Pubdate: Thu, 10 Feb 2005 Source: San Antonio Express-News (TX) Copyright: 2005 San Antonio Express-News Contact: http://www.mysanantonio.com/expressnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/384 Author: Jesse Bogan, Express-News Border Bureau REPORTER PART OF DEADLY BORDER STORY LAREDO ---- A television reporter is in hiding after producing a story that named individuals said to be involved in the disappearances of Americans in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. Gunmen riddled the reporter's parked car with bullets three days after the Televisa report, which featured a hooded informant accusing alleged members of the Gulf Cartel, a gang believed to control the drug trade in the border cities of Matamoros, Reynosa and Nuevo Laredo. The masked source said the cartel's enforcement arm, a paramilitary group called the "Zetas," has Nuevo Laredo divided into quadrants, communicating by radio. He said the group is backed by municipal police and has an informant planted with the Mexican army stationed in the city. An FBI official in Laredo confirmed the general accuracy of the TV report, which included information about captives being fed to lions. In fear of retaliation, Mexican reporters typically don't name those involved in the drug war. Business owners often criticize the media for exaggerating the violence, but the attention is also being credited by a relative of one missing American here as the best way to put pressure on the drug gangs. At least 25 U.S. citizens have disappeared in Nuevo Laredo since August. About a dozen have been released, two have been found dead and the remaining still are missing. U.S. government warnings about the violence have drawn media attention from across the United States. International news organizations also are sending reporters here. Jorge Cardona, 30, a reporter for Televisa Monterrey, wasn't injured in the early morning shooting Monday in front of his home in Monterrey, a 2-hour drive from here. "We gave him some time to rest," said Francisco Cobos, news director at Televisa Monterrey. "For his protection, we decided to put him in a house that nobody knows about." The shooting happened at 5:45 a.m. ---- when Cardona usually leaves for work ---- but on Monday he had the day off, Cobos said. "The shooting possibly happened because of the story, but we don't know," Cobos said. Aldo Fasci, assistant state prosecutor for the state of Nuevo Leon, said by phone Wednesday that there are two lines of investigation, "related to his work, and that's all we can say." Televisa's story about Nuevo Laredo aired in two parts last week, ending Friday. The masked source mentioned names and nicknames of people he said were the cartel's top street leaders in Nuevo Laredo. Then the masked man described a network of "halcones," or lookouts, who drive the streets, monitoring the city for the cartel. "Lookouts are surrounding the city, checking who is coming and going while communicating with the municipal police," he said, adding that an informant with the Mexican army stationed here advises the group about immediate military raids or possible arrests. "They have lions," the man said. "They throw (captives) to the lions." Art Fuentes, an FBI agent in Laredo, saw a copy of the footage Wednesday. "The information on that video is consistent with what has been reported to us," said Fuentes, adding that he's not at liberty to discuss any ongoing investigations. The agency monitors the drug violence but actively investigates cases involving Americans being held for ransom. A spokesman for Nuevo Laredo Mayor Daniel Pena, who took office in January, downplayed the accusations and gave a response common among border officials when discussing organized drug gangs. "Until now, the police in charge of prevention haven't encountered any types of crime like they are saying" in the report, spokesman Marcos Manuel Rodriguez Leija said. At least 14 municipal police officers have been killed in Nuevo Laredo since 2001. Many others have disappeared. Rodriguez, the spokesman, said: "A large part of the municipal police has been restructured. High school diplomas are required of officers as well as psychological exams." Meanwhile, disturbing news reports are likely to continue. William Slemaker, the step-father of Yvette Martinez, 27, who disappeared Sept. 17 with her friend Brenda Cisneros, 23, both of Laredo, after a Pepe Aguilar concert across the Rio Grande in Nuevo Laredo, has been interviewed almost daily in the past few months, especially after reports by the New York Times and the Washington Post. "We are hoping the people who have our daughter will get tired of all the news coverage and give her back so we will shut up," Slemaker said. He said reporters from Germany and the BBC are coming to Laredo next week. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth