Tag Archives: Attorney General Office

2 NJ state troopers lose jobs over high-speed sports car escort

A New Jersey state trooper has pleaded guilty to altering the license plate on his patrol car to cover up his role in escorting a caravan of sports cars that traveled at more than 100 mph.

A second trooper in the same case is applying for a pretrial intervention program that would keep his record clean.

The state Attorney General’s Office announced Monday that both have forfeited their jobs with the State Police and are barred from working in law enforcement in New Jersey.

Sgt. First Class Nadir Nassry of Phillipsburg pleaded guilty to tampering with records. The state says it’s recommending he receive probation.

Trooper Joseph Ventrella of Bloomingdale is trying to enroll in the pretrial program.

The two escorted the caravan in 2012 against State Police policy.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

2 NJ troopers lose jobs over high-speed escort

A New Jersey state trooper has pleaded guilty to altering the license plate on his patrol car to cover up his role in escorting a caravan of sports cars speeding down the Garden State Parkway at more than 100 mph.

A second trooper in the same case is applying for a pretrial intervention program that would keep his record clean.

The state Attorney General’s Office announced Monday that both have forfeited their state police jobs and are barred from working in law enforcement in New Jersey.

Sgt. First Class Nadir Nassry of Phillipsburg pleaded guilty to tampering with records. The state says it’s recommending he receive probation.

Trooper Joseph Ventrella of Bloomingdale is trying to enroll in the pretrial program.

Witnesses reported spotting the Atlantic City-bound caravan last March.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

No explanation for police chief missing in Mexico

In one of Mexico‘s most violent border cities, no one is saying what happened to Police Chief Roberto Balmori Garza.

It’s been a week since he went missing from Nuevo Laredo and the local news media have reported nothing, even after two of his brothers showed up murdered in a neighboring state on Feb. 17. One of them was an agent for the federal Attorney General’s Office.

City spokesman Juan Jose Zarate said the local government has no confirmation that Balmori Garza disappeared, only that he has not come to work.

He said the mayor, Benjamin Galvan Gomez, is still waiting for the chief to show up.

“That’s why we’ve put out absolutely no statement,” Zarate said.

It’s just one of the strange realities of the border city of 350,000 people, which is racked by drug violence every time a gang decides to challenge the reigning cartel at the busiest commercial crossing at the U.S.-Mexico border. Attacks have flared again in the Zeta stronghold since the beginning of the year.

On a recent afternoon, the few people willing to talk about life in Nuevo Laredo refused to be quoted for fear of retaliation. Residents rely on social media, not the press, to keep each other informed of attacks and day-to-day security.

Two weeks ago, the U.S. consulate in Nuevo Laredo reported via social media three grenade explosions in the vicinity of the consulate and a general uptick in violence from organized crime. A couple of days later it reported explosions near city hall.

The police station, city hall and U.S. consulate have all extended their security perimeters.

“Mexican law enforcement sources tell us the increased violence is likely the result of rival transnational criminal organizations fighting for control of the city and that similar attacks are likely to continue in the near-term,” the consulate said in a message dated Feb. 8.

It’s difficult to even gauge the impact of the chief’s disappearance because he had no police force. Local police haven’t patrolled the streets of Nuevo Laredo for nearly two years after being disbanded over concerns about corruption, according to a U.S. State Department security report.

Zarate …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Ex-Mexico official: List of missing doesn't exist

A member of former Mexican President Felipe Calderon‘s administration disputed on Friday that there is a list of 27,000 missing people as announced by the current government of President Enrique Pena Nieto.

Jose Vega, who was Calderon’s coordinator of the National Security System, an entity responsible for collecting and analyzing security data, said that the only registry on disappeared people contains 5,319 names.

Some of the missing people are those whose disappearances are blamed on organized crime, but others include those who may have voluntarily stopped contacting their families, Vega wrote in a letter sent to Mexican and international media.

Vega said that it’s up to state authorities to investigate missing person reports and to keep records on those people. He said the list that includes 5,319 people who went missing in the last decade is not complete because local authorities didn’t send the federal government the requested information when Calderon’s administration tried to compile a list.

This leads him, Vega wrote, to “categorically reject the existence of a list alluded to by national and international media and based on alleged leaks by the federal Attorney General’s Office.”

Lia Limon, deputy secretary for human rights at the Interior Department, told reporters this week that the government plans to unveil a database containing more than 27,000 records of missing people that were gathered by the federal Attorney General’s Office. She said she had not seen it and did not have details of specific cases.

Limon made the comments the same day Human Rights Watch criticized Calderon in a report on disappearances in Mexico, saying he ignored the problem that the group called “the most severe crisis of enforced disappearances in Latin America in decades.”

A Mexican civic organization released a database late last year that it said contained official information on more than 20,000 people who had gone missing in Mexico over the previous six years — the term of Calderon, who stepped up the government‘s campaign against drug cartels.

In posting the database on its website, Propuesta Civica, or Civic Proposal, said the information was collected by the federal Attorney General’s Office during Calderon’s administration.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Little change in Honduras prison where 362 died

On the 14th day of each month, Jesus Garcia joins other relatives to hoist a cardboard coffin and carry it in a macabre procession down a road to the prison where two cousins died with 360 other inmates in the worst prison fire in at least a century.

It’s their way to demand justice in the deaths of Antonio and Franklin Garcia, who were among many left locked in their cells as fire raced through the wooden barracks, and the handful of guards on duty ran for their lives.

“We go to the jail, in a symbolic procession with a casket, to ask for justice, but we get no answers,” Garcia said. “We go to the minister of human rights and she passes it along to the president and he passes it along to the first lady, but then nothing gets done.”

A year after the fire in Comayagua, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) from Tegucigalpa, the investigation remains open and prosecutors have filed no charges. The burned cells and electrical system are still being repaired.

While the government created a new agency told to replace the police in the prisons with specially trained guards, social workers and doctors, the three-person commission that started working last week was given no budget and has no office, according to its director, Agusto Avila.

Even the inmate who was the hero of the fire, finding keys and freeing hundreds of men, was never pardoned as President Porfirio Lobo had promised. Honduran law forbids commuting a murder sentence, so Marco Antonio Bonilla is still serving his time, working in the prison infirmary, where he was awakened that night by the screams of inmates as they were devoured by flames.

“There was no mechanism to extinguish fires, no evacuation plan. The firefighters were not allowed to get there quickly and the guards, instead of acting appropriately, only fired shots in the air, supposedly because that is the established procedure in case of escapes,” said government human rights prosecutor German Enamorado, who led the investigation for the Attorney General’s Office.

Garcia is in a position to know it can happen again. Besides being a relative of the dead, he is the warden of the Juticalpa prison northeast of the capital in rural Olancho state. A fire today in the Juticalpa facility of 500 inmates could cause similar devastation because it doesn’t have running water to fight a blaze, despite the fact it is one …read more
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Mexico: 'Several' detained in tourist rape case

Mexican authorities say they have detained several people in last week’s rape of six Spanish tourists in the Pacific resort of Acapulco. Officials aren’t saying how many suspects are in custody.

Guerrero state Gov. Angel Aguirre says that in addition to being detained in that case, two of the suspects are being held in connection with another rape.

State government spokesman Pedro Julio Velez says the suspects were detained by the federal Attorney General’s Office and taken to Mexico City. Federal officials have not commented.

The Feb. 11 attack on the Spaniards by masked gunmen was the latest incident of violence to tarnish Acapulco’s image, and tourism industry executives are worrying it could hurt business in other Mexican resorts.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

25 die in Mexico oil company office building blast

Rescuers searched the rubble for survivors and authorities promised a thorough investigation after an office building blast killed 25 people and injured 101 at the headquarters of Mexico‘s state-owned oil company, Petroleos Mexicanos.

The cause of the basement explosion in an administrative building next to the iconic, 51-story Pemex tower in Mexico City remained a mystery early Friday, with President Enrique Pena Nieto urging people not to speculate. Theories ranged from an electrical fire to an air conditioning problem to a possible attack.

“We have no conclusive report on the reason,” Pena Nieto told reporters. “We will work to get to the bottom of the investigation to find out, first, what happened work, and if there are people responsible in this case, that we apply the full weight of the law against them.”

Some 46 people remained hospitalized after the Thursday afternoon blast, some gravely injured and others with cuts, fractures and burns. Authorities said the dead were 17 women and eight men.

More than 500 firefighters, soldiers and rescue workers dug through chunks of concrete with dogs, trucks and a Pemex crane.

Interior Minister Miguel Osorio Chong said it was uncertain if any of the roughly 10,000 people who work in the five-building headquarters were still trapped, but that the search would continue. The explosion occurred at about 3:45 p.m., just as the administrative shift was about to end. It hit the basement and first two floors, which rescuers said all collapsed onto each other.

“There is a lot of risk,” rescuer German Vazquez Garcia said of working on the site.

Pemex first said it had evacuated the tower and 14-story administrative building because of a problem with the electrical system. The company later tweeted that the Attorney General’s Office was investigating the explosion.

Ana Vargas Palacio was distraught as she searched for her missing husband, Daniel Garcia Garcia, 36, who works in the building where the explosion occurred. She said she last talked to him a couple hours earlier.

“I called his phone many times, but a young man answered and told me he found the phone in the debris,” Vargas said. The two have an 11-year-old daughter. His mother, Gloria Garcia Castaneda, collapsed on a friend’s arm, crying “My son. My son.”

Gabriela Espinoza, 50, a Pemex secretary for 29 years, was on the second floor of the tower when she said she heard two loud explosions and a third smaller one.

“There was a very loud roar. It was very ugly,” she said.

Espinoza’s co-worker, Tomas Rivera, 32, worked on the ground floor where the explosion occurred and said the force knocked him to the basement, fracturing his wrist and jaw. The injured were taken to two Pemex hospitals and other facilities, including the Red Cross hospital in the Polanco neighborhood near the oil company’s office headquarters, where relatives huddled in the waiting room for news of their loved ones. Some walked out of meetings with the hospital social worker joyous, while others came out crying.

