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American on jetski shot in head by mexican pirates?
#61
(03-31-2011, 07:50 PM)Lady Cop Wrote: [b]here she is again. Blah-blah-0006Blah-blah-0006Blah-blah-0006

Really?

She has been trying to get her husband's body back and keep the pressure on the American govt.
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#62
yes really. i don't find her credible at all. i am not manipulated by slanted TV programs. i only know what my instincts and years of interviewing experience tell me when observing someone. sometimes it is not possible to pinpoint/define those things.

















































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#63
Well, if there are surveillance photos of the same men she described as killing her husband and shot at her, and a witness who saw her being chased, and a sheriff who says he's been told what happened, do you think she killed her husband?
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#64
BROWNSVILLE — Mexican marines patrolling Falcon Lake killed 12 presumed Zeta drug gang members in a gunbattle that erupted after the military discovered an island drug encampment, the Mexican navy said Monday.

One of the marines was killed in the shootout, which occurred Sunday afternoon on a portion of the lake two miles northeast of Nueva Ciudad Guerrero, part of the Zeta stronghold in northwestern Tamaulipas state.

The island was believed to be a holding place for marijuana carried on speedboats to the Texas shore. After the gunbattle, the military seized a cache of more than 20 firearms, including a .50-caliber rifle and a machine gun. The military also captured ammunition, bulletproof vests and surveillance equipment.

The Mexican side of the binational reservoir has become notorious as the site of the presumed fatal shooting Sept. 30, 2010, of David Hartley, a U.S. citizen whose body hasn't been recovered. After the shooting, his wife, Tiffany, raced her personal watercraft back to the United States.

U.S. authorities had warned of “pirates” shaking down tourists and fishermen in Mexican waters, and officials continue to urge visitors to remain in Texas waters.

The Texas side of the lake straddles largely remote Starr and Zapata counties, where dense brush lining the shore provides ample cover for smuggling drugs.

Zapata County Sheriff Sigifredo Gonzalez, the main U.S. investigator in the Hartley shooting, said he was angry that he wasn't notified of the gunfight.

“We have gotten basically no information whatsoever from Mexico,” he said. “The way I learned of this incident honestly was through media. I've contacted our chain of communication, and as far as I know, no one knew anything on the U.S. side of the border.”

Conditions have deteriorated in the months since the Hartley incident.

Read more: http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/article...z1MChfFx7B
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