(Los Angeles Times) Julio Ledezma had been chief of police in La Junta, a town of 8,700 in northern Mexico, for barely three months when a pair of strangers paid him a visit.They said an aide to the mayor had sent them, and they bore gifts: a briefcase stuffed with cash and a truck for Ledezma’s personal use.
In return, the new chief was to distract federal police at security checkpoints with fake calls for assistance. The diversion would allow drug traffickers to drive through the area without inspection.
Ledezma could refuse — and be killed.
He could take the bribe — and be owned by the Juarez cartel.
He chose to stall. He told the men he had to talk to his boss first. He approached civic leaders, trying to rally support. Word got back to the traffickers, and on Ledezma’s 45th birthday, six men with military rifles surrounded his home while he was out buying steaks and jalapeños for his birthday dinner.
The gunmen told his wife that they would find him and kill him, no matter where he went in Mexico. They waited about 20 minutes, then left.
When Ledezma returned, he realized that resistance was not an option. He drove to Juarez with his wife and their 15-year-old daughter and crossed the Bridge of the Americas into El Paso. There, they asked for political asylum.
Their request will probably be rejected, because asylum is reserved for people fleeing political oppression or ethnic discrimination. Police officers who stood up to drug cartels don’t necessarily qualify.
Indeed, the U.S. government is aggressively fighting Ledezma’s petition on the grounds that the threat that caused him to flee is inherent to police work, according to his lawyer, Eduardo Beckett. U.S. immigration officials said they could not comment because asylum cases are confidential.
George Grayson, a professor of government at the College of William and Mary in Virginia and an expert on U.S.-Mexico relations, said that if immigration judges began to grant asylum liberally to people fleeing the cartels, “We’d have literally tens of thousands of police officers coming to the United States, not to mention some mayors, too.”
Down in Mexico, this scenario is called “Plata o Plomo” — “Silver or Lead” — meaning you can take the cartel’s offer of silver or you can take the cartel’s offer of bullets.
The corruption is epidemic because the cartels just have far too much money and firepower. How many honest cops are going to stick with their $1,000 / month salaries when cartels offer ten to twenty times that much in bribes to those who’ll take them and execution style murders of entire families to those who won’t?
Just remember, 60% of that “Plata” is American money that would disappear from cartel hands if we legalized domestic production of marijuana. How tragic – we fund the Mexican cartels because we prohibit a plant that Americans demand, then we supply 90% of the firearms and ammunition the cartels use to terrorize police, but when the police run to us in fear for their lives, we won’t grant them asylum.

I say let them come. We need workers for our new
billion acre hemp forest. Do you see that this is about the future and safety of our country and by virtue of our leadership role in world politics, also the safety of the world? We can cut off more than half of all the cartels’ current funding for their insidious violence—with the stroke of a pen. Are you listening, Mister President? It is time for our government to reflect the will of the people. What we would will is to be free of this tyrrany inspired by ancient racist ideology.
[...] about La Frontera as of June 15, 2009 Monday, June 15, 2009 Honest Mexican police can’t get asylum in US – stash.norml.org 06/15/2009 ( Los Angeles Times ) Julio Ledezma had been chief of police in [...]