logo
Guatemalan town struggles to recover after border shootout

Guatemalan town struggles to recover after border shootout

Independent6 days ago
Nearly two months after Mexican police crossed the border into this Guatemalan town in pursuit of alleged criminals, La Mesilla hasn't fully recovered.
Like many remote border towns, it lives from commerce — legal and illegal — but locals say things still haven't returned to normal since Mexican state police drove armored vehicles into the downtown and engaged in a daytime shootout in June.
On Wednesday, more than 600 Guatemalan police and soldiers carried out nearly two dozen raids in the surrounding areas, but managed to seize only two guns without making an arrest, according to the Interior Ministry.
A criminal organization tied to Mexico's powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel controls the area, making locals reluctant to talk.
A man who sells clothing in La Mesilla said that when he saw the shootout, he used the border much like the criminals do.
'I ran, left everything; it didn't matter, I ran to the Mexican side,' he said. 'We were afraid. When we saw that everything was alright, we returned, we grabbed everything and left.'
That's similar to what led to the shootout on La Mesilla's main drag steps from the border. Mexican police chased suspects they had engaged with in Mexico who fled into Guatemala.
' People want to forget what happened, but there's still fear,' the young man said.
The incident was similar to another border escape a year earlier when hundreds of Mexican citizens fled into Guatemala to escape the violence sparked by the competition to control border crossings between the Jalisco and Sinaloa cartels. Some of those Mexicans spent months in Guatemala as refugees.
The cartels want to control the crossing of drugs, migrants and guns.
Another vendor said sales still hadn't returned to normal. 'That Sunday (of the shootout) was the market day, there were a lot of people,' he said. 'Today we feel safer because there are more police, but sales haven't recovered.'
The organization that authorities targeted Wednesday had been led by a father-son duo, who were both killed previously in a clash with Mexican police.
Guatemala's Interior Ministry said Wednesday's operation was carried out in coordination with Mexico to attempt to keep the targets from escaping across the border. It was unknown where they had gone.
Lusvin López, chief of the National Civil Police antidrug unit, said Wednesday's operation was in response the shootout in June. The United States government also provided support, according to the Interior Ministry, which didn't provide details.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former Heat security guard charged in $2 million theft, sale of jerseys
Former Heat security guard charged in $2 million theft, sale of jerseys

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

Former Heat security guard charged in $2 million theft, sale of jerseys

August 6 - A former law enforcement official, who later worked in security for the Miami Heat and the NBA, made his first appearance in federal court on Tuesday, charged with crimes related to the stealing and selling of game-worn jerseys and other memorabilia. The Southern District of Florida and the Miami FBI charged Marcos Thomas Perez, 62, with transporting and transferring stolen merchandise in interstate commerce. The two agencies announced the charges formally on Tuesday. They had executed a search warrant at Perez' Miami residence on April 3 and came away with approximately 300 game-worn jerseys and other items that the Heat confirmed had been stolen. Perez is a 25-year retired veteran of the Miami Police Department. He worked for the Heat from 2016-21 and for NBA security from 2022-25. The charging documents state that Perez sold more than 100 items to online brokers at a price of $2 million. The items were then shipped across state lines. One noteworthy items is a Heat jersey worn by LeBron James during the NBA Finals. Perez is alleged to have sold the jersey for $100,000. That jersey later sold for $3.7 million at a Sotheby's auction. Perez had unique access to the Kaseya Center, where the thefts took place. He was one of a handful of employees that could access the secured equipment room where the items were stored on game days and nights. The Heat had plans to display the items in a team museum. --Field Level Media

Daughter of murderous ex-MLB pitcher Daniel Serafini's victims speaks out after he gunned down in-laws
Daughter of murderous ex-MLB pitcher Daniel Serafini's victims speaks out after he gunned down in-laws

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Daughter of murderous ex-MLB pitcher Daniel Serafini's victims speaks out after he gunned down in-laws

