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The 2016 Audi TT Coupe 2.0T quattro S Tronic

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2016 Audi TT

by James Lewis Jr.

The all-new 2016 Audi TT comes in the styling version of a mini-R8 Supercar but alludes to a sharper/more tighter driving experience and is definitely a contender in the territory label of Sports Car. I had the pleasure of driving one in the Tango Red Metallic Exterior with Black Interior. The 2016 Audi TT is offered in two styling trims: Coupe and Roadster (Convertible). The awe-mazing focal point of cutting edge design of the cabin is the 12.3 Audi Virtual Cockpit Display where the infotainment controls and everything that is interface-related is moved directly in front of the driver which works with voice controls, an MMI Touch Scratch Pad in the center console and Steering Wheel Toggles. The ‘middle area’ is now a row of round vents that control the climate settings, along with LED ambient cabinet lighting which gives the car more of a modern race-car feel. The Equipment Standards are: Audi Advance Key ( which is a Keyless Entry/Keyless Start 2.0L TFSI 220hp/258lb ft I4 Engine ( meaning this car can go from 0 to 60mph in as little as 5.3 seconds—vroom vroom, with Cruise Control, along with the Quattro All-Wheel Drive System, 6-speed S Tronic (automatic and not manual) Transmission, 18” 5-double-spoke dynamic design, 245/40 Summer Tires, ESC (Electronic Stability Control), Disc Brakes that are ventilated in the front with solid rear discs, ABS (Anti-Lock Braking System) with Brake Assist, an Adaptive Rear Spoiler (that includes manual operation feature), a TPMS (Tire Pressure Monitoring System) and Spare Tire with Tool Kit and Jack. IT also has Remote Locking, an Alarm System, a HomeLink Garage-Door Opener, a Front and Rear Parking Sensor System and Audi Side Assist, Automatic Wipers and Headlights.

The Exterior of the car’s profile hasn’t changed much but it is a bit more chiseled. The R8 shows itself in the LED Matrix Headlights, new creasing to the hood and in the Single Frame Grille (it looks kind of trapezoidal), a powered spoiler that extends at speeds around 75mph and it retracts around 44mph, which isn’t going to make much of a difference while driving on the Highways in the US but it is still worth mentioning and it does gives you some bragging rights! Full LED Headlights (DRLs, Low/High Beams, Turn Signals, LED Taillights with Dynamic Turn Signals, Heated Exterior Mirrors.

The Interior’s contemporary styling of the cabin featured LED Ambient Lighting, a “virtual cockpit” gauge cluster that obviated the need for a separate center screen on the dashboard. It placed directly in front of the driver the ability to control the display screen to show everything from how effectively the car was being driven, the Drive Select System (Dynamic Mode = Sport Mode, i.e. RACE CAR, Individual Mode= Sedan Mode, i.e. STREET CAR) with the twist of a knob. A MMI Navigation Plus Package that adds a lot of COOL STUFF in addition to displaying clear, smooth-scrolling high-contrast colored maps a screen which also doubles as a Gauge Cluster, Heated 12-way Power Adjustable Front Sport Seats including Lumbar Adjustment, Alcantar Leather Seat 50/50 Split Folding Rear Seat, Audio Sound System with AM/FM/SAT/1CD audio with SD Card Reader, SIRIUS Satellite Radio (with three month complimentary subscription), 3 Spoke Leather Wrapped Multifunction Flat Bottom Steering Wheel with Shift Paddles, LED Interior Lighting (that you operate like touching your touch screen cell phones or laptops).

The Safety and Security Features are: Driver Advanced Single Stage Adaptive Frontal Airbags and Front Passenger Advanced 2-Stage Adaptive Frontal Airbag Supplemental Restraint System, Driver and Front Passenger Knee and Seat Mounted Thorax-Pelvis Side Airbags, SIDEGUARD Inflatable Curtain Airbags, Front 3-Point Safety Belts with Automatic Pre-Tensioning and Force Limiters, Rear 3-Point Safety Belts with Automatic Pre-Tensioning, Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children (LATCH) in Rear Seats and an Anti-Theft Alarm System with and Ignition Immobilizer.

The Packages/Options includes items that are costumed built such as: The Exterior and Interior Colors, Technology, Wheel Package, Sport Seat Package and the Bang & Olufsen Sound System and a Front Filler Panel.

