Nope, no Border Crisis Here

hm1996

Moderator
Staff member
Quote:
Tijuana medical examiner’s office overwhelmed by bodies

Posted on January 29, 2019 by Tribune News Service
32 Shares

SAN DIEGO — The smell is what hits you first within a block of Baja California’s Medical Examiner office in Tijuana.

It’s the unmistakable odor of rotting corpses, and a grim indication of a city overwhelmed by unprecedented levels of violence.

Officials in Tijuana’s medical examiner’s office, an agency known as SEMEFO, have asked the state government for additional funding after operating for several months at nearly double its capacity for cadavers, on the heels of last year’s record violence.

Law enforcement officials on both sides of the border said the spike in violence is mostly because of lower-level drug dealers fighting over street corners.

Judge Salvador Juan Ortiz Morales said the issue was “urgent” and called on the state government of Baja California to fund an additional refrigerator to hold an extra 100 bodies.

“There are days where the smell is worse than others,” said Marcela Lopez, who works in a laundromat downwind from Tijuana’s SEMEFO.

The agency’s capacity is between 130 to 150 bodies, but Dr. Cesar Raul Gonzales Vaca, the state’s director of SEMEFO, told Spanish-language media this week that the office is receiving at least double that amount. He said, at times, it is quadruple the capacity with up to 20 cadavers daily, or up to 600 bodies a month.

In 2018, the agency received more than 2,700 bodies, he said.

For families, who have lost loved ones, it means long waits and confusion because of a lack of personnel to assist members of the public during one of the worst moments of their lives.

“There is order, but it does not happen fast,” said Beatrice Espinoza, who was at the SEMEFO on Friday to reclaim the body of a family member who had passed away more than a week ago.

Espinoza said she had been jumping through bureaucratic hoops since Tuesday with no one available at SEMEFO to explain the process to her as she tries to plan a funeral and retrieve her family member’s body. She declined to say how her loved one died.

“I know it’s not the fault of the people who are working here. They are trying very hard with the resources they have,” she said. “Still, for me, I’d rather just grieve and not have to come back here four times to sort out the paperwork because they don’t have the personnel.”

The facility’s 26-member staff, which includes 12 medical examiners, has struggled to examine the hundreds of bodies that have arrived since Jan. 1.

About half of the autopsies are conducted on homicide victims, but medical examiners also must certify the causes of death of involuntary manslaughter victims and accidental deaths that could be suspicious.

“Right now, I’m just sad and I haven’t given much though to anything else,” said Kimber Villa, who was waiting for her older brothers to come identify the body of her youngest brother.

She said he died accidentally in his home.

“It’s harder though because you wonder: ‘How is he being treated in there?’ ” said Villa, still in shock about her brother’s death.

Arturo Mendoza, who works at a funeral home nearby, said the facility has been struggling day and night with staffing issues, especially after increasing the hours they are open to the public.

“Sometimes, people have a hard time getting their loved one’s body back just because they have a lack of staffing,” he said.

By law, SEMEFO will wait 15 days for the body of a loved one to be recovered before the deceased is buried in Tijuana’s common grave.

With more than 2,500 homicides last year, the city of Tijuana, population of approximately 1.8 million, is one of Mexico’s most violent places, as drug cartels compete for control over northern trafficking routes.

Gonzales said sometimes family members are afraid to come identify the bodies of their lost loved ones for fear of inserting themselves in police investigations.

— Wendy Fry
The San Diego Union-Tribune

———

©2019 The San Diego Union-Tribune, Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
This entry was posted in Featured, Freedom Concerns, From The Wire, Illegal Immigration, World Events and tagged Border Crisis, Drug War, mexico border. Bookmark the permalink.


https://personalliberty.com/tijuana-medical-examiners-office-overwhelmed-by-bodies/

Regards,
hm
 
Mexican meth is still a growing epidemic. Once they get it over the border they are extra low key to get it further north. Cartels are profit driven, the source of the super lab and their financial model is once across the border its value grows the farther north it gets. The violence may be bottlenecked on their side of the border but once across it spreads north and manifests all the way down to small town Oklahoma. Almost everyone has a family member or knows someone who's life has been or is being destroyed by meth. The border is broken...


You can compare Detroit, MI to Windsor Ontario, and you will find the similar scenario.
 
Originally Posted By: Infidel 762


You can compare Detroit, MI to Windsor Ontario, and you will find the similar scenario.

except our river isnt swimmable/wadeable like much of the rio grande is.

well i suppose you could try to swim the detroit river, but if you got in on the canadian side near belle isle the current would drag you somewhere down around lincoln park or wyandotte before you got to the US side lol
 
46921676472_138720afd6_c.jpg


While we're comparing borders/walls, take a look just across the southern border in what has been described as the busiest CBP sector. Talk about the thin blue line! The BP is doing an excellent job in this sector but have repeatedly requested a wall to assist in their efforts.

Want an inside look at the drug cartels operating along the border? If you have access to Crime &Investigation channel, watch Bordertown, Laredo.

Why not leave it up to those who actually do the job to assess the situation on the ground and have an input on whether or not a wall would be beneficial?

Regards,
hm
 
Back
Top