Mexico has Bigger Problems than the Second Amendment
“The person who’s supposed to be in charge of fighting the Sinaloa cartel was actually its most valued asset ... and with his help, the cartel made millions,” Assistant U.S. Atty. Philip Pilmar told jurors. He called García Luna “a man who betrayed both his country and ours.”
The most fearsome weapons wielded by Mexico’s drug cartels enter the country from Central America, not the United States, according to U.S. diplomatic cables disseminated by WikiLeaks and published on Tuesday by La Jornada newspaper.
Items such as grenades and rocket-launchers are stolen from Central American armies and smuggled into Mexico via neighboring Guatemala, the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City reported to Washington.
A United Press International report from January 1979, titled “Cops don’t give a shoot about guns in Mexico,” noted, “At least 75 percent of Mexico City’s 30,000 policemen have either lost, hocked or sold their guns, according to a police survey.” The piece went on to explain, “Many officers, the survey added, sell their new weapons and buy old ones to make a little money.”