Mexican Defense Secretary Announces New Initiative in Sonora

Warns of Cartel Infiltration in Local Police Forces

On September 2, Mexico’s Secretary of Defense Luis Sandoval announced federal action to counter an infiltration of organized crime elements into local police agencies in the state of Sonora, Mexico.

Sonora newspaper El Imparcial reports that Sandoval, who was accompanied by Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and Sonora Governor Claudia Pavlovich, announced a “purification process” for local police agencies would begin immediately.

The initial action will include the municipalities of Cajeme (Ciudad Obregon), Hermosillo, Guaymas (which includes Guaymas and San Carlos), Empalme and Navojoa.

Sandoval also noted that local police in the state of Sonora are understaffed by 40 percent.

Because of this, 4000 soldiers of the National Guard and federal military forces have been deployed to Sonora in permanent positions.

In addition to policing, their objective will be to increase intelligence activities against the operations and logistics of criminal organizations in Sonora.

Sonora Business Leaders Demand a Solution to Violence

Members of the organization Comparmex, the “business center of Northern Sonora,” met with public officials on August 13 in Guaymas to demand action to address the extreme violence that has gripped the state.

In addition to Comparmex members, the meeting was attended by Sonora Governor Claudia Pavlovich, state and federal security officials and the municipal presidents of Cajeme, Guaymas, Empalme and Navojoa

According to its website, Comparmex is a politically independent group of employers and entrepreneurs founded in 1929. It seeks to establish social conditions that contribute to the prosperity of all Mexicans, to increase equity and social cohesion.

Sonora newspaper El Imparcial reported that Comparmex President Arturo Fernández Díaz recommended that state and federal governments devote more resources to security forces, to include better training, equipment and salaries.

Anti-government and -police violence

Of particular concern is the level of violence against municipal governments, in particular municipal police officers. Their increasing frequency and levels of violence may indicate signs of social instability in the state of Sonora, Mexico.

On June 20, the comptroller of the city of Guaymas, Daniel Morales Pardini, was gunned down with another municipal employee, Enrique Galarza Núñez, as they were driving on Avenida Serdán, the main street in Guaymas. Both men were killed. Pardini had previously been the municipal police director for Guaymas.

On June 28, the eastern command police headquarters in Guaymas was assaulted by an armed gunman. There were three violent murders in Guaymas earlier in the day, and the presidenta municipal (mayor) of Guaymas, Sara Valle Dessens, announced on the radio that because of the violence, people in Guaymas should not leave their homes if they do not need to.

And in July, after seeing his partner slain in front of an Oxxo convenience store, a Guaymas police officer is quoted as saying “They are going to kill us all.”

An August 4 attack on the palacio municipal (city hall) of the municipality of Mazatan, Sonora. Gunment riddled the building with a fusillade of bullets.

The next day, August 5, an Hermosillo police officer was shot to death in his home. He was the 15th police official killed in Sonora in 2019.

Violence within proximity of children

And unfortunately, children have not been spared from seeing examples of violence in the state.

On July 29, a dismembered body was left outside a primary school in Empalme, just 500 meters from the police station.

On August 3, two men were gunned down outside of an Hermosillo McDonald’s where children were celebrating at a birthday piñata party.

And on the evening of August 4, a man entered the Ballpark restaurant, withdrew a weapon and shot a man who was dining at the restaurant, killing him. At a nearby table, several children dove under their table in terror as the man was murdered.

One week later, the manager of the Ballpark restaurant was kidnapped. He was later released.

Conclusion

By August 24, Hermosillo had experienced 160 violent homicides in 2019, just 15 fewer than all of 2018.

Earlier this year the Mexican federal government announced the deployment of federal national guard troops to establish “security priority areas” in Sonora. It is not clear what specific actions have been taken at the state level to curtail the violence in Sonora, but it has continued. We are especially concerned about growing tensions between armed groups and local governments, in particular against local police officials.

We recommend that you exercise extreme caution when traveling to or driving through the cities of Guaymas – San Carlos, Empalme, Ciudad Obregon and Hermosillo. Nighttime travel is definitely not recommended.

Armed Attacks in Cajeme Leave 5 Dead and One Injured

Saturday violence started with an attempted carjacking

 

Sonora newspaper El Imparcial reports that a young woman lost her life following an attempted carjacking, four others were also killed and one man was injured in armed assaults on a violent Saturday on June 15 in the Sonoran municipality of Cajeme.

19-year-old Daniela “MA” was a passenger in a vehicle that an armed assailant attempted to carjack in the Cajeme town of Yaqui Pueblo at 12:30 a.m. on Saturday. The gunman stepped in front of the car and when it failed to stop, he fired on the vehicle, wounding Daniela. She later died at a hospital.

The violence continued later that day, when five armed attacks occurred between 6:00 and 7:00 p.m. in Ciudad Obregon.

The assaults started shortly after 6:00 p.m. when two young people were killed in their home on Calle Francisco Zarco in Colonia Constitución.

