By Will Weissert The Associated Press
Article Last Updated: 08/01/2007 11:19:42 PM MDT
Havana - The vast majority of Cubans sneaking off the island enter the 
United States through Mexico after U.S. relatives pay thousands of 
dollars to organized-crime networks that scoop them off Cuba's western 
tip in souped-up speedboats.
The Mexico route is more dangerous than a direct, 90-mile voyage to 
Florida, but there is less chance the U.S. Coast Guard will intervene. 
Nearly 90 percent of undocumented Cubans who make it to America come 
overland rather than reaching U.S. shores by boat, said U.S. Customs and 
Border Protection.
 From the Mexican coast, Cubans travel up to the U.S. border, where, 
unlike others without documentation, they are welcomed in under U.S. law.
Mexico, already struggling against organized crime, is paying the price 
for the migration shift, especially in Cancún. On Monday, investigators 
there found the body of a Cuban- American from Miami, Luis Lazaro Lara 
Morejon, handcuffed and with duct tape over his eyes. He had been shot 
10 times, obliterating his face.
Days earlier, authorities had arrested at least eight people on 
suspicion of smuggling Cubans to Mexico, including six Cubans with U.S. 
residency or citizenship who had just been interviewed by U.S. 
authorities. Lara had connections to the suspects, Mexican investigators 
say.
"These gangs are well-organized, well-financed and very powerful," said 
Sen. Carlos Navarrete, who was in a group of Mexican lawmakers who went 
to Havana to discuss the issue with Cuban lawmakers in June. "They are a 
very serious problem for both governments - Cuba and Mexico."
An estimated 9,296 Cubans arrived in the United States from Mexico 
between Oct. 1 and July 22, more than double the 4,589 who crossed or 
were picked up by the Coast Guard in the Florida Straits in the same period.
The Mexico route is so popular that U.S. immigration officials call 
those who follow it "dusty foot" Cubans, a play on the "wet-foot/dry 
foot" policy that lets Cuban migrants captured on U.S. soil stay in 
America but sends those picked up at sea back to the island.
"That route, it has taken over," said a U.S. official interviewed at a 
Havana hotel on condition of anonymity because publishing his name would 
violate State Department protocol.
A speedboat smuggler making the 120-mile dash to the Yucatan peninsula 
can earn $30,000 per haul of 30 or more Cubans.
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