Saturday, March 18, 2023

HAS SITUATION CHANGED IN MATA? QUESTIONS ON KIDNAPPING


By Jack Herrera
Texas Monthly

For the thousands of travelers who cross into Matamoros, Mexico, from Brownsville every day, the commute across the border requires a practiced vigilance. Since the days of Mexican bootleggers tunneling whiskey into Prohibition-era Texas, gangs in Matamoros have vied for control of cross-border contraband routes. 

Their battles are unpredictable and brutal, and, for those who travel to the city, the trick to stay safe has come down to a simple maxim: don’t be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Mexicans who live there summarize this same guidance in a different way: no seas estupido. (Don’t be stupid.) 

The most important rule is to cross the border during the day: northern neighborhoods, right along the wall, can get rough at night, but are typically safe in the midst of bustling traffic. Other rules range from the obvious – avoid flashing expensive watches or bags, and avoid driving a car with foreign plates or plates from a different Mexican state – to the more unique – don’t wear shorts, as locals don’t wear shorts.

For the past few years, this approach has worked in Matamoros, even as its home state of Tamaulipas has endured some of the worst violence in the hemisphere, as heavily armed factions of the balkanized Gulf Cartel battle for supremacy over various cities. 

In Reynosa, just up the Rio Grande from Matamoros and across the river from McAllen, many aid workers now avoid crossing altogether. However, Matamoros has enjoyed relative calm. It’s one of the few border cities where the U.S. State Department permits its employees to work. Every day, hundreds of Texan border residents cross into the city to visit family, get health care, or just grab a meal; thousands more cross the other direction, on a daily commute to work.

For fronterizos living on both sides of the border, however, assumptions that there were rules one could follow to improve safety were shattered on March 3. A group of four U.S. citizens, who said they were traveling from South Carolina for cheaper cosmetic surgery in Mexico, crossed the border in a white minivan just after 9 a.m. 
Moments after they got into Matamoros, in broad daylight and in full view of border traffic and cameras, a pickup truck rammed into their car, and masked men began to open fire. The armed men picked up the limp bodies of the minivan’s injured passengers, dragged them across the road, and tossed them into the bed of the pickup truck.

Everything about the kidnapping looked unusual. While murder and kidnappings are not uncommon in Matamoros, they’ve typically remained isolated to certain neighborhoods, much like crime in U.S. cities: violence is often committed among networks of perpetrators and victims who know each other. 

The incident on March 3, however, broke all the rules that cross-border travelers rely on to stay safe, and defied the assumption of some that U.S. citizens had little to fear.

A president of a private security company who has lived and worked in northern Mexico for more than a decade and requested anonymity to avoid alienating prospective Mexican clients, explained how strange the attack was. He said that, despite what you see in the movies, the cartels typically “don’t just go around open firing on random people.” 

In general, the only time they’ll risk a daylight balacera is when they’re fighting cops or rival cartels. And, typically, when cartels do injure someone, they don’t take them hostage where they’ll require nursing and an armed guard. Yet the attackers in Matamoros loaded the injured into their truck.

Perhaps the most unusual aspect of the kidnapping, however, was the prompt law enforcement response to it. In Matamoros, Mexican police acted with uncommon alacrity and arrested multiple suspects. Within days, two survivors were found in a shack, not far from the Gulf Coast; the other two
had died from their injuries. Mexican authorities soon came across another crime scene, discovering a group of five suspected gang members, bound apparently by their own comrades, dumped in the street with a note from one of Matamoros’s major gangs apologizing for the attack on U.S. citizens.

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

Says
Reset
Cash

Anonymous said...

All these "dual" citizens crossing the border
Let's see what your "dual" country does for you when you go missing

I pledge allegiance....
Means you are a US citizen!

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2023/03/american-woman-kidnapped-in-colima-fbi.html?m=1

Anonymous said...

So, Jan, this is NOT a news site? Just an "informal" laundromat bulletin board for uneducated, pig-bellied Mexicans?

This post looks like news to me.


dare to be great.

(And why are you not writing these "border" reports?)


ja ja ja


Anonymous said...

Let's get some firsthand news coverage of Mata! It's lawless and reporting from there is damned scarce. Does Monty still have the reporting chops, or is he just another lame-ass Barton?

Get over there!


Anonymous said...

A esos negritos los mando Hunter Biden con su laptop. Aqui ay gato escondido. We are not being informed on what went down behind the scenes. I hate to write this but some people deserve to die. If you live the thug life, you can be brown, yellow, red, white, or black, just how do you think you are going to die? All of these individuals had and have a rap sheet as long as a skunk's stench.

Thug = Muerte de Perro

Anonymous said...

Y el Mexicano, in this case el cartel, siempre pidiendo disculpa. How many bets that Trump would not have apologize? An I right or am I right.

Anonymous said...

March 18, 2023 at 8:36 AM
cracker face hillbilly barfly this is a blog not a newspaper, stupid juicer drug addict gringo/coco/hillbilly. Go back to your zombie city cracker face idiota. Rednecks have two pig bellies one for drugs and the other for alcohol.
So what are you doing here coco mamon if its not for whitey?
Idiota want news, buy a newpaper tight wat cracker face.

Anonymous said...

March 18, 2023 at 11:25 AM
Pendejo he already has, estupido not once but several times with his snarky familia like all the cracker faces hillbilly rednecks.
Soon he'll have a luxury apartment over at lavenworht or sing sing overlooking your cesspool culo

Anonymous said...

March 18, 2023 at 10:45 AM
go buy a newpaper estupido this is a blog pendejo

Anonymous said...

Matanegros, Tamaulipas.

Anonymous said...


Fear is what makes the fronterizos keep their lives.

They walk briskly, they do not chat with strangers, they go home/school/job and phone home to inform all is well.

Matamoros people and Brownsville people are smart, they live life to their fullest but with great fear...which keeps them alive.

El miedo no anda en burro.

Anonymous said...

Mata what?

Anonymous said...

Hillbillies with their infected toe nails can't even walk. Smart they are not son puros mamones.

Anonymous said...

It wasn't a kidnapping. Cartel was just picking up its mess and disposing of it. Nobody asked for a ransom because these people have no value.

Anonymous said...

Most crimes in American cities are perpetrated by people who look like the four Americans in Matamoros.

rita