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Friday, August 03, 2007

3 bodies may be tied to Cuban smuggling

3 bodies may be tied to Cuban smuggling
Posted on Fri, Aug. 03, 2007

CANCUN, Mexico --
(AP) -- Police found three bodies at the bottom of a natural well near
Cancun that are believed to be tied to a settling of accounts within a
Cuban-American smuggling ring, officials said Friday.

Among those found was the Mexican girlfriend of ex-Miami resident Luis
Lazaro Lara Morejon, a Cuban-American being investigated for smuggling
Cubans through southern Mexico to the United States. His bullet-riddled
body was found earlier this week along a rural road outside Cancun, said
Attorney General Bello Melchor Rodriguez of Quintana Roo state.

Rodriguez said the bodies of Jesus Aguilar and Edwin Park, both Mexican
citizens, also were found in the cenote, a sort of deep natural well
common in the region. All three were handcuffed, blindfolded and gagged
with duct tape.

Authorities said the victims appeared to have been shot before they were
thrown into the cenote. Investigators found the shells of at least six
bullets near the site.

Aguilar allegedly ran a safe house for arriving Cuban immigrants and
Park allegedly arranged the transportation of Cubans to Mexico's
Caribbean coast, Rodriguez said.

''We believe these people were executed by those who are part of a
Cuban-American mafia,'' Rodriguez said. ``They probably hired people to
execute them. We don't know if the Cuban Americans themselves killed them.''

Rodriguez said the killers painted a red arrow along a highway near the
site, showing the way to the bodies.

Earlier this month, Mexican authorities arrested eight people outside
Cancun -- six of whom were Cuban-Americans or Cubans with U.S. residency
-- on suspicion of smuggling migrants.

Mexico, whose Caribbean coast is about 120 miles southwest of Cuba, is
increasingly used by smugglers as a route to get Cuban migrants into the
United States.

Migrants arriving here travel to the U.S. border, where they identify
themselves as Cubans to American officials and are usually allowed to
stay. Cuban migrants detained in Mexico are also often allowed to stay.

On Thursday, the Mexican navy detained 83 Cubans who were traveling in
makeshift boats off the country's Caribbean coast and believed to be
heading to the United States via Mexico.

http://www.miamiherald.com/466/story/192088.html

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