It was 4 a.m. Friday morning, August 31. Duke, Walt and Roger, three buddies from North San Diego County, were headed down to Mexico keen on surfing the predicted south swell. Their destination: San Carlos, Baja California for a Labor Day holiday weekend filled with surfing, kite surfing and relaxation. This was trip they had done many times before. Duke and Roger especially, having grownup in the Solana Beach/Del Mar area
Combined, the three men have been traveling into Baja for over 60 years. Duke and Roger speak fluent Spanish--Roger with a slight gringo accent; Duke with the native tongue. They were looking forward to surfing the uncrowded south swell. A pending protest at the border on Friday was sure to slow down the normal throngs of south bound surfers.
They drove in two trucks. A Honda Ridgeline loaded down with three surfboards, four kite boards, six kites, a dirt bike and all the camping gear and food to keep them happy and fed through Tuesday-as they didn't want to get stuck in the returning border traffic on Labor Day Monday. Roger and Duke were in the Honda. Behind them followed their buddy Walt in a Toyota Tundra loaded down with five surfboards another three kites, two kite boards and more camping gear. Oh, and they had some beer, margarita mix and Hornitos Tequila.
They crossed the border at 4:30 a.m. and preceded toward the toll road, driving along the well-worn road that hugs the border and then climbs the steep hill toward the Tijuana beaches, the bullring and coastal destinations further south. It is the road that everyone who has ever traveled into Northern Baja has been on. And the guys were fired up and optimistic as they followed the road south and descended less than half a mile from the USA/Mexico border. Then the blue lights hit their rear view mirror. Cops.
They were being pulled over. "This stuff comes with the territory," explained Roger. "Duke and I didn't feel the least bit apprehensive; pay the cop for whatever bullshit reason he comes up with and move on. Good surf awaited." The three surfers knew the drill; this area is notorious for the $40 Mexican cop shakedown. Duke, who was driving the Honda Ridgline and leading the two-truck caravan handed all his cash to Roger--except for $40 to pay-off the cop.
"Open the door, " the cop said to Roger as he rolled down the passenger window. A handgun pointed at Roger's eyes. "Open the f-ing door," the cop said a second time as he slammed the gun against Roger's right temple, reached in and pulled the door open.
As this unfolded, Walt, in the truck behind them and doing his duty as back driver in the caravan, pulled over behind Duke's Honda Ridgeline and watched in the still, dusky light. 'It immediately looked strange to me," explained Walt. "The cops came out of their truck with their guns drawn. My first thought is that they were looking for drugs. I thought this wasn't going to be a situation where we get out of it with a bribe."
Within a minute there were two other cops/thugs all over Walt, demanding that he get out of the truck, before simply reaching in and unlocking the door.
In the meantime Roger, the passenger in the front vehicle, was being dragged out of the truck by his shirt at gunpoint. The Mexican carjacker was wearing a cut-off black wetsuit ski mask. "I offered the guy my wallet, " explained Roger. "At this point I knew this was serious and I offered him everything we had, the car our money, everything."
While this transpired Duke the driver of the Ridgleine also had a gun to his head and was being lead out of the car.
With a black semi-automatic gun to his head, Roger was led to the roadside guardrail by the masked man and into a dark, open lot with a formidable cliff 30 yards away.
Again Roger tried to reason with carjacker. "Take my money," he said and handed him the $200 Duke had given him earlier. The car jacker directed Roger further into the darkness. Roger was getting closer to the cliff and deeper into the darkness. Again he tried to fend off the attacker with money. "I reached into my second pocket and threw a wad of cash at him," explained Roger. "The $240 I had for the trip. It fell to the ground and the attacker looked down, grabbed a wad full and left the stray twenty dollar bills. He looked down at the remaining bills--$60 or $80 dollars-then looked at me, jerked me forward again. He wasn't interested."
Again Roger pleaded with the man to leave him alone. The attacker's dark brown eyes stared at Roger and then twitched. "I think he was high-- on coke or something," explained the Roger. "His eyes were twitching. The man then continued to lead me further away from the others, into the darkness."
All sorts of thoughts raced through Roger's head. "I wondered if I should run. Would he shoot me? I was living in the moment. Instinct drove me, for better or for the worse."
At the edge of the 100-foot cliff the man stopped Roger and stared him down. Below was darkness--a 100-foot cliff, trash and debris. Roger stood facing the street, his back against the pending overhang.
Meanwhile Walt, in the truck behind Duke and Roger, was dealing with his own nightmare. "One of the Mexicans jumped in next to me pushed his cocked gun into my face pushing my head onto the dashboard," explained Walt. The cops or carjackers or Federales --nobody is really sure what they were or are--demanded that Walt get out. "The thug on the passenger side grabbed my shirt and put me over the road-side guardrail," explained Walt. The Mexican forced Walt's head over the guardrail and cocked the gun against the back of his head. Walt was waiting to die. Walt glanced up and out of the corner of his eye saw Roger down on his knees over by the cliff with a gun pointing on him.
"That's when I thought, 'I'm not going to let this guy shoot me here,'" explained Walt. "It wasn't a heroic action by any means. I just wanted to move out, so I pushed myself up off the guardrail and started walking toward the big ravine that divides the USA from Mexico. That's really when I thought, this is it, my life was over." Walt figured the Mexican thug was going to shoot him in the back. After five feet or so, and without hearing from the man holding a gun to his back, Walt started jogging in a zigzag motion toward the cliff, hoping that if the attacker did start firing his gun, perhaps he would miss him. His plan was to jump off the cliff; at least he had half a chance that way.
The masked attacker that held Roger at gunpoint ordered him to get on his hands and knees and crawl down the cliff. It wasn't a straight drop, but more of a steep incline. Roger groveled down until he found a ledge. He stood and looked up at the mask.
"It was dark, but I could see. My eyes had adjusted to the darkness. It would be light in about an hour,' explained Roger. "The masked man stood there, with the gun pointed at my chest, both hands on the grip. I was now looking up, maybe five feet below his feet."
The mask looked to his left as if awaiting a signal from the other thugs. He again stared down Roger and again turned to his left. This time he took his right hand off the handle and pulled the barrel forward and then back, cocking the gun. He inserted a bullet. The gun was now pointed down directly at Roger's chest. The man in the mask turned and shot the gun, just above horizon towards the street. He said something, which Roger couldn't make out and jogged slowly towards the vehicles.
Roger looked over to his left and saw Walt hunched over some twenty yards away. The two saw each other, said nothing. After waiting 30 seconds, maybe a minute, Roger and Walt ascended the cliff. "This cliff is a big cliff, and it's right on the border and as it got light we could see America on one side and we're in Mexico," explained Roger. "We were just sort of freaking out. It was surreal. They could have easily killed us and no one would have known. The two walked up to their friend Duke and the three said nothing. They were in shock. But at least it was over.
Or so they thought.
There was van across the street, an older model van. Beat up. Rickety. Broken down. The kind of vehicle you often see in Mexico. There next to the van was its owner, an old Mexican man. The three surfers yelled out to the old man in Spanish and he acknowledged that he saw the entire ambush. "He said he was scared for us, but that he could do nothing because of his age," explained Roger. "We ran over to him and the man opened up the sliding door of his van and Duke and I immediately jumped in, but Walt was adamant about not getting in this guys' van. "The last thing I wanted to do was get in some strangers old van," explained Walt. "It didn't feel right."
Walt eventually acquiesced and reluctantly hopped in the van. The old man closed the van door and the three surfers looked at each other anxiously like, 'was this a good idea?' Their sole focus was to get to the border, and this vehicle was going to get them there.
At this point Roger notices that there is a young man in his 20's sitting in the passenger seat. "The fact that a younger guy was in the passenger seat which sort of freaked us a bit," explained Walt. "After getting carjacked at gunpoint by Federales we didn't really trust anyone."
The old man turned over the engine in his van and it immediately started up. "I thought it was supposed to be broken," explained Roger. "So I start thinking was this guy involved. It was very weird."