Minutes later, two men were killed in a hail of more than 50 bullets while in a car at the corner of Calle Otancahui and Avenida Jesus Garcia in Colonia Las Arboledas.

And at 6:30 p.m. a man was seriously injured in an armed assault while riding in a car in Obregon’s Colonia Villa Fontana. His condition was not known at the time of the report.

After the assaults, police located two vehicles with weapons and tactical equipment in the El Rodeo subdivision of Ciudad Obregon.

And in an apparently related incident, witnesses reported that four alleged “sicarios” (assassins) in a gray late-model Nissan March abandoned their vehicle, leaving one man who had multiple gunshot wounds, and commandeered a red Yaris sedan from its owner to flee from the scene.

The Saturday gun violence followed the murders of nine people as a result of armed assaults in and near the border city of Agua Prieta.

We recommend that you use extreme caution if you choose to visit Agua Prieta, Ciudad Obregon or any other place in the municipality of Cajeme.

Border Gun Violence Continues in Agua Prieta

Following the nine homicides in the area on June 10, there were two more firearm-involved incidents on June 14 in the Arizona-Sonora border city of Agua Prieta, near the street where cross-border travelers wait to cross the border. Hermosillo-based newspaper El Imparcial reported that the gun violence involved two more murders and a shootout near a primary school. It is not clear whether the two events, which occurred one block apart, were related.

Early on June 14, two men were found dead in a home on Calle 3 between Avenidas 23 and 24 in Colonia Militar. The house is located just three blocks south of the international border and approximately 1.25 miles east of the Raul H. Castro Port of Entry border crossing.

El Imparcial reported that local police retrieved a variety of shell casings of various calibers from the scene, which also included a bullet-ridden late-model black GMC Sierra.

The deceased were identified by the Sonora State Attorney General’s Office (FGJE) as 39-year-old “Manuel N.,” aka “El Ratón” (the mouse) and “El Machi,” whose age was estimated to be between 30 and 35 years old.

Also that morning, nervous residents of Agua Prieta and Douglas were again listening to the sounds of gunfire as a gunbattle erupted outside of the Margarita Maza de Juarez Elementary School, located just two blocks south of the border on Calle 2, between Avenideas 22 and 23. The school’s young students were on summer break, but a group of administrators were meeting at the school.

Elements of the Mexican Army and Agua Prieta municipal police soon arrived at the scene to investigate. El Imparcial reported that there were rumors of fatalities, but police did not confirm them at the scene.

A “Code Red” police alert that indicates a firearms-related incident was activated at 9:40 a.m., activating a “C5i” Operations Center. The letters and number in C5i represent: Control, Command, Communication, Computing, Coordination and Intelligence.

Both shooting incidents occurred a short distance from Calle Internacional, the street where vehicles line up as they wait to cross the international border from Agua Prieta, Sonora to Douglas, Arizona. We reiterate our travel advisory for Agua Prieta, to take extreme caution if traveling to the area (which is not recommended). 

A Bloody Monday in the Arizona-Sonora Border Region

According to Sonora, Mexico media reports there were 10 homicides on the afternoon of June 10, making it the bloodiest day in recent memory for the state. Nine of the homicide victims were gunned down in border towns along the border between Arizona and Sonora.

The carnage started in the Sonora border city of Agua Prieta, located south of Douglas, Arizona. There, four men and one woman were killed by gunfire early Monday afternoon.

Shortly after those murders, at approximately 1:30 p.m., four men in a Chevrolet HHR were gunned down in a hail of gunfire along the highway on the south outskirts of Naco, Sonora.

Naco is located on the Sonora border approximately seven miles south of Bisbee, Arizona and is a 23-mile drive from the scene of the earlier deaths in Agua Prieta. The highway through Naco is a route to the tourism area along the Rio Sonora.

The tenth victim of gun violence in Sonora on Monday afternoon was a man found shot in a house on the corner of Calle Sufragio Efectivo and Juarez in the state capital of Hermosillo.

Details of the last homicide were still sketchy, but they did mention that the shooting occurred during a kidnapping attempt.

Because of apparently escalating tensions in the eastern border between Arizona and Sonora, we advise travelers to exercise extreme caution if you plan to visit or pass through Agua Prieta or Naco, Sonora.

Tucson Couple Kidnapped in Nogales, Sonora

The Arizona Republic reported yesterday that an American couple from Tucson, ages 38 and 40, were kidnapped by several armed gunmen last week in Nogales, Mexico.

The pair was abducted by several armed men last Wednesday, April 24. They were bound and held in a house in southern Nogales as their abductors attempted to get $15,000 from relatives in Tucson.

The situation ended the following day when investigators from the Sonora Attorney General’s office located and freed them.

They were interviewed to provide evidence for the prosecution of the kidnappers before they were taken to the international border to return to the United States.

Read more about the Nogales international border kidnapping