Editor's note: at www.lagunajournal.com is an online intelligence news service from the creator of the News letter "For Your Eyes Only" – written by Investigative Reporter Michael Webster, who has been developing sources around the world for the last 35 years. For more Click here: Michael Webster's Other Writings.
Having made many trips to Baja California, they knew a payoff was just part of the price of a visit. This time, returning from the Baja 1000 off-road race, they figured $40 would suffice and they'd be back at their El Cajon home within an hour.
Instead, several heavily armed, masked men surrounded their truck and trailer and pointed guns at their heads, the start of an hours-long assault that ended with Debra, Christopher and their two children running for their lives through the hills.
The Hall family's ordeal last week was the latest in a string of assaults against Americans that has shocked longtime visitors and severely undercut a recent anti-crime initiative aimed at polishing Baja California's image as a tourist-friendly destination. In a region where most visitors expect the occasional extortion attempt by police, the recent crime wave has seen attacks become more aggressive, often carried out by heavily armed men operating with paramilitary-style precision.
Surfers have been assaulted at gunpoint on beaches
and at campgrounds. One woman was sexually assaulted.
Expensive trucks, trailers and boats have been
carjacked.
At least seven assaults in the past few months have been
reported in the media or on websites of Baja surfing and
fishing groups. The State Department, which has a
consulate in Tijuana where citizens can report crimes,
said a long-standing travel alert remains in effect for
border regions.
The New Mexican cartel boss Juan Jose Esparagossa Moreno
It's not clear whether the incidents are isolated or
represent a trend, said Michele Bond, the department's
deputy assistant secretary for Overseas Citizens
Services.
But the crime wave is enough to frighten some longtime
visitors, including surf club owners who have canceled
operations and some prominent off-road racers who may
not compete in future Baja events.
Most of the assaults have occurred at night in the
coastal area between Tijuana and San Quintin, a 190-mile
stretch dotted with surf beaches, campgrounds, resorts
and golf courses.
Surf school owner Pat Weber, of Encinitas, and his
girlfriend, Lori Hoffman, were assaulted in October in
their recreational vehicle within sight of 30 other
campsites on a beach south of Ensenada.
Two masked assailants shot up the vehicle when Weber
initially refused to open the door. For the next 45
minutes, the men terrorized the couple, who had gone to
Mexico after evacuating their home during the wildfires.
Hoffman said she was sexually assaulted in front of her
boyfriend. Then the men made off with $8,000 worth of
laptops, jewelry, tools and other items. One of the men
disappeared into the night with Weber's acoustic guitar
slung over his shoulder.
"These guys were not novices," said Hoffman, who noted
the attackers' creased pants, combat boots and
sharpshooting skills. The incident was reported to
Ensenada police.
Many experts say the timing of the crime wave is
curious, coming just ahead of a change in
administrations in Tijuana. Critics say former Mayor
Jorge Hank Rhon bloated the police payroll with
unqualified and corrupt cops.
With rumors flying that the new mayor, Jorge Ramos,
whose term begins today, will fire hundreds of police,
some rogue cops may be going on a last-minute crime
spree, say some observers.
Ramos said one of his first acts as mayor will be to
create a special tourist police force -- with different
uniforms and cars than municipal police -- that will
patrol the coastal highway, in effect, policing the
police.
"Whatever it takes, it'll be done," said Oscar Escobedo
Carignan, Baja's new secretary of tourism. Escobedo said
the state remains a safe travel destination. "I don't
want to downplay what happened. We take it seriously.
And we're making every effort to control it."
But promises of a crackdown won't convince the Halls to
return to Mexico.
Christopher and Debra, along with their 16-year-old son
and 21-year-old daughter, were returning home from Los
Cabos about 1 a.m. after participating in the Baja 1000.
The family had driven the length of the peninsula many
times, so when the siren blared behind them as they
entered Tijuana, they thought nothing of it.
"We weren't concerned at all. . . . You kind of expect
it. It's part of the culture," Debra said.
Within seconds, about 10 men spilled out of two cars,
she said. Five jumped in their 2007 Ford F-250 and
pointed guns at their heads. The men drove the car into
the hills, ordering the family to keep their heads down.
The men stopped in an isolated area and started stealing
everything they could: watches, bracelets, $1,100 in
cash, Debra's wedding ring. Other men tore out the
toolbox in the truck bed and rummaged through the
27-foot trailer.
One man, speaking perfect English, told them to kneel.
Their son was singled out for rough treatment, Debra
said. "They shoved his face in the dirt. I thought he
was going to get executed right there."
Debra crawled over and covered her son with her body.
"He was crying, and I was crying. I told him I loved
him. He told me he loved me," she said. The men huddled
the family together and threw two sleeping bags at them.
Then they sped off with the truck and trailer. Shivering
from cold and fright, the Halls made their way down the
dark, barren hills above the beach.
When they walked toward a light at a construction site,
a man -- possibly a security guard -- fired two shots,
Debra said. They eventually made it into a neighborhood
and rang doorbells until a woman answered and phoned the
police.
The police, whom Debra said were attentive and "very
nice," drove them to the border and hugged them. The
family walked up to the border crossing at San Ysidro
with only their flip-flops and the clothes on their
backs. A customs inspector let them in the country
without their identification, she said.
Debra, like many other recent victims, said the
experience won't diminish her love of the country and
its people. She said the family had enjoyed decades of
visiting Baja California, where restaurant owners knew
their names, town mayors treated them to barbecues and
bartenders knew how to make their favorite margaritas.
But the family's south-of-the-border excursions are
over.
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