Pubdate: Sun, 06 Mar 2011
Source: El Paso Times (TX)
Copyright: 2011 El Paso Times
Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/townhall/ci_14227323
Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829
Author: Adriana Gomez Licon

Fighting Back

To Avoid Falling Victim of a Vicious Drug War, Some Resort to Taking Up Arms

NUEVO CASAS GRANDES, Mexico -- On the ranch lands near the U.S.
border, people no longer take security for granted and have turned to
weapons to stave off drug thugs.

Teachers, ranchers, town officials, business owners and lawyers in
rural towns of northwest Chihuahua near New Mexico have armed themselves.

Legal or not, they are ready to use their guns for
protection.

In a country caught in the clutches of a vicious drug war, people have
decided it's better to fight than to fall victim to the violence,
which has claimed about 35,000 people nationally.

It is estimated that 15.5 million weapons -- including small-caliber
handguns, shotguns and semiautomatic rifles -- are owned by residents
of Mexico while the army and the police have just under 1 million
weapons at their disposal, according to a organization in Australia
that tracks weapons worldwide.

Fed up with chronic violence, some Mexican residents might be ready to
push their government to make weapons more easily available.

"I don't go around without my gun anymore," said an official in a
nearby town. In November, gunmen shot him in the chest as he drove
along a highway. Because of the small size of his town, he did not
want to be identified.

The man keeps a pistol in a drawer at his office and another in his
truck's glove compartment. In January, the government issued him a
license to carry a loaded .45-caliber gun.

Many others share the town official's fear.

Life in areas southwest of Juarez has been cruel in the past two
years. Besides slayings, a string of extortions, kidnappings and armed
invasions of businesses and homes have taken them by surprise, many
said. Fearful, these residents said they can't just sit and watch
while criminals attack callously.

Guns are necessary, they said.

Having weapons for self-defense is a familiar concept for the United
States.

But in Mexico, it is close to impossible to obtain a permit to carry a
gun. People need a license just to own any firearm. The process is
burdensome. The punishment for illegal possession is severe, including
prison terms of up to seven years.

The only lawful gun store is in Mexico City, far from these towns east
of the Sierra Madre.

"You can have a gun only when it is not classified exclusively for the
use of the military and when it is registered," said Gustavo Nevarez,
an attorney in Nuevo Casas Grandes. "Nobody registers them, though."

Less than one-third of the guns owned by Mexican people are
registered, according to Gun Policy, an organization at the University
of Sydney in Australia that gathers guns statistics and facts across
the world.

The agency that keeps the gun registry is the Mexican military, which
also holds a monopoly on gun sales and manages the sole store.

Military officials in Mexico City did not respond to a request for an
interview.

The army conducts criminal background and psychological tests before
anyone buys or registers guns. For a gun license, a person must
provide the military with a dozen documents to show a source of
legitimate income and a genuine reason for wanting to have a weapon,
such as hunting or personal protection.

For a person to carry a concealed gun, the Mexican army issues an
annual permit.

However, many of those interviewed said that only affluent people or
politicians can obtain such permits because they can afford them and
can bribe their way into acquiring one. Some residents in nearby
Colonia LeBaron said they paid as much as $10,000 to get a permit.

It was not always that way.

Initially, Article 10 of the Mexican Constitution of 1857 allowed
people to have and bear guns.

As the Mexican Revolution was coming to an end, the Mexican government
passed a new constitution in 1917. The same article no longer
guaranteed the right to bear arms. It also prohibited civilians from
having army weapons.

"It was partly intended to reduce the number of rebellions," said
David Shirk, the director of the University of San Diego's
Trans-Border Institute, who specializes in Mexican politics.

Almost a century later, Mexico's challenges are heavily armed drug
cartels with weapons, many of which are smuggled from the U.S. In
2008, homicide rates began to skyrocket -- especially in cities like
Juarez, where about 7,800 people have been killed in the past two
years in a turf war between the Juarez and Sinaloa drug cartels.

It is a reality that Alex LeBaron, a state representative in
northwestern Chihuahua, wants the government to confront. Domestic gun
laws have remained a taboo subject among Mexican politicians for decades.

LeBaron believes times have changed, and he wants Mexico to revisit
gun politics.

"The right to bear arms is an important matter we shouldn't be afraid
to discuss," LeBaron said. "People are armed in their homes. This is
not a secret."

The eight municipalities LeBaron represents surround Juarez and have
been hit hard by cartel violence.

"People won't allow more kidnappings," he said. "They are determined
to defend themselves."

LeBaron was raised in Colonia LeBaron, a polygamous community of
breakaway Mormons, settled in the 1940s in the municipality of
Galeana. He does not practice the religion and has married only once.

LeBaron identifies with the U.S. Constitution's 2nd Amendment, which
gives people the right to keep and bear arms. His English is flawless.

He served four years in the U.S. Navy, went to Roswell's New Mexico
Military Institute to get his high-school education and received his
bachelor's degree in international business from New Mexico State
University in Las Cruces.

"We should let the criminals know that every citizen has a right to
bear arms," he said.

Other signs that show Mexican people are becoming more gun-friendly
are web forums on gun rights and shooting clubs.

Web forums such as Armed Mexico advise people who have been victims of
recent attacks to purchase guns by joining shooting clubs. Shooting
clubs have surged in farming towns in northern Mexico.

 From a two-way road that connects Nuevo Casas Grandes to the LeBaron
colony, white letters painted on a desert hill read Club Paquime,
where a rifle club meets weekly.

Another rifle club is forming in Galeana, where former mayor Vern
Ariel Ray lives in fear.

"Yes, we want target practice but deep inside, we all know that we
want that gun for protection," Ray said.

Ray, who was mayor from 2007 to 2010, said he was threatened after
gunmen chased two of his sons home in early 2009. The men opened fire,
but his sons were not injured. Then Galeana's police chief told him he
was receiving calls that "the mayor was next." In November 2008,
gunmen had killed Miguel Angel Mota Ayala, the previous police chief.

Ray, who has dual nationality, took his family to the United States
and came back, changed his address and governed while in hiding for
six months.

Now Ray, owner of a hotel, impatiently awaits for the new shooting
club to start.

Inside the Galeana district, many fundamentalist Mormons who raise
cattle and grow fruits are armed in the LeBaron colony.

English is the language of choice for most ranchers who have dual
nationalities. The men work in the United States finishing drywall to
bring money back home to buy land.

A history of violence runs in the LeBaron family, stretching back
several decades.

Today, the LeBarons are no strangers to the wave of extortions,
kidnappings and murders.

Alex LeBaron's father, Daniel Dayer LeBaron, was killed in 2005 in a
carjacking attempt in Santa Ana, a city 60 miles south of the Arizona
border in Sonora.
More recently, two of Alex LeBaron's cousins were victims of narco
attacks.

In May 2009, Eric LeBaron, then 16, was kidnapped and released eight
days later after the community mobilized to protest in Chihuahua City.

In July 2009, gunmen killed Eric LeBaron's brother, Benjamin LeBaron,
who had become a leader in the protests. Another villager, Luis
Widmar, was killed in the same attack.

"What happened to Benjamin and Luis was a revealing moment for me,"
said Alex LeBaron, as his eyes watered.

The killings prompted the townsfolk to go on a gun shopping spree,
said Alex LeBaron.

For the most part, colony residents have been quick on the
trigger.

In October 2009, a 10-minute gunbattle erupted between the LeBarons
and the Mexican army.

Soldiers arrived at Alex LeBaron's house while his family was having a
party. Not knowing who the soldiers were, the LeBarons prepared their
AR-15 rifles and .44-caliber Magnum revolvers to defend themselves. A
member of the LeBarons shot into the air, the soldiers began firing
right away, and the ranchers shot back.

A soldier was killed, another one was injured and two of Alex
LeBaron's brothers were taken to jail and charged with murder and
illegal possession of weapons. A federal judge dismissed the charges
because it appeared the Mexican Army had tampered with evidence, Alex
LeBaron said. He said he did not fire his gun in the shoot-out.

Colony residents have other ways of defending themselves.

On a recent day, Nefi LeBaron, uncle of Alex, Eric and Benjamin, drove
his truck up the rocky, zigzagging path to the top of a mountain in
the colony.

The view is striking. Pecan orchards are divided by dirt roads that
wind toward the Sierra Madre outlined against the bright blue sky. An
occasional eagle screeches.

At the top of the mountain, the LeBarons built a wooden hut to watch
for suspicious visitors. Alternating shifts, the LeBarons guard their
colony with night-vision binoculars and two-way radios. Their
community police force was formed after the 2009 murders of Widmar and
Benjamin LeBaron.

"We created a working strategy," Nefi LeBaron said.

Perhaps the LeBarons' U.S. origins give this community a pro-gun
mindset.

Brent LeBaron, is critical of the Mexican gun laws, as is his cousin,
the politician Alex LeBaron.

"The bad guys will think twice about attacking a civilian who they
know has the right to bear arms," Brent LeBaron said.

Not so far away from the colony, other people are breaking gun laws to
protect their homes.

The town of Ascension formed a vigilante group after an angry mob
mobilized to beat two 17-year-old boys to death in September.

Police said the boys had kidnapped a 17-year-old girl from a
restaurant. Abductions had become as frequent as three times a week in
the town of 9,000.

One of the members of the group opened a dresser drawer where he hides
two handguns. The man, a rancher, did not want his family to be identified.

He took out a silver .38-caliber Colt gun. He also keeps a 9mm
handgun, which the government prohibits.

"Now my wife knows how to use them," he said of his wife, an
elementary school teacher.

The man also pulled out a shotgun from under the couple's
bed.

"Here, it's like the Wild West. The one who doesn't have a gun is
against the norm," he said. "Even the priest keeps a pistol."

The schoolteacher still lives terrified by an attack her daughter
suffered. Her body tenses up when she shares the story.

Her daughter, who now goes to school in El Paso, managed to escape a
group of criminals who were chasing her and pushing her car off the
highway a week before the September killings.

Months after their daughter's close call and the killings of the
alleged kidnappers, the parents said they feel more secure.

While people are buying guns and ammunition for self-protection near
the U.S. border, tracking these weapons' origins is not a priority for
the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The
agency has been tracing arms recovered from crime scenes in Mexico.
The focus has been to stop the flow of arms from U.S. gun dealers to
Mexican drug dealers.

"What we try to do is prevent guns from falling into the cartels'
hands," said Tom Crowley, a spokesman for ATF's Dallas region.

Reports by Stratfor, a global intelligence company based in Austin,
have documented that cartels are not the only ones interested in
high-caliber weapons now, and northwest Chihuahua is not the only
place with a demand.

"I met people and talked to people in different places in cities like
Torreon, border cities like Juarez, even in Mexico City who are arming
themselves because of fear," said Scott Stewart, Stratfor's vice
president for tactical intelligence.

Stewart said that for a long time northern Mexico has had a gun
culture similar to Texas and Arizona, where ranchers protect their
property from trespassers. But drug violence has changed the feelings
of gun owners in Mexico.

"You have your cowboys; you have the hunters," he said. "Recently
people have become very scared. It's ordinary people -- business people."

It is not clear whether this trend will yield a change in gun
policies.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon has focused on pressuring the U.S.
government to stem the flow of firearms south of the border.

Alex LeBaron said Chihuahua's congress may challenge the federal
government by proposing changes in gun laws in the near future.

"I have been talking to representatives. There are several of us who
are interested in this," he said.

Analysts, political scientists and lawyers said they doubt gun laws
will change in Mexico soon.

"I don't think they have to change the gun laws," Trans-Border
Institute's Shirk said. "It is simply a question of how much the
government wants to facilitate the access to guns."

Shirk said there is no evidence that honest citizens carrying guns
would bring down crime in Mexico.

The recent tale of a resident in the border town of Palomas
illustrated what happened to one person who used a gun to defend
himself and his family.

When Alvaro Sandoval, 50, saw four gunmen about to break into his home
on an early Sunday morning in January, he stood right by the door. The
men knocked the door down, and Sandoval opened fire with his
.380-caliber handgun. Sandoval killed three men. The fourth escaped.

It was a story of courage for about a week -- how a man stood his
ground against four heavily armed criminals to protect his wife and
young daughter. Two weeks later, other gunmen went back and killed
Sandoval. This time, his wife, Griselda Pedroza, 35, attempted to
repel the attack with a 9mm handgun and died while trying. 
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