The cabin of the 2016 Audi TT is that of a Race Car Enthusiast dream as well as the drive! The 2.0T Coupe beat out the base (manual-transmission) of the Porsche Cayman by an awesome 0.3 seconds (here is where those aforementioned bragging rights come in).

So my Race Car Fans…if your spouse utterly forbids you to drive for either INDY or NASCAR; give yourself an ultimate treat and test drive the 2016 Audi TT Coupe quattro S Tronic today! As always Drive Smart and Drive Safe

Happy Holidays!

Keeping an Eye on Safety for December 17, 2015

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By Samuetta Hill Drew

 

Home Evacuation! A safety topic the Historic Smithfield Neighborhood bordering Interstate 59/20 West by the Arkadelphia Road exit had to contend with on Wednesday of last week. This historic neighborhood which was the most affluent for Blacks in the 1940’s through the late 1970’s in the State of Alabama has encountered many safety threats in its past mainly during the turbulent 1960’s Civil Right Era in our city. Due to the active roles many of the residents played during this time, some of their homes where bombed and danger became imminent resulting in the men creating their own neighborhood militia which stood guard throughout the night to protect their families and properties. Yes, safety threats were not uncommon to this neighborhood, but never a home evacuation! The residents were notified by the Birmingham Police Department to evacuate their homes immediately due to a dangerous chemical spill on I-59/20 West. It did not occur at a time most residents were considering leaving their homes. This notification occurred at a time most had eaten dinner and were settled in for the night either relaxing by watching their favorite television shows, decorating for Christmas or preparing for the next school/work day. Most residents’ initial reaction was disbelief! They were told the Boutwell Auditorium had been opened to house them until it was safe for them to return home. This is another example of how quickly a safety threat can arise without a moment’s notice which supports the need to alter the way we think about safety preparation and response for ourselves and love ones.

 

Preparation Tips for Immediate Safety Threat Notification:

  • Keep a small piece of luggage packed for emergencies with basic necessities (sleepwear, notions like toothpaste and toothbrush, telephone charger, change of clothing, etc.) for at least two days. Make sure you always take your medication along with other personal items such as your cellular telephone, wallet or purse.
  • Keep a flashlight with some extra batteries and a first aid kit by your emergency packed luggage.
  • Keep a copy of your home insurance policy inside of your emergency luggage.
  • Try to maintain at least one half tank of gas in your motor vehicle at all times.
  • Have a safety evacuation plan for you and your family. You should conduct a periodic drill possibly twice a year. Try to conduct the drills at different seasons of the year.
  • Identify an alternate safe home location. Ask a family member or friend if the occasion should occur which requires you to evacuate your home for a few days, if you and your family, if applicable, can stay with them temporarily. This should be included in your plan.
  • Make sure the packed luggage, flashlight, etc. are kept in a location that’s easily assessable for a quick departure.

 

Unfortunately, current times and events require we think more and more about safety preparation and response for ourselves and our love ones by Keeping an Eye on Safety!

President Obama Promises To Be ‘Non-Traditional’ In His Last State Of The Union Address

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President Obama Delivers State Of The Union Address At U.S. Capitol

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House is promising President Barack Obama will deliver a “non-traditional” State of the Union address next month, eschewing the standard litany of policy proposals for a broader discussion on the challenges facing the country.

The format reflects the legislative reality for Obama’s final year in office. Much of what the White House and the Republican-led Congress could realistically achieve in an election year is already underway, including discussions on criminal justice reform, and the ticking clock on Obama’s presidency leaves little time to jumpstart major new initiatives.

The president is scheduled to deliver his last State of the Union on Jan. 12, less than three weeks before Americans begin voting in the presidential primaries.

In a briefing for reporters Thursday, White House officials said Obama’s agenda for his last year in office includes securing congressional approval of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact, additional steps to address climate change, and bolstering gun control measures. The latter steps will be taken through executive action, though officials wouldn’t say whether the measures would be ready in time for Obama’s address to Congress.

Officials also did not commit to a timeline for sending lawmakers a long-delayed plan for closing the Guantanamo Bay detention center.

Rather than fade into the lame duck phase of his presidency, the White House said Obama is eager to use 2016 to take steps that drive the debate in the 2016 race. He also expects to be active on the campaign trail, stumping for the Democratic presidential nominee and other party candidates, the White House said.

An active campaign role for Obama would be a marked shift from the 2014 midterm elections, when he was marginalized by his party.

The White House said it’s still possible the president could endorse in the Democratic primary, which is a two-way contest between front-runner Hillary Clinton and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, her closest challenger.

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Daily Quote ❅December 16, 2015❅

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Inspirational Message

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Alabama Mayor, Councilman Fight at City Hall

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — The mayor of Alabama’s largest city got into a fight with a city councilman during a meeting Tuesday, sending both men to the hospital.

A video of the council meeting captures sounds of a man repeatedly shouting “No!” from outside the council chamber before the presiding member calls for a recess.

Members scurry past double doors decorated with Christmas wreaths toward the noise as the gavel slams down, and a perplexed look crosses the face of a man who was making a presentation.

After the dust settled, Mayor William Bell and Councilman Marcus Lundy both had minor injuries. The council meeting ended early. A man dressed up as Santa Claus sat slouched in a chair outside council chambers afterward while police lingered in the hallway.

A police report identifies Bell as the victim and says Lundy is accused of assault. Birmingham police spokesman Sean Edwards said in an email that a warrant had been issued for Lundy’s arrest Tuesday night.

Bell and Lundy were in a room behind council chambers discussing a city matter and Lundy charged at Bell and started cursing at him while discussing a personal issue, the police report said.

According to the report, Bell told police he turned and tried leaving the room three times, but that Lundy closed the door each time before grabbing him by the neck from behind and putting him in a chokehold.

Two of Lundy’s assistants came into the room to break up the scuffle but refused to give interviews with police until after they spoke with legal counsel, police said.

Bell suffered bruising on the right side of his neck and swelling in his left knee, the report said. Bell’s spokeswoman April Odom said the mayor underwent a CT scan and an MRI after the fight. Council President Johnathan Austin showed photos of scrapes on the back of Lundy’s left leg during a news conference.

A city council attorney told investigators Lundy would not immediately give police a statement. Austin said Lundy told him that he planned to file charges against Bell.

Odom said Lundy recently had to return the city vehicle he was driving because the law prohibits council members from having municipal vehicles. It’s unclear whether that factored into the confrontation, she said. An audio recording from a committee meeting on Monday captured a terse exchange between city councilmembers and the mayor’s chief of staff about the procedure that was used to retrieve the vehicle.

Austin said Lundy alleges Bell called his place of work trying to get him fired. Odom denied that. Austin also accused Bell of being unwilling to work with the council and said the confrontation was likely the culmination of the deteriorating relationship.

“This right here is ridiculous,” Austin said. “We can overcome this and we can do better and we will strive to do better as a council.”

Councilwoman Kim Rafferty said there have been ongoing power struggles between Bell, 66, and the council.

“Boys need to grow up and be men and do the job they were elected to do,” she said. “They need to sit across the table and talk about conflict resolution.”

Bell, a former council member, has been mayor since 2010. He briefly spoke at a law enforcement training session on active shooters that included a mention of workplace violence before the council meeting but missed a chamber of commerce luncheon afterward.

Lundy, elected in 2013, has worked as an executive with several companies. He is chairman of the council’s Economic Development, Budget and Finance Committee.

SAUDI ARABIA FORMS ISLAMIC COUNTERTERRORISM COALITION

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AP Photo/Mosa’ab Elshamy

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Saudi Arabia said Tuesday that 34 nations have agreed to form a new “Islamic military alliance” to fight terrorism with a joint operations center in the kingdom, but the coalition does not include Shiite-majority Iran or Iraq, and it’s not clear how exactly it would function.

The announcement, published by the state-run Saudi Press Agency, said the Saudi-led alliance is being established because terrorism “should be fought by all means and collaboration should be made to eliminate it.”

However, the absence of Iran, Iraq and Syria, three countries battling the Islamic State group, raised questions about whether the alliance was intended to present a unified front against the extremists or Tehran, Saudi Arabia’s main regional rival.

Riyadh backs rebels fighting to overthrow Syrian President Bashar Assad, a key Iranian ally, and has been leading an Arab coalition against Iran-supported Shiite Houthi rebels in Yemen since March. It is also part of the U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq.

The Saudi statement said Islam forbids “corruption and destruction in the world” and that terrorism constitutes “a serious violation of human dignity and rights, especially the right to life and the right to security.”

Saudi Deputy Crown Prince and Defense Minister Mohammed bin Salman told a news conference that the new coalition will develop mechanisms for working with other countries and international bodies to support counterterrorism efforts. He said their efforts would not be limited to countering the Islamic State group.

“Currently, every Muslim country is fighting terrorism individually … so coordinating efforts is very important,” he said.

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir told reporters in Paris that members could request assistance from the coalition, which would address the requests “on a case-by-case basis.”

“There is no limit in terms of where the assistance would be provided, or to whom it would be provided,” he said.

The new counterterrorism coalition includes nations with large and established armies such as Pakistan, Turkey and Egypt, as well as war-torn countries like Libya and Yemen. African nations that have suffered militant attacks, such as Mali, Chad, Somalia and Nigeria, are also members.

It was not immediately clear what role, if any, the United States would play in the coalition. U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said he is looking forward to learning more about what Saudi Arabia has in mind.

“In general, at least, it appears that it’s very much aligned with something that we’ve been urging for quite some time, which is greater involvement in the campaign to combat ISIL by Sunni Arab countries,” Carter told reporters during a visit to Incirlik Air Base in Turkey, referring to the IS group by one of its acronyms. He said he’d like to talk to the Saudis about the plan so he could learn more about it.

A senior defense official said the U.S. did not know in advance about the plan for the alliance, and that officials were working to find out the details. The official was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly so spoke on condition of anonymity.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu of Turkey, the only NATO member in the new coalition, called it the “best response to those who are trying to associate terror and Islam.”

“We believe that this effort by Muslim countries is a step in the right direction,” Davutoglu said.

Smaller member-states included in the coalition are the archipelago of the Maldives and the Gulf Arab island-nation of Bahrain, which is home to the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet.

Other Gulf Arab countries such as Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates are also in the coalition, though notably absent from the list is Oman, a neighbor of Saudi Arabia. In recent years, Oman has maintained a neutral role and has emerged as a mediator in regional conflicts, serving as a conduit from the Gulf Arabs to Iran.

A Jordanian government spokesman confirmed that the Hashemite kingdom is part of the coalition. Spokesman Mohammed Momani would not comment specifically on the alliance but said that “Jordan is always ready and actively participates in any effort to fight terrorism.”

A Lebanese official confirmed to The Associated Press that his nation was also part of the 34-nation coalition. Tiny Lebanon has seen frequent spillovers from Syria’s civil war next door, as well as sectarian clashes and militant attacks.

“Lebanon is fighting a daily war against terrorism … Lebanon cannot but be part of the alliance that is combating terrorism,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to give official statements. Asked how Lebanon plans to contribute to the alliance, he said that “these are details that we haven’t gotten into yet.”

Benin, while it does not have a Muslim majority, is a member of the new coalition. All the group’s members are also part of the larger Organization of Islamic Cooperation, which is headquartered in Saudi Arabia.

The full roster of the new coalition is: Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Jordan, Tunisia, Yemen, the Palestinians, Egypt, Morocco, Turkey, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Benin, Chad, Togo, Djibouti, Senegal, Sudan, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Gabon, Guinea, Comoros, Cote d’Ivoire, Maldives, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, and Nigeria.

Associated Press writers Karin Laub in Amman, Jordan, Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey, Zeina Karam in Beirut and Lolita C. Baldor in Incirlik Air Base, Turkey contributed to this report.

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EMAILED THREAT SHUTS DOWN SECOND-LARGEST US SCHOOL DISTRICT

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by Christopher Weber

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AP Photo/Richard Vogel

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The nation’s second-largest school district shut down all of its campuses Tuesday after an emailed threat targeted students at many Los Angeles-area schools.

The shooting in nearby San Bernardino that left 14 people dead this month influenced the decision to close all the schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District, which 640,000 students attend, Superintendent Ramon Cortines said.

A law enforcement official says the threat was emailed to a school board member late Monday and appeared to come from overseas. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the investigation.

Officials would not elaborate on the threat, saying it was still being evaluated, but said the shutdown came as a precaution. Schools would remain closed until the threat was cleared, which could happen by the end of the day, officials said.

Los Angeles schools commonly get threats, but Cortines called this one rare.

“It was not to one school, two schools or three schools,” he said at a news conference. “It was many schools, not specifically identified. But there were many schools. That’s the reason I took the action that I did … It was to students at schools.”

Cortines said he wants every campus to be searched and a report given to him and the school board that they are safe. The district has more than 900 schools and 187 public charter schools.

The superintendent said the district police chief informed him about the threat shortly after 5 a.m.

“He shared with me that some of the details talked about backpacks, talked about other packages,” Cortines said.

No students would be released on their own, and school leaders would wait with children whose parents had not yet arrived to pick them up, he said.

The closure came the same day classes were canceled at San Bernardino Valley College because of a bomb threat. Students and staff were sent home around 5:30 p.m. Monday after the threat was made.

Associated Press writer Tami Abdollah in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

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30 LIVES EXTINGUISHED, BUT NO REGRETS: A KILLER’S STORY

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AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills

 

IGUALA, Mexico (AP) — The killer says he “disappeared” a man for the first time at age 20. Nine years later, he says, he has eliminated 30 people – maybe three in error.

He sometimes feels sorry about the work he does but has no regrets, he says, because he is providing a kind of public service, defending his community from outsiders. Things would be much worse if rivals took over.

“A lot of times your neighborhood, your town, your city is being invaded by people who you think are going to hurt your family, your society,” he says. “Well, then you have to act, because the government isn’t going to come help you.”

He operates along the Costa Grande of Guerrero, the southwestern state that is home to glitzy Acapulco as well as to rich farmland used to cultivate heroin poppies and marijuana. Large swaths of the state are controlled or contested by violent drug cartels that traffic in opium paste for the U.S. market, and more than 1,000 people have been reported missing in Guerrero since 2007- far fewer than the actual number believed to have disappeared in the state.

The plight of the missing and their families burst into public awareness last year when 43 rural college students were detained by police and disappeared from the Guerrero city of Iguala, setting off national protests. Then, suddenly, hundreds more families from the area came forward to report their kidnap victims, known now as “the other disappeared.” They told stories of children and spouses abducted from home at gunpoint, or who left the house one day and simply vanished.

This is a story from the other side, the tale of a man who kidnaps, tortures and kills for a drug cartel. His story is the mirror image of those recounted by survivors and victims’ families, and seems to confirm their worst fears: Many, if not most, of the disappeared likely are never coming home.

“Have you disappeared people?” he is asked.

“Yes,” he replies.

In Mexico and other places where kidnapping is common, the word “disappeared” is an active verb and also an adjective to describe the missing. Disappearing someone means kidnapping, torturing, killing and disposing of the body in a place where no one will ever find it.

To date, none of the killer’s victims have been found, he says.

For months, the AP approached sources connected with cartel bosses, seeking an interview with someone who kills people on their behalf.

Finally, the bosses put forward this 29-year-old man, with conditions: He, his organization and the town where he met with reporters would not be identified. He would appear on camera wearing a ski mask, and his voice would be distorted. And one of his bosses would be present throughout.

In jeans and a camouflage T-shirt, the hit man looked younger than his 29 years. He wore a baseball cap with a badge bearing the face of Sinaloa cartel boss Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman and “prisoner 3578” – Guzman’s inmate number before he escaped through a tunnel from Mexico’s maximum-security prison in July, cementing his image as a folk hero.

“Of all the bad lot,” the killer said, Guzman “seems to be the least bad.”

The killer – who does not work for Guzman – does not see himself as bad. Unlike others, he says, he has standards: He doesn’t kill women or children. He doesn’t make his victims dig their own graves. He raises cattle for a living and doesn’t consider himself a drug trafficker or a professional killer, although he is paid for disappearing people. While he acknowledges that what he does is illegal, he says he is defending his people against the violence of other cartels.

The killer wears a bag with a strap over his chest in which he carries several walkie-talkies and cell phones, one of which he used to take calls and issue orders: “Muevanse,” he said – move on. “Esperense ahí” – wait there. Just before the interview begins, he puts the bag aside, and slips on the ski mask. He sits in a plastic armchair.

There are many reasons people are disappeared, the killer says. It may be for belonging to a rival gang, or for giving information to one. If a person is considered a security risk for any reason, he may be disappeared. Some are kidnapped for ransom, though he says he does not do this.

Each kidnapping starts with locating the target. The best place is at a home, early in the morning, “when everyone is asleep.” But sometimes they are kidnapped from public areas. If the target is unarmed, two men are enough to carry out a “pickup” or “levanton,” as the gang kidnappings are known. If he is armed, it requires more manpower.

The victim is taken to a safe house or far enough out into the woods that no one will hear him during the next step: “getting information out of them by torture.”

He rests his forearms on the chair and moves his hands over his knees as he speaks about torture. He describes three methods: beatings; waterboarding, or simulated drownings in which a cloth is tied around the mouth and nose, and water is poured over it; and electric shocks to the testicles, tongue and the soles of the feet.

He has no training in torture. He learned it all by practice, he says. “With time, you come to learn how to hurt people, to get the information you need.”

It usually takes just one night. “Of the people who have information you want, 99 percent will give you that information,” he says. Once he gets it, he kills them. “Usually with a gun.”

The problem is that people under torture sometimes admit to things that are not true: “They do it in hope that you will stop hurting them. They think it’s a way to get out of the situation.”

That may have happened to him three times, he says, leading him to kill the wrong men.

The dead are buried in clandestine grave sites, dumped into the ocean, or burned. If the organization wants to send a message to another cartel, a victim’s tortured body is dumped in a public area. But the 30 people he has “disappeared” all have been buried, he says.

By the official count, 26,000 Mexicans have been reported missing nationwide since 2007, just over 1,000 of those from Guerrero. But human rights officials and the experience of families from the Iguala area indicate that most people are too afraid to report kidnappings, particularly in areas where police, municipal and state officials are believed to be operating in tandem with the cartels. The official tally has just 24 missing from the Costa Grande area, where the killer says he has been involved in the killings of 30 people.

“The (disappeared) problem is much bigger than people think,” the killer says.

The killer has a grade-school education. He wanted to continue studying, but when he was a child there was no middle school in his town. “I would have liked to learn languages … to travel to other places or other countries. I would have liked that,” he said.

Some in his circumstances use drugs, but he says he doesn’t. “When people are on drugs, they’re not really themselves,” he says. “They lose control, their judgment.”

He says no one forced him to join his organization. His parents and siblings don’t know what he does, but he thinks they can guess, since he is always armed: He usually carries a .38-caliber pistol and an AK-47 assault rifle.

He isn’t married and has no children. Although he would like to have a family, he knows his future is uncertain. “I don’t really see anything,” he said. “I don’t think you can make plans for the future, because you don’t know what will happen tomorrow.”

“It’s not a pretty life,” he says.

Life in an area torn by drug disputes is rarely pretty. For years, Guzman’s Sinaloa cartel controlled drug production, coastal access and trafficking routes in Guerrero. The Beltran Leyva brothers took over, until the Mexican government killed Arturo Beltran Leyva in a shootout in December 2009, and then the state’s opium and marijuana business was divided up among half a dozen smaller cartels, including Guerreros Unidos, los Rojos, Los Granados and La Familia, from neighboring Michoacan state.

Besides running drugs, some Mexican cartels operate extortion rackets and control human trafficking to the United States. Where needed, they buy off politicians and police forces to make sure nothing gets in the way of business. When necessary, they kill those who fail to cooperate.

The violence spikes when cartels are fighting each other for control of territory, or when the military launches operations to strike the cartels. An anti-narcotics military operation prevented the killer’s arrival at a pre-arranged location on the first try, but the next day he and his bosses made it to a house on a humid stretch of the Pacific Ocean known as the Costa Grande, an area lush with groves of coconuts and mangos – other exports for which cartels take a cut.

In recent years, residents of a number of towns and cities have taken up arms to protect themselves against drug cartels. In several cases, authorities have claimed these vigilantes are allied with rival gangs, and pass themselves off as self-defense groups to gain greater legitimacy.

Federal authorities told the AP that several drug gangs in Guerrero, including those that operate on the Costa Grande, act as self-defense groups to generate support from local residents.

“I can’t say I’m a vigilante,” says the killer, “but I am part of a group that protects people, an autonomous group of people who protect their town, their people.”

He recognizes he would be punished if caught by the authorities. “For them, these (killings) are not justifiable under the laws we have, but my conscience – how can I put this – this is something that I can justify, because I am defending my family.” A rival gang, “would do worse damage.”

The killer fears dying, but he fears being captured by a rival gang even more. He knows better than most what will happen to him: “If I died in a shootout, for example, the suffering wouldn’t be as bad.”

With the same lack of emotion with which he described torture, the killer addresses his many murders.

“Whatever you want to say, you’re hurting someone and in the end, you kill them, and that leaves people hurting, the family hurting,” he said. “It’s the kind of thing that causes stress and remorse, because it’s not a good thing.”

But he tries not to think about it too much, and while he can remember the number of people he has killed and the places he buried them, he says he cannot recall his victims. “Over time,” he says, “you forget.”

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E. Eduardo Castillo on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/EECastilloAP

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Daily Quote ❅December 15, 2015❅

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Daily Quote ❅December 14, 2015❅

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Inspirational Message

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