First murder in Southlake since 1999. http://www.city-data.com/crime/crime...ake-Texas.html
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Fatal shooting in Southlake Town Square
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Originally posted by UserX View PostFirst murder in Southlake since 1999. http://www.city-data.com/crime/crime...ake-Texas.htmlToken Split Tail
Originally posted by slow99Lmao...my favorite female poster strikes again.Originally posted by Pokulski-BlatzYou are a moron .... you were fucking with the most powerful vagina on DFW(MU)stangs.
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Originally posted by yellowstang View PostWas he a DA?
Probably a drug related crime I think. A LOT of guys and girls from Laredo, Nuevo Laredo, El Paso and even Juarez that are involved in the drug trade tend to come through (and sometimes stay) Dallas on the way to AR. Dallas and Arkansas are well know places for higher ups or high level traffickers to hang out when the heat is on...
Just saying, but then again, I know nothing...Originally posted by Sean88gtYou can take white off the list. White on anything is the best, including vehicles, women, and the Presidency.Originally posted by Baron Von CrowderYou can not imagine how difficult it is to hold a half gallon of moo juice and polish the one-eyed gopher when your doin' seventy-five in an eighteen-wheeler.
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Southlake Murder Victim Was Drug Cartel Attorney
The man gunned down execution-style at the Southlake Town Square Wednesday was an attorney linked to a major Mexican drug cartel who had been living in Southlake with his wife and three children, NBC 5 has learned.
The victim was identified as Juan Jesus Guerrero-Chapa, 43, of Nuevo Leon, Mexico.
Guerrero has been named in various Mexican news reports as a lawyer for the Gulf Cartel, one of the largest and most violent drug organizations in Mexico.
According to the respected Mexican investigative magazine Proceso, Guerrero was arrested on drug charges by the Mexican military on Feb. 26, 2002, and taken to the maximum-security prison known as La Palma.
At the time, Guerrero was representing the second-highest ranking leader of the Gulf Cartel. The attorney was soon freed because of an apparent lack of evidence, Proceso reported.
Chapa lived in a highly-secure, gated community in Southlake with his family. A guard at the front gate prevents uninvited guests from entering.
His family is now in hiding under police guard after a masked gunman jumped out of a white SUV, opened fire, and shot Guerrero multiple times at about 7 p.m. Wednesday, police said.
Guerrero was in the passenger’s seat of a 2012 Range Rover. His wife, who was behind the wheel at the time, was unhurt, police said.
The gunman returned to the white SUV, driven by a second man. They fled down Southlake Boulevard, police said.
During a news conference Thursday, Southlake police released surveillance photos of an SUV they believe to be the getaway vehicle and said the Texas license plate contains a "B" and a "Y." Those photos are inset in the image above.
The victim’s car is registered to Armando Guerrero-Chapa with a post office box in Plano.
State records show that in December 2010, Armando Guerrero and Juan Guerrero formed a gambling company called Siglo 21, based in a small town along the border near McAllen.
Police have been unable to locate Armando Guererro, Southlake police chief Steve Mylett said.
A webpage that appears to be Juan Guerrero’s LinkedIn profile says he is a rancher in Guanajuato and raises a “wide range of livestock and farm animals.”
“Juan Jesus Guerrero Chapa enjoys the regional flavors of the restaurants in his hometown, and he often donates cows and calves to be prepared by Mexican chefs,” the profile said.
The page also identified him as the owner of Elite Charolaise Mexico and gives his hometown as McAllen.
In a trial earlier this month of a reputed Gulf Cartel leader, Aurelio Cano Flores, the U.S. Justice Department said the organization distributed more than 1.4 million kilograms of cocaine and 8,000 metric tons of marijuana into the United States from 2000 to 2010.
Witnesses testified in the trial that in those 10 years, the Gulf Cartel grew from an organization of only 100 members controlling three border towns to an organization of 25,000 people controlling the drug trade in over half of Mexico.
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Dang...crazy chet there. You never know who's involved in that stuffOriginally posted by Da PrezFuck dfwstangs!! If Jose ain't running it, I won't even bother going back to it, just my two cents!!Originally posted by VETTKLR
Cliff Notes: I can beat the fuck out of a ZR1
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