Pubdate: Wed, 03 Feb 2010 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/formnewsroom Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Authors: Daniel Borunda, and Adriana Gomez Licon EL PASO MAN KILLED IN SHOOTOUT LED CARTEL HIT SQUAD An El Paso man killed by Mexican soldiers in a shootout on Monday was the mastermind behind the massacre of 16 people at a birthday party over the weekend in Juarez, federal officials said Tuesday night. Adrian Ramirez, alias "Ramon, El 12 or El Rama," allegedly led a hit team for the Juarez drug cartel also known as La Linea, authorities said in statement that included artist renderings of other suspects in the slayings. Federal officials said the team of shooters believed the people attending the party were members of a rival gang known as Artistas Asesinos. Officials refused to say whether any of the victims were gang members, but most of them were identified as students and athletes. The attack shocked Mexico because of its brutality, and it caused an immediate response from officials, who offered a million peso -- about $76,000 -- reward. Authorities said they discovered that Ramirez was from El Paso. El Paso law enforcement said they did not immediately have information about Ramirez. Ramirez had an "EPT" tattoo on his abdomen, according to a photograph provided by Mexican authorities. Officials have said that "EPT" stands for El Paso, Texas, and that the insignia is also used by members of the El Paso-based Barrio Azteca prison gang. Mexican officials said Ramirez, who is also suspected in the killing of four people at the Bandoleros nightclub on Monday, was shot and killed about 3 p.m. Monday after a chase that ended in a shootout with soldiers. Ramirez and Jose Dolores Arroyo Chavarria were driving away after a roadway shooting in an attempt to kill Daniel Elias Becerra Vicencio, a member of the Artistas Asesinos, authorities said. Arroyo was arrested. The car, a 2002 Pontiac Grand Am, had been reported stolen in the U.S. Artistas Asesinos, also known as AA, or Doblados, are rivals of the Azteca gang, which is aligned with the Juarez cartel. Arroyo is allegedly a "halcon" (falcon), slang for lookouts during "jales," or jobs, done by cartel operatives. Investigators are looking for a dozen other shooting suspects, identified only by numbers the cartel uses as identifiers. A man known as El Diego, or "El 10," ordered Ramirez to attack the party where members of the Artistas Asesinos were believed to be celebrating, Arroyo told investigators, according to a narrative provided by investigators. The attack at the birthday party began when lookouts first scouted the neighborhood to make sure there were no police. Four vehicles then arrived with 24 men, some armed with AK-47s and AR-15 assault rifles to shoot the partygoers, authorities said. The statement offered by Mexican authorities does not go into detail about what happened inside the party, but bodies were found in three locations, and blood was spilled on floors and splattered against walls. In all, 16 died and 12 were wounded. The youngest killed was a 13-year-old girl and the oldest was 42. Wakes took place Tuesday for some of the victims. President Felipe Calderon condemned what he called the "cowardly murder of a group of young people." Some Juarez school officials, lawmakers and the human-rights commission demanded that the government reshape its strategy to fight organized crime. "The society in which we are living is already very ill," said the principal of high school CBTIS 128, which seven of victims attended. She did not want her name published because of safety concerns. Four CBTIS 128 students died, and three were hospitalized in stable condition. "Now the situation is critical. We, faculty and administration, are very shocked," the principal said. CBTIS 128 will start classes today without Rodrigo Cadena Davila, Juan Carlos Medrano and Brenda Ivonne Escamilla, all 17, and Carlos Lucio Moreno Avila, 18, who were killed. "I'm scared more fear will be spread," the principal said. At the Juarez campus of the Autonomous University of Chihuahua, dean Jose Eduardo Borunda Escobedo said it was a disgrace to lose two college students in the attack. "We are demanding the government to investigate thoroughly and that the full weight of law fall upon those responsible for the killings," Borunda Escobedo said. Mexican Sen. Fernando Baeza Melendez of Chihuahua said a minute of silence for the victims was observed during Monday's session of congress in Mexico City. "There's a need to revise the strategy against organized crime followed by the federal government," said Baeza Melendez, of the Institutional Revolutionary Party. "The Calderon administration began with the wrong diagnosis." More than 4,400 people have been killed in Juarez since a war between the Juarez and Sinaloa drug cartels began in January 2008. Calderon has deployed about 45,000 soldiers nationwide to fight the cartels, including about 8,000 in Juarez. "We are asking to redefine the strategy," Baeza Melendez said. Mexican Rep. Adriana Terrazas Porras, of Juarez, used the massacre as an example to tell other legislators about the rising brutality of crimes that have spread uncertainty and mistrust among residents. "It cannot be possible that only the military and federal police are sent as a measure to patrol streets," she said in a news release. Other groups blamed officials for the lack of public safety. The Frente Nacional Contra la Represion en Ciudad Juarez, or National Front Against Repression in Juarez, said residents of the Villas de Salvarcar neighborhood, where the massacre occurred, criticized soldiers when they arrived at the crime scene. The group alleged that soldiers sealed off the scene, harassed passers-by and prevented wounded victims from receiving medical attention. A spokesman for Coordinated Operation Chihuahua said he could not comment because the investigation continued. "We blame the three levels of government -- federal, state and city - -- for the massacres that occur in the city, and for failing to protect our community," the group said in a statement. Mexico's National Commission of Human Rights urged citizens to report anything they knew about the massacre. Dennis Blair, director of the National Intelligence Center, spoke about Mexico's drug cartels and violence during his testimony Tuesday before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. He said more than 7,000 people died in Mexico last year in drug-related violence. According to Blair's Annual Threat Assessment report for the committee, President Calderon "is determined to break the cartels' power and influence and reduce drug flows despite slow progress and continued high levels of violence ... the drug cartels probably will not destabilize the political situation even with escalated violence." - -------------- Times reporter Diana Washington Valdez contributed to this story. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart