"Germany
 La Vie en Rose
escort directory

Thread: Crime, Safety, and the Police

+ Add Report
Page 4 of 288 FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 14 54 104 ... LastLast
Results 46 to 60 of 4318
This forum thread is moderated by Admin
  1. #4273
    Quote Originally Posted by Hargow20  [View Original Post]
    I have not seen police stop anyone there recently.
    Yes that little area between the arch and the side of hotel nelson has a reputation. I think cops who are assigned to patrol revolucion see that as there little hot spot to jack people up away from all the eyes on revolucion. From what I have been seeing and hearing it is usually a team of 3 cops, 2 men doing the frisking and a female acting as a lookout. I did hear of a fellow monger recently losing around $800 to these thieves. Another area to avoid would be primera between constituton and nino heros.

  2. #4272
    I agree, I was in Uber last year and the cops stopped the Uber to search me last year around 1 am. If he was drunk then he would have been a target for the police to stop as well.

    Quote Originally Posted by LuvMexicanas  [View Original Post]
    Yeah it ebbs and flows but that's the area where I've most consistently seen gringos arms out getting searched including myself.

  3. #4271
    Quote Originally Posted by Hargow20  [View Original Post]
    I have not seen police stop anyone there recently.
    Yeah it ebbs and flows but that's the area where I've most consistently seen gringos arms out getting searched including myself.

  4. #4270
    I have not seen police stop anyone there recently.

    Quote Originally Posted by LuvMexicanas  [View Original Post]
    Or take a path to avoid the arch because most veterans like you should know the area near Hotel Nelson is a prime spot for cops to stop people.

  5. #4269

    Freedom of the press

    Quote Originally Posted by CaptainSolo  [View Original Post]
    AMLO is attacking the journalists reporting the investigation instead of the investigators. Looks like AMLO is deadly afraid of US journalists. It's a dirty blow publicizing their cell numbers.

    He knows his cartel friends cannot win attacking US Dept of Justice, but they can easily murder and shut up the unarmed journalists, like happened many times in Mexico.

    The US will protect its freedom of the press and will defend its citizens. If any of these journalists are harmed, perpetrators and their masters will have hell to pay.
    The DOJ has already said the case was closed and didn't have plans to go against AMLO so he seemed more upset that this investigation was brought up again in the article and frustrated with the journalist.

    In regards to freedom of the press I think you might want to investigate Julian Assange and how the US government has treated him.

  6. #4268

    Here's an idea

    Quote Originally Posted by Dogers69  [View Original Post]
    Thursday night I drank bug time because hadn't drink in 2 weeks. Drank my hotel, hk, tropical, Chicago. After Chicago. About 930 pm got harassed by polocia. Ignored the cop car at 1st bu they radioed to their amigos to get me closer to the arch. Patt3 d me down. Looked hard for drugs. Since I travel alot I won't put up with this shit and will stay away.
    Or take a path to avoid the arch because most veterans like you should know the area near Hotel Nelson is a prime spot for cops to stop people.

  7. #4267

    The US will protect its freedom of the press

    AMLO is attacking the journalists reporting the investigation instead of the investigators. Looks like AMLO is deadly afraid of US journalists. It's a dirty blow publicizing their cell numbers.

    He knows his cartel friends cannot win attacking US Dept of Justice, but they can easily murder and shut up the unarmed journalists, like happened many times in Mexico.

    The US will protect its freedom of the press and will defend its citizens. If any of these journalists are harmed, perpetrators and their masters will have hell to pay.

  8. #4266
    This may be a sign that Tijuana police might be increasing shakedowns. Much depends on how drunk you were of course.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dogers69  [View Original Post]
    Thursday night I drank bug time because hadn't drink in 2 weeks. Drank my hotel, hk, tropical, Chicago. After Chicago. About 930 pm got harassed by polocia. Ignored the cop car at 1st bu they radioed to their amigos to get me closer to the arch. Patt3 d me down. Looked hard for drugs. Since I travel alot I won't put up with this shit and will stay away.

  9. #4265

    NY Times article

    I wouldn't jump to conclusions so fast, AMLO is going to be out of office later this year so it does raise some red flags that this is being brought up when Biden is looking for re election and needs AMLO to help with the border problem.

    One of the weirdest things is that AMLO did a press conference against this article and gave the personal cell phone number of the journalist putting their life in danger with the high number of journalists killed by the cartels.

  10. #4264

    Thursday night harrasment from policia

    Thursday night I drank bug time because hadn't drink in 2 weeks. Drank my hotel, hk, tropical, Chicago. After Chicago. About 930 pm got harassed by polocia. Ignored the cop car at 1st bu they radioed to their amigos to get me closer to the arch. Patt3 d me down. Looked hard for drugs. Since I travel alot I won't put up with this shit and will stay away.

