I have an interesting footnote to this story. This is another example how things operate in Mexico. A close friend called me up one night and told me that his nephew was in the Tijuana jail and if I would go down with him to help get his nephew out of the slammer. My friend figured I knew my way around down there and could speak the language. My friend said he wasn't told why his nephew was in jail. My friend wasn't allowed to speak with his nephew.dagosd2000 wrote:Day Of The Dead
I read where they killed the brother of Julio Cesar Chavez. Bandits broke into the back of the home of Rafael Chavez in Culiacan,Sinaloa and demanded money. Rafael Chavez gave one of the robbers money,but it appears that the amount didn't satisfy the thieves. They demanded more, and when Rafael resisted,he was shot three times in the head. He was murdered in front of his family.This information was gleaned from the police report in Culiacan,the hometown of the Chavez family.Rafael Chavez ran a clinic in Culiacan for drug and alcohol abusers.The clinic serves around 250 addicts.Julio Cesar Chavez said that everyone knew that his brother was dedicated to helping people suffering from substance problems.Julio Cesar Chavez has battled with drug and alcohol abuse during his life.
Julio Cesar Chavez has now been informed by the FBI that there are individuals in Mexico who are threatening to kidnap him and his daughter. This information was relayed to the FBI by government officials in Tijuana.Chavez says he has made overtures to Mexican state authorities,but the responses have been inconclusive. They have told Chavez that one of the men who made the threats was recently released from prison.Chavez says that he is being virtually "ignored" by the Mexican government.He is angry and upset and afraid.
This story may or may not shock the reader.As far as I'm concerned it does not make me gasp for breath. We all know that Julio Cesar Chavez was Mexico's greatest boxing icon. That means something to some people,but to the ruthless, it says that Chavez and his family are targets.Being a hero in Mexico doesn't insure that you'll walk the streets with adulation. With fame and glory, wealth accompanies,and that will necessitate to looking over your shoulder.It will also require employment of an entourage of bodyguards.
The famous ranchera singer Vicente Fernandez had to finally relocate to San Antonio ,Texas to escape the wrath of the monsters who had kidnapped his son,Vicente Jr. He was held captive for four months. The kidnappers chopped off two of the son's finger.The ransom was paid.Fortunately, they released the son,but the father then gathered his clan and moved to the United States.
Adrian Gonzalez who now plays first base for the Los Angeles Dodgers ,had to take similar action to protect his family. Gonzalez grew up in Tijuana,but wanted to play high school ball in San Diego.He knew that he had the goods to get drafted into the Majors.A fellow teacher and friend of mine in the district by the name of Dave Gonzalez coached the baseball team at Eastlake high School in Chula Vista.Adrian played on that CIF Championship team. He was drafted by the Padres for the big money. Coach Gonzalez told me that when Adrian signed his contract,the cartels in Tijuana were making threatening phone calls . KIdnapping for ransom money was the message. Adrian had to relocate his family north.
There are very wealthy people living in Mexico.So what goes on with them?They pay and they pay big time to the cartels for protection.They also travel surrounded by bodyguards.When they have to be driven somewhere,the bulletproof vehicles are fortified by men with automatic weapons and shotguns. Sometimes I'll drive through a rich neighborhood in Tijuana and I can always tell where someone lives who needs to be on his guard.A half dozen or so button men carrying AR 15's stand outside the door.Carlos Slim,not only the richest man in Mexico but in the world,has to bend to this kind of lifestyle.
I've often heard that Mexico "needs a revolution."Well,they had one. It was a covert, slow work in progress,but they had one.It used to be that the Spaniards,the aristocrats,the old political families,the highly educated,and the wealthy businessmen controlled the fortunes on Mexico.On the surface it may still seem that way,but in reality it's a country ruled by the cartels.And now they fight between themselves to be the boss. There will never be just one cartlel that runs things. There'll always be wars going on for that power.The killings will never cease.
So who are the men that compose these gangs?They weren't elitists.They were never the chosen few. They were born in abject poverty at the lowest rungs of the Mexican social strata. They lived in broken homes rife with violence and abuse. They walked on dirt floors.They had no money.From their environment they learned violence.I'll use the cliché "law of the jungle" to make my analogy. They seperated themselves from their fellow downtrodden with a sociopathic tenacity that was the only way to rid themselves from despair.The Chapos,the Quinteros,the ex cops who were run out for overstepping their authority.The ones who were once on the bottom are now at the mountain top and that mountain is a volcano. They've moved in on law enforcement and the politicos. Their bedrock was controlling the drugs. Now they control everything:big business,politics,the entertainment industry,tourism. They even have their "own' music bands that glorify them in song.Patron saints are blessed by the church to protect them.It's a way of life now that the country learns to live with. It's fruitless to worry about it unless you're in a situation like Julio Cesar Chavez.Just leave well enough alone.
What's sad about all this is that the guys running the show now ,who have that history of what it was like to have nothing, are now in a position to straighten things out,but they won't.Oh,they may build a bridge in town or a little park here and there,but that's mostly wind and smoke.A night club with glamorous women and plenty of action is more to their liking.
Julio Cesar Chavez wants action to find the culprits and havethem pay the penalty for his brother's death.To make it look good, they may arrest someone,perhaps some patsy who they say did the shooting .It's really out of Julio Cesar Chavez's hands. His fame will only work against him.
The day of The Dead in celebrated on November 1st in Mexico.All the adult spirits come to the cemetery to visit their families. The families will put on the graves what their beloved deceased cherished the most in life .I'm sure Julio Cesar Chavez , with his family,will be at his brother's gravesite. I don't know what they'll put there.Probably something simple.Something innocent maybe that reflected the heart of a brother whose mission in life was to help people.
http://imgur.com/fEPGm7k
Julio Cesar Chavez
We drove down to the old Tijuana jail on 8th Street. Tijuaneros referred to the jail as "Calle Ocho." When we got to talk to the captain he had told us that the kid was arrested for having a" weapon." My friend asked what was the weapon. The "weapon "turned out to be a bullet. Later,after we finally got the kid out,the kid told us that he kept a bullet on the the dashboard of his car. It was used as a paperweight.The nephew said he left his car parked on the street.Evidently, a cop saw the bullet on the dashboard.He waited for the kid to return to the car and then arrested him.
Guns and ammo are strictly taboo in Mexico. I've never seen a gun store in Mexico. The penalty for having an illegal firearm is very severe.The police captain said that my friend's nephew was no longer at the Tijuana jail. He had been transferred to the police station in the Rio.However, in order to proceed to get the kid's release, we had to pay the captain a thousand dollars.With this problem facing us, we returned to San Diego,went to the bank the next morning ,and my friend withdrew a thousand dollars from his savings.We returned to the Tijuana jail and paid the captain the thousand. We expected to see the kid and get his release. But the captain said we would have to go to the station in the Rio to get him freed.The kid was supposed to be locked up there.
We went to the jail in the Rio and had to speak with another captain. Well,do I need to go on any further? We got the same scenario from this guy. Your nephew ain't here and in order to go on blah blah...another grand. Back to San Diego. This time I told my friend to close out his savings account.We went back,were told to go to another station because the kid was there not here.This went on for two more trips to different police atations with the same "bite" put on us by two more of Tijuana's finest.
I guess they figure that they couldn't get anymore blood from the rock and finally gave the kid his walking papers. In total,it cost my fiend his life savings...6 G's.Oh,and by the way,the cops never gave the kid's car back
http://imgur.com/kaOJFNw
The old Tijuana jail. Torn down around ten years ago.