Pubdate: Mon, 24 Jan 2000 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2000 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: PO Box 120191, San Diego, CA, 92112-0191 Fax: (619) 293-1440 Website: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Forum: http://www.uniontrib.com/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Anna Cearley Union-tribune Staff Writer TIJUANA NEIGHBORHOOD REELING IN FEAR AFTER RASH OF KILLINGS TIJUANA -- The residents of Ejido Chilpancingo have grown accustomed to the petty crime the drug trade brings to their working-class neighborhood. The stolen cars. The house break-ins. The occasional addict slumped on a street corner. But the stakes grew dramatically higher this month when a citywide killing spree moved into the neighborhood, which lies below the assembly plants at the Otay Mesa border checkpoint. On Jan. 14, three men eating at a family restaurant were gunned down by a man armed with an AK-47 assault rifle. The next day, a little boy found the corpses of two men lying in a ditch. "The executions have us all worried," said Maurilio Sanchez Pachuca, president of an Ejido Chilpancingo neighborhood organization. "We are suffering from the narcotics trade, and it is a grave example for the young people." And the fears of this neighborhood are spreading throughout the city. Since the start of the new year, Tijuana has logged more than 30 killings. Authorities say about a dozen may be linked to organized crime's narcotics dealings or immigrant-smuggling. State police are alarmed at these growing signs of organized crime. But proof is hard to come by, because few witnesses or acquaintances of the victims are willing to come forward. When links are found, the cases are turned over to federal authorities. "What we are finding are the corpses, but little information," said state Attorney General Juan Manuel Salazar Pimentel. The homicides include: A legal adviser for Grupo Beta, a special law-enforcement unit that targets smugglers and other shadowy characters on the border, was gunned down in front of the Hotel Conquistador at about midnight on Jan. 4. Another man was killed at the scene, where authorities found more than 100 bullet casings. On Jan. 14, Lorenzo Guadalupe Favela Montoya, 30; his brother, Juan Diego Favela Montoya, 26; and an unidentified man were hit by almost a dozen bullets at La Palapa in Ejido Chilpancingo. No one else was injured. A child found the corpses of Luis Enrique de la Torre, 29, and Carlos Alberto de la Torre, 39 in a ditch in Ejido Chilpancingo on Jan. 15. The victims had bruises on their bodies and marks on their wrists from being tied. One had a bullet hole near his temple. On Jan. 17, state police discovered the ossified remains of Bismarck Hidalgo Corral, a former state police officer reported missing by his family in December 1997, after he had left the force. Authorities had to dig through layers of concrete and dirt to exhume the body, which was buried behind a house. Enrique Tellaeche, spokesman for the state Attorney General's Office, said this month's homicide statistics are alarming because they include so many execution-style killings. "It seems to be that the drug traffickers are using our territory to resolve their differences," he said. With presidential elections in July, Tijuana's violence is bleeding into the collective consciousness of city dwellers. Residents say candidates will have to offer solutions. "There is a lack of results in resolving these crimes, and a lack of punishment," said Chamber of Commerce President Arturo Gonzalez Cruz. "That worries us a lot. We need a government that will take action strongly and seriously against crime." Crime is a concern on both sides of the border. But in San Diego, with a population of 1.2 million, homicides have declined since 1991 when they reached a record 167. Last year there were 58. In comparison, Baja California police last year investigated almost 400 killings, stabbings and shootings in Tijuana, whose population is near that of San Diego. Gonzalez fears the recent spate of execution-style killings will take its toll on Tijuana's economy. He said a growing number of business people are leaving Tijuana to live in San Diego. Some are even taking their businesses with them. "The insecurity is defined by a line -- the border," he said. While the slayings have magnified the insecurity of Tijuana residents, the gradual increase of other crimes is fraying their nerves. Gonzalez's construction and plumbing-fixture business has been robbed five times in the past few months. Each time, at least $1,000 was taken from the cash register. As some Mexicans move north to escape crime, U.S. residents may be heading south to foment it. At Ejido Chilpancingo, residents say unwelcome visitors from the United States roam the streets on weekends. Their reason for being here is unclear. But in the past, San Diego law-enforcement authorities have identified gang members from Barrio Logan as go-betweens for the Baja California drug cartel headed by the Arellano Felix brothers. In Ejido Chilpancingo, Claudia Zarate, 31, closes the doors of her home at 8 o'clock every night. From her barred windows she watches the darkened streets. With her husband and two children safely inside, she turns her attention to the television and radio. After the shooting at La Palapa restaurant, "I am even more worried," she said. "We have to take even more precautions to make sure we are safe." La Palapa has been closed since the shooting. It is a small building with a thatched roof, bamboo walls and palm trees planted to give it a tropical ambience. This week, mothers passed by the restaurant with baby strollers, and residents gathered around a nearby food cart. Maria Gutierrez, 29, who works at a nearby restaurant, recently moved here from Durango with her husband and children. She is shocked by Tijuana's crime rate. "I believe it's because we are near the border, and things are just more dangerous," she said. Jose Julian Hernandez, 23, who grew up in Ejido Chilpancingo, adjusted to Tijuana's dangers a long time ago. "Someone is at the house all day, so we never leave it alone," he said, his arms folded over his chest as he stood in front of the small concrete building on a sunny afternoon. Julian was standing at this spot when he heard the shots that killed the three men at La Palapa about three blocks away. He heard the diners' screams and saw their shadowy forms as they fled. "That's a family-type restaurant, and it's very surprising to us that this would happen here," he said. "We can't walk the streets in peace." - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson