Latin America: Week in Review, Mexico

Mexico Sentences 15-Year Old American-Born Killer To Prison

July 27, 2011 By Staff

Today in Latin America

Top Story— Mexican authorities sentenced a 15-year old, American-born boy to three years in prison for torturing and murdering four people. Edgar Jiménez Lugo, who went by the nickname “El Ponchis”, shocked Mexico due to the gruesome nature of his murders when he was arrested last December. He was 14 at the time of the murders. Mexican authorities said that Lugo confessed to killing four men and hanging their bodies from a bridge in Cuernavaca, a town near Mexico City. Lugo, who was born in San Diego but raised in Mexico, claimed to have started killing for drug cartels when he was 11 and earned $200 a week for committing the crimes while drugged and under threat. The 15-year old’s case highlights the increasing number of minors used in Mexico’s drug war. A report released in October by Mexico’s attorney general’s office said the number of minors charged with drug-related crimes had increased to 810 in 2009 from 482 in 2006.

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Headlines from the Western Hemisphere

North America

Caribbean

  • Cuban Vice President José Ramón Machado Ventura gave a speech for the holiday of July 26 calling upon the country to work harder to advance economic reforms.
  • Haitians’ frustration with their president was on display during Michel Martelly’s Sunday trip to northern city Cap Haitien in northern Haiti, where demonstrators threw rocks and bottles at him.
  • Chevron Puerto Rico will pay a $600,000 penalty and spend $5.2 million for improvements to storage tank facilities on the island, after 100 of them were cited by the Environmental Protection Agency for leakage violations.

Central America

Andes

Southern Cone

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