Pubdate: Tue, 15 Jun 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: Ana Campoy A GRUESOME RECKONING Librarian Sifts Mexican Press to Tally Drug-Cartel-Related Killings in Juarez LAS CRUCES, N.M.-Molly Molloy keeps a grim diary. "Eight killed in night club," reads her April 28 entry. "Pregnant woman killed during soccer match," she noted on May 4. Ms. Molloy, a 54-year-old librarian at New Mexico State University here, spends most mornings sifting reports in the Mexican press to create a tally of drug-cartel-related killings in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. She is striving to fill a widening information gap about these homicides in Juarez, some 50 miles southeast of Las Cruces, across the Rio Grande from El Paso, Texas. There is no official count of the people killed in Mexico's escalating drug wars-whether the victims are drug traffickers, police or civilians. A government estimate puts the total at about 22,000 in all of Mexico since late 2006. For Juarez, Mexico's deadliest city, state officials keep their own tally, but the swift pace of the killings, as well as distrust of authorities, has prompted reporters and such observers as Ms. Molloy to keep their own counts. Some Americans who attempted to count the killings were overwhelmed by the carnage and gave up. But Ms. Molloy perseveres. The death toll has risen above a thousand in Juarez so far this year, according to her count. "I don't think there's a phenomenon like that in the world unless it's a declared war," she said. Mexican government officials say they aren't deliberately withholding information on the killings. They say determining which homicides are linked to criminal gangs involves lengthy investigations and a level of coordination among various agencies that isn't automatic. The Mexican news media, however, distinguish drug-related killings from, say, domestic violence, by using information collected by reporters at crime scenes. Ms. Molloy tallies their reports and makes her findings available for free to anyone who wants them. Her material is used in news accounts and scholarly studies in the U.S. and beyond, as universities and some U.S. newspapers curtail travel in Mexico because of concerns about the violence. More than 300 people subscribe to Ms. Molloy's daily news and analysis emails, including congressional staff, U.S. and Mexican human-rights watchdogs, local and international reporters, and border observers from as far away as Norway. U.S. reporters covering crime elsewhere in Mexico bemoan the lack of tools like Ms. Molloy's emails. "It's really frustrating not knowing what is going on," said Jared Taylor, a crime reporter at the Monitor newspaper in McAllen, Texas, just across the border from Reynosa, Mexico. Local crime reports are getting thin in Reynosa as journalists themselves become drug-cartel targets, as they have in other cities in northeastern Mexico. Ms. Molloy consults a stream of articles online from her home in New Mexico, as well as copies of newspapers she purchases during trips to Juarez, where reporters are still covering drug-related crime. She copies relevant articles into an online archive, which she uses to compose her email reports. Ms. Molloy said her long-term plan is to build a more comprehensive archive at her university's library to document Juarez's bloody years. She hopes future readers will be able to track, in the news clippings, longstanding problems she and other scholars believe are contributing to today's violence: the migration of poor workers from Mexico's interior searching for manufacturing jobs; the growth of shanty towns; and more recently, a generation of uneducated youth lured by the gangster lifestyle. "Ten years from now, people are going to ask 'What happened in Juarez?' " Ms. Molloy said. Her interest in Latin America started in the 1980s, when she translated articles into English at a newspaper run by the Sandinista government in Nicaragua. These days, she is charged with keeping her school's library well-stocked with Latin American Studies titles, and she did research for "Murder City," a book by journalist Charles Bowden about the killings in Juarez. Ms. Molloy said she feels partly responsible for the cartel mayhem, which is supported by the money spent by Americans on illegal drugs smuggled into the U.S. from Mexico. "It wouldn't be unfair to say that we're the major economic stimulus for the drug business," she said. Beto O'Rourke, an El Paso councilman and subscriber to Ms. Molloy's emails, said they were useful for planning purposes, since many refugees from the violence are settling in El Paso. He tried to keep his own tally of the dead but quit because it took so much time. Ms. Molloy said her work also could help the refugees. Earlier this year, a lawyer representing a person seeking U.S. residency asked Ms. Molloy for documentation of a body-and a severed head-deposited near the client's home. Ms. Molloy found an article on the incident by searching her database for "decapitated." The client's visa was approved. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake