Pubdate: Sat, 04 Dec 2010 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: David Luhnow Note: Jose de Cordoba contributed to this article. YOUTH SUSPECTED AS CARTEL HIT MAN MEXICO CITY-Mexican troops arrested a 14-year-old U.S. citizen suspected of being a hit man for a drug cartel and beheading his victims, the latest shocking development in Mexico's war on drug-trafficking gangs. Edgar Jimenez was captured late Thursday at an airport in Cuernavaca, a tourist destination about an hour south of Mexico City, as he attempted to board a flight to Tijuana, the Mexican army said in a statement. The teenager-short and slight with curly black hair-was allegedly trying to make his way back to San Diego, where he has lived previously and where his stepmother is believed to live, officials said. The boy belonged to a youth gang that became notorious last month after pictures posted online showed members posing with assault rifles next to their victims. Other members of the gang appeared to be in their early teens. The army said Mr. Jimenez was captured along with two of his teenage sisters, one of whom the Army suspects of being a girlfriend of a leader in the Beltran Leyva cartel. The Beltran Leyva drug gang, named for the brothers who founded it, is originally from Sinaloa state in western Mexico but has much of its operations in the country's central region. In a postarrest presentation by officials to the media, Mr. Jimenez acknowledged that he had killed several people, at least four of whom he decapitated. He said he acted under the influence of drugs and was pressured to carry out the killings by the top hit man of the cartel in the state of Morelos, Julio Raquilla, called "El Negro," or "The Black One." Authorities said they have no more information about Mr. Jimenez's background except for what the boy said was documentation from San Diego. The boy said that when he was age 12, he was picked up by Mr. Raquilla and given drugs. Mr. Jimenez was then pressured to carry out killings, he said. Asked if he regretted his actions, the boy said "yes, I'm sorry I got involved with all this." Criminal activity by minors is on the rise in much of Mexico, where children in towns without much economic opportunity view wealthy drug lords as a model. One survey in Ciudad Juarez, the epicenter of Mexico's drug-related violence, showed children as young as nine years old wanted to join a drug gang. "The kids [in narcotics cartels] are getting younger and younger," says Bruce Bagley, a Latin America expert at the University of Miami. "Mexico has fallen into a spiral that will scar a whole generation. Life is cheap and getting cheaper." Mexicans vented their frustration online at their own country's lack of progress. "Look at what we've created: lack of a proper education, lack of opportunities, lack of a healthy social environment. A perfect cocktail for young people to join narcotics gangs," an individual who identified himself as Benito Camelo wrote on the online comments page of Mexico's leading newspaper, Reforma. Drug-related violence in Mexico has claimed more than 30,000 lives since President Felipe Calderon took power and declared war on drug gangs. The barbarity of the killing has escalated. On Friday, the heads of three men turned up in a plastic bag in southern Guerrero state. The skin had been flayed from their faces. As the ages of killers drop, so do the ages of law-enforcement personnel tasked with catching them. One town in Chihuahua appointed a 20-year-old college student, a female, as police chief because no one else wanted the job. Jose de Cordoba contributed to this article. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D