Innocent man kidnapped and killed

MEXICAN CARTEL KIDNAPPED MAN IN US, SMUGGLED ACROSS BORDER, FEARED DEAD

 852
 5
 1321
 


Email Article

Print ArticleSend a Tip

The partial unsealing of a criminal complaint by theU.S. Attorney’s Office reveals a Mexican man legally living in the U.S. was kidnapped on U.S. soil by the Mexican Gulf cartel, illegally brought across the U.S. southern border back into Mexico, and allegedly executed.

Roel Garza of Texas was arrested on July 7, 2013 and stands accused of participation in the kidnapping which authorities say was retaliation by the Mexican Gulf cartel for the theft of more than 100 kilograms of cocaine from the cartel. The victim, however, was not involved in any way with the stolen drugs.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the agents of the Gulf cartel claimed to be a police officer and handcuffed the man. The victim’s wife thought police had taken her husband, but when she called the local Texas authorities, she discovered that they had not arrested her husband.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office says the victim was beaten, blindfolded, gagged, and bound in duct tape. He was taken by the agents of the Gulf cartel to a nearby ranch on U.S. soil. Only then, say authorities, did the kidnappers realize they had taken an innocent man and that the victim was not the person they were seeking.

Authorities say the agents of the Gulf cartel decided to sneak him across the porous border and cross the Rio Grande river. U.S. authorities claim agents of the Gulf cartel allegedly murdered the man in Mexico, despite his innocence in the matter.

“The victim was a permanent resident of the U.S. with no criminal record and had no involvement in the theft or sale of cocaine. The victim has not been heard from or seen since this event,” explained the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Follow Brandon Darby on Twitter @brandondarby.

About Karen Hopkins

Karen Hopkins (1949-) was born and raised, California. At seventeen she moved to Talcahuano, Chile. After completing her university degree she moved to London, England to work for Pan American Airlines and traveled extensively throughout Europe, the Middle East, and India. For twenty-six years Karen taught Spanish and English as a Second Language in a variety of settings including a private school in Panama, the "most remote school in the United States" in Ticaboo, Utah, the Navajo Reservation, and on a teacher exchange in Hermosillo, Mexico. Karen and her husband traveled extensively in Mexico and Central America, spending many summers in the highlands of Chiapas, Guatemala, and El Salvador . Karen currently lives and writes in Arizona near the Mexican border.
This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a comment