Arizona family robbed at gunpoint during Sonora beach vacation

Puerto Lobos, Sonora

Lessons to be learned regarding travel in Sonora, Mexico

A family of four from Mesa, Arizona traveling to their Sonora, Mexico beach house were forced to pull over at gunpoint as they traveled south of Puerto Peñasco, Sonora (also known as Rocky Point). The assailant then stole their pickup truck, luggage, ATVs and other possessions. The auto, which they had paid off just two months earlier, and possessions were not insured in Mexico, and the family estimated it to be a $70,000 loss.

According to published reports, Mason and Natalie Davis from Mesa were driving to their Puerto Lobos beach house with their two daughters last Tuesday evening, October 6. At approximately 6:00 p.m. they had just passed through Puerto Peñasco and were driving south to their beach house in Puerto Lobos, Sonora when a grey sedan pulled alongside their white 2017 Toyota Tundra pickup truck.

A man in the sedan pointed an AK-47 assault rifle at Mason Davis and indicated for him to stop the vehicle. After Davis had pulled over, one of the assailants climbed into the vehicle’s driver’s seat while Natalie and the two girls were still inside. They jumped out of the pickup just before it sped away with the passenger doors still open. The pickup was towing a 20-foot tandem axle trailer loaded with three quad ATVs, luggage, a bicycle and other family possessions, which may have been the targets of the carjacking.

The Davis family was left stranded at the side of the road until a bus that transports mine employees stopped to give them a ride to a nearby military post, and they returned home the following day.

Pickup recovered without trailer

The Toyota Tundra was recovered by Sonora state police three days later in the town of San Felipe, located in the municipality (similar to a county in the U.S.) of Caborca.

Important lessons for those considering travel to Sonora, Mexico

Purchase vehicle and travel insurance

Many frequent visitors to Sonora feel so safe and confident in their travels that they do not purchase Mexico auto insurance or travel insurance before crossing the border into Mexico. The Davis family, who had traveled to their Puerto Lobos beach house for 20 years, apparently had this faulty sense of safety and confidence.

As a result, they paid dearly for the oversight. And given the current high level of violence in Sonora, they are fortunate to be alive.

Do your research

Before crossing the border, make an informed decision on whether you should travel to Sonora, or any other part of Mexico. The state does not perform comprehensive coronavirus testing, as indicated by their positivity rate of 45%, and they are beginning to experience a second wave of the virus.

Puerto Lobos was the scene of a cartel battle in June that left 12 dead. The municipality of Caborca and other Sonoran municipalities are currently under siege as local cartels battle with out-of-state criminal organizations, as evidenced by news reports of armed conflicts in the region spurred by Caborca turf wars and other news reports.

Also, the U.S. Department of State publishes travel warnings regarding Sonora, but in this case their advice was not only useless, but potentially dangerous.

Previously the State Department had allowed government employees to travel to Puerto Peñasco by entering Mexico at Nogales and driving from Santa Ana to Rocky Point via Mexico highway 2, which passes through Caborca. When Caborca heated up earlier this year they removed mention of that route but did not mention why (they did not even mention that it had been removed) or add any travel advisories.

If the State Department had acknowledged the danger of traveling in Caborca, and in particular travel to the coast of Caborca, the Mason family may have decided not to take the trip; or at least they may have taken more precautions.

Basically, the only relatively safe places to visit in Sonora include day trips to border towns and the route from the Lukeville-Sonoyta border crossing to Puerto Peñasco.

Follow common precautions

Sonora is more dangerous now than it has been in years, so these basic, common sense precautions are more important than ever.

Avoid conspicuous signs of wealth. This not only applies to wearing expensive jewelry while shopping, but driving late-model pickups and towing expensive and highly desired vehicles.

Travel in groups. When possible, travel with others for extra security.

Be aware of your surroundings. Frequent visitors to Mexico may be lulled into a sense of false confidence and not notice signs of danger.

Travel during daylight hours. When traveling in Sonora, always travel during the daylight hours. Again, familiarity with Sonora and a false sense of confidence may have been the reasons why the family chose to travel at dusk and into the evening hours.

Make good decisions, and be safe

Sonora’s economy has been hit hard by the coronavirus. Combine that with a lack of economic support from government, and the result is that many Sonorans are suffering from health and economic distress. Know that if you flout your wealth in that environment, you may just end up being robbed. Or worse.

Be safe.

Arizona-Sonora website

Another bloody Sunday; Triad of triple killings in Sonora

Sunday homicides in Guaymas, Empalme and Cócorit; youngest victim was 10 years old

 

Three armed attacks on Sunday, July 12 resulted in the deaths of nine people in Guaymas, Empalme and Cócorit, near Ciudad Obregon. The first murder victims were in a vehicle traveling on a Guaymas street, and the other two deadly assaults were home invasions.

Family attacked on Guaymas street, three dead

The first homicides occurred at approximately 10:10 a.m. on Josefina Borboa Boulevard in Guaymas, when a vehicle carrying nine family members traveling in a blue Ford Escape came under a withering hail of gunfire from a group of armed assailants in a gray or silver van.

