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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | November 2007 

Drug Hitmen Snatch Buddy's Body From Morgue
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Forensic workers stand near debris of a helicopter that crashed in Ensenada in Mexico's state of Baja California November 14, 2007. (Reuters)
Tijuana, Mexico - Twenty heavily armed drug hitmen snatched the body of a fellow trafficker from a morgue in northern Mexico after he died in a dramatic helicopter crash, police said last week.

The gunmen killed two policemen as they took the corpse from the morgue in the town of Ensenada, about 65 miles (110 km) south of the U.S. border near San Diego, Calif.

"This is unprecedented ... and shows us how far these (drug) organizations can go," said a police spokesman in the border city of Tijuana.

The dead man was thought by police to be a member of the Arellano Felix drug cartel. His fellow traffickers were believed to have wanted his body to take it away for burial without having to identify themselves when claiming the corpse.

He died earlier this week in a helicopter crash along with another suspected trafficker, but the gunmen failed to get the second man's body from the morgue.

The pair were watching a car race through the desert from the helicopter when it hit electricity lines and crashed to the ground. Images of the accident were shown on television.

Around 2,350 people have been killed in Mexico this year in drug violence, most of it between rival cartels.

President Felipe Calderon has sent some 25,000 troops to fight the cartels since taking office last December, and Mexico's security forces have made several major cocaine seizures.



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