“We were talking and all of sudden we heard an explosion with white smoke and glass falling from the windows,” said Maria Concepcion Andrade, 42, who lives on the same block as the Pemex building. “People started running from the building covered in dust. A lot of pieces were flying.”

Streets surrounding the building were closed as evacuees wandered around, and rescue crews loaded the injured into ambulances.

Pemex, created as a state-owned company in 1938, has nearly 150,000 employees and in 2011 produced about 2.5 million barrels of crude oil a day, according to its website, with $111 billion in sales. Pena Nieto, who took office in December, has made Pemex reform the center of his platform, with a plan to pump new investment into a company whose profits feed much of Mexico‘s federal budget, but which has fallen behind other oil companies in production, technology and exploration.

Shortly before the explosion, Operations Director Carlos Murrieta reported via Twitter that the company had reduced its accident rate in recent years. Most Pemex accidents have occurred at pipeline and refinery installations.

A fire at a pipeline metering center in northeast Mexico near the Texas border killed 30 workers in September, the largest-single toll in at least a decade for the company.

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Associated Press writers Adriana Gomez Licon and Katherine Corcoran contributed to this report.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

25 dead, 101 injured in explosion at Pemex headquarters in Mexico

An explosion at the main headquarters of Mexico‘s state-owned oil company in the capital killed 25 people and injured 101 on Thursday as it heavily damaged three floors of a building, sending hundreds into the streets and a large plume of smoke over the skyline.

Another 30 people were reported trapped in the debris late Thursday, as soldiers with rescue dogs, trucks with mounted lights and a Pemex crane were brought in to extract victims. The Interior Ministry said it was uncertain of the exact number of people trapped because many were outside having lunch when the explosion occurred about 3:45 p.m. local time in a basement parking garage next to the iconic, 51-story tower of Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, one of the tallest buildings in Mexico City.

“It was an explosion, a shock, the lights went out and suddenly there was a lot of debris,” employee Cristian Obele told Milenio television, adding that he had been injured in the leg. “Co-workers helped us get out of the building.”

President Enrique Pena Nieto said authorities have not yet found what caused the blast in the 14-story building in a busy commercial and residential area. Pemex first said it had evacuated the building because of a problem with the electrical system. The company later tweeted that the Attorney General’s Office was investigating the explosion and any reports of a cause were speculation.

Ana Vargas Palacio was distraught as she searched for her missing husband, Daniel Garcia Garcia, 36, who works in the building where the explosion occurred. She said she last talked to him a couple hours earlier.

“I called his phone many times, but a young man answered and told me he found the phone in the debris,” Vargas said. The two have an 11-year-old daughter. His mother, Gloria Garcia Castaneda, collapsed on a friend’s arm, crying “My son. My son.”

The tower, where several thousand people work, was evacuated following the blast but not damaged, according to Gabriela Espinoza, 50, a Pemex secretary for 29 years who was on the second floor when the explosion next door occurred.

“There was a very loud roar. It was very ugly,” she said.

Espinoza’s co-worker, Tomas Rivera, 32, worked on the ground floor and was knocked to floor, fracturing his wrist and jaw.

Hundreds of firefighters, military in camouflage and Red Cross workers hauled large chunks of concrete and looked for victims late into the night, with at least four bodies pulled out of the rubble, according to an Associated Press reporter at the scene.

The exploded building was intact on the outside but filled inside with debris.

Television images showed people being evacuated in office chairs, and on gurneys. Most of them had injuries likely caused by falling debris.

“We were talking and all of sudden we heard an explosion with white smoke and glass falling from the windows,” said Maria Concepcion Andrade, 42, who lives on the same block as the Pemex building. “People started running from the building covered in dust. A lot of pieces were flying.”

Police landed four rescue helicopters to remove the dead and injured. About a dozen tow trucks were furiously moving cars to make more landing room for the helicopters.

“I profoundly lament the death of our fellow workers at Pemex. My condolences to their families,” Pena Nieto said via Twitter. He later toured the scene.

Streets surrounding the building were closed as evacuees wandered around, and rescue crews loaded the injured into ambulances.

The injured were taken to Pemex’s hospital in the capital’s northwest delegation of Azcapotzalco and the Red Cross hospital in the Polanco neighborhood near the oil company’s office headquarters, where relatives huddled in the waiting room for news of their loved ones. Some walked out of meetings with the hospital social worker joyous, while others came out crying.

Pemex, created as a state-owned company in 1938, has nearly 150,000 employees and in 2011 produced about 2.5 million barrels of crude oil a day, according to its website, with $111 billion in sales.

Shortly before the explosion, Operations Director Carlos Murrieta reported via Twitter that the company had reduced its accident rate in recent years. Most Pemex accidents have occurred at pipeline and refinery installations.

A fire at a pipeline metering center in northeast Mexico near the Texas border killed 30 workers in September, the largest-single toll in at least a decade for the company.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News