Mexico nabs suspected killer of 17 rehab patients

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Troops captured the  suspected killer of 17 patients at a rehabilitation clinic in  northern Mexico, one of the deadliest attacks in President  Felipe Calderon’s three-year war against drug cartels, local  media said yesterday.

The suspect, Jose Rodolfo Escajeda, is considered one of  the bloodiest hitmen in the crime-ridden state of Chihuahua and  a leader of the powerful Juarez Cartel. He is on the US Drug  Enforcement Administration’s most-wanted list for marijuana and  cocaine smuggling into the United States.

About a dozen hooded men burst into a clinic in the  violence-plagued industrial city of Ciudad Juarez, across from  El Paso, Texas, on Wednesday, lined up patients and killed 17  of them.
Turf wars and targeted attacks by drug trafficking gangs  have killed more than 13,000 people across Mexico since  Calderon took power in late 2006 and launched his drug war, a  level of violence that has alarmed Washington and unnerved both  tourists and investors.
Drug gangs have targeted rehab centers in the past,  accusing them of protecting dealers from rival groups.

Escajeda is also believed to be behind the killing earlier  this year of two American members of a Mormon community in  northern Mexico who were brutally murdered for denouncing  cartel kidnappings, Mexico City’s Daily Excelsior newspaper  reported on its website.

Benjamin LeBaron, a breakaway Mormon leader and anti-crime  activist, was abducted from his house and killed by around 20  gunmen in revenge for helping track and arrest a group of drug  gang members. His brother-in-law was also killed in the July  attack.
Calderon has deployed thousands of troops and federal  police against drug cartels across the country but drug  killings are at record levels. Some 10,000 soldiers patrol  Ciudad Juarez alone, but crime remains out of control.