Associated Press
December 11, 2008
Editor’s note: Click through to read the paragraph on registering and fingerprinting cell phone users. Not surprisingly, the Mexican government is exploiting the bloody turf war between drug cartels to foist draconian laws on the Mexican people. It should be noted that the drug cartel business in Mexico is highly profitable for the banksters who engage in wholesale money laundering. In the late 1990s, several Mexican banks were charged with money laundering drug profits, including Banca Confia, owned by Citibank. It is also a demonstrated fact that the CIA has been involved in the Latin America drug trade for decades (see The CIA Drug ConnectionIs as Old as the Agency).
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s Congress on Tuesday voted to broaden police powers, allowing law enforcement agencies to use undercover agents and taped conversations as evidence in a bid to help them fight increasingly bloody drug cartels.
- A d v e r t i s e m e n t
The reforms, which were approved earlier by the Senate, are backed by President Felipe Calderon and come as Mexico is shaken by organized-crime violence that has claimed almost 5,400 lives so far this year, more than double the death toll from the same period of 2007.
They allow taped conversations to be used in court if submitted as evidence by one of the parties in the conversation, and let police request search warrants by e-mail or by telephone calls to judges rather than exclusively in writing, according to a Congressional statement.
The changes also permit undercover agents.
Many Mexican detectives currently operate in plain clothes, but the new measure would let them keep their identities secret in legal proceedings and be identified by a numerical code known only to superiors.
Drug gangs have increasingly targeted police officials for assassination in recent years.
The reforms include some safeguards meant to prevent police from abusing their powers, including one requiring that officers quickly register all detentions. Under current law, they have up to two days to present a suspect before a judge.
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