Pubdate: Sat, 02 Aug 2003 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Section: Page A7 Copyright: 2003 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Ricardo Sandoval, Dallas Morning News 5 KILLED IN DRUG-GANG VIOLENCE MEXICO CITY -- At least five people were dead and several injured after a day of what police believe is an outbreak of drug-gang violence in Nuevo Laredo, a bustling commercial city on the Mexico-Texas border. Three people died in an early morning shootout yesterday between groups of heavily armed men in an area near downtown Nuevo Laredo. Two were killed when a pickup truck was struck in the shootout and caught fire, police said. Another died of gunshot wounds at the scene. None of the dead have been identified, officials said. Officials denied that army units called into the shootout had destroyed a truck with a bazooka. Five hours after the 2 a.m. shootout, police found two more bodies in a vehicle outside of Nuevo Laredo. The unidentified men had been handcuffed and shot in the head, according to local police. The bloody day in Nuevo Laredo is the latest in a year of violence that has killed at least 20 local, state, and federal police officers on this stretch of the US-Mexico border. The body count includes four federal agents who were kidnapped and executed, according to federal officials. US and Mexican drug agents suspect that the new violence is related to rival drug gangs vying for control of a region dominated by the Gulf Cartel. Earlier this year, Osiel Cardenas, the Gulf Cartel's leader, was arrested by the Mexican army after a ferocious shootout with his bodyguards - -- some of whom were former soldiers and police officers. It was unclear what the role of federal police and the military was in yesterday's violence in Nuevo Laredo. What is known is that around 2 a.m. local police reported being in pursuit of a caravan of armed men in large vehicles. The suspects had fired upon them, and the local officers were calling for support from army units, according to taped conversations between dispatchers and local police, published by El Universal, a Mexico City newspaper. "They're shooting at us, we ask that you send in the military," one police officer says. A dispatcher responds that the army has been called and urges the officers on the scene to shoot at the assailants "in the name of our fallen colleagues." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman