Mexico, is competing for the job with French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde.

"Augustin Carstens' previous experience in the IMF, combined with his background as finance minister of Mexico and his current position as governor of the Mexican central bank, equip him very well to understand and address, on a collaborative and inclusive basis with IMF member countries, the challenges faced by the global economy," said a statement by Canada and Australia, released by Ottawa.

"Accordingly, after due consideration of the candidates and the IMF selection criteria, we have decided to support him for the position of IMF managing director."

The two governments said both Carstens and Lagarde were "highly credible" candidates.

(Reporting by Louise Egan; editing by Rob Wilson)


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Mexico's most powerful drug cartels (The Christian Science Monitor)

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- As one quasi-religious drug cartel falls apart, another rises to try to take its?… Full Story Time.com


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Mexican killed by U.S. agent trying to cross border (Reuters)

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SAN DIEGO, Calif (Reuters) – A U.S. Border Patrol agent shot dead a Mexican man on the California-Mexico border, U.S. and Mexican authorities said on Wednesday.

Michael Jimenez, a spokesman for the U.S. Border Patrol's San Diego sector, said an agent was involved in a shooting late on Tuesday, but could not give further details.

A newspaper reported the incident began after an agent attempted to arrest three men who crossed illegally into the United States about 1.6 miles west of the San Ysidro Port of entry, south of San Diego, at around 7:30 p.m. local time on Tuesday.

The San Diego Union Tribune newspaper said a second agent arrived to assist. Two of the men fled back into Mexico through an opening in the fence, while the other man resisted arrest.

As he scuffled with the agents, one of the men scrambled up the border fence and pelted the agents with large rocks and a piece of wood studded with nails, striking one of them.

As the man attempted to throw another rock, one of the agents opened fire, hitting him once. He fell off the fence and subsequently died in Mexico, it reported.

Jimenez confirmed a Border Patrol agent had been treated for injuries and released from a local hospital.

In a statement released on Wednesday, Mexico's foreign ministry confirmed the body of a Mexican national had been located in Mexican territory, following a "violent incident" on the border line.

The ministry said the use of firearms to counter attacks with rocks amounted to a disproportionate use of force. It condemned the death, and called for an "exhaustive" investigation into the incident.

The U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency said in a statement released late on Wednesday that a thorough investigation into the shooting death was being conducted by the FBI and San Diego Police Department.

(Reporting by Marty Graham; Additional reporting by Robin Emmott in Mexico; Writing by Tim Gaynor, Editing by Greg McCune)


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Chief who fled Mexico decries attack on police (AP)

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By JUAN CARLOS LLORCA, Associated Press Juan Carlos Llorca, Associated Press – Fri?Jun?24, 8:35?pm?ET

EL PASO, Texas – A young woman who says she left her post as police chief in her Mexican hometown and is seeking U.S. asylum because of death threats calls herself "sad and angry" after a policewoman from her hometown was wounded by assailants.

Marisol Valles Garcia, 21, fled nearly four months ago from the small border town of Praxedis G. Guerrero, where she had been police chief since October. The criminology student had made international headlines when she took the post that had been hard to fill after her predecessor was tortured and beheaded.

Her attorney, Carlos Spector, said Valles Garcia has "a well-founded fear of persecution" because of Wednesday's attack on the female officer. Mexican officials say the officer and her husband and child were stabbed in their home during a robbery, not an assassination attempt.

"What happened to my fellow policewoman could have happened to me. If it didn't, it's because I am here with my family. But I'm nervous this could happen to more people, to police officers," Valles Garcia said at a news conference Friday.

Valles Garcia asked for U.S. asylum, claiming she fears for her life because she has "denounced widespread corruption in all levels of government in Mexico," said Spector.

Mexicans asking for asylum face an uphill battle. The U.S. received nearly 19,000 asylum requests from Mexico since 2005, but granted asylum to just 319 petitioners between 2005 and 2010.

Drug violence has transformed the township of Praxedis G. Guerrero from a string of quiet farming communities into a lawless no-man's-land only about a mile from the Texas border. Between 1995 and 2005, it had a steady population of about 8,500 inhabitants. Five years later, slightly more than 4,500 people live there. Two rival gangs — the Juarez and Sinaloa drug cartels — are battling over control of its single highway, a lucrative drug-trafficking route along the Texas border.

After taking office, Valles Garcia started receiving death threats. She said that when she applied for the job, it didn't cross her mind she'd be a target — particularly after publicly vowing not to go after the drug cartels that control the zone bordering El Paso county.

