Saturday, June 8, 2013

4 die in shooting in Mexico City neighborhood

A police car sits parked at the entrance to a gym where four people were shot dead in the Tepito neighborhood of Mexico City, Friday, June 7, 2013. Two masked gunmen stormed into the Body Extreme gym yelling "everyone hit the floor" and opened fire, in the Mexico City neighborhood that is home to the area's biggest black market, authorities said. Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera said preliminary investigations indicated the killings were part of a "personal grudge," and denied that the kind of large-scale drug cartel executions that have bloodied other parts of Mexico have arrived in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Gabriela Sanchez)

A police car sits parked at the entrance to a gym where four people were shot dead in the Tepito neighborhood of Mexico City, Friday, June 7, 2013. Two masked gunmen stormed into the Body Extreme gym yelling "everyone hit the floor" and opened fire, in the Mexico City neighborhood that is home to the area's biggest black market, authorities said. Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera said preliminary investigations indicated the killings were part of a "personal grudge," and denied that the kind of large-scale drug cartel executions that have bloodied other parts of Mexico have arrived in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Gabriela Sanchez)

A police officer stands guard at the entrance to a gym where four people were shot dead in the Tepito neighborhood in Mexico City, Friday, June 7, 2013. Two masked gunmen stormed into the Body Extreme gym on Thursday night yelling "everyone hit the floor" and opened fire, in the Mexico City neighborhood that is home to the area's biggest black market, authorities said. Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera said preliminary investigations indicated the killings were part of a "personal grudge", and denied that the kind of large-scale drug cartel executions that have bloodied other parts of Mexico have arrived in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Gabriela Sanchez)

A newspaper vender uses a megaphone as he works near the gym where four people were shot dead in the Tepito neighborhood of Mexico City, Friday, June 7, 2013. Two masked gunmen stormed into the Body Extreme gym on Thursday night yelling "everyone hit the floor" and opened fire, in the Mexico City neighborhood that is home to the area's biggest black market, authorities said. Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera said preliminary investigations indicated the killings were part of a "personal grudge", and denied that the kind of large-scale drug cartel executions that have bloodied other parts of Mexico have arrived in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Gabriela Sanchez)

(AP) ? Two masked gunmen stormed into a gym yelling "everyone hit the floor" and opened fire, killing four people in a tough Mexico City neighborhood that is home to the area's biggest black market, authorities said Friday.

Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera said the attack appeared to be aimed at two brothers who were exercising at the gym and another man who was with them. A fourth man, identified as the gym owner, died later in the hospital after he apparently tried to intervene in the killings.

The Thursday night shooting happened in the Body Extreme gym in Tepito, one of Mexico City's most dangerous neighborhoods. Two suspects were arrested after they opened fire on police a few blocks away from the gym shortly after the killings, he said. No police were injured.

Mancera said preliminary investigations indicated the killings were part of a "personal grudge" between the killers and the victims, and he denied that the kind of large-scale drug cartel executions that have bloodied other parts of Mexico have arrived in Mexico City.

"I don't have any indication of any cartel in Mexico City," Mancera told the Televisa television network. "It's not a cartel. What we have in Tepito is an upswing in violence, and an upswing in some gangs."

Tepito is the main clearinghouse for millions of dollars of contraband, from guns and drugs to counterfeit handbags that come through Mexico City.

A dozen people from the same neighborhood disappeared nearly two weeks ago from an after-hours bar in a posher part of the city several miles (kilometers) away. Three people have been detained in the case, but there is still no sign of the 12. Relatives allege they were taken in broad daylight May 26 from the "Heaven" bar by heavily armed and masked men.

Mancera said the Thursday shooting did not appear to have had anything to do with the missing people.

"It appears to have been a personal dispute with the people who unfortunately were killed there," Mancera said, noting that about 30 witnesses were at the gym and have talked to police. First, one attacker entered and shouted a series of insults, Mancera said, including one that would roughly translate as "you've bought it now," and "you didn't listen to what you were told."

Agents found six bullet shells inside the building.

But Mancera said authorities were investigating whether the alleged mass kidnapping might have been related to the execution on May 24 of a low-level drug dealer outside a bar in the trendy Condesa neighborhood. A public security official who was not authorized to be quoted by name had said that the killing of the dealer outside the "Black Bar" was related to the disappearances two days later, and that both may have been part of a turf battle between drug gangs.

"The Heaven bar and the Black bar have some threads in common, which prosecutors are investigating," Mancera said. "These two events could lead us to the conclusion that they are related." But he said "we have found nothing to connect" the Thursday gym shootings with the bar case.

The shooting Thursday so close to the two other crimes raised fears that an organized crime battle could be breaking out in Mexico's capital, which has been mostly spared from the cartel wars that have caused so much violence along the U.S.-Mexico border and in other parts of the country.

"We are going after those who carried out these attacks, those who have sought to cause unrest in Tepito," Mancera said, while stressing "this is a local, limited problem."

The shooting brought an enormous police operation, including helicopters flying over the mostly residential street.

One woman crying at the scene said her boyfriend was killed, but wouldn't give her name, only claiming his innocence and shouting "you know who did this."

Josefina Ramirez said her nephew was one of the four killed, along with two friends and an instructor.

"Two masked men came and just started shooting," she said. "He had no enemies."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-07-LT-Mexico-Violence/id-50518b833ce744ee8e0b5950b8e45a94

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