Mom of Five
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2008
- Messages
- 231
- Reaction score
- 0
http://www.amw.com/missing_persons/case.cfm?id=30313
Brenda Cisneros, 23, was also abducted in September of 2004
On September 17, 2004, Yvette Martinez and her friend, Brenda Cisneros, crossed the border from Laredo, Texas to Nuevo Laredo, Mexico to celebrate Brenda's birthday by going to a concert. Neither of them came back.
Yvette's stepfather, William Slemaker, said a toll ticket showed the women crossed the border at 11:11 p.m. A relative saw them sometime after that at the concert. Slemaker also said that a friend spoke with the two women by cell phone around 4 a.m., about getting breakfast as they headed toward the international bridge back to Texas. But there's been no word since.
Because the authorities in Nuevo Laredo didn't seem to be doing much about the case, Slemaker decided to take matters into his own hands. He traveled numerous times to Nuevo Laredo in search of his missing stepdaughter. On October 8, 2004, he found Yvette's 2001 white Mitsubishi Galant at a Nuevo Laredo tow yard. The stereo and battery were gone and the rear bumper had paint on it. But that's where the trail goes cold.
Victims of Mexico's Spreading Violence?
Slemaker fears that his stepdaughter and her friend have become caught up in a new wave of violence that's been spreading through Mexico -- especially along the border areas.
Mexico's drug war has begun to move across the border, creeping into the United States. Mexico's most powerful drug cartels are fighting territorial battles over control of the border, spawning a terrorizing wave of violence.
But fighting isn't the only thing erupting in the streets of Mexico. Mexico's lawlessness - an outbreak of kidnappings for ransom, brutal gunfights among rival drug cartels and escalating violence -- has now crossed the border and touched many American families. Their stories are similar: Americans cross the border from Laredo, Texas to Nuevo Laredo, Mexico to celebrate birthdays, holidays or to shop or just to enjoy another culture. But, one by one, these Americans failed to return home.
Thirty-one Americans have been reported as kidnapped just across the Mexican border. According to U.S. officials, two of them have been confirmed dead, and a dozen have returned home either by paying a ransom or somehow escaping. That means 17 Americans are unaccounted for, somewhere in the Nuevo Laredo area of Mexico -- dead or alive.
ws.com/story/0,2933,487904,00.html[/U
There are so many americans that are missing and disappeared in Mexico. Something needs to be done about this.
Brenda Cisneros, 23, was also abducted in September of 2004
On September 17, 2004, Yvette Martinez and her friend, Brenda Cisneros, crossed the border from Laredo, Texas to Nuevo Laredo, Mexico to celebrate Brenda's birthday by going to a concert. Neither of them came back.
Yvette's stepfather, William Slemaker, said a toll ticket showed the women crossed the border at 11:11 p.m. A relative saw them sometime after that at the concert. Slemaker also said that a friend spoke with the two women by cell phone around 4 a.m., about getting breakfast as they headed toward the international bridge back to Texas. But there's been no word since.
Because the authorities in Nuevo Laredo didn't seem to be doing much about the case, Slemaker decided to take matters into his own hands. He traveled numerous times to Nuevo Laredo in search of his missing stepdaughter. On October 8, 2004, he found Yvette's 2001 white Mitsubishi Galant at a Nuevo Laredo tow yard. The stereo and battery were gone and the rear bumper had paint on it. But that's where the trail goes cold.
Victims of Mexico's Spreading Violence?
Slemaker fears that his stepdaughter and her friend have become caught up in a new wave of violence that's been spreading through Mexico -- especially along the border areas.
Mexico's drug war has begun to move across the border, creeping into the United States. Mexico's most powerful drug cartels are fighting territorial battles over control of the border, spawning a terrorizing wave of violence.
But fighting isn't the only thing erupting in the streets of Mexico. Mexico's lawlessness - an outbreak of kidnappings for ransom, brutal gunfights among rival drug cartels and escalating violence -- has now crossed the border and touched many American families. Their stories are similar: Americans cross the border from Laredo, Texas to Nuevo Laredo, Mexico to celebrate birthdays, holidays or to shop or just to enjoy another culture. But, one by one, these Americans failed to return home.
Thirty-one Americans have been reported as kidnapped just across the Mexican border. According to U.S. officials, two of them have been confirmed dead, and a dozen have returned home either by paying a ransom or somehow escaping. That means 17 Americans are unaccounted for, somewhere in the Nuevo Laredo area of Mexico -- dead or alive.
ws.com/story/0,2933,487904,00.html[/U
There are so many americans that are missing and disappeared in Mexico. Something needs to be done about this.