  11. #4263
    Quote Originally Posted by Rainman306  [View Original Post]
    Has anyone made the walk from the Ped East border crossing to Pueblo Amigo Hotel & Casino?

    Is it safe in both no possible thugs or having to cross busy roads?
    I make that walk almost every weekend twice. On the way in first stop the caliente casino next to pueblo amigo. And on the end of the weekend last stop caliente and then walk to ped east.

    Not sure if it matters but usually its daytime and I'm just an elderly gringo.

  12. #4262
    That area is safe walk. To ped East & back.

    Quote Originally Posted by Rainman306  [View Original Post]
    Has anyone made the walk from the Ped East border crossing to Pueblo Amigo Hotel & Casino?

    Is it safe in both no possible thugs or having to cross busy roads?

  13. #4261

    Walk from Ped East to Publo Amigo Hotel / Casino

    Has anyone made the walk from the Ped East border crossing to Pueblo Amigo Hotel & Casino?

    Is it safe in both no possible thugs or having to cross busy roads?

  14. #4260

    USA Examined Allegations of Cartel Ties to Allies of Mexico's President

    What can the US do to prosecute AMLO?

    Send Navy Seals to Mexico City?

    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/22/w...ug-cartel.html

    The inquiry examined accusations of potential links between drug traffickers and close confidants of the president while he governed the country.

    By Alan Feuer and Natalie Kitroeff Feb. 22,2024 Updated 1:17 pm ET.

    American law enforcement officials spent years looking into allegations that allies of Mexico's president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, met with and took millions of dollars from drug cartels after he took office, according to USA Records and three people familiar with the matter.

    The inquiry, which has not been previously reported, uncovered information pointing to potential links between powerful cartel operatives and Mexican advisers and officials close to the president while he governed the country.

    But the United States never opened a formal investigation into Mr. López Obrador, and the officials involved ultimately shelved the inquiry. They concluded that the USA Government had little appetite to pursue allegations against the leader of one of America's top allies, said the three people familiar with the case, who were not authorized to speak publicly.

    Mr. López Obrador called the allegations "completely false," responding to questions from The New York Times on Thursday. He said the news of the inquiry would not "in any way" affect Mexico's relationship with the United States, but said he expected a response from the USA Government.

    "Does this diminish the trust the Mexican government has in the United States?" Mr. López Obrador said at a regular news conference, adding, "Time will tell. ".

    Drug cartels have long infiltrated the Mexican state, from the lowest levels to the upper reaches of government. They pay off the police, manipulate mayors, co-opt senior officials and dominate broad swaths of the country.

    But while the recent efforts by the USA Officials identified possible ties between the cartels and Mr. López Obrador's associates, they did not find any direct connections between the president himself and criminal organizations.

    "There is no investigation into President López Obrador," a spokesperson for the Justice Department said. "The Justice Department has a responsibility to review any allegation. ".

    Much of the information collected by USA Officials came from informants whose accounts can be difficult to corroborate and sometimes end up being incorrect. The investigators obtained the information while looking into the activities of drug cartels, and it was not clear how much of what the informants told them was independently confirmed.

    For example, records show that the investigators were told by an informant that one of Mr. López Obrador's closest confidants met with Ismael Zambada García, a top leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel, before his victory in the 2018 presidential election.

    A different source told them that after the president was elected, a founder of the notoriously violent Zetas cartel paid $4 million to two of Mr. López Obrador's allies in the hope of being released from prison.

    Investigators obtained information from a third source suggesting that drug cartels were in possession of videos of the president's sons picking up drug money, records show.

    Mr. López Obrador denied all the allegations made by the informants.

    The USA Law enforcement officers also independently tracked payments from people they believed to be cartel operatives to intermediaries for Mr. López Obrador, two of the people familiar with the inquiry said.

    At least one of those payments, they said, was made around the same time that Mr. López Obrador traveled to the state of Sinaloa in 2020 and met the mother of the drug lord Joaquíand Guzmáand Loera, who is better known as El Chapo and is now serving a life sentence in an American federal prison.

    More than a decade ago, a separate investigation led by the Drug Enforcement Administration unearthed allegations that traffickers had donated millions to Mr. López Obrador's unsuccessful presidential campaign in 2006. This inquiry, which was detailed by three media outlets last month, was closed without charges being brought.

    What you should know. The Times makes a careful decision any time it uses an anonymous source. The information the source supplies must be newsworthy and give readers genuine insight.

    For the United States, pursuing criminal charges against top foreign officials is a rare and complicated undertaking. Building a legal case against Mr. López Obrador would be particularly challenging. The last time the United States filed criminal charges against a top Mexican official, it ultimately dropped them after his arrest caused a diplomatic rift with Mexico.

    The Biden administration has an enormous stake in managing its relationship with Mr. López Obrador, who is seen as indispensable to containing a surge in migration that has become one of the most contentious issues in American politics. It is a major concern for voters in the lead-up to the presidential election this fall.

    Mexico is also a top American trading partner and the single most important collaborator in USA Efforts to slow illicit drugs like fentanyl from crossing the southern border.

    USA Law enforcement agencies have jurisdiction to investigate and bring charges against officials of other countries if they can show a connection to narcotics moving across the border into the United States.

    While it is uncommon for American agents to pursue top foreign officials, it is not unprecedented: The drug trial of Juan Orlando Hernández, the former president of Honduras, began this week in Federal District Court in Manhattan.

    Federal prosecutors in New York also secured a corruption conviction last year against Genaro García Luna, Mexico's former public security secretary, persuading a jury that he had taken millions of dollars in bribes from violent cartels he was meant to be pursuing.

    While efforts to scrutinize Mr. López Obrador's allies are no longer active, the revelation that USA Law enforcement officials were quietly examining corruption allegations against them could itself be damaging.

    Last month's media reports, including one by ProPublica, about a USA Inquiry into 2006 campaign donations — for an election he did not win — ignited a firestorm in Mexico.

    Mr. López Obrador publicly denounced the stories, implying they were aimed at influencing the country's presidential election in June, in which his protégé, the former Mexico City mayor Claudia Sheinbaum, is leading the race to replace him. He suggested the reports could complicate talks on migration and fentanyl with the USA Government, and said he considered not receiving President Biden's homeland security adviser for a planned meeting in the Mexican capital.

    "How are we going to be sitting at the table talking about the fight against drugs if they, or one of their institutions, is leaking information and harming me?" Mr. López Obrador said at a regular news conference days after the stories published.

    After President Biden called Mr. López Obrador, calming tensions, the Mexican foreign minister said that the USA Homeland security adviser told Mexico "that this is a closed issue for them. ".

    The Biden administration has handled Mr. López Obrador with great care, avoiding public criticism in favor of repeatedly dispatching top officials to Mexico City to meet with him and press for sustained migration enforcement in private.

    The decision to let the recent inquiry go dormant, the people familiar with it said, was caused in large part by the breakdown of a separate, highly contentious corruption case. In the closing months of the Trump administration in 2020, USA Officials brought charges against Gen. Salvador Cienfuegos Zepeda, who served as Mexico's defense secretary from 2012 to 2018.

    American officials also investigated Gen. Salvador Cienfuegos Zepeda, who served as Mexico's defense secretary from 2012 to 2018. Credit. Rebecca Blackwell / Associated Press.

    In a federal indictment, unsealed in New York after a multiyear investigation named "Operation Padrino," prosecutors accused General Cienfuegos of using the powers of his office to help a violent criminal group called the H-2 cartel conduct its drug trafficking operations.

    His arrest at the LOS Angeles airport provoked a furor within the Mexican government, particularly among the leaders of the country's armed forces, which have assumed greater responsibilities and power under Mr. López Obrador.

    The president said the charges were "fabricated" and his administration released more than 700 pages of communications intercepted by USA Agents that purported to show criminal activity but were cast as inconclusive.

    The Drug Enforcement Administration, which already had a checkered history as protagonists in a drug war seen as bloody and futile, suffered a tremendous blow to its relationship with the Mexican government.

    Just weeks after the arrest took place, the USA Justice Department, under heavy pressure from Mr. López Obrador, reversed itself and dismissed the indictment, sending General Cienfuegos back to Mexico.

    The episode not only damaged longtime security arrangements between the two countries, but also left a deep impression on law enforcement officers north of the border, many of whom saw the failed case as a cautionary tale about undertaking similar efforts against other high-ranking Mexican officials.

    Emiliano Rodríguez Mega contributed reporting.

    Alan Feuer covers extremism and political violence for The Times, focusing on the criminal cases involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and against former President Donald J. Trump. More about Alan Feuer.

    Natalie Kitroeff is The Times's bureau chief for Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean. More about Natalie Kitroeff.

  15. #4259

    Both females

    Quote Originally Posted by Scbb1  [View Original Post]
    What makes you think the next President will be a women?
    Because the two leading candidates in the election later this year are females, and with the large lead they have it's very unlikely not to be a female.

Posting Limitations

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
 Sex Vacation
Escort News


Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape