Thread: Crime, Safety, and the Police
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05-28-21 18:20 #2938
Posts: 1479Originally Posted by Mbison2411 [View Original Post]
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05-28-21 15:51 #2937
Posts: 139Originally Posted by Ctytek [View Original Post]
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05-28-21 05:45 #2936
Posts: 2422Originally Posted by Mbison2411 [View Original Post]
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05-28-21 04:57 #2935
Posts: 425Originally Posted by Mbison2411 [View Original Post]
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05-28-21 02:56 #2934
Posts: 2618Personally I only buy one Viagra at a time and take it in the pharmacy. This way I don't have to worry about a cop finding it and shaking me down. This year I discovered that I no longer need the pills to help me out. Bu then again I found that the pills don't mo out that much.
Originally Posted by Mbison2411 [View Original Post]
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05-27-21 23:49 #2933
Posts: 1949Originally Posted by Mbison2411 [View Original Post]
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05-27-21 23:26 #2932
Posts: 4Shakedown by Tijuana's Finest
Last week a buddy and me got a room at Cascadas for a night of fun and partying in HK. Before we arrive we stop at a pharmacy and my buddy buys a bottle of Maxifort dick pills. He gives me one and keeps the rest. We ended up having a great time ended up partying with some hot HK girls all night. Next day around noon we were both eager to get home so we exited Cascadas near HK front entrance and took the taxi parked outside (I know big mistake). We asked to go to the border and we were on our way. As we were about to arrive the cops flashed us up and the taxi pulled over. We were both asked to exit and they begin to search us. Lo and behold the cop find a single pink "dick pill" in my buddies pocket.
The cop starts going on and on how this is illegal and how he's going to take him to jail. He tells my friend to sit in the back of the cop car. He's sitting there protesting asking them to just let us go to the border. He eventually realizes the only way to get out of this is to pay. He places a hundred dollar bill on the seat in the cop car and when they see it and let us go. We are so close to the border we just continue walking on foot. Lesson learned don't take the taxis parked directly outside HK and don't carry dick pills in your pockets.
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05-27-21 18:51 #2931
Posts: 6535Mexican Army's war on drugs
Looks like the Mexican Army has been doing a lot of dangerous work against drug cartels that are not publicized. 2,500 pounds of Meth is a very serious bust. They drive around La Zona Norte in Army trucks with the Squad Auto Weapon aimed straight ahead like they are ready for big fire fight. They may be backing up policias in drugs raids. Have not heard of any major battle involving the army in Tijuana.
There was no mention of any Fentanyl seizures. With hundreds tons of precursor chemicals shipped through Mazatlan and helps from China to cook the extremely toxic Fentanyl, Mexican cartels have enough poisons to kill every man, woman, children in America 100 times over.
In addition to raids at street and retail levels, Mexico should target the wholesale traders, follow the money and prosecute the top guys in the drugs chain, seizing all their assets and reward LE and army troops. It's hard when drugs are the main products with the highest profit margin for these countries. If drugs production and trafficking are not eradicated, the addicted population will pull whole countries down the toilet.
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2021/0...c-bag.html?m=1
Of note, two retired SEDENA soldiers were killed in Tijuana just six days before this discovery. On the night of May 18 2021, two men were found dead of apparent gunshot wounds in the Costa Coronado neighborhood. They were found near a gold Chevrolet Tahoe SUV. Both 380 caliber and 45 mm casings were found nearby. Both men had multiple gunshot wounds. The bodies were later identified and confirmed by SEDENA officials to be Pedro Marcial Mariche (46 years old) and Rodolfo Armenta Torres (60 years old). Both were retired and of the rank second lieutenant.
SEDENA has also been involved in recent arrests of cartel members in Tijuana, though for obvious reasons the press rarely discloses which specific divisions of SEDENA participated in these joint operations. The city of Tijuana falls within Military Zone 2, which is led by Brigadier General Diplomate of General Staff Saúl Luna Jaimes.
In addition, on March 30 2021, over two tons of narcotics which had been seized from various investigations were incinerated within the facilities of the 28th Infantry Battalion of Tijuana. The narcotics came from multiple different seizures made by the regional Office of the Attorney General of the Republic (FGR).
Among the items incinerated was roughly.
• 1100 kilos (approx 2425 pounds) of methamphetamine hydrochloride.
• 300 kilos (approx 661 pounds) of marijuana.
• 100 kilos (approx 220 pounds) of marijuana plants.
• 61,168 other units of various drugs.
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05-26-21 00:44 #2930
Posts: 248Confused
Originally Posted by Frogg [View Original Post]
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05-26-21 00:10 #2929
Posts: 709Originally Posted by Travv [View Original Post]
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05-25-21 23:00 #2928
Posts: 2422https://www.yahoo.com/news/mexico-fi...164112657.html
Good news. Mexico starting to distribute its Mexican vaccines. Hopefully Tijuana will get its fair share since Mexico City has a history of hoarding everything.
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05-25-21 01:15 #2927
Posts: 6535CoVid vaccines for bar girls street girls
Jackie has a fantastic idea.
