The largest cross-border international boundaries in the world are with 350 million legal crossings annually between the United States and Mexico. It is enough to say that the border, which extends to some 3,200 km (2,000 miles), has seen the part of their unscrupulous characters. The gorgeous massacre has altered the desert areas with the brain, which is turning the hilly terrain into a graveyard on a large scale. The following 10 items come in these horrors as well as in lesser known abusive incidents that appear throughout the years.
1. Mass Graves
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Northeast of Brooks County sits on one of Texas's busiest checkpoints. With more than 10,000 vehicles passing through the surrounding vehicles every day, some have imagined a terrible search in the remote town's cemetery, Sacred Heart Burial Park. In 2014, a team of archaeologists highlighted mass graves including the bodies of countless immigrants. Their remains were stacked on top of the garbage bag, biohazard bag, shopping bag, or nothing, like the teeth of the toothbrush. Christophe Latham, a forensic anthropologist with Indianapolis University, estimated that Burials 2005 and 2009 Most of the dead did not recognize any of the dead. Although it is uncertain how many cadavers were disposed of in this way, it is believed that the funeral was organized by local funeral home Funeria del Angel Howard-Williams. According to County Judge Raul Ramirez, for nearly 20 years, Sheriff officials have contracted with the funeral home to settle the dead body recovered from the brash country. The price tag was $ 450 per corpse. The validity of the practice of the county remains in question, while hundreds of families consider the fate of their loved ones.
2. Black Magic And Voodoo
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During the break with friends during the spring break in March 1989, college student Mark Kilroy was kidnapped and taken to a remote farm near the US border in Maxmore, Mexico. After hours of continuous torture, the kidnappers of Kilroy removed the student with the macho, went out of his heart, and boiled his mind in a kettle. The terrible act was believed to be part of the superstitious rituals received from ancient Aztec rites of Saintsia, African Voodoo and human sacrifice. Kilroy was one of the 12 people who had deviated and murdered by the demented gang of drug traffickers, who believed that horrifying murders provided them protection. He believed that human and animal sacrifices raised a magical shield to protect them from bullets and other evils. The interesting thing is that the Mexican police has adopted its black magic as it has been able to calm the details of strange rituals by drug gangs. While law enforcement officers in Tijuana are known to tattoo their bodies with Voodoo symbols to prevent bullets, others use the prayer to protect them along the cartel trafficking routes on the border, with the blood of alleged chickens Do paint your faces.
3. Lightning
Photo credit: arizonaexperience.org
In 2006, the border patrol agent Bradford Rubinoff was responding to a car accident near the Mexico border when he and his companions suddenly launched several feet in the air suddenly. Rubinoff explained, "When I came back to the ground, I felt this intense heat and pain in the core of my body." Two officers were killed by electricity, during a monsoon season there was a common occurrence in southern Arizona. A year later, apart from two Mexican citizens, many more agents were killed near Nogales, who were illegally admitted to Sonota, Arizona, after being admitted to the hospital after entering the United States. Three years later, Hidalgo's 17-year-old Farnan Cortez Aguilier of Mexico was killed with patrol patrols when he was killed and was hit by an electric bolt when a sharp storm was blown through the area. According to the World Health Organization, there are more deaths due to Mexico's electricity attacks anywhere in the world, which make an average of 223 people every year. In fact, between 2005 and 2011, a National Power Association reported that 12,000 people were injured by electricity. The mountainous areas of Mexico contribute to the danger of being hit by lightning.
4. Ghostly Sightings
In 1995, pursuing a group of illegal immigrants near Lower Oit Reserve, Border Patrol Agent Louis Santiago slipped 37 meters (120 feet) on the top and slipped off the rock. The agent earned the reputation of tracking narcotic smugglers. It inspired many people to believe that he was murdered and his troubled soul continued to attack the mountainous region to take revenge. Despite the absurdity of such claims, the countless sight of Santiago's ghost has been certified by fellow border patrol agent Rocky Elmore. In his book, Out On Foot, Elmore remembers other deep events throughout his years while patrolling Ota Mountain. In March 1991, eight members of the band of two airports and Reba McIntere died when their airplane crashed late in the night. It promoted more accounts of unusual activity with the border. According to the locals, it is common to see the dancing shadows mainly in the headlights and hear the voices of a foreign tongue on the mountain or the mascotite branches breaking in the night. Despite the lack of human presence during such untimely events, illegal people crossing the area can be held responsible. From Nuevo Laredo to Nogales, the stories of the Dead Hunting Frontier Towns persist in the 21st century, including men's stories, "eyes that are drowned in the eyes look like skeletons so thin in the city." Many believe strongly That the southern border is not only full of body, but the spirits of migrants who have disappeared during the journey of the North.
5. Coyotes
Prior to 2004, the attractive business of human trafficking was largely abandoned to large families living near border towns. In the last decade, however, the drug cartels have been captured, which has increased significantly in human life. There are an average of 207 uncontrolled border deaths each year. Even so, such a number is estimated to only consider the number of unknown bodies, which can still be searched. Monsoons are destroyed by flooding cadweds or by the sliding rays of the sun, usually found in a mammifed state where they sought refuge in the shadow of aroos or tree. Mostly, the people who choose to cross the border are unknowingly signing their own death warrants because their "coyote" (human trafficking) has no intention of seeing them through treacherous travels. In such cases, they are abandoned and left to die in the desert without water. It is unbelievable that there is nothing more than an object for the human life cartel. Thus, the financial benefits of the smuggling business have killed many dangerous killings. Sadly, between 1998 and 2013, more than 2,700 bodies were found in the Arizona desert alone.
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