Killed in the attack were 35-year-old Francisco N., his wife Nayeli, 30 and a 10-year-old girl. El Imparcial reported that police suspect that Francisco was the target of the attack.

The other six passengers of the vehicle were taken to the hospital with various injuries, the youngest was a two-year-old child.

Three killed in Cócorit home

The next killings at approximately 4:30 p.m. in the pueblo of Cócorit, a short distance north of Ciudad Obregon in the municipality of Cajeme.

There, three men were shot to death in a home on Isla Huivulai street in Colonia Ampliación Alameda. Police arrived to find their bodies inside the home.

The killings brought the number of homicides in Cajeme to 11 for this month, nearly one a day.

Three murdered inside home in Empalme

And two hours later, a group of armed men entered a home in the Prado Bonito subdivision of the municipality of Empalme and shot to death its three inhabitants. 

Evidence was collected at all of the three crime scenes in an attempt to identify the killers.

Sonora travel warning

These incidents illustrate that although the state of Sonora is dealing with a serious COVID-19 outbreak, its levels of violent crime have not abated, especially in the municipalities of Cajeme, Empalme and Guaymas.

We do not recommend travel to any area of Sonora at this time, outside of brief day trips across the border.

Police detain minor and seize 12 tactical firearms in Magdalena de Kino

Ammunition, stolen cars and tactical equipment also seized from two stolen vehicles 

 

A juvenile driving a car that had been reported stolen in Tucson last month was stopped by the Sonora State Public Security Police (PESP) on July 3 in the Misión Residencial neighborhood in Magdalena de Kino.  

Officers seized eight weapons, including five AK-47s, an AR-15 and two pistols, as well as ammunition and tactical equipment. 

After that, police in Magdalena stopped a Volkswagen Polo that had also been reported as stolen.   

They seized four more weapons, including AK-47s and AR-15s, from the vehicle, as well as 400 AK-47 rounds and other ammunition.  

2 killed in Sunday morning armed clashes in Caborca

Two shootouts leave two dead early Sunday morning in Caborca 

 

Armed conflicts between cartels resulted in two deaths early Sunday morning in the municipality of Caborca, Sonora.  

Police encountered two bodies at the scene of the first clash, on the road from Caborca to Las Calabazas. They also seized a van and weapons at the location. 

The second gun battle was at the ejido Llano Blanco de Altar. Ejidos are cooperative communities where families own a part of the land the community occupies. Many were formed for agricultural purposes. 

Authorities located and seized several weapons at Llano Blanco de Altar. 

Steel spikes flatten tires on highway 2 

The combatants also threw steel spikes on the Altar – Caborca section of Mexico highway 2, which tore into the tires of several vehicles, including tractor-trailer trucks, that were traveling on the highway.  

The spikes could have been implemented to stop the travel of enemy combatants, but such traffic impediments have also been used for ambushes. 

Travel warning – continued violence in Caborca and coronavirus 

The July 5 gun battles in Caborca were the most recent cartel-related shootouts in the municipality of Caborca. They follow armed conflicts in April and late June, the latter of which left 12 dead. 

Caborca is also experiencing rapid community growth of the novel coronavirus. To date, it has 413 confirmed cases and 24 deaths from the virus. 

We do not recommend travel to Northern Sonora during this time, due to armed violence and the coronavirus outbreak. 

Arizona-Sonora website

Weekend accident kills 4 on Sonora highway

Adults and children killed and injured in multi-vehicle accident 

According to published Sonora news reports, a collision between two vehicles at kilometer 74 + 300 on the highway between San Luis Rio Colorado and the Gulf of Santa Clara on late Saturday night or early Sunday morning left 16 adults and children wounded or dead. 

The accident was caused by a collision between a minivan with Baja California license plates and a gold-colored Buick sedan that did not have license plates. 

Four people were declared deceased at the site of the accident, including a five-year-old girl. 

Twelve others were taken to hospitals, including adults in their 20’s and a three-year-old girl. 

Alcohol may have been a contributing factor in the accident. 

Travel advisory 

We strongly recommend and reiterate that visitors to Sonora should not drive at night, especially on highways, due to the high possibility of dangerous conditions. 

 

Four bodies dumped on main San Carlos boulevard

Early morning discovery on Manlio Fabio Beltrones Blvd. 

 

At approximately 2:00 a.m. on June 4 in San Carlos, Sonora, motorists on Manlio Fabio Beltrones Boulevard reported the sighting of bodies by the side of the road. 

Police located four corpses that showed signs of torture.  

Manlio Fabio Beltrones Boulevard is the main thoroughfare used by tourists and others to drive to the coastal resort town of San Carlos. 

Same location as three other murders 

According to press reports, the location where the bodies were dumped is just feet from where the bodies of three men in an Uber vehicle were found last year.  

The dead included the Uber driver and two passengers from Hermosillo. The Uber vehicle had been reported missing during a trip from Hermosillo to Kino Bay. 

Tourist warning 

In addition to an out-of-control coronavirus outbreak in Sonora, be aware that there are frequent homicides in Sonora, and the Empalme – Guaymas – San Carlos area is a very active zone for killings. 

We do not recommend any travel to Sonora during this time, with the possible exception of brief visits across the border.