craffles
Brownlow Medallist
What areas in Mexico are deemed to be “safe tourist spots”?
Cancun?
Cancun?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yeah, Cancun, Riviera Maya, Puerto Vallarta, Cabo, La Paz.What areas in Mexico are deemed to be “safe tourist spots”?
Cancun?
'The tyres issue is, of course, a cover story,' he said.
'No one will kill three tourists in Mexico for tyres. You can steal the tyres during the night without drawing so much attention.'
His comments come after the style of the alleged slayings - a single gunshot to the head - sparked fears locally about the possible involvement of drug cartels, which are rife in the region.
Violence in Mexico is mainly carried out by warring cartels and criminal groups battling for control of the cities, according to Mr Talmi.
'Many tourists from many parts of the world believe they can behave the same as they do in their home country without understanding the culture,' he said.
Mr Talmi said that areas like Baja California are of special concern for tourists as they are very isolated with low government presence.
'Mexico today is one of the most dangerous countries in the world. Visitors may face different risks as robberies, kidnappings, extortions and more,' he said. "
Quote below NY Times 7/5/24
"
On Sunday, Mexican authorities announced that the bodies of the three tourists, found at the bottom of a well with gunshot wounds to their heads, had been identified by their families.
The men had been killed in a carjacking gone wrong, the authorities said, and suspects had been detained within days of the men’s disappearance. More people are being investigated.
It was a tragic yet somewhat fast resolution to a case that had drawn international attention.
For many local Mexicans, however, the quick response from the authorities to locate the Robinson siblings and Jack Carter Rhoad, the American, and make arrests seemed to be an exception in a country where tens of thousands of missing-person cases have sat for years without ever being solved.
The government said in March that about 100,000 people are missing in Mexico, though the United Nations says that could be an undercount.
“It is very difficult, except for high-profile cases like the one that just happened, for the authorities to immediately trigger the search,” said Adriana Jaén, a sociologist based in Ensenada who provides legal, emotional and logistical support to people searching for their missing loved ones.
Federal and state officials in Mexico tend to claim that violence levels have dropped even as official data contradicts them. The local authorities have themselves been involved in disappearances — in Baja California, municipal police officers from Ensenada were recently accused in the disappearance of one man. And then there’s also a lack of resources to investigate."
It makes sense the cartels prefer not to target tourists because it can bring unwanted external attention which is what's happened here and place pressure on the cops who are on their payroll. It's very corrupt.
All shot in the head doesn't really indicate resistance or a fight, more so if they were killed in their tents.
The car itself and the tyres weren't what they wanted, if robbery it was probably something in the vehicle. Or they've had interactions with these three prior and there was some sort of score to settle?
Also possible the three arrested are patsies, charged quickly to settle it and limit any further probing by outsiders.
I wonder how well the two brothers knew the American they were with.
There is a basic conflict in the tents being blood spattered and that they resisted the robbery like in the below report.It makes sense the cartels prefer not to target tourists because it can bring unwanted external attention which is what's happened here and place pressure on the cops who are on their payroll. It's very corrupt.
All shot in the head doesn't really indicate resistance or a fight, more so if they were killed in their tents.
The car itself and the tyres weren't what they wanted, if robbery it was probably something in the vehicle. Or they've had interactions with these three prior and there was some sort of score to settle?
Also possible the three arrested are patsies, charged quickly to settle it and limit any further probing by outsiders.
I wonder how well the two brothers knew the American they were with.
There is a basic conflict in the tents being blood spattered and that they resisted the robbery like in the below report.
If they were resisting how come it was three seperate head shots and no other shots or wounds?
If the were executed in their tents then how were they resisting the theft?
There is a conundrum between the two and with the rapid arrest it is possible that it is to 'clean up the crime' without proper investigation by the Mexican authorities.
That the Mexican authorities are under reporting crime in the region and country anyway, as stated in the NYTimes it looks more likely that they don't want to scare the tourist's and want the eyes off the whole business.
The fact that there was a US citizen involved and the involvement in the initial reports of the FBI in the investigation may lead to a further more thorough investigation but it is known that the mexican authorities do not have the resources to spend on investigating crime as there is just too much and they are overloaded already.
We may never know what the real circumstances were.
As to Mexico being a dangerous place to travel, it is as are a lot of South American countries.
No travel is ever totally safe anyway, on cruise ships the risk of Norovirus is very real, even a trip to the airport has it's own risks. As you said previously though camping in a secluded spot was never a good idea.
"Mexican police have revealed they found three abandoned tents splattered with blood at a campsite south of the town of Ensenada.
Authorities also found shell casings at the campsite where the three men were last seen with further investigations leading them to the well about 2km away.
Baja California's Attorney-General, María Andrade Ramírez, said the murder investigation would probe whether the men were killed in an alleged robbery.
She said the alleged thieves were likely interested in the mens' truck, a white Chevrolet Colorado pickup, and more specifically in the tyres.
'When they tried to get the vehicle, the victims opposed the robbery, the robbers were armed with a firearm and apparently shot the victims,' Ms Andrade Ramírez said."
Tragic voicemail Aussie surfer left girlfriend before his brutal death
Callum Robinson and his brother Jake, age 33 and 30, were travelling with another friend in Mexico when they disappeared. They were found dead in a well on Saturday.www.dailymail.co.uk
This article suggests one of the cartels handed them over to police.
Make of that, what you will.
Nah it reminds me of the triple murder in Burwood. You wouldn't get a light sentence in Australia.They are going to throw the book hard at the murderer.
Bet now he wishes he committed the murders in Australia.
He get 20 and serve 12 to 15 with good behaviour.
Nah it reminds me of the triple murder in Burwood. You wouldn't get a light sentence in Australia.
Ashley Coulston - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Thanks for sharing - very eye opening. What a lawless place.Update from the Borderland Beat crew
https://www.borderlandbeat.com/2024/05/sinaloa-cartels-la-rana-linked-to.html?m=1
These guys are proper journosThanks for sharing - very eye opening. What a lawless place.
I've done some stupid shit travelling, me and a girlfriend walked past La Vele in Naples. we got dropped off in the wrong area with no battery and had to ask people how to get to a hotel and they kept saying 'too far, too far.' everywhere was full of smashed shop windows and people would get on their balconies to watch us walk past. it was ****ing scary. we were pretty resigned to sleeping in a ditch and seeing what happened.not sure why anyone would go there, horrendous
I've done some stupid s*t travelling, me and a girlfriend walked past La Vele in Naples. we got dropped off in the wrong area with no battery and had to ask people how to get to a hotel and they kept saying 'too far, too far.' everywhere was full of smashed shop windows and people would get on their balconies to watch us walk past. it was ****** scary. we were pretty resigned to sleeping in a ditch and seeing what happened.
We got to the hotel after about two hours of walking and the Italian concierge said 'you walked past there? for how long?' and bought us a coke and beer and bowl of chips and said 'I'll drive you to the airport tomorrow.'
Going to Mexico is too wrought with potential issues.