Pubdate: Sat, 24 Apr 2010
Source: El Paso Times (TX)
Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times
Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/formnewsroom
Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829
Author: Aileen B. Flores
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Juarez

8 DIE IN JUAREZ SHOOTOUT

Attack Is Considered Retaliation for Arrests

Six federal agents, a female police officer and a man died in Juarez 
on Friday in a large-scale shootout in broad daylight -- an attack 
authorities described as an ambush in retaliation for arrests made Thursday.

The ambush was one of the largest fatal attacks on law enforcement 
officers since a drug war began in the city in 2008.

About noon, federal and municipal police vehicles were patrolling the 
Bosques de Salvarcar neighborhood in south Juarez when a street 
vendor at the intersection of Durango and Santiago Troncoso Avenues 
asked for help.

When the officers stopped to assist, a group of armed men arrived in 
several vehicles, opened fire and killed five federal agents and the 
police officer.

Officials said the agents tried to fight off the attack and fired 
their weapons at the attackers. In all, more than 300 shots were 
fired, officials said.

Chihuahua state police said three other people were wounded, 
including a federal agent who died five hours later at a hospital.

Federal officials said at least one hit man was wounded, but he and 
the others fled. It's not known how many attackers were involved in 
the ambush, a tactic that rarely takes place at such a large scale.

According to a state police preliminary investigation, at least three 
types of weapons were used in the attack, including AK-47s, other 
high-powered rifles and 9 mm handguns.

Federal agents were able to find two vehicles used by the gunmen in 
the shooting, but no arrests were reported late Friday.

Municipal police spokesman Jacinto Segura said the local officer 
killed was Ana Gustina Nevares Soto, 22, who joined the force in August.

Segura said Nevares Soto was a member of the Benito Juarez municipal 
police command in south Juarez.

The federal agents killed were Romenio Velazquez Chavez, Pedro 
Balderas Gonzalez, Juan Garcia Sanchez, Ulises Garcia Martinez, 
Israel Alejandro Carbajal Cornejo and Jose Rivera Chavarria.

The other man who was killed was identified Gabriel Ornelas Sotelo, 
between 25 and 30 years old. It's not known whether he was involved 
in the shooting or was a bystander.

Mexican federal police spokes man Jose Salinas said authorities think 
the attack was a retaliation for the arrests of eight people Thursday.

Police on Thursday arrested five men and three women on suspicion of 
possession of drugs and high-caliber weapons.

Arrested were Jose Alfredo "Chito" Amaro Campos, 37, Alan Joseph Mena 
Martinez, 18, Carmen Patricia Ayala Chavez, 18, and five minors.

"This (attack) is in response to the blows we have delivered," Salinas said.

After Friday's attack, Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz, said authorities will 
be more careful in the way they operate.

Reyes Ferriz gave orders to the secretary of public safety to 
increase the number of federal and municipal officers working 
together when patrolling.

The number of units -- vehicles that have from two to eight officers 
- -- will increase from two to at least three when they are on patrol, he said.

"We will not stop working and won't let this type of attack affect 
the police work we're carrying out. However, we have to take 
precautions to make sure federal and municipal police are safe while 
patrolling the streets," Reyes Ferriz said.

He said the city is patrolled by 8,000 police officers -- 5,000 
federal and 3,000 municipal. Law enforcement officers have been 
killed in the past while on patrol, going to work or after their 
shift, but not in numbers as large as in the ambush on Friday.

The city has been under a cloud of violence since Jan. 2008 when war 
broke out between the Juarez and the Sinaloa drug cartels. Since 
then, nearly 5,000 have been killed in an near Juarez. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake