Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Baja Skies Safari Through Wednesday Shooting Stars and Planets

Posted by safariclub@cox.net at 06:10:47 | Permalink | Comments Off

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Baja Safari NOW! Bring Baja into Your Home

Baja Refresher

Zachary Zavislak for The New York Times. Food stylist: Liza Jernow. Prop stylist: Kim Ficaro.Plate and White Bowl: Global Table.

Published: March 17, 2009

“The restaurateur Lou Amdur was leaning over his bar the other day at Lou, in Hollywood, uncorking some biodynamic deliciousness made in a French garage and talking about a few of the experiments he had going in his home up in the hills. Some weirdly flavored vinegars. Absinthe. House-cured bacon in the kitchen of the wine bar, a few pots of pork rillettes. It all sounded complicated and fantastic — a portrait of a food artist at work. Amdur shook his head. “None of this is art,” he said. “It’s craft. And craft isn’t all that hard. You can learn to do it.”

  Baja Safari Fish Tacos

Zachary Zavislak for The New York Times. Plate and white bowl: Global Table.

“He was being modest. Amdur is a talented cook, in addition to being a wine guy of the first order (and the husband of Manohla Dargis, a chief film critic of The Times). But he was not wrong. As he went on to say, art is to craft as brain surgery is to a butcher’s work. Art is genius, or magic. Craft is observation and research multiplied by practice. It’s learnable by anyone.

Put another way, in the context of this space: you can learn to cook fish at home, if you ask the right people how to do it.

Dave Pasternack is the right people. He is the chef and an owner of Esca, in the theater district of Manhattan. He has an affinity for cooking fish that approaches the surreal. You might give him a barnacle, a grouper liver and three grains of sea salt, only to have him return to your side with a plate of food good enough to make you laugh out loud. His skill is that of an alchemist, or a magician. But unlike such characters, Pasternack also knows how to teach technique. The success of his restaurant is dependent on that ability. If a piece of monkfish is ethereal when he makes it for the lunchtime rush, it better be when the young cook he hired makes it at dinner, too. That’s how restaurants work. Consistency matters. It’s the most important thing. And it can be taught.

Today’s sermon is a recipe for fish tacos, that great meal of the Baja Peninsula, a taste of summer in spring. It benefits from time spent at Pasternack’s elbow, from the tacos served at, among other places, El Siete Mares taco stand on the eastern end of Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles and from practice runs in a Brooklyn home kitchen. They are simple to make, no more complicated in fact than a hamburger or a mess of pancakes, and they are considerably more flavorful.

Really. Here is the Sunday exhortation: You’re going to make fish at home, it’s going to be easy and it’s not going to take up your day or destroy your kitchen. The recipe is going to work. Trust the process. That’s Pasternack Rule No. 1. You’ve got to get over the fear.

“The first thing you want to do,” he said in the kitchen after lunch, “is you want to find a thick fillet of fish. You want a nice, thick fillet so you can develop the color and the crust.” Pasternack speaks in a soft Long Island bark that turns any conversation into an intimacy, a prelude to something possibly criminal and certainly fun. “Ask for the large,” he continued. “They have large in the back. They always do.”

What kind of fish in particular? For tacos, something fresh and white and firm. Emphasis on the fresh. Out in the cold waters off Montauk, the cod bite is on and the flatties are coming soon: big doormat flounder caught on hooks and line. Montauk snowshoes, they call these monsters, and if you see them in the market, it’s time to make tacos. That’s Pasternack Rule No. 2: Buying the fish is half the battle.

Rule No 3: Crust is crucial. You want, at home, a fish taco that has the crunch and texture of the deep-fried version available at the Fish Market in Ensenada, Baja Mexico, though with better flavor and less mess and no need for security services.

Let us return, then, to our thick fillet, now dredged in seasoned flour. Pasternack, as if talking to a dishwasher out of Puebla he has just promoted to a job in front of a stove: “You want to make sure the bottom of your pan is completely covered in fat. It’s on a medium flame. You add a pat of butter for flavor, and you put the fillet in the pan. You turn it to medium high, and you watch it cook until it turns a deep golden brown on the bottom. That’s like three, four minutes. Then you turn it. A minute later, you take it out, put it on paper towels, season it with a little salt.”

This works, and how. You could do it with cod or char, and kings would cross mountains to honor you. But with flounder the goals are more modest. Fried in strips and served onboard warm corn tortillas with a simple salsa, a pinch of fresh cabbage, plenty of lime and a cream sauce you might want to punch up with some chopped chipotle, these fish tacos can turn a cold March night into bluebird summer, transporting you from spring chill into deep humidity and bliss.”

From The Baja Safari NOW! Kitchen

“2 medium tomatoes, seeded and finely chopped

1 small red onion, peeled and finely chopped

1 clove garlic, minced

1/2 cup roughly chopped cilantro

1 jalapeño, halved lengthwise, seeded and cut crosswise into half moons (optional)

1/4 cup mayonnaise

1/2 cup sour cream

2 limes, 1 halved and 1 cut into wedges

Kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper

1 tablespoon canned chipotle pepper, finely chopped (optional)

1/2 cup flour, preferably Wondra or other fine-milled flour

1 1/2 teaspoons chili powder

1/2 cup milk

1/4 cup peanut oil, plus a splash more for greasing pan

Pat of butter

1 pound flounder or any firm white-fleshed fish, cut across the grain of the flesh into strips about 1/2 inch wide by 3 inches long

12 6-inch fresh corn tortillas

2 cups shredded green cabbage

A saucy hot sauce, like Tapatio or Frank’s.

1. In a medium bowl, combine the tomatoes, onion, garlic, cilantro and jalapeño (if using).

2. In a small bowl, whisk the mayonnaise and sour cream until combined. Season to taste with the halved lime, salt, pepper and chipotle (if using).

3. In a medium bowl, mix together the flour, chili powder and 1 1/2 teaspoons each of kosher salt and black pepper. Pour the milk into another medium bowl, and place the fish into it.

4. Pour 1/4 cup of the peanut oil into a 12-inch frying pan and place over medium-high heat until it shimmers and is about to smoke. Remove the fish pieces from the milk bath and dredge them lightly through the flour mixture, shaking to remove excess. Add the butter to the pan. Place some fish pieces in the oil, without crowding them, and cook until deep golden brown on one side, 3 to 4 minutes. Turn carefully and cook for 1 minute more. Remove to a warmed, paper-towel-lined plate and sprinkle with salt. Repeat with the remaining fish.

5. Meanwhile, lightly grease a skillet with a drizzle of oil and set over medium heat. Heat the tortillas, one or two at a time, until they are soft and hot. Keep them warm, wrapped in a dish towel.

6. Fill each tortilla with 3 pieces of fish, browned side up, followed by tomato salsa and a pinch of cabbage. Drizzle with the cream sauce. Serve 2 to 3 tacos per person, with lime wedges and Baja Safari Salsa hot sauce on the side. Serves 4 to 6.”

New York Times

Baja Safari NOW!

Posted by safariclub@cox.net at 14:42:05 | Permalink | Comments Off

Friday, April 3, 2009

FINAL PUBLIC CRIME REPORT: ATF Steps Up and Gets Real. Tidal Wave of American Arrests in Tijuana Baja California Mexico Bolsters Fear.


FINAL PUBLIC CRIME UPDATE

After three years of taking the reigns of informing the international travel community of the real risks of Baja Mexico travel, this will be our Final Public Update.

Members can continue to get Security Reports by contacting the office.

Since April 14, 2006, when the Baja Safari Mexico Club, went public in a press conference in San Diego, the Club’s leadership, all volunteers from around the world, wanted the group to take the lead.

Here were some of the work results:

 http://www.vnnforum.com/archive/index.php/index.php/t-32391.html

 http://www.10news.com/news/8708954/detail.html

 http://www.mexicofile.com/autoinsurance.htm

 http://www.co.san-diego.ca.us/cnty/recreation/travel/

 http://www.ocregister.com/news/police-attack-rosarito-1947503-city-chief

http://www.thedailyaztec.com/2.7451/take-caution-before-crossing-the-border-1.793873


After the press conference and for the entire three years of this selfless work, there were detractors from the beginning who said the work was “overreacting” to “overblown”. All of them are today, an incredible group of selfish, ignorant and blood-soaked people. SHAME

Today, we can proudly say, we were right! We salute all the agents of the United States Government, dedicated to the safety of international travel and the rights of American citizens, worldwide. The membership of the Baja Safari Mexico Club, sincerely say, Thank You!

On April 2, 2009, the DHS and the Justice Department took the needed steps to take “the lead”, that we called for, three years ago, on April 14, 2006:

“”The Feds are to add two dozen (24) agents in the San Diego area to inspect Mexico-bound vehicles for weapons and currency (illegal drug profits), as part of the federal government’s new anti-drug plan.”"

It is entirely possible, that if these small efforts were made in 2006, the murders(#?), kidnappings (*44?) and crimes(#?) of/upon American citizens in the United States and completed in the Republic of Mexico, may never have occurred. The reality is, the crime wave is so prevalent, Mexican nationals have fleed the republic by the thousands and American citizens across the land, know the real dangers first mentioned on April 14, 2006.

……………………………………………………………

April 14, 2009

Washington, DC - The United States depends on a secure Southwest border in order to ensure the safety of its citizens and those of Mexico, facilitate legal trade and transit, support lawful immigration and prevent illegal smuggling of guns, drugs, money, and people. 

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) continues to meet recent increases of cartel violence in Mexico with strong action and solidified coordination with federal, state, local, tribal and Mexican authorities.

DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano announced at the White House last month a major set of Southwest border initiatives designed to support Mexico’s campaign against violent drug cartels by limiting the flow of firearms and cash from the United States to Mexico. These initiatives bring more personnel to the Southwest border and place additional technology at strategic locations in order to crack down on the illegal activities that fuel the drug war in Mexico.

DHS has formalized the following operational enhancement plan, building from last month’s announcement, which lays out specific information about how each initiative will be implemented. The initiatives will be budget-neutral to the Department, funded by realigning from less urgent activities, tapping available fund balances, and, in some cases, reprogramming to deploy resources where they are currently needed the most.

DHS and the Southwest Border

  1. Guard against violent crime spillover into the United States
  2. Support Mexico’s crackdown campaign against drug cartels in Mexico
  3. Reduce movement of contraband in both directions across the border

The exact placement of these increased resources will be determined by shared intelligence and coordinated with all relevant stakeholders: federal, state, local, tribal and international. Specific deployment location information is law enforcement sensitive and is not detailed below to protect operational planning. Furthermore, resources will be supplemented or moved based on continual changes in intelligence information and operational needs. Finally, these deployments parallel the Mexican government’s efforts to combat drug trafficking and associated criminal activity. As an example, Mexican officers are embedded in the DHS Border Enforcement Task Forces that are being augmented by this initiative.

Doubling Border Enforcement Security Task Force (BEST) Staffing

  • DHS will double the number of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents assigned to BESTs - teams that bring together federal, state, local and Mexican authorities in an effort to increase cross-border crime investigations, arrests and prosecutions at strategic locations along the Southwest border.
  • Doubling assignments of  ICE special agents to BESTs from 95 to 190 will help to facilitate seamless cross-border enforcement actions. The 95 additional ICE investigators will augment BEST task forces at the following locations: San Ysidro and Imperial Valley, Calif.; Phoenix and Tucson, Ariz.; Deming and Las Cruces, N.M.; and El Paso, Laredo, and Rio Grande Valley, Texas. In addition, to further BEST efforts in Mexico, the Department will assign an additional four agents to the Mexico City Attaché to help coordinate BEST investigations.
  • BEST details have already begun and the additional personnel are currently in place.
  • Cost: $5.7 million

Tripling DHS Intel Analysts on the SWB

  • DHS will triple the number of intelligence analysts working at the Southwest border, providing a greater capability to develop pre-operational intelligence reports, strategic intelligence products and post-operational impact assessments - to ensure DHS resources have the maximum impact possible to protect public safety.
  • Thirteen U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement analysts are currently assigned to Southwest-border operations. Eight are assigned to BESTs and five are assigned to the Border Violence Intelligence Center (BVIC) in El Paso, Texas.
  • ICE will detail 26 additional analysts to the Southwest border—16 will be assigned to BESTs in Imperial Valley, Calif.; Phoenix, Tucson and Yuma, Ariz.; and El Paso, Laredo and Rio Grande Valley, Texas; five will go to the BVIC and five more to ICE Attaché offices in Hermosillo, Juarez, Mexico City, Monterrey, and Tijuana, Mexico.
  • Intelligence analyst details have already begun and the additional personnel are currently in place.
  • Cost: $3.3 million

Increasing ICE Attaché Personnel in Mexico by 50 percent

  • DHS will increase ICE Attaché personnel in Mexico by 50 percent. This program supports the Mexican government, as well as domestic ICE offices, by pursuing investigations inside Mexico involving money laundering, narcotics or human trafficking, and weapons smuggling.
  • Twenty-four ICE Attaché personnel are currently assigned in Mexico. ICE will detail an additional twelve Office of International Affairs personnel to Attaché offices in Hermosillo, Juarez, Mexico City, Monterrey, and Tijuana, Mexico.
  • Cost: $650,000

Doubling Violent Criminal Alien Sections Assignments

  • DHS will double the number of ICE Detention and Removal Operations (DRO) personnel assigned to Violent Criminal Alien Sections along the Southwest border.  These sections work to expedite identification, processing for removal and prosecution of recidivist criminal aliens.
  • Due to the large volume of cases of repeat offenders, namely criminal aliens, doubling Violent Criminal Alien Sections manpower will allow DHS to expand its ability to identify perpetrators, develop casework and prosecute these violators.
  • Fifty DRO officers are currently assigned along the Southwest border; ICE will detail an additional 50 officers to support ICE and CBP operations in San Diego, Calif.; Phoenix, Ariz.; and El Paso, San Antonio, and Houston, Texas.
  • Cost: $2.3 million

Quadrupling the Number of Border Liaison Officers (BLOs)

  • DHS will quadruple the number of ICE Border Liaison Officers (BLOs) assigned along the Southwest border. These men and women work to identify and combat cross-border criminal organizations with a focus on coordination between U.S. and Mexican law enforcement authorities.
  • Ten BLOs are currently deployed along the SWB: five are assigned in San Diego, Calif., and five in San Antonio, Texas. ICE will increase the number of BLOs by designating 30 additional special agents already deployed to the Southwest border to serve in this capacity—resulting in a total of 40 BLOs operating at the border.  The additional assignments will be in San Diego, Calif.; Phoenix, Ariz.; and El Paso and Laredo, Texas.
  • No cost - existing positions are already in place.

Bolstering Secure Communities Biometric Identification Deployment

  • The Secure Communities program uses biometric identification technology to share information between law enforcement agencies in order to focus resources on assisting communities in removal of high-risk criminal aliens.
  • Currently, 23 counties in the Southwest Border States of Arizona and Texas use the Secure Communities biometric identification technology. Secure Communities plans to make this capability available to an additional 26 SWB counties in Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas within 90 days.
  • ICE will also activate Secure Communities biometric identification technology in Los Angeles County, Calif., Ventura County, Calif., and San Diego County, Calif..  San Diego County is expected to be activated in early May.
  • Cost: $95 million

Implementing 100% Southbound Rail Screening

  • Using non-intrusive inspections systems, CBP can screen 100 percent of southbound rail traffic to identify the presence of any contraband, such as weapons or currency. In early March, CBP launched 100 percent southbound rail screening at all Southwest border rail crossings.

Increased Maritime Interdiction Operations

  • In response to numerous U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) and CPB reports of go-fast boats loitering or moving north along the California Baja, DHS began focused interdiction operations. Additional operations over the past year have successfully stopped drugs and undocumented migrants from entering the U.S.
  • Operation Baja Oleada:  This maritime operation, which began in December 2005, cracks down on illegal migrant and drug smuggling along the California Baja to the arrival zone in northern Baja and San Diego area. The Coast Guard maintains a twenty‑four hours a day, seven days per week patrol boat presence and frequently surges additional patrol boats, with air support as available. In FY 2009, the operation has resulted in seizures of four vessels and more than 50,000 pounds of marijuana.
  • Operation Red Zone:  This highly successful interagency operation to detect, deter and disrupt transnational smuggling threats in the maritime approaches to southern California and off Baja California ran from Feb. 1 through March 31, 2009. It involved USCG, CBP, U.S. Border Patrol, U.S. Navy, local police and Mexican Navy (SEMAR).

Immediate Port of Entry (POE) resources enhancements

  • Mobile X-Rays.  This technology enhances the ability of law enforcement authorities to identify currency and weapons in passenger vehicles that may contain weapons and/or currency. Previously, seven mobile x-ray units were deployed along the Southwest border—four in San Diego, two in El Paso, Texas, and one in Laredo, Texas. Two additional units have recently been moved to Tucson, Ariz., and Laredo, Texas. (Cost: $30,000)
  • Border Patrol Agents.  One hundred Border Patrol Agents currently stationed in the area will be reassigned from non-critical tasks to augment southbound vehicle and pedestrian inspection operations. More than 16,400 CBP agents currently work between ports of entry along the Southwest border. No personnel will be transferred to implement this initiative. (No cost)
  • Canine Detection Teams.  CBP dual-detection canine teams, which can recognize both currency and weapons, provide enhanced detection capabilities in cargo and vehicles and on passengers. CBP currently uses dual-detection teams along the Southwest border; 7 additional dual-detection canine teams have been deployed, for a total of 12 teams in California, Arizona, and Texas. Up to 15 additional teams will be deployed to locations yet to be determined. (Cost: $440,000)
  • Mobile Response Teams (MRT).  Mobile Response Teams are deployed for short operations along the Southwest border, providing increased enforcement presence and personnel to conduct additional inspections of southbound individuals and vehicles. Four MRTs, consisting of 25 officers each, are currently available for special deployments along the Southwest border. Twelve additional MRT officers have already been deployed to Texas and Arizona field offices; 24 more are scheduled to be deployed to the California, Texas and Arizona field offices in early May. Combined with the four existing teams, these 36 officers will comprise eight additional teams for a total of 12. Additional deployments will be determined operationally.  (Cost: $3.2 million)
  • Operation Stonegarden Grants.  DHS designed these grants to enhance cooperation and coordination among federal, state, local and tribal law enforcement agencies in a joint mission to secure the border. On March 24, DHS distributed an informational bulletin to all eligible state and local entities outlining modified grant guidance for the remaining FY 2006-2008 balances (totaling up to $59 million).  The new guidance does not take funding away from any states. Rather, it expands the scope of how the remaining balances can be spent to enhance current state, local and tribal law enforcement operations and assets on the Southwest border.  Eligible expenses include activating reserve and part-time law enforcement personnel, deploying existing law enforcement personnel, and covering overtime expenses, travel or lodging for deployment to the Southwest border. Secretary Napolitano waived the 50 percent cap on personnel and operational activity costs for local eligible jurisdictions along the border to provide additional resources where they are needed most.
  • License Plate Readers (LPR).  License plate readers are intended to automatically read vehicle license plates and automate law enforcement queries.  Southbound LPR information provides valuable intelligence, enhances domestic and international partnerships and assists with current weapon and currency southbound operations. CBP currently operates 52 outbound LPR lanes at 16 Southwest border crossings. CBP has initiated and expanded outbound operations and is moving quickly to replace the 52 LPRs currently equipped in southbound lanes to improve accuracy rates and enhance capability.

Periodic Evaluation and Review of the SWB Initiative

  • DHS will employ an iterative and risk-based decision making process that will guide the nature and makeup of DHS operations on the border. Key considerations will be threats and priorities across of all the Department’s missions. Actions and deployments within this initiative will remain flexible in order to respond quickly and effectively to the most current information and intelligence.
  • Secretary Napolitano will be regularly briefed regarding DHS operations on the Southwest Border and will conduct quarterly reviews of DHS enhancements.


April 4, 2009

Travel Update/Southbound Inspections Begin Today

Baja Travel Situation Updated


US Federales and State Highway Patrol are stopping southbound cars prior to the border. They have asked the following questions: Where are you coming from? Where are you going? Is this your car? How much money do you have with you? They commonly rifle through belongings. They have the 2 or 3 southbound lanes on the left closed off creating a bottleneck and are using the space for inspections. The northbound Sentri guys are also starting to ask questions about where have you been and where are you going.

From SY southbound to TJ

Traffic is commonly backed up past the 805 overpass ramp. The I-5-805 interchange.

In Tijuana: More troops are there with guns. New positioning.

Free road from Tijuana south, northbound at Popotla, just south of Blvd 2000/Fox studio is a Mexican Army inspections. These are 45 minute delays. 20 minute waits northbound at Ensenada toll booths.

Shakedowns continue on roads through Tijuana to Rosarito.


Major Mexico travel officials and three recent Baja crime reports expose the reality of whats happening on the ground, NOW in Baja Mexico. The 61 year old, continuous, Newport to Ensenada yacht race almost canceled. Here’s how it played out in the press:

“The Mexican leaders who came to visit with the press — Jorge Gamboa Patron, director of the Mexico Tourism Board in Los Angeles; Jorge A. Saenz Flores, international relations for the city of Ensenada; Agustin E. Pradillo, press consul for the Consulate of Mexico in Santa Ana, and Carlos Rodriguez y Quezada, the Mexican Consulate in Santa Ana –  reassured us that they take the issue seriously and that steps are being taken to improve security.

The yacht race “is very good for both countries so of course we’re concerned about the situation in Mexico,” Quezada said.

They insisted that the media reports of violence are “overblown” and that most of Mexico is safe and secure. Also, most of the families will be shuttled through Tijuana on buses and shouldn’t be exposed to any danger in any event. Ensenada, they said, is not one of the cities plagued by violence like Tijuana. They also claimed that participation has increased for the 62nd running of the regatta as sailors from as far away as Japan plan to compete.”

Three recent crimes expose the reality of whats happening to international travellers in Baja California, Mexico:

 1 April 2, 2009 “TIJUANA, Mexico —  A 4-year-old girl and her parents have been found dead inside a public bathroom in a northern Mexican beach town.

A statement from the Baja California state prosecutor’s office says the parents had been beaten and possibly stabbed. The toddler’s body showed no outward signs of violence.

Police have not yet determined the cause of death for the three, or a possible motive for their killings.

Wednesday’s statement said the family was found Tuesday in the Pacific coast town of Ensenada. It said the parents were seasonal farm workers from the southern state of Oaxaca.”

— Shane Pennington’s dreams led him west to California, where he found work in Anaheim and planned on joining the military or attending college. Those dreams ended last month, when he was stabbed to death on the beach in Playas de Tijuana.

Now his mother has flown in from Hendersonville, N.C., haunted by questions: What led the 19-year-old to cross into Mexico, and what happened in those final hours?

Baja California authorities said robbery may have been a motive for the attack, but they have reached no conclusions. Because the investigation is ongoing and Pennington’s mother has yet to formally identify her son, they did not offer many details about the case yesterday.

On March 23, Pennington had sent his boss a text message that he was ill and at the doctor, said Gayle Boan, secretary at A Cut Above Beef and Seafood, where Pennington began working as a deliveryman last year.

Instead, he stayed with a family friend in Redlands, leaving at 1:15 p.m. “He never said anything about going to Tijuana,” said Theresa Sala, a longtime friend of Pennington’s mother. Pennington drove away in the company’s refrigerated delivery truck, Sala said. “I don’t think he would have gone there alone.”

Pennington’s body was found at 6:10 a.m. the next day by a Tijuana patrol officer responding to a call about a man asleep on the beach. According to the Baja California Attorney General’s Office, the victim had been stabbed repeatedly in the neck, chest, back and head.

Authorities said they believe he was stabbed on the beach. He had an empty sheath for a knife. Investigators believe he was killed with his own knife, a Winchester that his mother had given him for Christmas.

The medical examiner’s office’s initial report noted marijuana and alcohol in Pennington’s system at the time of his death, according to a source in the Attorney General’s Office who asked not be identified because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

Friends and co-workers described Pennington as adventurous and extroverted. “He didn’t deserve this,” Boan said. “He was a wonderful young man who made friends wherever he went.”

Boan said Pennington had spoken of visiting Tijuana. “’He did want to go there’, at some point, just like all kids want to go down and party and have a good time.”

Pennington’s mother, Elizabeth Taylor, expects to identify her son’s body Monday. She said her son had minor trouble with the law when he was younger, “mischievous things, it was all dropped.”

Pennington, the oldest of four children, “always wanted to take care of everything,” his mother said. She said he set off across the country last year, hoping to join the military or enroll in college.

“It was the California dream thing of it,” the mother said, “coming out here and doing what he wanted to do.””

 3 Public insecurity march 29, 2008 from La Paz Baja California Sur:

“Public denunciation!
Ask a favor of Luis not to move the message, the intention is that the public would know that Valley is not left behind the crime. It’s just the feeling of a concerned citizen in their heritage. I thank you in advance.

On Tuesday 24, are all outside the home, at school my children, my wife and a server at work, our house was invaded by the social evil with that beautiful name … lovers of others. .. miserable rat useless beings who do not deserve nor God’s forgiveness. In broad daylight in the morning, were violently door of our house and stole obvious that various objects, which proceeds much effort, which had been purchased by the passage of years. Among these are two computers used primarily for work as a teacher of my wife and a server, which also had years of work stored in formats for our work, reviews, offices, many copies of personal documents in order, in various forms. A computer was used by my son to study and work at your school. As far as I’m concerned there were records of years of history of off-road, racing valuable files such as statistics and hundreds of pictures …. all lost in a snap thanks to the insecurity that prevails in our country. Within the list of stolen items are the Sony Handycam video camera with which we recorded in our fun hobby to career, career videos and many more objects.

We have not yet seen clear that a proper investigation has started, goes without saying that a lawsuit was filed and giving it some very important clues. Sad situation that is already a constant at the national level … perhaps the only solution is to arm and defend ourselves … we are not bad senior military that can defend, kill those who invade our properties and threaten our lives … no, we’re not that influential people free to leave if you remove some rats living waste of humanity.”

Let these three recent sad reports give you insight to the new world of travel in Baja. Make no mistake, it is a new world of travel in Baja Mexico.

Contact Baja Safari Mexico Club at 619-251-9486, 24/7, bajasafari.com


April 2, 2009 UPDATE

The Feds are to add two dozen (24) agents in the San Diego area to inspect Mexico-bound vehicles for weapons and currency (illegal drug profits), as part of the federal government’s new anti-drug plan.

On her first visit to the Southwest border since announcing the anti-trafficking blueprint last week, DHS Chief, Napolitano said the agents would help staff checkpoints that had been used sporadically for the last two years. They would look to intercept high-powered weaponry that is believed to be fueling much of the drug violence in Mexico.

Southbound checkpoints have turned up numerous weapons and millions of dollars, including the March 19 discovery at the Laredo, Texas, border crossing of $3 million hidden in a passenger bus.

Napolitano said new technology, including license plate readers, would help speed up the inspection process, at inspection points.”


March 31, 2009 UPDATED

Reforma Newspaper reports Mex Gov figures

“Based on government figures, the newspaper reported that between 2002 and 2007, an average of 1.4 people were kidnapped for ransom per day nationwide. However, last year a total of 1,028 kidnappings were reported, a 90 percent increase over the past seven years.

The most dangerous places in the country for abductions are in the central state of Mexico, where 166 were reported, Mexico City, with 151, and Baja California, where 102 people were kidnapped.”


Security Situation in Northern Baja and Mexico

(AP) “Mexican based business leader says ‘a significant number’ of businessmen working along the U.S.-Mexican border have transferred their offices to U.S. cities to escape a wave of crime and extortion threats in Northern Baja Mexico.

The head of the Mexican Employers’ Federation says business owners in the border cities of TIJUANA and Ciudad Juarez have moved their operations to San Diego and to El Paso, Texas.

Federation President Ricardo Gonzalez said Tuesday that extortionists have demanded payments from businesses in the region ranging from small shops to much larger firms.

Gonzalez did not give an exact number. Some of the extortion threats are linked to Mexico’s drug cartels, whose bloody turf battles have claimed nearly 9,000 lives in Mexico since 2006.”


March 3, 2009 UPDATE

SAN DIEGO (AP) — “The Justice Department’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has taken the unusual step of urging college students to avoid parts of northern Mexico during spring break.

The bureau’s Los Angeles field division said Monday that it discourages travel to Tijuana and Rosarito Beach, noting that both cities just south of San Diego have witnessed a lot of drug-fueled violence. Rosarito has long been a mecca for Southern California students on spring break. [Now, its home of hundreds of murders]

The warning goes a step further than one issued by the State Department last month advising travelers to Mexico to avoid areas of prostitution and drug-dealing and to take other commonsense precautions. [The State Department Sucks]

The ATF is responsible for preventing arms smuggling into Mexico.”


UPDATE

State of Baja Mexico not happy with United States Honesty

March 3, 2009. KPBS San Diego: “Mexican Tourism officials says US federal agencys’ alerts about travel south of the border are unfair. Baja California officials are again turning to a US public relations firm to help tell their story. KPBS Reporter Amy Isackson has details.

Officials with the U-S Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms recently discouraged people from traveling to places like Tijuana and Rosarito due to drug cartel violence.

The US State Department also issued an alert that says US citizens have been trapped in shootouts in some border cities. That some gun batlles in Tijuana have broken out during daytime in shopping center and other public places. And that criminals have followed and harassed US citizens driving in Tijuana.

Oscar Esobedo is Baja California’s Toursim Secretary. He says the warnings are unjustified. “What’s happening is between the people who are in drug trafficking, maybe 98% of it,” says Escobedo. ”And to the rest of the population, you could say it is safe to visit Baja California.”

Drug cartels in Tijuana have not targeted nor killed tourists. Drug violence hasn’t hit tourist areas.”"

Escobedo obviously caught his own lie there. “Maybe 98% of it.” And the Baja California Mexico AG wants the United States not to deport Mexican Criminals back to Mexico. Hey State of Baja California, FU.

Baja Safari NOW!



UPDATE

The US State Department is a year late. Again.

Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, February 21, 2009

“”MEXICO CITY, Feb. 20 — The latest travel advisory for Mexico from the U.S. State Department will certainly not please the tourist board. Rather than a glossy brochure advertising the country’s many delights, the travel alert issued Friday reads like the plot of a crime thriller.

“Recent Mexican army and police confrontations with drug cartels have resembled small-unit combat, with cartels employing automatic weapons and grenades,” the advisory reads. “Large firefights have taken place in many towns and cities across Mexico but most recently in northern Mexico, including Tijuana, Chihuahua City and Ciudad Juarez. During some of these incidents, U.S. citizens have been trapped and temporarily prevented from leaving the area.”

Being “temporarily prevented” from leaving a firefight is never a good thing as far as promoting tourism goes. Tourism is one of Mexico’s main sources of income, and the country that sends the most tourists to Mexico is the United States.

The State Department routinely updates its assessments of hot spots around the globe, issuing official “warnings” and “alerts.” Warnings are the worst, reserved for nations posing higher risks for travelers, and cover countries such as Haiti, Iraq, and Congo. “Alerts,” like the one issued for Mexico, do not recommend that visitors avoid an entire country but instead advise them to employ extra caution and avoid specific locales and behaviors. In Mexico, those behaviors include driving at night, buying drugs and visiting the state of Durango.

 

According to the alert, the threat of bodily harm is part of the ongoing drug war: “Mexican drug cartels are engaged in an increasingly violent conflict — both among themselves and with Mexican security services — for control of narcotics trafficking routes along the U.S.-Mexico border. In order to combat violence, the government of Mexico has deployed troops in various parts of the country. U.S. citizens should cooperate fully with official checkpoints when traveling on Mexican highways.”

The alerts are a poke in Mexico’s eye as well as a source of friction. As Mexican commentators point out, the country is fighting to stop drugs heading to the world’s largest consumer nation — the United States.

The department uses strong language to describe the situation in Mexico. “U.S. citizens are urged to be alert to safety and security concerns when visiting the border region. . . . While most crime victims are Mexican citizens, the uncertain security situation poses serious risks for U.S. citizens as well,” the alert states. “Robberies, homicides, petty thefts, and carjackings have all increased over the last year across Mexico generally, with notable spikes in Tijuana and northern Baja California. Ciudad Juarez, Tijuana and Nogales are among the cities which have recently experienced public shootouts during daylight hours in shopping centers and other public venues.”

The State Department will review the situation again in six months.”"

UPDATE

Surfer Writes of Violent Encounter at Baja Malibu in Letter to Baja Safari NOW!

February 14, 2009

Our recent Baja Update drew a significant amount speculative feedback regarding the safety, or lack thereof, in Northern Baja. We thought one response, however, deserved to be shared. In an unsolicited, open letter, an anonymous poster wrote of his most recent Baja experience:

“Dear Surfline,
I wanted to drop a note and tell you guys of a very bad experience I endured while in Rosarito. It was the weekend of Jan 17-19th. I had traveled down there with my girl and we had surfed BM’s all three days. There were alot of ski’s in the water (8+) and they made it hard for any of the paddle in crew to get any decent waves. I even tried going down the beach farther, but it seemed like they kept following me. That was a disappointment, but not the main point of this letter. After surfing all day my chick and I decided to hang out and wait till late evening to battle the border. We had parked at the restaurant at BM’s and decided to eat there and have a beer or two. After eating we ordered some beers and played some pool. At the bar there were a few locals and they were very boisterous about how they didnt like skis taking over their break and people crowding their spot. I was feeling uneasy and thought it was time to leave. I went to the bar to pay my bill and was approached by a local. He started getting aggressive with me and I paid the bill and turned to leave. At that point I was hit from behind. I can fight and defended myself and locked the guy in a sleeper hold while walking backwards to exit. I was hit from behind again by something hard. I fell to the floor endured a lot more punishment and tried getting up. I looked up to see the bartender walking away with a baseball bat. My right arm was in terrible pain and I couldnt move it. My girl was pinned against the wall by one of the guys with his hand on her throat. I staggered up and they shoved us out the door telling us never to surf there again. We went strait to the border and to the hospital. I now have a broken humerus(two places) and a mild concussion. My girl wasnt harmed, but terrified. I am out of the water for atleast 4-6 months. I have never had any issues with any part of mexico and I have surfed BM’s countless times. I just wanted to share my story with every one. I know times are tough, but there is no need for this kind of violence.”

UPDATE

Orange County Travel Writer gets the “Special” Tijuana treatment

“”Driving home, I was debating whether to come back down soon and spend an entire day lounging at the deserted rooftop pool deck. I was thinking about writing a travel story about our crime-free weekend in Rosarito Beach. As we were about to pull up onto the ramp in Tijuana that leads into the customs area back to the U.S., Rose Marie was pulled over by a motorcycle cop. I was expecting him to tell us we were going the wrong way. Instead, he told Rose Marie that she was speeding – not true – and had failed to use her turn signal. He wanted her to pay him $140 in cash for the ticket. In other words, he wanted a bribe. He also gave us the possibility of “going to the courthouse” instead of paying him in cash, which he made sound quite unappetizing. I was a bit worried about our Mexican auto insurance expiring before we crossed the border, but after dithering for a bit, we decided that, yes, we would go see the judge. Miraculously, once we announced we would prefer to go to the courthouse, the motorcycle cop snapped his ticket book shut and said he was giving us a warning instead. “But, next time, you ladies watch out,” he told us. Oh, you betcha. We’ll certainly watch out. Thanks for the warning.”"

Baja Safari NOW! Note: Obviously, you are a failed pro-traveler. You live in Orange County and you went through Tijuana for pleasure travel? FAIL


UPDATE:

TEXAS PLANS FOR MEXICO COLLAPSE

AUSTIN — Texas officials are working on a plan to respond to a potential collapse of the Mexican government and the specter of thousands fleeing north in fear for their lives after recent reports indicated the country could be on the verge of chaos.

“You hope for the best, plan for the worst,” Katherine Cesinger, spokeswoman for Gov. Rick Perry, said last week. “At this point, we’ve got a contingency plan that’s in development.” Late last year the U.S. Department of Defense issued a report that listed Pakistan and Mexico as countries that could rapidly collapse. The report came after similar alarms sounded by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and former U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey. “I think their fears are well-grounded,” Texas Home land Security Director Steve McCraw told lawmakers recently at a border security briefing. Lawmakers expressed concern that the state’s southern neighbor, embroiled in drug violence and facing uncertain economic conditions, could send thousands north in search of safety.State Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Sugarland, asked McCraw at the meeting whether Texas had a plan to cope with such a situation.”We have a preliminary plan,” McCraw said. “There needs to be one in place.”McCraw, a Perry appointee, was unavailable to comment for this story, but Cesinger said the plan was in early stages. It now deals with only law enforcement concerns, she said, and not any potential crush of humanitarian needs the state might face if thousands of refugees flood across the border. “That might be something that comes into consideration as it’s developed,” Cesinger said. Destabilization in Mexico might be only a remote possibility, but lawmakers said preparing for any potential disaster is prudent. State Sen. John Carona, R-Dallas, said Texas should plan to deal with not only security concerns but also basic needs refugees would have for housing, health care and food. “It seems very far-fetched that something like this could occur,” he said. “At the same time, I think it would be na ve to believe it’s impossible.” El Paso Democratic state Sen. Eliot Shapleigh said El Paso is already seeing refugees from the violence in Juárez. More than 1,600 died in the drug violence there last year, and the bloodbath continues. More than 200 people have been slain so far this year. Nearly 50 victims of the violence in Juárez were shuttled to Thomason Hospital for treatment last year. And Shapleigh said many people from Juárez who can afford to are moving north to El Paso.

Developing a contingency plan to deal with a potential Mexican downfall makes sense, he said.”Better to investigate, examine and plan now, rather than make ad hoc decisions later,” Shapleigh said. Tony Payan, a political science professor at the University of Texas at El Paso, said Mexico is nowhere near the brink of demise. Problems in Mexico are serious, he said, but the nodes of violence are concentrated in specific areas of the country and primarily involve the warring drug cartels. “I am standing on campus in Ciudad Juárez now,” Payan said Thursday. “Students are working, students are going to class, people are shopping.” Developing a plan to cope with a disaster south of the border was not a bad idea, Payan said.

But Texas could do more to help prevent a catastrophe in Mexico, he said, by working with state and local officials in that country to reinforce their governments. While federal officials in the U.S. and Mexico often work together, Payan said, state and local leaders with firsthand knowledge of the problems often mistrust one another and fail to collaborate to deal with their mutual concerns. “Often we want to solve the problems with the border as if they stopped at the international line,” Payan said, “and they do not.”



UPDATE! Authorities come clean with the partial numbers of International tourists killed in Mexico

February 8, 2009

Houston Chronicle/AP

“HOUSTON — More than 200 American citizens have been killed since 2004 in Mexico’s escalating wave of violence, amounting to the highest number of unnatural deaths in any foreign country outside military combat zones, according to the U.S. State Department.

The deaths included a 22-year-old Houston man and his 16-year-old friend who were hauled out of a minivan and shot execution style. They also included a 65-year-old nurse from Brownsville found floating in the Rio Grande after visiting a Mexican beauty salon and a retiree stabbed to death while camping on a Baja beach, reported the Houston Chronicle in a story published Sunday, which examined hundreds of records related to the deaths.

The State Department tracks most American homicides abroad but releases few details about the deaths. Most, however, occurred in border cities, including Tijuana, Ciudad Juarez and Nuevo Laredo, where violence has spiked with drug cartel feuds in recent years.

The Chronicle analysis showed some American homicide victims were involved in organized crime. At least two dozen American victims were labeled as cartel hitmen, drug dealers, smugglers or gang members. Others were drug users or wanted for crimes in the United States.

But in at least 70 other cases, the Americans were killed in Mexico while there on seemingly innocent business: visiting family, vacationing or living and working there.

Mexican Congressman Juan Francisco Rivera Bedoya of Nuevo Leon said he believes most American victims get killed after crossing the border for illegal activities or venturing into unsafe areas.

“Tourists visiting cathedrals, museums and other cultural centers are not at risk,” he said.

The State Department last year issued “travel alerts” for several border communities, warning that dozens of U.S. citizens had been kidnapped or killed in Tijuana, though it gave no details.

“We’re not trying to scare anybody off, but we sure as heck want people to be aware of the dangerous conditions that they might encounter in certain parts of the country,” said former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Tony Garza in an interview before he left his post.

Across Mexico, more than 5,000 people were killed last year, authorities report. Some of the deaths of police and other public officials have been public and gruesome, with bodies posed in public places.

The Chronicle found that among the American deaths, at least 40 were killed and had their bodies dumped in the methods favored by drug cartels.

Few of the killers are caught.

Only about 20 percent of homicides in Mexico result in arrests, the Chronicle found in its analysis of data from the Citizens’ Safety Institute. The Mexico City-based nonprofit surveys prosecutors across Mexico.

Records from the prosecutor in Baja California Norte, home to Tijuana, show none of the cases from 2004 to 2006 have been closed. More than 90 Americans have been killed in the state south of San Diego since 2003.”

ALSO REPORTED:

*”There also have been about *44 kidnappings in the San Diego-Tijuana region, said Undersheriff Bill Gore. Many of them were people with family or business ties in Mexico, but living in San Diego County, Gore said.

UPDATE!

Mexican drug violence spills over into the US

This letter was authored by the Director and Associate Director of the Center for Latin American Studies at San Diego State University, and sent out to SDSU Alumni. It contains some substantial misinformation that the professionals of Baja Safari would like to correct. [Editorial Corrections]

“Dear SDSU Community,

In response to the U.S. State Department’s Travel Alert for Mexico, various University offices have recently expressed concern about members of the University community traveling to Mexico, particularly the border region. As the Director and Associate Director of the Center for Latin American Studies, a campus unit with actual expertise on Mexico and several different courses and programs in the region, we would like to comment on the situation.[Responding to the State Departments meager advise here and citing your 'expertise', exposes your lack of vision.]

First, the drug wars in Tijuana, Baja California, and Mexico, are real. They have claimed a significant number of lives and the country’s institutions are under great pressure to respond.  We feel that it is important that students and other campus community members are aware of the situation and we welcome the attention of SDSU authorities.  However, the current violence has been going on for several years, [Simply because the violence has been ongoing and escalating for years, you assume the hazard is lessened? False premise] reflected in the fact that the State Department Travel Alert which was recently sent around campus is a re-issuance of an Alert that has been in place for some years. State Department Travel Alerts expire, and the current alert was issued in order to keep the previous one active.

Second, members of the campus community should exercise the same caution when traveling in Tijuana that they exercise when in any major city. [Bad advise. Decapitations, torture, AK-47's and the associated criminal activities in Baja Mexico, Tijuana in particular, are not found anywhere else in the world. Based on a false premise] Tijuana has approximately 1.5 million residents, and like all big cities, there are situations that should be avoided. That said, if you are new to travel in Tijuana or the border region, you should take extra precautions that go along with being in a new area and a foreign country. We can help you here, please feel free to contact us. [Right, the experts! SDSU, home of the fuzzie-headed, drunk institution.]

Third, the murder rate in Tijuana is less than 40 per 100,000, which puts it between Oakland, CA and St. Louis, MO.  That is high, but less than Baltimore and Detroit (mid-40s) and well below New Orleans (65 to 95, depending on who you talk to).  New Orleans is a great place to visit, and we have yet to meet anyone who decided not to go due to its murder rate.[Comparing any level of violence and crime rates to Baja Mexico is folly. Please, any author of this letter, stay in Tijuana for any extended period of time and lets see how long you last!]

Fourth, the overwhelming majority of murders are perpetrated against those involved in the drug trade (including corrupt police officers) and those who are actively fighting the drug trade (again including police officers). [This statement is false. Hundreds of Mexicans have been kidnapped and killed, who had no connection to criminal activites prior to their deaths. False premise and outright lies.]

Finally, life continues in Tijuana.  Kids go to school, families visit grandma, parents shop for groceries, and students go to museums and concerts.  [Life does continue. But, in a recent interview with CNN, the Tijuana Mayor was quoted as saying, "They are trying to take our lives from us." Stating the criminal elements in Mexico were serious threats to the culture and way of life, for thousands of Baja Californios.] We do not want to minimize [You do 'minimize' with your false conclusions.] the reality of the drug wars, but we also want to point out that, as with our war on terror, paranoia grows in proportion to one’s lack of familiarity and understanding.  We thus caution against allowing fear to manifest in perceived narratives of racism or morality as has occurred far too often in interactions between the United States and Mexico. In addition to crossing the border fairly frequently, we have talked at length to our colleagues at various institutions throughout the border region, all of whom assure us that although crime has increased, our students, colleagues, and the average US citizen are not targets [False, see recent FBI released data] any more than are average Mexican citizens and they look forward to our continued interactions with them. [Liberal false premise leading to false conclusions. Death and the threat of death makes the stated conclusions here, dangerously flawed advise.]

We urge you to continue your normal routines in Tijuana and throughout Mexico, following the same cautions you would use in any region that is undergoing an increased crime wave. If you have any questions, concerns, or would like to discuss the situation further please do not hesitate to contact us. As they say in Mexico, Estamos aqui para servirles.

Jim Gerber, Director, Center for Latin American Studies
Ramona Perez, Associate Director, Center for Latin American Studies”

[Mr. Gerber and Ms. Perez, you have failed in your analysis and your conclusions. You have also exposed valuable lives to mortal danger. F-FAIL]


Baja Safari NOW!


Posted by safariclub@cox.net at 18:04:27 | Permalink | Comments Off

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Best Baja Atlas & Maps, Available now

Baja Safari NOW EXCLUSIVE

Don’t wait another six months for that Baja almanac! Baja fans have been seeking a new, definative Baja document that does more than just be a map. Today, Baja Safari is proud to promote the Baja Atlas, produced by the respected Esparza family of Baja California!

The Baja California Road & Recreation Atlas (Esparza Editores). This atlas provides excellent detail for the
entire peninsula in a convenient format. Details such as surfing spots, gas stations (and diesel stations),
fishing spots, missions, etc. are included. 32 different symbols point out the variety of activities available to the traveler on the Baja Peninsula as well as hotels and RV parks.

The smaller format (7″ x 9″) is perfect for a motorcycle tank bag’s map pouch or the glove box of your vehicle.

Everyone remembers those great old Mexico PEMEX maps, concise & well documented, well, they were produced by the very same Esparzas.

The atlas in book format (8.75″ x 6.75″) contains 40 pages of mapping along with city maps of Mexicali, Tijuana, Rosarito, Ensenada, La Paz, San Jose del Cabo, Cabo San Lucas and a Los Cabos Corridor map.
An index of 2500+ entries is included to find your favorite places on the peninsula. Seven different types of roads are shown from toll roads to dirt tracks. Scale 1:500,000. [First reported on 8-21-2007]

Use this LINK to Mexico Maps.com to get yours NOW!

Posted by safariclub@cox.net at 03:29:10 | Permalink | Comments Off