I was in Reynosa, a border town, tis real sad, the clouds of suspicion hang over hooded police, wearing sunglasses, no one knows if the guy carrying the AK-47 is with the narco commandos, or sent by the Army in Mexico City. ALL the families we talked to had suffered in some personal way, a death, a kidnapping, churches robbed during services at gun point, told better not file charges, as it will only make matters worse.
“I was in Reynosa, a border town, tis real sad, the clouds of suspicion hang over hooded police, wearing sunglasses, no one knows if the guy carrying the AK-47 is with the narco commandos, or sent by the Army in Mexico City. ALL the families we talked to had suffered in some personal way, a death, a kidnapping, churches robbed during services at gun point, told better not file charges, as it will only make matters worse.
I was in Reynosa, a border town, tis real sad, the clouds of suspicion hang over hooded police, wearing sunglasses, no one knows if the guy carrying the AK-47 is with the narco commandos, or sent by the Army in Mexico City. ALL the families we talked to had suffered in some personal way, a death, a kidnapping, churches robbed during services at gun point, told better not file charges, as it will only make matters worse.”
What you describe is the information I’m getting from our retired border agents. Still, some here refuse to believe Mexico is in crisis. I fear it will get worse before it gets better.