Monday, August 6, 2018

AZMEX EXTRA 6-8-18

AZMEX EXTRA 6 AUG 2018

Note: "Exploding bullets". Photos, video, etc. at links.
Thx


Exploding bullets in Rio Rico mark fiery end to smuggling effort
By Pablo Lopez For the Arizona Daily Star
Aug 6, 2018 Updated 1 hr ago

https://tucson.com/news/local/exploding-bullets-in-rio-rico-mark-fiery-end-to-smuggling/article_23eb65f4-5d78-5344-a51c-26694cb3b4cd.html?utm_medium=social&utm_source=email&utm_campaign=user-share

Exploding bullets 1
The remains of the car sit illuminated in the Pilot Travel Center parking lot Thursday night.
Courtesy Jonathan Clark, Nogales International

Exploding bullets 2
The car was abandoned on the west side of Pilot Travel Center.
Courtesy Jonathan Clark, Nogales International

Exploding bullets 3
Bullets and casings litter the ground around the vehicle's front left tire.
Courtesy Jonathan Clark, Nogales International


A failed attempt at smuggling ammunition into Mexico ended with a car engulfed in flames at a truck stop in Rio Rico
as bullets hidden under the hood began to explode, newly released reports show.

Francisco Eduardo Santana Lopez, a 19-year-old U.S. citizen, and Aaron Jazziel Cordova were driving to Mexico
with more than 4,200 rounds of ammunition hidden around the engine when rounds began exploding on May 31,
a criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Tucson by a special agent with
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives on June 14 shows.

Santana Lopez and Cordova entered the United States on May 31 through Nogales and drove to
a bulk ammunition retailer in Phoenix.
They spent $2,300 on 200 rounds of .50-caliber ammunition, 2,000 rounds of 7.62x51mm ammunition and
2,000 rounds of 7.62x39mm ammunition.
They intended to smuggle the ammunition into Mexico, according to the criminal complaint.

After Santana Lopez and Cordova, neither of whom are licensed arms exporters, left the ammunition retailer and drove toward Mexico,
they stopped at a house in Rio Rico where they broke down the ammunition into smaller boxes
and placed them under the hood of the car, around the open areas of the engine,
a special agent with Homeland Security Investigations wrote in a sworn affidavit filed with a search warrant request.

Once everything was loaded into the vehicle, Santana Lopez, Cordova and an unidentified woman from the house drove back toward Nogales. As they drove down Interstate 19, Santana Lopez heard explosions coming from under the hood of the vehicle, according to the affidavit.

They got off the interstate, parked the car at the Pilot Travel Center in Rio Rico and ran away as the car began to burn
and ammunition continued to explode.

Two weeks later, Santana Lopez was stopped at the Nogales port of entry as he tried to return to the United States.
He told HSI agents he and Cordova were picked up by an unidentified man near the Rio Rico gas station and taken to Mexico.

Santana Lopez told Homeland agents he had gone to the Phoenix ammunition store
so many times that employees knew him well enough to keep the store open late for him.
When asked how many times he had gone to the store,
Santana Lopez told agents "not more than fifty," according to the affidavit.

Santana Lopez also bought military-grade equipment, including a rifle capable of penetrating armored vehicles, from online retailers and smuggled it to Mexico, the Homeland agent wrote in the affidavit.

On July 11, Santana Lopez and Cordova, whose age and citizenship were not included in court documents, were indicted by a grand jury on charges of attempted ammunition-smuggling and conspiring to smuggle ammunition from the U.S. to Mexico.


From June 2017 to June 2018, Santana Lopez possessed a variety of firearms and firearms equipment
that he intended to transport from the U.S. to Mexico,
including four M203 grenade barrels, which are designed to attach to a rifle to launch grenades,
a Barrett .50- caliber rifle
and a parts kit and tripod assembly for a machine gun,
according to the indictment.

Drug traffickers use .50-caliber Barrett rifles against Mexican authorities,
including an attack in late March in Tamaulipas, Mexico, against a Mexican navy armored truck, according to Mexican media reports.

On July 27, Santana Lopez pleaded not guilty. His trial is set for Sept. 5. His defense lawyer did not respond to a request for comment.

End

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