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Mar4

Mexican soldiers patrol an industrial area of the border city of Ciudad Juarez March 3, 2009.
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (Reuters) – Hundreds of heavily armed soldiers fanned out across Mexico’s bloodiest drug war city on Tuesday, trying to prevent a collapse in law and order just south of the U.S. border.
Sirens blared as the army staged one of its biggest troop build-ups in years in Ciudad Juarez, a desert city across the border from El Paso, Texas, where near-daily clashes between drug gangs and police have terrified residents.
Infamous in the 1990s for the unsolved murders of hundreds of women, Ciudad Juarez is now engulfed in the worst drug violence in Mexico as cartels in league with corrupt cops fight over one of the country’s most profitable smuggling routes.
More than 2,000 people have been murdered in the area over the past year and drug gang hitmen showed their power last month by forcing the city’s police chief to resign with a threat to keep killing police officers until he quit.
“We’ve got to show we can achieve security in Juarez, for Mexico’s sake, for its economy, for people’s lives, for our international reputation,” said Victor Valencia, the Chihuahua state governor’s representative in Ciudad Juarez.
Ciudad Juarez is prized for its location smack in the middle of the 2,000 mile border with road and rail links deep into the United States. The Pacific-coast Sinaloa gang, led by top fugitive Joaquin “Shorty” Guzman, is one of several fighting for control of the city.
Mexico’s police forces are tainted up to the highest levels by corruption and direct links to the drug cartels, and President Felipe Calderon has staked his reputation on a nationwide army-led crackdown on cartels.
Ciudad Juarez is now the most crucial battleground of a war that killed more than 6,000 people across Mexico last year and is scaring off investors in cities near the border.
“The solution is with the military. The federal, state and municipal police are infiltrated by organized crime,” Valencia told Reuters.
The army expects to have 7,500 soldiers and federal police stationed in Ciudad Juarez by the end of the week, with a further 2,000 troops in the rest of Chihuahua state. Six local bishops pleaded in newspaper ads this week for an end to the killings that are “staining the state with blood”.
Troops rolled past U.S.-style shopping malls in Ciudad Juarez on Tuesday to set up checkpoints at bridges running over the border and at the city’s international airport, briefly shut last week after bomb threats.
GANGS PILE IN
Calderon has about 45,000 soldiers across Mexico fighting cartels but has never before sent so many troops to one city.
At least four main cartels are fighting for control of Ciudad Juarez, and gangs of unemployed youths have joined the fray to extort businesses, kidnap residents, rob banks and work as hitmen.
Residents fear the city could go the way of Colombia’s Medellin at the height of the drug war there in the 1990s, when murder rates hit 6,000 deaths a year.

Mexican soldiers inspect vehicles at a checkpoint at the Paso del Norte international border crossing in Ciudad Juarez March 3, 2009.
“Juarez is prisoner to an infinity of groups fighting for the territory, and others who are making the most of the confusion for easy money,” said army spokesman Enrique Torres.
Guzman, Mexico’s most-wanted man, wants to seize Ciudad Juarez from local drug boss Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, and officials say the shadowy La Linea cartel from the western state of Michoacan and the feared Zeta hitmen from the Gulf of Mexico cartel are also at war here. The jump in killings in the city to around 10 a day in February has put Calderon under intense pressure. Some U.S. officials have publicly asked whether Mexico is becoming a failed state and voiced concern about a spillover of executions, kidnappings and extortions into the United States.
Last month, gunmen killed two city councilmen and forced out Ciudad Juarez’s police chief by killing his deputy and vowing to murder an officer every 48 hours until he stepped down.
A former soldier attacked a convoy carrying Chihuahua’s state governor in what many believe was an attack linked to drugs. Spooked by a series of death threats, the city’s mayor now lives over the border in El Paso.
Ciudad Juarez, which boomed in the U.S. Prohibition era and now bulges with factories making goods for export, has pockets of normality during the day. Cars cram its shabby streets, residents sit in parks or walk their children to school.
But at night, the city once famed for its sex and tequila-fueled party life is ghostlike and residents adopt a self-imposed curfew from dusk till dawn.
“The drug hitmen are in control here. Things are out of control, there’s so much death,” said textile salesman Valente Salazar in Ciudad Juarez’s main square as troops swept past in Humvees. “At six o’clock I go home and I don’t go out at all after that. There are so many killings.”
No CommentsFeb28After 35 years on the job, Manhattan DA steps down
Filed under: Obama, Politics; Tagged as: breaking news, district attourney, kennedy, manhattan, mobster, murder, new york new york, Politics, united states, world war IHe has been a prosecutor in New York City since Kennedy administration 
Robert Morgenthau, 89, has been a prosecutor in New York City since the Kennedy administration.
NEW YORK – Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau has decided not to run for re-election, marking the end of a long era for a prosecutor who has locked up murderous mobsters, corrupt CEOs and thousands of other criminals for five decades.
A high-ranking person in Morgenthau’s office who is familiar with the decision says the prosecutor will announce his plans Friday afternoon. The individual spoke on condition of anonymity because the decision had not been announced.
Morgenthau, 89, scheduled an announcement Friday but did not elaborate on its subject.
He has been a prosecutor in New York City since the Kennedy administration, when he was appointed Manhattan’s top federal prosecutor. In 1974, he became the New York state prosecutor in the Manhattan borough, leading the busiest and most prominent district attorney’s office in the nation.
