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The Guardian (Free subscription) | 11/15/2009
... world. The cartel was founded in the 1970s but emerged in its modern form in the mid-1980s, led by Juan García Abrego (now in a Colorado jail) and thereafter Osiel Cárdenas Guillén, who founded the Zetas and who is now awaiting trial in Houston, Texas. The Zetas are now led by Heriberto Lazcano – "El Lazco" or "Z3" – wanted in both Mexico...
3Vote!
The Observer (Free subscription) | 11/15/2009
... world. The cartel was founded in the 1970s but emerged in its modern form in the mid-1980s, led by Juan García Abrego (now in a Colorado jail) and thereafter Osiel Cárdenas Guillén, who founded the Zetas and who is now awaiting trial in Houston, Texas. The Zetas are now led by Heriberto Lazcano – "El Lazco" or "Z3" – wanted in both Mexico...
3Vote!
qwstnevrythg.com (Free subscription) | 11/15/2009
... world.The cartel was founded in the 1970s but emerged in its modern form in the mid-1980s, led by Juan García Abrego (now in a Colorado jail) and thereafter Osiel Cárdenas Guillén, who founded the Zetas and who is now awaiting trial in Houston, Texas. The Zetas are now led by Heriberto Lazcano – “El Lazco” or “Z3? – wanted in both Mexico and the US. It is Lazcano and the Zetas who...
3Vote!
Southwest Farm Press RSS Feed (Free subscription) | 11/06/2009
Juan Garcia, a 30-year veteran with USDA, was named Texas state executive director of the Farm Service Agency (FSA) last summer and faces the daunting challenge of ushering in significant changes in farm programs mandated by the 2008 farm bill.
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FIRE (Free subscription) | 11/05/2009
... South Campus, even in the designated free speech zone. TCC Vice President for Student Development Juan Garcia threatened Brett with punishment if he went so far as to wear a T-shirt advocating "violence" or displaying "offensive" material. Brett contacted us for help, and we gathered national media attention to TCC's censorship. The Thomas Jefferson Center for...
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Philadelphia Inquirer (Free subscription) | 11/02/2009
Juan Garcia and his half sister Elizabeth DeJesus were just trying to help out their boss, say federal prosecutors. Thing is, the boss allegedly wanted two people dead and a third maimed.
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Charlotte Observer: Viewpoint (Free subscription) | 11/04/2009
(By William J. Bratton, Special to The Los Angeles Times) On March 12, Juan Garcia, 53 and homeless, was brutally murdered in an alley just west of downtown Los Angeles. Police were stumped. There were no known witnesses and few clues. Then a 43-year-old undocumented immigrant who saw the crime came forward and told detectives what he saw. Because of his help, a suspect was arrested a...
8Vote!
Philadelphia Inquirer (Free subscription) | 11/03/2009
Juan Garcia and his half-sister Elizabeth DeJesus were just trying to help out their boss, say federal prosecutors. Thing is, the boss allegedly wanted two people dead and a third maimed.
4Vote!
Miami Herald (Free subscription) | 11/06/2009
Jet travel inspired the third work on the program, Evan Ziporyn's War Chant. He put together two contrasting styles -- the spiky, modernistic tone of the composer Iannis Xenakis and the genial, relaxed mood of the Mexican composer Juan Garcia Esquivel -- to portray the menace and weirdness beneath the surface of air travel, particularly in the post-9/11 world. One style brings out the...
7Vote!
Law Blog - WSJ.com (Free subscription) | 11/04/2009
The number of jobs the Obama administration credits to federal stimulus money could be overstated by at least 20,000 of the 640,000 claimed.
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Law Blog - WSJ.com (Free subscription) | 11/04/2009
The number of jobs the Obama administration credits to federal stimulus money could be overstated by at least 20,000 of the 640,000 claimed.
5Vote!
Later On (Free subscription) | 11/02/2009
... been so successful that there is no crime left to fight. Bratton’s column begins: On March 12, Juan Garcia, a 53-year-old homeless man, was brutally murdered in an alley off 9th and Alvarado streets in the Westlake District, just west of downtown Los Angeles. At first, the police were stumped; there were no known witnesses and few clues. Then a 43-year-old undocumented immigrant who...
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Sanctus Christopher (Free subscription) | 10/25/2009
Juan almost dozed off several times. It was easy to do with his eyes closed on that soft warm night in Valladolid and he struggled to keep his senses. Each time he caught himself drifting away, a cold shock would bring him back. The pin he pricked against his leathery thumb helped him too. It took three hours before he was satisfied that his household was finally asleep. Just before 2 a.m.,...
5Vote!
Truth Out (Free subscription) | 10/29/2009
Behind the world stage, however, Honduran electoral officials are on a whirlwind mission - trying to educate electoral observers and boost turnout for what might be the most controversial race its officials have ever witnessed. "We must continue on anyway," says Juan Garcia, a spokesman for the Honduran Supreme Electoral Court (TSE).
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Christian Science Monitor (Free subscription) | 10/29/2009
... the most controversial race its officials have ever witnessed. "We must continue on anyway," says Juan Garcia, a spokesman for the Honduran Supreme Electoral Court (TSE). On a recent Saturday, a group of roughly 30 Hondurans – homemakers, young professionals, blue-collar workers – sat in a sweltering elementary school classroom in the historic center of Tegucigalpa learning the country's...