Google – AFP, 12 November 2013
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Members of
the Federal Police patrol in Nuevo Leon state, Mexico on
February 20, 2013
(AFP/File, Julio Cesar Aguilar)
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Monterrey —
Authorities have detained a former US soldier accused of leading a gang of
kidnappers in northern Mexico, officials said Monday.
The
32-year-old suspect spearheaded a band of 16 people who operated in the states
of Nuevo Leon, Coahuila and Tamaulipas in the past four years, said Nuevo Leon
security spokesman Jorge Domene.
He carried
two identities -- Luis Ricardo Gonzalez Garcia and Javier Aguirre Cardenas --
and moved to Nuevo Leon's industrial city of Monterrey from the United States
in 2009, Domene said.
He served
in the US military between 1998-2002 before working as a police officer in
Texas between 2002-2009, the spokesman said.
The
suspected gang leader is accused of ordering the September 25 kidnapping of
Jorge Luis Martinez Martinez, the 70-year-old father of the mayor of the town
of Zuazua, a suburb of Monterrey.
The victim
was found dead five days later in the neighboring state of Coahuila even though
a ransom had been paid for his release.
The 16 gang
members were detained in eight separate operations in Nuevo Leon and Coahuila
in the past month, but their arrests and pictures were only presented Monday
because the kidnapping investigations were recently completed.
Their
alleged leader was in possession of a 9mm gun when he was caught while
traveling in a sport-utility vehicle in the wealthy Monterrey suburb of San
Pedro Garza Garcia on October 19, Domene said.
Kidnappings
for ransom have soared in Mexico in recent years, coinciding with a rise in
drug-related violence.
Official
figures show that 1,205 people were abducted in the first nine months of the
year, compared to 1,317 in 2012.

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