The old man, the three surfers and the van start rolling down the hill, with the USA on their left and the sun rising brightly. At the bottom of the hill where the street next to the border fence flattens out, and less than a half mile from the carjacking, a Tijuana Police officer had pulled over a truck. A flat bed truck. The kind of flatbed truck that you tow other trucks with.
The three surfers tell the old man to stop his van. "We got out of the van to tell the cop about our carjacking incident," explained Walt. The cop then did something rather unusual. He picked up his cell phone and made a call. He didn't use his official police communications radio installed on his police truck. "I didn't think much about it at the time, but thinking back on it, it seems strange," explained Roger.
The three American surfers asked the officer to take them immediately to the border to file a report of the incident. "The cop tells us to get in the back of his police truck and we thought we were going to the border," explains Roger.
But to the surfers dismay the policeman turns onto Avenida Revolucion into the seediest part of Tijuana and pulls over. The surfers demand that he take them straight to the border. The cop refuses. He suggests they get some cash (Duke still had a hidden credit card) from the ATM machine and hire a taxi to take them to the border. By this time the surfers are nervous, restless, and paranoid. They ask the TJ police officer to please file report on the incident but he refuses telling them that the incident happened outside of his jurisdiction.
Fed up with the lack of regard for their situation, the surfers climb out of the cop's truck and start walking toward the ATM machine so they can get cash for a taxi to the border. They spot another TJ police officer walking the street beat. It's 5:30am on Avenida Revolucion in Tijuana and all sorts of sketchy people are around. Whores. Street people. Thugs. Drunks. The cop is on patrol to keep some sense of order. She is genuinely kind and concerned for the three Americans, and she directs Duke to the ATM kiosk.
Duke walks into the ATM machine kiosk and immediately two guys follow him into the ATM machine. "I was very nervous about it," said Walt. "The woman cop ran over to Duke and basically guarded him from these two guys."
With cab fare in hand and their focus still on the getting to the USA the surfers, with the help of the cop, hail a taxi. The women cop tells the cab driver to bring the Americans to the border and to not stop for anyone. "That part was little odd," explained Walt. "It was like she knew something was going to happen."
Walt, Duke and Roger got in the taxi and headed towards the USA, maybe three miles away from the border. "The cab took us on a one way street toward the border. Not unusual, I don't think," explained Walt. "Then I hear a loud truck barreling down the street behind us. It's going like 60, maybe 70 MPH."
The Nissan Frontier cuts directly in front of the taxi, slams on its brakes and skids to a stop in front of the Americans in the taxi, blocking it from going forward. "We all started screaming "Go! Go! Go!," explained Roger. "It was scene right of the movie 'Traffic.'"
Then another vehicle, a VW Tourig, loaded up with four Mexicans, screeches up behind the taxi and boxes it in from behind. The cab couldn't move. All three surfers are screaming at the cab driver to move out.
Serendipitously, the driver positioned the cab in a manner so that she could escape from the two pursuing vehicles and the taxi bolted full speed to the border.
Carjacked and kidnapped and contracted for death, at this point the three American Surfers were completely spun. The would-be kidnappers pursued, but there were other cars around by this time as the commute across to the USA was filling up traffic.
They paid the taxi driver and bolted a hundred yards or so to the pedestrian crossing. They attempted to tell another Mexican police officer but again, no help. They crossed the border. They called 911. They called their wives. They were safe at last.
In hindsight Duke, Walt and Roger believe the masked carjacker was a police officer. According to the three, that may explain why he wore a mask and the other carjackers did not.
Another interesting note: According to the surfers, the carjackers all spoke fine English, with barely a trace of an Hispanic accent. The carjacking was very professional, and went down with a strategic polish one might see in the military. "These guys were pros, " explains Walt. "Their guns were drawn and they were on us fast. Even if we had a gun, there is no way we could have acted."
Mexico has always been a scary place. According to one report, more journalists have died in Mexico than in Iraq. It's the Wild West. It is not safe. "I'll never drive into Mexico again. I've been surfing in northern Baja for over 20 years and I'll never go back," explained Roger. "There is nobody that cares about you. Nobody. You are all alone and the bad guys are the good guys and the good guys...well there aren't any."
READER COMMENTS
Sat Mar22, 2008, 5:23 PM
i was reading this article wow man badstuff when asong came on the radio the albatross the whales the clear blue water its time for a cool change you know it? I LOVE THE OCEAN SKIM BOARDING BODY SURFING / SURFING ALL OF IT but when we cant have access to what we love and do then what the hell go for it because we only here one time jim croce says dont tug on supermans cape my dad always said just on trucking peace andy
Wed Apr16, 2008, 11:38 AM
I had a bad experience in Baja as well. Cops pulled us over, guns drawn and took us to jail. Luckily they just wanted our cash and let us go for $40. I'm never going back either! Going over the border you lose your rights, your freedom and sometimes your life! Not worth it....
Tue Apr22, 2008, 4:49 PM
I lived for quite a few years in this part of Tijuana. Highly doubtful the thieves were police, more likely just impersonating. The carjacking left the victims in a paranoid state obviously and they were seeing evil everywhere after it. The regular police are generally petty thieves and cowards. I still go there often and am no more worried than most other parts of the world. Just be street smart, low profile, and you'll be ok.
Sat Jun 7, 2008, 3:22 AM
CRAZY MAN I REALLY FEEL BAD FOR YOU GUYS BUT MEXICO IS ALL ABOUT MONEY,DRUGS, & CARTELS THE POLICE IN MEXICO ARE SOME OF THE MOST CORRUPT PEOPLE ON THIS EARTH AS I HAVE BEEN GOING THERE SINCE 97 TO PARTY I WOULD SEE AND WITH TIME ENDED UP EARNING POOL WITH SOME OF THESE GUYS AND MAN OH MAN TRUST ME THESE GUYS ARE RUTHLESS MAN THEY WILL DO ANYTHING FOR MONEY I PERSONALLY HAVE EXPERIECE AND SEEN HOW THEY WORK & WHO CONTROLS WHAT! IM HISPANIC GUYS JUST TAKE MY WORD "DONT GO TO MEXICO FOR SHIT! WHAT THEY WHERE GOING TO DO YOU GUYS WAS KIDNAPP YOU GUYS AND COLLECT RANDSOME FROM YOUR FAMILY OR JUST KILL YOU! THESE GUYS WILL KILL ANYBODY FOR 300 BUCKS OR LESS THEY DONT CARE FOR LIFE MONEY IS MONEY! THE POLICE ARE VERY DIRTY THE PEOPLE THAT RUN EVERYTHING ESPECIALLY NOW ARE CARTELS AND THE POLICE WORK FOR THEM ITS NOT A MYTH ITS A FACT! AND ANYBODY THAT WANTS TO PROVE ME WRONG LOL WILL NOT. BEST SUGGESTION DONT GO TO MEXICO FOR NOTHING LET THE CARTELS AND PEOPLE KILL EACTH OTHER THERE WE HAVE OUR OWN SURFS!
Sat Jun21, 2008, 4:15 PM
GOOD THING YOU DIDN'T HAVE ANY OF YOUR WOMEN WITH YOU! SCARY TO THING ABOUT THAT. USE TO BE IF YOU STAYED COOL, NO ONE WOULD SCREW WITH YOU! NOT ANY MORE. EVERYONE HAS A COW CHIP ON THERE SHOULDER!IT'S ENOUGH TO GIVE YOU WAVE RAGE!!!!!!!!!!!!
Wed Jun25, 2008, 3:50 AM
WHAT A BUNCH OF PUSSIES. HAVE YOU EVER BEEN IN NEW YORK? THERES 3 CARJACKING DAILY IN NEW YORK... 3. THE MOST CORRUPT POLICE FORCE IS HERE IN AMERICA (USA). DOWN THERE IN MEXICO, THE CRIME ISN'T ORGANISED. ORGANISED HERE IN USA. AS SOON AS A BIG DRUG CARGO CROSSES THE BORDER... BAM... BANISHED. So, STOP BLAMING MEXICO ABOUT EVERYTHING. STOP GOING TO MEXICO TO DO THINGS THAT ARE UNLAWFULL HERE IN USA (SMOKING POT, GET DRUNK, ETC.) OR ARE YOU GOING YO TELL ME THAT IS A DIFFERENT TIDE IN SAN DIEGO THAN IN ROSARITO? BULLSHIT.
Mon Jul 7, 2008, 7:09 PM
Gone are the days of heading to baja to surf, chill and enjoy the free time. This is not the first I have read or heard about stuff like this happening, in fact you are lucky the wives didn't go, after all you know what happaned to a particular couple that went to mexico to escape from the fires lasr year! it was on the news, tragic. Ruben... I didnt read anything in the article about these guys doing any illegal drugs or partying, maybe you should stop being such a Dwad with your idiotic "shouting" and actually read the article. ..but of course that may prove to be difficult so don't strain yourself.
Thu Sep 4, 2008, 11:49 PM
Maybe the USA ought to take Baja as payment for caring for illegals all these years. I mean, Baja could be Southern California, and we could have a beautiful vacation paradise that would overtake Vegas.
Thu Oct 9, 2008, 10:29 PM
Mexico should figure this out..they are going to lose a lot of money. My friend recently went to a resort in baja and he and his wife were the ONLY guests. No tourists, not tourist dollars.
Thu Nov13, 2008, 11:40 AM
In the 80's I kept a trailer near the Taco Surf/El Morro area adjacent to Maria's reef break. I never kept anything in my vehicle because if you parked at places like k38 the chances were you'd get broken into and robbed. Of the many times I was rousted down there, pulled over in Rosarita and taken to jail for not using my turn signal (he said) only to be cut loose after paying a $3.75 fine. The most memorable was one day and friend and I left the trailer park (Campo Benny, just six trailers)and were driving driving toward Las Gaviotas to visit a friend who lived there when a police car pulled along side us and motioned us to a dirt road which led under the toll road. I pulled off at first but stopped then the cop car bumped the rear bumper and we continued. All I could think was "We're Dead" They checked us out searched the car but found nothing and while they figuring out what to do with us the guy I was with goes for one of the cops guns. The cops beat him down and threw him in th
Thu Nov13, 2008, 11:55 PM
Yep its nuts down here (i live in San Quintin) fuckin bandidos comin out from under the rocks,yeah...you should just stay home,waves are shitty anyhow and theres sharks everywhere just waiting for stupid gringos on their shiny new pop-out K-boards. But i know a place you can all surf in SD (WIND an SEA)and its like baja but no bandidos or sharks.... ...just a bunch of tight jean wearing posers.
Fri Nov14, 2008, 1:27 PM
i have been to baja many times since 1972 and nothing has changed since then , ihave been robbed federales and by locals also k38 k55 san miguels are very bad spots so watch your self and watch fellow gringos surfer backs too!
Thu Dec 4, 2008, 6:26 PM
I agree w/ Ruben: crap happens EVERYWHERE. Rape, murder, drugs- all of it in the good old U.S A. as well as Mexico. I spoke w/ Kelly Catian by phone today (he lives in San Quintin so he KNOWS) and he said something interesting: He observed that the internet brings things to us quicker (and often with a lot more embellishment to the story)than we had 10 or more yrs ago. This adds to the hysteria. I'm not saying these things are not horrible. They are. But I have been going down there since 1983 and all of that stuff happened back then- including the inevitable shakedowns by the cops. A fact of Mexican life. Every single person I've personally spoken w/ who LIVES there has told me that he or she feels just as safe living there as they EVER have. And THEY should know.
Fri Jan30, 2009, 4:13 PM
bad experience myself. Drove my 2001 new for truck down to surf baja malibu one weekend. Ended up with my boards taken from me at gun point and my truck striped in front of me. Tires, stereo and seats! never will return to Mexico again! cops are in on it as well. They turn the cheek so the thiefs can act. They get paid a small fee for that. corrupt fucken town! been surfing baja for 10 years! I am glad no one was injured, god bless you guys. Ban Mexican Beer that is bottled in TJ rosarito! mabey the politicians can do something to stop this madness, cause they have their hands in the finances of Mexico. If that struggles then they struggle, that is the only way I think the probelm will be noticed. Wheather there is something done about it?
Mon Feb 2, 2009, 8:12 PM
Ruben: I sympathize with your remarks but until you go on the net and do some serious research as to what is happening right now to Mexico. Now that the Narco's have destroyed most of their young men who do the killing and raping. These youths who work for the Cartels are groomed by the Capos. They get to killing and get off on it. A lot like getting into fist-fighting, except the people in the pool room in TJ get killed just because they were there. The shooters go out and laugh about their "job." Then they go and order Lobster Dinners. NY is bad, I agree. Mexico is far worse. If you look into Juarez, across from El Paso, they killed two medical people in cold blood just a week or two ago. They were innocents who worked at Texas Tech. Over 500 women have been raped and carved up, their bodies stripped and left to be seen when dawn arrives. Not one suspect has been identifed. That is the meaning of "impunity." Mexico is right up there with Guatemala, maybe worse.
Sun Mar22, 2009, 5:49 PM
WOW IT SEEMS AS YOU HAVE BEEN SEING A LOT OF MOVIES LATLEY "It was a scene right of the movie 'Traffic.'" ?????? WATZZ UP WITH THAT I CAN SAY THE SAME THING YOU HAVE NEVER BEEN TO NEW ORLEANDS OR EVEN LAGUNA BEACH RIGHT ??? YEAH THATS WATH I TAUGHT, JUST CHEK OUT THE CRIME DAY BY DAY OVER THERE, LA,NEW YORK ,NEW ORLEANDS I HAVE LIVED IN BOTH PLACES US AND MEXICO AND THE CRIME IS THE SAME AT LEAST IN MEXICO YOU DONT HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT SEXUAL PREDETORS,BEING OUT IN AREAS AT CERTAIN HOURS OR OTHER TINGS AS WELL, IF THEY STOP YOU AND ASK 4 SOME MONEY AND YOUR NOT DOING ANYTHING WY GIVE IT AWAY JUST LIKE THAT, YOU SEE IN SOME WAYS YOU ARE HELPING THIS TYPE OF THINGS TO HAPPEN Y DONT U JUST SAY TAKE ME TO JAIL THEY WON'T, DONT GO ANYMORE TO MEXICO ONE LESS STUPID GROUP OF INMATURE KIDS "GRINGOS" TO WORRY ABOUT "
Fri Apr 3, 2009, 1:02 PM
3 PEOPLE WERE CARJACKED IN TIJUANA OVER 2 YEARS AGO. AND YET THIS STORY LIVES ON. SAN DIEGO HAS HAD 4 CARJACKINGS SINCE DEC OF 2008. ONE GUYS STABBED, ANOTHER WHERE A PREGNANT WOMAN JUMPS OUT OF A MOVING CAR FEARING FOR HER LIFE. GET A GRIP. THIS WAS A MOMENT IN TIME. NOTHING MORE. BOTTOM LINE IS BAJA IS A GREAT PLACE TO FIND CLEAN UNCROWDED WAVES. TRY THAT AT WIND AND SEA !! THE FIRST SOUTH SWELL OF 2009 I WAS SURFING IN BAJA IN LAS GAVIOTAS WHERE WE TRADED WAVES IN CLEAN OVERHEAD UNCROWDED LINE UP.. DOESNT GET MUCH BETTER !! FOR ALL THE CHICKENS OUT THERE AFRAID TO GO TO BAJA, I SALUTE YOU.
Sun Apr19, 2009, 3:24 PM
I think things are more sketch. With over 20 years myself going, have to be smart. Early morning, loaded trucks, BMX bike, boards staked high is not smart. If you wouldn't do it in El Salavador, Don't do it in Baja. Personally, I am glad its back to the old days. I was on the verge of never going back because it was to easy nd too many people....
Sat May16, 2009, 4:35 PM
I got pulled over in Rosarito before this Surf comp/reggae fest in 07. the cop/prick/toughguy wanted money and he searched my buddy wileys truck and found a multitool...saying it was a weapon. and found a bottle of ripped fuel that is not narcotics. He almost shit his pants when he saw that. Luckily my friend gabe, who is border patrol now, haha is puerto rican and spoke spanish. It fucked our whole weekend up not because of the money we lost but because we realized mexico is a corrupt shithole. And if its fucking terrorism like ive heard countless times...then wtf. Mexicos next I hope. we could totally take baja over and fly the american flag, but shits still gonna be f'd up...its mexico, and its full of nasty people. Nothing will change. I say just stay away and let those dumb fucks kill themselves...THEN we can all go down there, eat fish tacos, live life and surf.
Mon Jun15, 2009, 4:52 PM
WOW!!! Crazy story but come on people lets be serious here. Who the f... drives into mex at 4 a.m...i dont care how far, how good, or how long any swell or "surfer" is for that matter...just plain stupid! oh well those kooks didnt make it very far anyway with their "kiteboards" anyway hahalolhaha Next time why dont they try to bring franklin donavinrider guy, his stupid board and his guitar maybe some-hemp-or something and the banditos will just think they suck(or smell)and they would leave them alone. or just drive some beater that runs good, not a honda ridgeline(who buys those anyway) OH YEAH i heard KELLY SLATER goes down to san carlos and says he wants to fight any kiteboarder or bandito that drops in on him... p.s. Who here thinks Roger and Duke are Gay??? sorry guys im fn bored!!!!!!!!!
Sat Jun20, 2009, 5:37 PM
I have driven from San Diego to Erendira three times since December 08 and have encounter no trouble--with any one. Twice I have driven from down to Erendira at night. But I keep my surf gear inside my vehicle with tinted windows. Don't be a target don't pull over unless the vehicle is clearly mark "Polica" for "Federal" duh! If the carjackers were really police for federals, their vehicle would have been clearly marked. Other than Federals wearing ski masks at official check points in order to protect their identity from cartel members--things are business as usual! Baja is safe if you travel safely!
Sat Jun20, 2009, 8:38 PM
I am a 4th generation Tijuanense [born, raised & living here] My Grandfather, who worked [help founded] at the race track "Hipodromo Agua Caliente" he used to tell me stories about gangsters, the kind of alcohol smuggling gangsters. My Great-Grandfather was an army general, fought in the "Guerra de los Filibusteros" in 1911, against us territory invasion. If you want to talk about Tijuana, ask me. I have been here for more than just one weekend.
Fri Jun26, 2009, 8:27 PM
Ok Lola I have some questions for you. Why are TJ(Baja) people, police, politicians, military, etc so corrupt. How come weapons are illigal in Mexico and only the criminals are allowed to carry them. I understand that all countries have corrupt people(military & police), but when foreigners and the mexican civilians are dying then it is time to do something. I believe Mexico is the most corrupt country in the world. It has a history of corruption starting with EL PRI and even before. Instead of having the campaing VIVE MEXICO (which is the new campaing to atract visitors) They should hire the American Marines, Army, Navy, Air Force and National Guard to get rid off all the trash in mexico(By trash I mean Narcos, crooked politicians, thieves,hitmen, etc etc) Then and only then Mexico will be Great. This message was writen by a Latino so do not take this as if it was writen by a gabacho. There was no racism intended with this message only tired and frustrated with all the criminal activity and unsafety in MX
Thu Jul 2, 2009, 10:08 PM
hey , people dont be escare; keep going to la baja is the best spot to be hapy ono mira en mexico te tratamos ppinche gringo tus coronas bien frias tus coctail en su concha que mas queres pero si pones al pedo pues tu sabras enpocas palabras take it esie man. Iloveyou gringos. wuelcome to mexico paisa.