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Houston Chronicle (Free subscription) | 01/07/2009
Masked gunmen opened fire and tossed a grenade at a Mexican television station as it aired its nightly newscast Tuesday, leaving behind a message warning the station about its coverage of drug gangs.
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Reporters sans frontières (Free subscription) | 01/07/2009
Reporters Without Borders hopes for quick progress in the investigation into yesterday's armed attack on the regional studios of the national TV network Televisa in Monterrey, which was claimed by drug traffickers. The federal justice ministry is in charge of the investigation.
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Raw Story (Free subscription) | yesterday
When news director Francisco Cobo heard the explosion outside his television studio, as his two on-air anchors were presenting the evening news, he thought it might be a story. Then, Cobo said, he realized: We are the story. The Televisa network news offices in the northern city of Monterrey were attacked Tuesday night in a commando-style raid by hooded gunmen who fired on the front doors of...
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ABC News (Free subscription) | 01/07/2009
Gunmen attack TV station in Mexican city of Monterrey; no injuries reported.
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Denver Post (Free subscription) | yesterday
Press freedom groups are condemning an attack on a Mexican television station in the northern city of Monterrey. Masked gunmen opened fire and tossed a grenade at the Televisa network's studio as it aired a nightly newscast. The assailants left behind a message warning the station about its coverage of drug gangs.
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Reuters (Free subscription) | 01/07/2009
MONTERREY, Mexico (Reuters) - Gunmen threw a grenade and opened fire outside a news television station during its evening broadcast in Mexico on Tuesday and left a message warning journalists from reporting on drug war violence.
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New Zealand Herald (Free subscription) | 01/05/2009
MONTERREY - Police say a woman who begged from a wheelchair was caught running from a crime scene on foot in Monterrey, Mexico. Police spokeswoman Sidlayin Robles says 30-year-old Ana Victoria Perez fled on foot after...
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Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Free subscription) | 01/07/2009
MONTERREY, Mexico -- Masked gunmen opened fire and tossed a grenade at a Mexican television station as it aired its nightly newscast Tuesday, leaving behind a message warning the station about its coverage of drug gangs.
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Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Free subscription) | 01/05/2009
MONTERREY, Mexico -- Police say a woman who begged from a wheelchair was caught running from a crime scene on foot in Monterrey, Mexico. Police spokeswoman Sidlayin Robles says 30-year-old Ana Victoria Perez fled on foot after she and her husband allegedly threw a stone through the front window of a furniture store.
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San Fransisco Chronicle (Free subscription) | 01/06/2009
Police say a woman who begged from a wheelchair was caught running from a crime scene on foot in Monterrey, Mexico. Police spokeswoman Sidlayin Robles says 30-year-old Ana Victoria Perez fled on foot after she and her husband allegedly threw a stone through...
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euronews24 (Free subscription) | 01/05/2009
MONTERREY, Mexico - The abduction of a U.S. anti-kidnap expert in northern Mexico last month remains a mystery with no clues to the man's whereabouts and no ransom demanded by his captors, police said on Monday. Gunmen abducted Felix Batista, a Cub
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cbs4denver.com: Water Cooler (Free subscription) | 01/06/2009
Police say a woman who begged from a wheelchair was caught running from a crime scene on foot in Monterrey, Mexico. Police spokeswoman Sidlayin Robles says 30-year-old Ana Victoria Perez fled on foot after she and her husband allegedly threw a stone through the front window of a furniture store.
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Chicago news (Free subscription) | 01/06/2009
Police say a woman who begged from a wheelchair was caught running from a crime scene on foot in Monterrey, Mexico. Police spokeswoman Sidlayin Robles says 30-year-old Ana Victoria Perez fled on foot after she and her husband allegedly threw a stone through the front window of a furniture store.
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Arizona Republic (Free subscription) | 01/05/2009
Ana Victoria Perez was a regular fixture along a main Monterrey road, asking for change from motorists as she sat in a wheelchair pushed by her husband.