“We owe much of our city’s low crime rate and safe streets to his years of great service. He will be sorely missed,” said City Council member Peter F. Vallone Jr., a former assistant to Morgenthau.
In 2005, at age 86, Morgenthau was elected for the eighth time, turning back a challenge from Leslie Crocker Snyder, a popular former state judge who tried without success to turn his age and lengthy tenure into campaign issues.
Crocker Snyder is seen as a favorite to win the post in the November election.
Morgenthau cultivated a dignified, above-the-fray presence and was widely acknowledged by allies and foes alike as effective, nonpartisan and incorruptible.
Model character for ‘Law & Order’
From that emerged a reputation that extended beyond the Lower Manhattan courthouse. He was the model for the avuncular character of prosecutor Adam Schiff, played by actor Steven Hill on the long-running television series, “Law & Order.”He hails from a wealthy, prominent New York family. His paternal grandfather was U.S. ambassador to Turkey during World War I, and his father was treasury secretary under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, a family friend.
Morgenthau had a lifelong friendship with members of the Kennedy clan. He campaigned for John F. Kennedy in the 1960 presidential race. The next year, the new president named him U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.
No CommentsFeb16Islamic TV station Founder confessed to beheading his wife
Filed under: U.S., Wacky News; Tagged as: breaking news, divorce, islamic, life, murder, murdered, murders, new york new york, police officer, television, the police, tvNo Comments
NEW YORK (CNN) — The founder of an Islamic television station in upstate New York aimed at countering Muslim stereotypes has confessed to beheading his wife, authorities said. Muzzammil Hassan was charged with second-degree murder after police found the decapitated body of his wife, Aasiya Hassan, at the Bridges TV station in the Buffalo suburb of Orchard Park, said Andrew Benz, Orchard Park’s police chief.Hassan was arrested Thursday.
His wife filed for divorce January 6, and police had responded to several domestic violence calls at the couple’s home, Benz said.
Hassan went directly to the police station after his wife’s death and confessed to killing her, Benz told CNN. Benz declined to give further details.
Attempts to reach an attorney for Hassan were unsuccessful, and his family didn’t return calls from CNN. He had two children, 4 and 6, with his wife. He had two other children, 17 and 18, from his previous marriage.
He launched Bridges TV, billed as the first English-language cable channel targeting Muslims inside the United States, in 2004. At the time, Hassan said he hoped the network would balance negative portrayals of Muslims following the attacks of September 11, 2001.
The station’s staff is “deeply shocked and saddened by the murder of Aasiya Hassan and the subsequent arrest of Muzzammil Hassan,” a statement from Bridges TV said.
“Our deepest condolences and prayers go out to the families of the victim,” the statement said.
Feb7Judge clears dead Texas man of rape conviction
Filed under: U.S.; Tagged as: breaking news, death, Health, health care, life, murder, prison, texasNo Comments‘I’m truly sorry for my pathetic behavior and selfishness,’ actual culprit says
AUSTIN, Texas – A man who died in prison while serving time for a rape he didn’t commit was cleared Friday by a judge who called the state’s first posthumous DNA exoneration “the saddest case” he’d ever seen.State District Judge Charles Baird ordered Timothy Cole’s record expunged. Cole was convicted of raping a Texas Tech University student in Lubbock in 1985 and was sentenced to 25 years in prison. He died in 1999 at age 39 from asthma complications.
DNA tests in 2008 connected the crime to Jerry Wayne Johnson, who is serving life in prison for separate rapes. Johnson testified in court Friday that he was the rapist in Cole’s case and asked the victim and Cole’s family to forgive him.
“I’m responsible for all this. I’m truly sorry for my pathetic behavior and selfishness. I hope and pray you will forgive me,” Johnson said. The Innocence Project of Texas said Cole’s case was the first posthumous DNA exoneration in state history.
“I have his name,” Cole’s mother, Ruby Cole Session, said after the hearing. “That’s what I wanted.”
Cole and his relatives for years claimed he was innocent, but no one believed them until evidence from the original rape kit was tested for DNA. Cole had refused to plead guilty before trial in exchange for probation, and while in prison, he refused to admit to the crime when it could have earned him release on parole.
The Innocence Project pressed for a hearing to start the process of clearing Cole’s name. Cole’s family now wants Gov. Rick Perry to issue a formal pardon.
‘He could have been a father’
Michele Mallin, the rape victim in the case who originally identified Cole as her attacker, said she felt guilty that the wrong man went to prison. The Associated Press does not typically identify rape victims but Mallin, now 44, has come forward publicly to help clear Cole’s name.
Confronting Johnson after his testimony, Mallin told him she was “going to try to forgive you, but it’s going to take a long hard time. … No woman deserves it. No person deserves what that man got. He could have been a father, he could have been a grandfather right now.”
Mallin picked Cole out of a photo lineup that included at least six other pictures. All were standard jail mug shots except for Cole’s photo, which was a Polaroid. Mallin later identified Cole in a live lineup and again at trial.
She said Lubbock officials had portrayed Cole as a violent criminal and a thug while investigating her case. The Lubbock County district attorney’s office did not participate in the hearing.
Gary Wells, an Iowa State University professor and expert in witness testimony, said Friday that improperly conducted lineups could be manipulated and that witnesses tend to select the person who looks most like the perpetrator. “If the real perpetrator is not in the lineup, it’s a horrible strategy,” Wells said.