We are forming a group of volunteers to admin CoVid vaccines to the people of Mexico out of the famous HK club.
Priority is for the prettiest and sexiest girls in Mexico who would come to Tijuana and line up in bikinis inside HK for the shots.
One condition is the girls have to leave their mooching BFs / pimps / padrotes home so they can soon die with the virus.
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05-25-21 00:09 #2926
Posts: 6535Countries open to foreign travelers
Argentina is closed, but Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, DR ect are open for foreign travelers by air with proof of negative CoVid test within 72 hours of departure.
A few still close their land and sea ports.
https://travel.state.gov/content/tra...tag=YHF4eb9d17
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05-24-21 16:17 #2925
Posts: 2422Hopefully, we will be able to soon take care of our Tijuana neighbors and get them vaccination. As I understand it, we will soon have a surplus in the USA because about 25% of Americans refuses vaccination. Fine. It's a free country. But fuck them, and ship the surplus to Tijuana and other border towns to vaccinate people so that mongers and expats don't bring back a mutated strand a year from now when the Covid gets out of control down there. The last thing we need is Tijuana turning into Pandemic India.
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05-23-21 02:41 #2924
Posts: 6535COVID overwhelms Latin America, Caribbean as region hits 1 M casualties
CoVid death rate in Caribbean and Latin America is about 4 x global average.
The virus is just now starting to kill in Latin America. Without vaccines, I suspect it will get worse.
All bars, stores, restaurants, malls and businesses in Tijuana have reopened in full. Bars in La Zona would be the worst spots to spread infection but have not heard biitching from Tijuana's health care community and the government.
COVID overwhelms Latin America, Caribbean as region hits 1 M casualties.
By Isabel VincentMay 22,2021.
5:41 pm.
Updated.
Graves of victims of COVID-19 are seen at the municipal cemetery No. 12 in Tijuana, Mexico. Jorge Duenes / Reuters.
Freshly dug open graves line a municipal cemetery in Tijuana, just one of thousands of burial sites across Latin America and the Caribbean where gravediggers are making room for the region's one million COVID-19 victims.
The region hit the grim milestone Friday, with South America now recording the highest per capita deaths from the infection in the world.
Patients afflicted with COVID-19 are overwhelming fragile and underfunded health care systems in countries where large percentages of the population live in abject poverty, and have been unable to enter lockdown, according to a Reuters report.
As cases fall in North America and Europe, and stabilize in Africa, they are spiraling out of control in the Caribbean and Latin America. In May, the region recorded 31 percent of all COVI-19 deaths around the world, according to the report. The area is home to 8. 4 percent of the world's population.
Graves of victims of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), and of others, are seen at the municipal cemetery No. 12 in Tijuana, Mexico May 21,2021.
Over a million people have died from COVID in Latin America and the Caribbean.
"Instead of preparing for the pandemic, we minimized the disease, saying the tropical heat would deactivate the virus," said Francisco Moreno Sanchez, head of the COVID-19 program at one of Mexico's main hospitals and a critic of the government's vaccination plan.
The Pan American Health Organization has criticized "glaring gaps" in access to COVID-19 vaccines in Latin America.
"Just three percent of Latin Americans have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. We urgently need more vaccines," PAHO director Carissa Etienne said at a press conference last week.
Open pits are pictured next to graves of victims of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), and of others, at the municipal cemetery No. 12 in Tijuana, Mexico May 21,2021.
South America has been inflicted with the highest deaths per capita from COVID in the world.
Leaders such as Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro downplayed the gravity of COVID-19. Brazil, an epicenter of the virus, has recorded 446,000 deaths — the highest in the region. Bolsonaro, who has repeatedly opposed lockdowns and says he doesn't trust vaccines, is being investigated by a parliamentary commission over his handling of the health crisis.
Brazil is the third most affected country in the world regarding COVID-19 cases, surpassed only by the US and India, according to statistics from Johns Hopkins University.
India, which recorded more than 26 million COVID-19 cases and nearly 296,000 deaths, is also worried about rising cases, particularly in rural areas where public health services are scarce and underfunded, according to a report.
Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro attends the launching ceremony of the Asphalt Giants Program.
Jair Bolsonaro's Brazil has been one of the countries hit the hardest during the pandemic.
Eraldo Peres / AP.
As hospitals overflow with new cases and the country struggles with a shortage of vaccines, experts are warning India could face a new wave of infection in the coming months.
"While it has stabilized in many parts of the country, and overall the burden has been lessened, we have a long way to go with this wave," said V. K. Paul, a doctor who is part of a federal government panel on COVID-19 management, speaking at a press conference last week. "For the first time, we have seen that rural areas have been affected in this pandemic."
In the southern state of Tamil Nadu, where more than 1.7 million people have been infected with the coronavirus, authorities extended a lockdown for an additional seven days Saturday, introducing stricter measures to stem the rising wave of infection.
Graves of victims of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), and of others, are seen at the municipal cemetery No. 12 in Tijuana, Mexico May 21,2021.
The Pan American Health Organization has said Latin Americans haven't had equitable access to the COVID vaccine.
Jorge Duenes / Reuters.