"I didn't believe I was a danger for the `narcos,' we were not going after them. We told them in (news) conferences that we would not mess with them," said Valles Garcia who advocated a community police approach for her town, targeting problems like domestic violence and leaving the drug war to federal police and the army.

Still, threats started coming. "I just didn't want to wait for them to call me one day and say: `We're waiting for you outside.'"

Valles Garcia said in a small town like Praxedis, it's not hard to spot strangers with bad intentions. Her officers would constantly call to alert her of suspicious cars driving around.

"One day they parked just outside the office, that's when I thought I would not last that day. I went to my parents and said: `Ma, I don't want to be here anymore' and then and there we planned it, in that instant I took my purse, a diaper for my son and next thing we knew we were here, asking for asylum." She, her husband and son along with her parents and two sisters fled that day.

She now believes the media attention that she brought to her town and the drug trade there was what angered the cartels. Still, she does not regret her time as police chief. "I wanted to do something for my municipality, for my son."

She has to wait until her May 2013 court date to state her case, Spector said. "It's hard to be in a country that is not your own, without work, without a house. You have to depend on your relatives, ask for rides everywhere. It's a difficult life situation."


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USA, Mexico meet for third straight Gold Cup final (AFP)

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LOS ANGELES (AFP) – Mexico and the United States meet in the final of the CONCACAF Gold Cup tournament on Saturday for the third consecutive time.

Mexico and the US have won nine of the 10 Gold Cups contested since the biennial tournament took its current form in 1991.

Mexico dominated the United States 5-0 in 2009 and the Americans beat El Tri 2-1 two years earlier.

The two sides meet again Saturday in a sold out contest at the Rose Bowl stadium near downtown Los Angeles.

Aldo de Nigris and Javier "El Chicharito" Hernandez scored off corner kicks early in overtime and Mexico defeated Honduras 2-0 in the semi-finals on Wednesday.

The Americans advanced but also struggled in a 1-0 win over Panama in the other semi-final.

Mexico have outscored their five Gold Cup opponents by an aggregate score of 18-2. They are also undefeated in their last 11 Gold Cup games, with nine wins and two draws.

Mexico scored a tournament high 14 goals in group play.

The contest should be a matchup of Mexico's high-powered offence against the defensive-minded Americans.

The Americans head into the game after not having given up a goal in 322 minutes of action.

Landon Donovan and Freddy Adu were two of the best American players in the semis and both started the game on the bench.

The 22-year-old Adu hadn't played in this year's tournament before being inserted into the match in second half.

After a scoreless first period, US coach Bob Bradley also put Donovan into the game in the second half, when he combined with Adu on the winning goal.

Bradley had been under fire after the US were upset by Panama in the group play earlier in the tournament.

"Even though it wasn't our best game we were still able to grind out a result," said American Clint Dempsey who scored the only goal Wednesday on a setup from Donovan, after Adu started the play in his own end.

Adu had not played for the national team since the 2009 Gold Cup.

Panama's loss Wednesday was their fourth consecutive defeat to the Americans in the knockout stages.


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2011年6月25日星期六

Mexico discovers 117 migrants hidden in truck (AP)

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MEXICO CITY – The Mexican army has discovered 117 migrants hidden inside a trailer truck in the southern state of Oaxaca.

The federal immigration agency says soldiers detected the truck in the town of San Pedro Totolapam, 350 miles (564 kilometers) southeast of Mexico City. The agency says it doesn't know if any arrests have been made.

The migrants are mainly from Guatemala and El Salvador. The agency says they were found Thursday evening, but immigration authorities weren't notified until Friday.

Officials are checking their medical condition before they are deported.

Mexican authorities have recently discovered large groups of migrants bound for the United States in jammed trailers. That includes two trucks with a total of 513 people in May.


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Analysis: Mexican ex-presidents lead debate on legalizing drugs (Reuters)

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MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Once praised lavishly by the United States for waging a war on drugs, Mexico's last two presidents now say legalizing them may be the best way to end the rising violence the U.S.-backed campaign has unleashed.

Ernesto Zedillo and Vicente Fox led efforts to crush drug trafficking gangs in Mexico between 1994 and 2006 but the rapid escalation of violence over the past four years under President Felipe Calderon has convinced them a change of tack is needed.

"As a country, we are going through problems due to the fact that the United States consumes too many drugs," the 68-year-old Fox told business leaders in Texas last month. "I would recommend to legalize, de-penalize all drugs."

Though public support for some legalization is growing on both sides of the border, resistance is firmly entrenched in the U.S. government and analysts say Mexico is very unlikely to liberalize its drug laws without Washington's approval.

Calderon is stuck between a rock and a hard place.

He has staked his reputation on breaking the cartels and is unlikely to press for radical change in what remains of his presidency but the death toll is surging and Zedillo, Fox and other former Latin American leaders are pressuring Mexico to consider opening up the market.

Victims' families are adding to the clamor for change.

Calderon has begun to soften the hard-line rhetoric that won him allies in Washington, stressing his readiness to discuss the merits of drug legalization.

"I'm completely open to this debate. Not just on consumption, but also on movement and production," he told a meeting with victims' families in Mexico City on Thursday.

But he added: "This issue goes beyond national borders. If there's no international agreement, it doesn't make sense."

Since he sent the army to fight the cartels in late 2006, some 40,000 people have died. If the rate of killing persists, the total will surpass U.S. combat deaths in the Vietnam War by the time a new president is elected in mid-2012.

The United States was still fighting in Vietnam when President Richard Nixon first declared a "war" against drug trafficking and consumption. Forty years on, more and more statesmen who have followed its course say the fight against the cartels cannot be won by force either.

Zedillo was among the former Latin American leaders on the Global Commission on Drug Policy which this month concluded the drugs war had failed, urging Mexico and others to explore regulation as a means of weakening the criminal gangs.

NEW RACKETS

Calderon insists his strategy has weakened the cartels and that the capture of many prominent drug bosses has reduced the threat that organized crime posed to the state.

But the violence has shocked many Mexicans and hit support for Calderon and his conservative National Action Party, or PAN. Polls suggest the PAN will be ousted at the presidential election in July, 2012 by the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI.

The PRI has pilloried Calderon for the growing lawlessness, though it has yet to offer any radical alternative to defeating the drug gangs, whose interests during the crackdown have grown to encompass a host of new rackets.

The expansion of criminal activity has even prompted those who back decriminalizing soft drugs -- such as Mexico's Green Party -- to question how much legalization would achieve.

"Do you think the drug bosses will suddenly turn into normal businessmen? Of course not, they'll just turn to other sorts of crime like robbery, kidnapping and extortion," said Arturo Escobar, a member of the Greens in the Senate.

Mexicans have long been skeptical about legalizing drugs but the country has decriminalized possession of small amounts of soft and hard drugs under Calderon, and sympathy for a more liberal tack has grown as the violence intensifies.

A national survey in August 2010 by daily Reforma showed 32 percent of Mexicans in favor of legalizing personal use of marijuana. Barely two years earlier, in October 2008, support for legalization was just 7 percent, pollster Parametria said.

Support in the United States now stands at 46 percent, according to a Gallup poll published on October 28.

Yet despite support from some libertarians, a recent shift to the right in U.S. politics has made it tough to sell the idea before a 2012 presidential vote in both countries.

"If Mexico legalized, the U.S. Congress would use every piece of pressure it has to oppose them," said Rodolfo de la Garza, a political scientist at Columbia University. "We will hit them economically. We will start messing with NAFTA. We will hammer them on migrants. Much more than we are already."

Drug demand is driven by the United States, and Fox this month stepped up calls for legalization, arguing that Washington's $1.4 billion in drug war aid was nothing but a "tip" in compensation for Mexico's losses in the war.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says the global drugs trade is worth hundreds of billions of dollars and in 2009 a top official at the agency said traffickers' cash had helped prop up the banks during the financial crisis.

Legalizing drugs would generate some $88 billion a year in savings and tax revenue for U.S. federal and state governments, according to Harvard University economist Jeffrey Miron.

As long as public budgets remained stretched, pressure is likely to grow on governments to regulate the market, said Daniel Okrent, the author of "Last Call - The Rise and Fall of Prohibition," a study of the era of U.S. alcohol prohibition.

"Prohibition ended because of The Depression. The federal government was in desperate need for cash and the country needed jobs," said Okrent. "This and the unwillingness to pay taxes is one of the reasons why there will be legalization."

(Editing by Kieran Murray)


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Mexico president defends attack on organized crime (AP)

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By KATHERINE CORCORAN, Associated Press Katherine Corcoran, Associated Press – Fri?Jun?24, 5:25?am?ET

MEXICO CITY – President Felipe Calderon made an impassioned defense of his military assault on organized crime in an unusual public faceoff Thursday with his biggest critics: sometimes weeping relatives of murder victims who blame the government for the bloodshed.

Poet Javier Sicilia, who lost his son to drug violence in March, opened the publicly televised exchange by demanding that Calderon take the military off the streets and apologize to victims for a failed strategy that he and others say have caused more than 35,000 deaths since Calderon took office in late 2006.

"Where are the benefits of this strategy?" Sicilia asked Calderon, ticking off a list of cases where people have gone unpunished, from drug violence to a 2009 day-care fire that killed 49 children. "You don't have anything to show us, and we are not politicians, we are citizens."

The meeting at Mexico City's historic Chapultepec Castle was emotionally charged, with a mother breaking down in tears as she demanded results into the investigation of her four missing sons, and a relative of two slaying victims of drug traffickers holding back tears while he asked for an update in their case.

Sicilia said that Calderon is "obligated to apologize to the nation and in particular to the victims."

Surrounded by grim-faced top Cabinet members and the first lady, the president pointed his finger and pounded the table to emphasize that with criminal gangs seeking to control Mexico, it would have been irresponsible not to act.

"I agree that we must apologize for not protecting the lives of victims, but not for having acted against the criminals," Calderon said. "One thing I regret is not having sent (the military) before."

Several people have been arrested in the March 28 slaying of Sicilia's son, Juan Francisco Sicilia, a college student who authorities say was in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Calderon repeated what has become the mantra for his administration: that criminals, not the government, are causing the violence. "Francisco was killed by criminals, not federal forces," he said.

While the face-to-face confrontation seemed dramatic, most observers expected little to come of it.

"It's the typical way the Mexican government has worked for decades," said John Ackerman of the legal research institute at Mexico's National Autonomous University. "They're open and willing to talk and have a meeting, but from that to actually taking things into account ... is another thing."

Some saw the public confrontation as benefiting Calderon, giving him a wide audience for his message, while Sicilia's proposals to focus on cleaning up institutions and attacking corruption are things the government says it's already doing.

One of the most concrete demands from his group is for a memorial that names all drug war victims.

"They don't understand the phenomenon of drug trafficking, so they have presented a package of proposals that have nothing to do with public policy," said columnist Raymundo Riva Palacio. "All of their proposals are emotional."

Sicilia has organized what he calls a civil disobedience movement for peace, leading protests in Mexico City and the nearby city of Cuernavaca and a caravan to the violent border city of Ciudad Juarez, where Calderon also had an emotional meeting last year with relatives of youths killed when gunmen burst into a party and opened fire.

Sicilia's movement announced it will send a new protest caravan to Mexico's border with Guatemala.

Previous marches organized by other victims-rights groups in Mexico have drawn more protesters, and violence has only increased.

Calderon gave a frank assessment of what is going on in Mexico: that cartels control some areas of the country, corruption is rampant, judges are paid to let criminals go and local police are in the employ of gangs.

But he said he couldn't wait to clean up institutions before launching an attack.

"If you can stop a crime and you only have stones, then you do it with stones," he said.

Sicily ended his remarks by giving Calderon a scapular he received from a victim's family along one of his marches, calling it "a sign that justice now rests with you."

Calderon agreed to meet with the peace activists in three months, after the two exchanged an awkward hug.

___

Associated Press writer E. Eduardo Castillo contributed to this report.


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Key US role in drug cartel capture: Mexico police (AFP)

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MEXICO CITY (AFP) – US law enforcement agencies aided the capture of the leader of Mexico's notorious La Familia drug cartel, the head of Mexico's national police force said Wednesday.

"The battle against this group was made possible in collaboration with various US agencies, including the US Drug Enforcement Agency," said Federal Police Commissioner Facundo Rosas.

His remarks came a day after Mexican police arrested infamous drug outlaw Jose de Jesus Mendez Varga, 50, who was captured Tuesday thanks to "intensive intelligence work that has been ongoing since the end of May," said Rosas.

Mendez, who hailed from Tepalcatepec in Michoacan state, was seen as the brains behind La Familia, one of Mexico's most violent drug cartels.

Mexican officials said Mendez's arrest has decapitated the feared drug cartel, in what has been hailed here as a major breakthrough in Mexico's ongoing war against the narco-traffickers.

US drug czar Gil Kerlikowske also praised the arrest during a news conference in the Mexican capital.

"This important arrest shows yet again how President Calderon's heroic efforts to directly confront violent criminal elements are leading to real results in disrupting transnational crime," said Kerlikowske.

Ranked among Mexico's seven major drug cartels, La Familia is considered the country's top producer of synthetic drugs and has its stronghold in Mendez's home state of Michoacan.

The cartel came to international prominence in October 2006, when some of its members walked into a bar and rolled five severed heads onto a dance floor.

In another notorious incident, the gang challenged the federal government with a grenade attack in September 2008 that killed eight people during celebrations marking Mexico's independence day.

In July 2009, its members killed 16 police officers, and left 12 of the bodies piled by the side of a road.

The toll in suspected drug-related violence in Mexico has surpassed 37,000 since Calderon launched a military crackdown on organized crime in 2006.

Since 2006, authorities have killed or arrested several top cartel leaders, including Arturo Beltran Leyva, head of the cartel bearing his name, in December 2009; and Gulf cartel chief Ezequiel Cardenas Guillen, alias "Tony Tormenta."

The arrest of Mendez, government security spokesman Alejandro Poire said Tuesday, had "destroyed the remaining command structure" of the Familia cartel.


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The Crusaders of Meth: Mexico's Deadly Knights Templar (Time.com)

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At first, the amateur video shows a normal evening in the seething valley town of Apatzingán, in Mexico's western Michoacán state. But as residents and stall owners mix jovially on the sidewalk, the calm is broken by the sudden, sinister appearance of masked men gripping machine guns mounted on more than 50 pickup trucks, Hummers and Jeeps. The gangsters cruise openly down Apatzingán's main drag, a frightening show of force even by the brutal standards of Mexico's drug-war bloodbath. The propaganda video was sent to media outlets by the newest players in that conflict, the bizarrely named Caballeros Templarios, or the Knights Templar. As the name suggests, these narcos are inspired by the Jerusalem-based crusaders who fought in the name of Christ between 1119 and 1312, when the Pope banned them. But unlike their medieval idols, these thugs cook up methamphetamines, or crystal meth, and have left scores of mutilated corpses strewn about Michoacán since emerging as a group in March.

Anyone who follows Mexico's mayhem, which has resulted in almost 40,000 gangland murders since 2007, will find the news of drug-dealing Christian zealots unsettlingly familiar. The Knights are a breakaway group from the "narco-evangelical" cartel known as La Familia - which burst onto the scene in Michoacán five years ago by throwing five severed heads onto a discotheque dance floor. La Familia's criminal and spiritual leader, Nazario Moreno, alias El Mas Loco, or The Craziest One, even wrote his own "bible" of religious ramblings, which was compulsory reading for his troops. President Felipe Calderón, himself from Michoacán, sent thousands of federal troops to stop the psychopathic gang from unleashing what it called Old Testament justice on everyone from rivals to politicians. In December, federal police allegedly shot Moreno dead; on June 21, police arrested his No. 2, José de Jesús Méndez, alias El Chango, or The Monkey. As The Monkey was paraded before reporters on Wednesday, Mexican police said La Familia had been devastated - a vindication of Calderón's controversial military campaign against the cartels. (See the top 10 notorious Mexican drug lords.)

But the rise of the Knights Templar from the ashes of La Familia shows the fundamental problem of the drug war: whenever one set of bad guys is taken down, another steps up to take their place, largely because Mexico has few if any real investigative police institutions to halt the vicious cycle. The Knights are purportedly headed by an old lieutenant of Moreno, Servando Gómez, a former school teacher from Michoacán's rugged hills, where meth labs abound like hillbilly stills. Mexican police files show that both Moreno and Gómez converted to Evangelical Christianity while migrants in the United States in the 1990s. Returning to Mexico, they found religious discipline was a useful tool to keep criminal troops in line.

Like La Familia, the Knights claim to be pious and patriotic protectors of the Michoacán community even as they traffic and murder. When they first announced themselves last spring, they hung more than 40 narco-manteles, or drug-cartel banners, across the state with a message promising security. "Our commitment is to safeguard order, avoid robberies, kidnapping, extortion and to shield the state from rival organizations," they said. A week later, their first victim was hanged from an overpass with a note claiming he was a kidnapper. (See pictures of a Mexican drug gang's "holy war.")

But they soon began murdering many of their old friends in La Familia cartel. This points up another key problem in Mexico's drug war: when cartel capos are taken down, their lieutenants battle for the crown. Because former cartel mates are often in the same towns and know where each other's homes are, the internecine fights are particularly devastating. On a single day this month, June 9, thugs displayed 21 rival corpses outside the Michoacán capital, Morelia. Two weeks earlier, fighting between Knights and La Familia loyalists was so fierce that about 1,000 people temporarily fled their villages. The photos of refugees in shelters sent an ominous message about Mexico's security situation (although most returned home after a few days).

The Knights Templar appear to be successfully usurping La Familia's turf. As a result, Mexican army and police commanders promise to take the new group down with the same energy they summoned to destroy La Famila. But it's unlikely the Knights will go quietly. In May, their gunmen fired a machine gun at a Mexican federal police helicopter, forcing it to make a controlled landing. Their latest savagery occurred as Mexico opened the under-17 World Soccer Cup in Morelia on June 18. As Mexico's teenagers defeated North Koreas, the Knights left 14 corpses on public display in nearby villages. "This criminal organization used the event as an opportunity to show off and demonstrate they are here," Michoacán Attorney General Jesús Montejano said. (See "Should Mexico Call for a Cease-Fire with Drug Cartels?")

The massacres have rapidly given the Knights Templar a brutal reputation in an already barbaric conflict, in which drug cartels compete to prove who should be most feared. But one group is very miffed about the new gangs's name and fame: the official Knights Templar. The International Order of the Knights Templar is an organization of men inspired by the old crusaders to perform charity work. Roberto Molinari, Prior of the Order of the Knights Templar in Mexico, said the new cartel's appearance is tarnishing his group's name and putting its members in danger. "The authentic Knights Templar have never had any link to criminal activities," Molinari told Mexican media. "The danger is if the criminals hurt someone and their rivals are looking for revenge they might find one of our members and shoot them." Molinari wants the Michoacán counterfeits to "find yourself another name." And a more Christian crusade.

See more pictures of Mexico's drug wars.

See pictures of Mexico's drug tunnels.

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Canada, Australia support Carstens IMF bid (AFP)

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OTTAWA (AFP) – Canada and Australia said that they will support the bid of Mexico's central bank governor Agustin Carstens to be the next IMF managing director.

A statement late Friday from Canadian Finance Minister James Flaherty and Australian Finance Minister Wayne Swan said that the two countries will support the long-shot bid by the 53-year-old Mexican economist, who worked at the International Monetary Fund from 2003 to 2006.

Carstens?s previous experience, which include a stint in the number-three position as the IMF's deputy managing director, "equip him very well to understand and address, on a collaborative and inclusive basis with IMF member countries, the challenges faced by the global economy," the joint statement read.

"Accordingly, after due consideration of the candidates and the IMF selection criteria, we have decided to support him for the position of IMF managing director," read the statement.

Carstens faces stiff competition from French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, seen as the clear frontrunner to succeed managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who resigned May 18 to fight sexual assault charges in New York.

Lagarde has the backing of Europe, which holds seven of the 24 seats on the executive board, and the board hopes to select the new managing director by consensus.

Under a tacit agreement between the United States and Europe, the leadership of the IMF has always gone to a European, while the top job at the World Bank has always gone to an American.

The United States, the largest IMF stakeholder with nearly 17 percent of the vote, has not publicly endorsed either Lagarde or Carstens, considered an emerging-market candidate.

"It is important that the new IMF managing director be selected in an open and transparent process with the candidate chosen on the basis of merit and not nationality," read the Canadian-Australian statement.


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Canada, Australia back Carstens to lead IMF (Reuters)

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OTTAWA (Reuters) – Canada and Australia are backing Mexico's Augustin Carstens to head the International Monetary Fund, they said in a joint statement on Friday in an apparent bid to end Europe's traditional lock on the position.

Carstens, currently central bank governor in Mexico, is competing for the job with French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde.

"Augustin Carstens' previous experience in the IMF, combined with his background as finance minister of Mexico and his current position as governor of the Mexican central bank, equip him very well to understand and address, on a collaborative and inclusive basis with IMF member countries, the challenges faced by the global economy," said a statement by Canada and Australia, released by Ottawa.

"Accordingly, after due consideration of the candidates and the IMF selection criteria, we have decided to support him for the position of IMF managing director."

The two governments said both Carstens and Lagarde were "highly credible" candidates.

(Reporting by Louise Egan; editing by Rob Wilson)


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Attorney charged in child-porn sweep found dead in Mexico (Reuters)

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NEW YORK (Reuters) – A former attorney at the law firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher who was charged along with at least two dozen others in a child-pornography sweep died in Mexico two days after the charges were publicly announced, prosecutors and his family said.

Moshe Gerstein, 35, died on June 16, his family said in an obituary posted on the website of Massachusetts newspaper The Republican.

A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Mexico, Alexander Featherstone, confirmed that Gerstein died in Mexico City, after Above The Law, a legal-gossip website, initially reported it.

"Our consular officials are aware of the death and have been assisting the family," Featherstone said.

The cause of death was not immediately clear.

Gerstein attended Yale University and graduated from Harvard Law School in 2001. He worked as an associate at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom before moving to Gibson Dunn, where he specialized in corporate transactions, according to a profile of him on the firm's website. The profile was taken down shortly after the charges were announced on June 14.

Gerstein was first arrested on May 10 and was freed on $5,000 bail, Manhattan district attorney spokeswoman Erin Duggan said.

Charges against him were formally dropped on Wednesday at a hearing in Manhattan criminal court, Duggan said, after his death was confirmed.

A lawyer who had been representing Gerstein, Steven Kartagener, was not immediately available to comment.

"This is a tragedy for his family, and we extend our condolences," Gibson Dunn said in a statement.

Manhattan prosecutors had accused Gerstein of being a part of a child-pornography ring that shared images of children being raped and sexually abused.

Funeral services are being held Friday in Springfield, Massachusetts.

(Reporting by Basil Katz, Leigh Jones and Noeleen Walder)


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Mexico demands probe in migrant killed by US agent (AP)

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SAN DIEGO – Mexican President Felipe Calderon on Wednesday condemned a Border Patrol agent's fatal shooting of a Mexican man who allegedly struck another agent with a nail-studded post. The union representing agents called the triggerman a hero.

The victim was shot once after he hit the agent in the head with the nail-studded piece of wood that was about 3 feet long and resembled a table leg, said San Diego police Lt. Ernie Herbert. He was about to throw a rock when the other agent fired.

The victim fell on the Mexican side of the fence near San Diego's San Ysidro border crossing, where he died Tuesday night, Herbert said.

Mexican authorities identified the victim as Jose Alfredo Yanez, 40, of Tijuana. Heriberto Garcia, the Baja California state human rights ombudsman, said Yanez worked at a towing company and had a young child with his 18-year-old girlfriend, who is five months' pregnant with their second child.

No Border Patrol agents were seriously hurt.

Calderon wrote on Twitter that he discussed the killing with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at a meeting of regional leaders in Guatemala City.

"I demanded punishment for the guilty," he wrote.

Mexico's Foreign Relations Department urged U.S. authorities to swiftly investigate and questioned the "use of firearms to repel an attack with stones."

The union that represents Border Patrol agents defended the killing. Shawn Moran, a spokesman for the National Border Patrol Council, said the agent likely saved his colleague's life or spared him serious injury. The triggerman has been an agent for three years.

"The guy's a hero," said Moran. "He's a relatively junior agent, but he showed great poise in dealing with a really bad situation."

San Diego police are leading the investigation. They did not release names of the victim or the agents.

Three men climbed over the fence or went through an opening and confronted two agents, Herbert said. Two men fled back to Mexico, while the third man wrestled with one of the agents.

One of the men who fled climbed atop the fence and hurled objects at the agent who was wrestling, leading the other agent to fire his pistol, Herbert said. Authorities arrested the 44-year-old man who was wrestling; his name was not released.

Border Patrol agents in San Diego have long been pelted with rocks and other objects by people on Mexican soil, fueling occasional tensions between U.S. and Mexican authorities about how the Border Patrol should respond.

The American Civil Liberties Union of San Diego and Imperial Counties questioned the latest killing.

"We simply cannot allow our law enforcement agents to use lethal force when confronted with rock throwers," said Kevin Keenan, the group's executive director.


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Arizona sheriff blames Mexican smugglers some fires (Reuters)

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PALOMINAS, Ariz (Reuters) – Two Arizona wildfires that have scorched a quarter-million acres combined and destroyed dozens of homes just north of the U.S.-Mexico border were probably started by Mexican smugglers, the Cochise County sheriff said on Tuesday.

The remarks by Sheriff Larry Dever are likely to add to the furor sparked by Arizona Senator John McCain when he suggested that illegal immigrants were to blame for some of the massive wildfires raging out of control in the state.

The latest of those, the so-called Monument Fire, erupted a week ago at the Coronado National Memorial and spread quickly into the adjacent national forest. It roared through the steep slopes and rugged canyons of the Huachuca Mountains before breaking out into ranch lands and populated areas over the weekend.

A separate blaze in southeastern Arizona known as the Horseshoe 2 Fire has blackened some 223,000 acres and destroyed or damaged nine dwellings since it began May 8, though it is now listed as 90 percent contained.

Cochise Sheriff Dever told reporters the Monument Fire was "man-caused" and started in an area near the border fence that is closed to visitors and known to law enforcement for "high-intensity, drug- and human-trafficking."

"It wasn't the rabbits or the rattle snakes that started this fire, it was human beings, and the only human beings believed to be occupying (the area) were smugglers," he said during a news conference.

Dever said traffickers intentionally light fires to use as signals, to keep themselves warm and as diversions "to keep ... law enforcement off their backs." He added that the Horseshoe 2 Fire was likely sparked in the same way.

Federal officials stressed, however, that origins of the Monument and Horseshoe 2 fires remains under investigation.

Any statements at this point about a cause "would be speculation," said John Morlock, acting National Park Service administrator for the Monument Fire.

He told Reuters that while the grounds of the Coronado Memorial where the Monument Fire began were closed to the public due to extreme fire danger at the time, a road that runs through that 4,700-acre park was open to traffic.

Dever's statements appeared to give credence to statements McCain made on Saturday citing "substantial evidence that some of these fires have been caused by people who have crossed our border illegally."

The Arizona Republican and former presidential candidate made that comment at a news conference after paying a visit to the site of a third, larger blaze farther north in Arizona, the Wallow Fire in the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest.

Some critics have accused McCain of trying to single out illegal immigrants as scapegoats before the cause of the fires had been officially determined.

But Dever told Reuters, "I wouldn't take issue with the senator at all. In fact, I would support absolutely what he is suggesting."

The Monument fire has gutted at least 62 homes and a number of businesses, and an estimated 11,000 people were forced to flee at the peak of the fire threat in an area southeast of the town of Sierra Vista, Arizona. About 27,000 acres have burned in all.

Diminished winds since Monday have helped firefighters make headway against the flames, and by Tuesday ground crews had managed to carve containment lines around 40 percent of the fire's perimeter. But much of the Monument Fire continues to burn in remote terrain inaccessible to ground crews.

Federal fire authorities have said they suspect that an unattended campfire touched off the Wallow Fire, which has burned over 800 square miles and ranks as the largest ever in Arizona. Two "persons of interest" have been questioned by investigators, but they have not been identified, and no charges have been filed.

In response to McCain's remarks, a U.S. Forest Service spokesman was quoted by ABC News as saying there was no evidence to suggest illegal immigrants were to blame,

McCain has stood by his statement, saying he was speaking generally about "some" of the Arizona fires, not the Wallow Fire specifically.

On Monday, McCain, fellow Arizona Senator Jon Kyl and two Arizona congressmen, U.S. Representatives Jeff Flake and Paul Gosar, issued a joint statement saying that a Forest Service official who briefed them during their Wallow Fire visit told them that "some wildfires in Arizona are regrettably caused by drug smugglers and illegal immigrants."

(Additional reporting and writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Greg McCune)


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Arrest in Mexico in 1982 murder of 2 Calif. girls (AP)

在 ServiceModel 客户端配置部分中,找不到引用协定“TranslatorService.LanguageService”的默认终结点元素。这可能是因为未找到应用程序的配置文件,或者是因为客户端元素中找不到与此协定匹配的终结点元素。
在 ServiceModel 客户端配置部分中,找不到引用协定“TranslatorService.LanguageService”的默认终结点元素。这可能是因为未找到应用程序的配置文件,或者是因为客户端元素中找不到与此协定匹配的终结点元素。

STOCKTON, Calif. – A man wanted in the 1982 rape and murder of two California girls was captured in Mexico after nearly three decades on the lam in a case that already has sent one man to death row, authorities said.

FBI agents and Mexican federal police arrested Alfredo Reyes, 51, on May 27 outside a pool hall in Tijuana, where he had been living under an alias, the Record of Stockton reported Friday.

Investigators say 13-year-olds Renee Rontal and Nancy Rubia were out looking for fun on a popular cruising strip in Stockton when they were picked up by a 22-year-old Reyes and 21-year-old Antonio Espinoza on the night of Jan. 25, 1982.

"These girls were in and out of cars all night long," Elbert Holman, a retired sheriff's detective who led the initial investigation, told The Record. "They got into the wrong car."

The next day, a farmworker found Renee in a ditch outside town with her throat cut. Nancy was found nearby face down in shallow water, and an autopsy concluded that she died from drowning in the muddy water. Both girls had been beaten and raped, according to court documents.

Espinoza was arrested a year and a half after the killing and was convicted of murder. He is now on California's death row.

San Joaquin County prosecutors say they're negotiating with Mexican officials to extradite Reyes back to Stockton to face charges. They already have agreed not to seek the death penalty for Reyes as one condition of extradition, Chief Deputy District Attorney Ron Freitas told The Record.

"We're very optimistic that he will be tried in a San Joaquin County court and be held accountable, as he should be," Freitas said.

Renee's brother, Joseph Rontal, said he is looking forward to finally seeing Reyes in a courtroom.

"I know throughout the years this man was running," Rontal, 44, told The Record. "He didn't have a conscience. It's time for him to be put away, man."

___

Information from: The Record, http://www.recordnet.com/


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