Adrienne Spohr, the daughter of Gary Spohr and Wendy Wood, has spoken out after disgraced former MLB player Daniel Serafini gunned down her parents. Serafini, 51, was found guilty in July of murdering his father-in-law and attempting to kill his mother-in-law. The former Minnesota Twins and Chicago Cubs pitcher broke into Spohr and Wood's Lake Tahoe-area home in 2021 and shot dead Spohr at close range before firing at Wood, 69. Wood, who suffered brain damage as a result of the shooting, killed herself in 2023 at an assisted-living facility. Now, Adrienne, the 35-year-old sister of Serafini's wife Erin, paid an emotional tribute to her parents as she opened up on their tragic deaths. 'My parents were forces of nature. They were strong, adventurous, generous and they loved deeply,' Adrienne told People. 'That's how I want people to remember them — not as victims but as the incredible people they were.' Prosecutors claimed that Spohr was 'executed' with a bullet to the back of his head, while Wood was struck by gunfire, vomited and bled on the couch before she crawled to a bathroom, where she managed to call 911. She was so badly injured that she could only gasp for air. Still, emergency responders rushed to the scene, where they found Spohr's body along with bullet shell casings and bloodstains splattered around the luxury home. Medics found Wood in the bathroom, and flew her to the hospital in Reno, where she spent the next month in intensive care. Adrienne said that in the following weeks her mother 'relearned how to walk and write and even went hiking.' However, Wood suffered with depression and anxiety, ultimately taking her life in 2023. 'The heartbreak of losing my dad — and knowing who was responsible [for his death] — became too much,' Adrienne said. 'She said it felt like she had lost her right arm.' Last month, a California jury declared that Serafini was guilty of first-degree murder for his father-in-law's death, as well as the attempted murder of his mother-in-law and burglary, CBS News reported. The jury also found Serafini was guilty of charge enhancements, including discharging of a firearm to cause great bodily injury, lying in wait and that the attack was woeful, willful and premeditated, according to KCRA. However, the 10-woman, two-man jury found Serafini was not guilty of child endangerment as his children were not at the house at the time of the deadly shooting. Prosecutors have claimed throughout the months-long trial that Serafini had been in desperate need of cash following an acrimonious divorce and a failed bar venture for which he lost $14 million in earnings from his baseball career. They also argued that the former baseball star hated his wealthy in-laws and even told others that he wanted them dead, as he continued his affair with the nanny, Samantha Scott, 35. Serafini, they said, ultimately devised a plan to sneak into his wealthy in-laws home on June 5, 2021 when he knew they were spending time out on the lake with his wife and children. He then waited with a .22-caliber gun for his wife and children to return to their Reno, Nevada home, and when Spohr and Wood were watching television shortly before 9am, Serafini opened fire, Assistant Chief Deputy District Attorney Richard Miller told jurors. She ultimately hanged herself in 2023, and her will is now the subject of a contentious legal battle between Serafini's wife, Erin, and Adrienne. The two sisters are fighting to get custody of the couple's estate - which they estimate to be worth $10 million. It now seems that Serafini's relationship with his in-laws had been fraught from the beginning - and tensions only grew worse as the former pitcher and his wife found themselves partially reliant on handouts from her wealthy parents. Making matters worse, her parents forced Serafini to sign a post-nuptial agreement one year after their wedding - meaning he would not get any of her money if their marriage were to end, Erin testified in court, according to the Sacramento Bee. Wearing a backpack and black hoodie, the man thought to be the killer carried a concealed .22-caliber gun as he strolled around Lake Tahoe on the day of the murder As the investigation into the shooting continued, authorities also discovered Serafini once said he would pay to have his in-laws killed. ''I'll pay $20,000 to have them killed. They're wealthy pieces of s***.' That's what he said about his in-laws,' Miller told jurors back in May. He said Serafini made the comment in 2012, the same year he married their daughter, Erin, now 36. Then, just three months before the murder, Serafini was also overheard by a mine foreman saying he wanted to kill them in a furious phone call. Transcripts of angry emails and text messages between Serafini and his wife's parents further showed a heated, ongoing dispute over a $1.3 million loan from his in-laws to help fund Erin's fledgling horse ranch business. Yet the in-laws continued to help out their daughter - even providing her a check for $90,0000 on the day of the grisly murder. Erin and Serafini's two young children had visited the Lake Tahoe compound that day, and as they spent hours boating on the lake, a masked man was caught on camera sneaking into Spohr's Tahoe City shortly after 5pm. Just over an hour later, five gunshots were heard in rapid succession from inside the property with the masked killer caught leaving the home a few minutes before 9pm. The former baseball star is now due to be sentenced on August 18, when he faces the possibility of life behind bars. Serafini was an MLB pitcher who was drafted in 1992 and whose career spanned 11 years with multiple teams. He played for the Cincinnati Reds, San Diego Padres, Chicago Cubs and finished his career with the Colorado Rockies back in 2007.

We must have transparency over migrants and crime. The politicians who lose control of our borders cannot be allowed to hide the consequences from us
We must have transparency over migrants and crime. The politicians who lose control of our borders cannot be allowed to hide the consequences from us

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

We must have transparency over migrants and crime. The politicians who lose control of our borders cannot be allowed to hide the consequences from us

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, looking more beleaguered and sounding less convincing than ever, said yesterday that the police should routinely reveal the nationality and asylum status of those charged with criminal offences. New legal guidance, she promised, would shortly be issued for police forces to provide greater 'transparency'. Not for the first time, Labour was rushing to follow in the footsteps of Nigel Farage 's Reform party. Only 24 hours before, as part of Reform's 'Britain is lawless' campaign, Farage had called for the ethnicity of suspects charged with rape and sexual assaults to be made public. Now Cooper was in a hurry to oblige.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store