Web Video Shows Beheading Of Purported Mexican Drug Cartel Hit Man

ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) _ A video purportedly showing the beheading of a drug cartel hit man appeared on video-sharing Web site YouTube, and its makers called on Mexicans to kill more members of the gang.

Sunday, April 1st 2007, 7:57 pm

By: News On 6


ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) _ A video purportedly showing the beheading of a drug cartel hit man appeared on video-sharing Web site YouTube, and its makers called on Mexicans to kill more members of the gang.

The video appeared as the rival Gulf and Sinaloa gangs wage a bloody battle for trafficking routes and President Felipe Calderon is taking on organized crime with thousands of troops sent to drug-plagued areas.

``Do something for your country, kill a Zeta!'' read a written message opening the five-minute video posted Friday. The Zetas are believed to be ex-army operatives serving as hit men for the Gulf cartel.

The footage shows a man in his underwear tied to a chair with a ``Z'' written on his chest and the message: ``Welcome, kill women and children. Continue Ostion.'' It is unclear who Ostion is. One of the man's legs is marked with the name ``Lazcano,'' possibly referring to Heriberto Lazcano, the suspected head of the Zetas.

The man is shown being interrogated about the Feb. 6 killing of five police officers and two secretaries in the Pacific resort city of Acapulco. The unseen interrogator repeatedly asks him about the killings, punching him several times until the man says he participated in the attacks. He is then beheaded. The footage ends with a message in red saying, ``Lazcano you're next.''

Anyone can post a video on YouTube and the site indicated the video was posted by a user named ``matazetaregio.'' It was the only video posted by that user and there was no way to confirm the authenticity of the video or who made it.

A message seeking comment was left with YouTube on Sunday evening. The company removed the video late Sunday, and posted a message that the removal was ``due to terms of use violation.'' YouTube policy bans videos with gratuitous violence or illegal acts.

A spokeswoman at Mexico's Attorney General's office said she had no information on whether the video was being investigated by authorities.

Mexican drug traffickers have begun videotaping their killings and carrying out beheadings, like Iraqi insurgents, to send a message to rival gangs or the government.

In the Iraqi videos, however, the aggressors use knives to cut off their victims' heads. In the Mexican video, the man is strangled by twisting a cord tied to metal rods until the pressure cuts through his neck.

The video appears to portray the aggressors as vigilantes. One comment posted on the site from a man who identifies himself as a 26-year-old from Mexico said, ``That's how justice is served!''

The Feb. 6 killings at two police stations in Acapulco were among the most brazen attacks since Calderon's crackdown. Witnesses said the killings by more than a dozen men were videotaped by the assailants, although authorities have never found any footage.

Federal authorities have said they were investigating whether some of the slain officers had ties to drug traffickers, and whether the killings were meant to settle scores between the Gulf and Sinaloa drug cartels. No was has been charged with the killings.

In apparent attempts to terrorize those who oppose them, the gangs have placed severed heads on public display with threatening notes including one that read, ``See. Hear. Shut Up. If you want to stay alive.''

In the most gruesome case, gunmen burst into a nightclub and rolled five heads onto the dance floor.

In 2005, a homemade DVD purporting to show four Zeta hit men being beaten and interrogated, and one of them being shot in the head, was sent anonymously to the Kitsap Sun, a newspaper in Bremerton, Wash.

The footage shows the men sitting bruised, bloody and bound. Prodded by an unseen interrogator, they detail how they kidnapped, tortured and killed their enemies, including a Mexican radio reporter and a Nuevo Laredo police chief.

Eleven federal agents were charged with kidnapping the four men and possibly helping kill them. Three of the men on the video were never seen again.
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