Hole
of Justice
By
Peter G. Jimenea
Business
Behind Bars
On
April 29, 2015, an inmate (name withheld to protect the family) at the Bureau
of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) in Ungka District Jail at Jaro, Iloilo
City, was reported to have committed suicide inside his cell.
Three
days later, May 3, 2015, another inmate in the same compound was also reported
to have committed suicide. But the autopsy report of the medico legal revealed
otherwise, the two prisoners are victims of foul play. Other than traces of
torture, one has a punctured wound on the head.
The
two victims are facing drug charges and one is on schedule for hearing the next
day. There were signs of torture in their bodies and worse, they were found
positive of drugs during autopsy. Parents of the victims are asking justice but
to date no inmate cooperates.
We
cannot discount the possibility that the two victims have unpaid debts while
still outside to the supplier of their vices. People hooked-on-drugs will
always find ways to provide their addicted bodies with drugs and other
substance to satisfy the need.
This
reminds me of the arrest of Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman of the dreaded
Sinaloa Cartel on February 2015, in Northern Mexico. The powerful Mexican drug
lord faces multiple indictments in the US Court. But until now Pres. Barack Obama
has not yet requested his extradition.
The
Sinaloa Cartel displaced the Carrillo Fuentes criminal organization in Ciudad
Juárez. The court papers identify Gabino Salas Valenciano as El Chapo’s man who
ran the cartel’s business in Ciudad Juárez. His job was to hire arms dealers,
drug traffickers and assassins in the U.S. to eliminate clients who will not
pay their debts.
On
August 5, 2009, at Sierra Blanca, Texas inspection station, agents stopped two persons
with trailer containing 303.9 kilos of marijuana. It was learned that a 30
year-old Sergio Saucedo owned them and was trying to smuggle from Mexico.
A month later, on September 3, a
group of masked gunmen from the U.S.–broke into a house in Horizon City, in the
suburbs of El Paso, and kidnapped Saucedo in a maroon-colored Ford Expedition.
It is widely believed that El Chapo ordered the kidnapping.
Five days later after his kidnapping,
on September 8, 2009, Saucedo’s body was found on the banks of the Rio Grande
river semi-nude, with signs of torture and with cut-off hands placed over his
chest, a sign of not-paying-debts.
A suspect in the kidnapping case when
arrested eventually revealed that Saucedo had stolen more than 600 pounds of
marijuana from the drug lord. It was Salas Valenciano, El Chapo’s man in Ciudad
Juárez, who paid them $250,000 to deliver Saucedo.
El Chapo like other kingpins in the
underworld business has a nice way to deliver his message. Through his man
Salas Valenciano who ran the cartel business in Ciudad Juárez, they made their
rule known to the underworld – “TILL DEBT DO US PART.”
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