Guns Found South of the Border

July 6, 2010
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*Q: **Did border patrol recently discover a large cache of guns on the
Arizona border?
*

*A:** No. A chain e-mail making that claim shows pictures of a seizure by
the Mexican Army about 70 miles south of the Texas border. *

*FULL QUESTION*

Is this e-mail true?

Look what they found on the Arizona border!


 *FULL ANSWER*

This chain e-mail contains several photographs of a large number of guns
confiscated in a wooded area. We have only included one of the photographs
above; readers can view the rest on various blogs and Internet forums, such
as this one <http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-463127>.

The anonymous author of this e-mail claims these weapons were "found on the
Arizona border," and says, "Thank God for the border patrol that this did
not come over the border." The author uses these images to back up his or
her view on immigration — that federal laws should be enforced "across the
board on EVERYONE violating them." This unnamed person is certainly entitled
to that opinion — but the author misrepresents these photos and gets several
facts about them wrong.

The photos are of a Mexican Army bust of what is believed to be an organized
crime and drug trafficker training camp. These guns were not found by U.S.
border patrol. They also weren’t found "on the Arizona border." Instead,
they were found in Higueras, near Monterrey, about 70 miles from the Texas
border. The location is several hundred miles from
Arizona<http://www.mapquest.com/maps?city=Higueras&country=MX&latitude=25.93944&longitude=-100.006119&geocode=CITY>,
which, it’s safe to assume, the author names because of the state
passed a controversial
immigration law
<http://factcheck.org/2010/06/arizonas-papers-please-law/>this year.

The same images are seen in this Monterrey, Mexico, local TV report on the
bust <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsGpfBOVIEY&feature=related>, which the
Mexican military made with helicopters and ground troops on May 11,
discovering a large collection of weapons, including more than 100 assault
rifles, plus hand grenades and grenade launchers — as well as SUVs and
military clothing. One man trying to flee the camp was killed.
Spanish-language news reports on the incident can be found on other news
sites, such as Alerta
Periodistica<http://alertaperiodistica.com.mx/interviene-ejrcito-campamento-de-delincuentes-aseguran-arsenal.html>,
which includes one of the photos being circulated in the chain e-mail.

The *Houston Chronicle* also reported on the incident, saying it was the
third such raid in about five weeks as Mexican authorities have attempted to
crack down on gang activity.

*Houston Chronicle, May 12:* The Monterrey area and the natural
gas-producing ranch lands between it and the Texas border have exploded in
violence this spring as the Zetas fight gunmen from the Gulf Cartel and its
gangland allies. President Felipe Calderon has deployed more than 1,800
assault troops amid the worsening conflict.

The enhanced military presence has sparked more than 50 clashes with
gangsters this year in which dozens of suspected gunmen have been killed or
captured. It also has resulted in civilian deaths.

Newsweek also 
reported<http://www.newsweek.com/blogs/declassified/2010/05/17/is-the-flow-of-u-s-weapons-to-mexican-drug-cartels-increasing-under-obama.html>that
the camp was run by the Zetas cartel, and the magazine said that U.S.
law enforcement believed that all of the weapons had originally been
purchased in the United States:

*Newsweek, Declassified blog, May 17: *The Mexican military has discovered a
major training camp run by the notorious Zetas drug cartel and stocked with
an arsenal of military weapons, including 140 semi automatic assault rifles
and 10,000 rounds of ammunition—*all of them believed to be purchased in the
United States, U.S. law enforcement officials tell Declassified. *The
discovery last week of the training camp in the town of Higueras, just 70
miles south of the U.S. border in the state of Nuevo León, provides fresh
evidence for Mexican President Felipe Calderón—due to meet with President
Obama in Washington on Wednesday – to press his case that the U.S.
government is failing to crack down on a massive flow of illegal weapons
into Mexico.

* — Lori Robertson*
Sources

Las Noticias <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsGpfBOVIEY&feature=related>.
News report, Monterrey, Mexico. YouTube.com 12 May 2010.

Alerta Periodistica. "Interviene Ejército campamento de delincuentes;
aseguran 
arsenal<http://alertaperiodistica.com.mx/interviene-ejrcito-campamento-de-delincuentes-aseguran-arsenal.html>."
11 May 2010.

Althaus, Dudley. "Mexico stages ranch raid Move against Zetas captures
weapons cache." Houston Chronicle. 12 May 2010.

Isikoff, Michael. "Is the Flow of U.S. Weapons to Mexican Drug Cartels
Increasing Under
Obama?<http://www.newsweek.com/blogs/declassified/2010/05/17/is-the-flow-of-u-s-weapons-to-mexican-drug-cartels-increasing-under-obama.html>"
Newsweek.com. 17 May 2010.

Posted by Lori Robertson
<http://www.factcheck.org/author/lori-robertson/>on Tuesday, July 6,
2010 at 1:27 pm
Filed under Ask FactCheck
<http://www.factcheck.org/category/askfactcheck/>· Tagged with
arizona <http://www.factcheck.org/tag/arizona/>,
border<http://www.factcheck.org/tag/border/>,
chain e-mail <http://www.factcheck.org/tag/chain-e-mail/>,
Guns<http://www.factcheck.org/tag/guns/>,
illegal immigrants <http://www.factcheck.org/tag/illegal-immigrants/>,
mexican <http://www.factcheck.org/tag/mexican/>







*Being  humble to superiors is duty, to equals courtesy, to inferiors
nobility . . . *
**

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