One Dominican among the dead
SANTO DOMINGO.- The National Police found seven bodies in Paya towship, Baní, in Dominican Republic’s south coast, six of them Colombians and one Dominicn, an incident authorities call a "typical drug rip-off."
Tuesday afternoon Police spokesman Nelson Rosario said a Nicaragua national whose name he didn’t disclose, and who is believed to be involved in the incident, was shot and is in stable condition, whereas at the murder site one other was still alive when the agents arrived in the rural community, some 60 kilometers west of the capital, Santo Domingo.
“They were all tied up in a row,” the official said, adding that a long range radio was found in the residence of four of the seven victims, where according to the Colombians’ watchman, Emilio Basilio Victoria, several men struck him with a weapon and bound the maid before taking their employers away.
The bodies with gunshot wounds were found in a cane field near the beach Sabana Uvero, in the community Ojo de Agua, of the Bani municipality, but the authorities have yet to disclose further details and an investigation is underway.
According to National Inestigation Department (DNI) director Sigfrido Pared, the killings are "typical of rip-off" when drugs are stolen by a rival gang.
In that area of the country cocaine and heroin are often airdropped by planes or shipped on speedboats from South America.
Newspaper Diario Libre and radio program El Poder de la Tardereport that the bodies’ hands were tied, while Police investigators estimate that the killings took place between 12 midnight and 1 a.m., after the kidnapping suspects took two bags whose content weren't disclosed, always quoting Victoria.
One of the Colombians is reportedly Jesús de David del Río Hans, 28, whereas the Dominican is identified only as Manolo.
From: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me
looks like suicide to me
Written by: Banilejo, 5 Aug 2008 5:15 PM
From: United States, Boston- Paya,Bani.
Damn, im from Paya , Bani..
this is turning to be crazy....
good thing im 3,000 miles up north...
From: United States
Legalize it I say...
Written by: anthonyC, 5 Aug 2008 5:39 PM
From: United States
Natural causes.
From: United States
John .. this has your fingerprints all over it .. your MO.. I knew it .. I knew it ..
From: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me
wong again
From: United States
John John John .. the drug trade in one of it's worst manifestations seems to be playing itself out on Dominican territory .. we have become the front line of this struggle .. we can't get our friends up north to stop consuming .. we can't stop the Colombians from producing .. our geographic location vis-a-vis the producing and consuming nations places us in a bit of a quandry ..it looks bad. Very bad.
Written by: NYCDR, 5 Aug 2008 8:38 PM
From: United States
:( when will this stop...its a down spiral...legalizing it will not help, that is the dumbest idea ever...
Imagine if drugs could be purchased and consumed everywhere, now imagine bus drivers, train conductor and/or drivers on cocaine, marijuana, heroin, speeders etc...its a massacre waiting to happen...modesty has almost disappeared thanks to alcohol and drugs. Parents who use drugs have kids who use drugs...its corroding our lives...our country...and gives us a bad name as a group.
From: United States
Legalization could reduce the large profits being made in the illicit drug trade .. but then again it might backfire and create new problems .. I see your point .. so we are in a quandry .. can't go up .. can't go down.. can't move sideways .. stuck until a better solution appears on the horizon ..
Written by: BASTA, 5 Aug 2008 10:28 PM
From: Dominican Republic, =Ghetto/Legalize Drugs
Legalize drugs - the US was never able to stop liquid drugs, so tax the drugs. After the repeal of prohibition consumption declined.
From: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me
I would guess that when we get to the bottom of this ,,,if we ever do we will find police collusion.....But this is how the Colombianos do business. violently theirs is a long history of it
Written by: NYCDR, 6 Aug 2008 7:12 AM
From: United States
Written by: BASTA, 5 Aug 2008 10:28 PM
From: Dominican Republic
Legalize drugs - the US was never able to stop liquid drugs, so tax the drugs. After the repeal of prohibition consumption declined.
Oh yeah, that really has worked with cigarettes in NYC, Not!!!
when you enter an office building in NYC or when you go out to lunch you are walking into a living walking ashtray. Not only that, the second hand smoking in NYC its so bad at times your clothing get stuck with that awful smell... : ( I want to kill them
the smokers are either on the side of the building or walking in front of you...they are unavoidable and cigarettes are taxed ...a pack of cigarettes runs (from what I have seen) about $10.00-$12.00 a pack after taxes...the consumption has not stopped nor declined...yet you don't get all those other incredible side effects like you do from drugs (some that lasts forever) like hallucinations, memory gaps, suicidal tendencies, promiscuity, to name a few.
From: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me
the promiscuity was there before thank goodness....just kidding ....juvenile remark
Written by: NYCDR, 6 Aug 2008 2:46 PM
From: United States
Gouletcolonial, lol
Written by: Ivano, 7 Aug 2008 1:11 AM
From: United States
Speaking from prior experience in dealing with Dominican Authority, if it was indeed a "rip-off"; It wouldn't surprise me if in the near future, we start to see the bodies of high ranking military officials showing up in random places, and public executions of their innocent relatives ...What seemed like the perfect "rip off" or score to these delinquents; has indeed turned into a perfect nightmare, as they left a key witness, and a timing shortage as the bodies were found several weeks prior to the "due date", (YES, SOMEONE FUCKED UP), they are well aware that the proprietor of whatever was stolen has plenty more resources ($$$$), locate them, specially after a key witness was left alive, and considering how hard times are in the Dominican Republic with inflation and the price of oil, finding informants will not be an issue for cartels........they'll just take this as an "occupational hazard" or business "lost"
a Dominican friend of mine once told me " No todo Dinero, se coje"
Written by: Ivano, 7 Aug 2008 1:33 AM
From: United States
worst possible outcome, it was indeed a rip off by another cartel and which will lead to a drug war; best outcome those responsible are dealt with in a modest and oredrly fashion.
From: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me
thats what I say " law and oredr "
From: United States
If drugs were legalized there will be rules just like with Alcohol. You can't be high and drive. You would have to get high in the privacy of your own home or in bars/clubs. Drugs would be sold at pharmacies and the pharmacists would try to control the quantity per person. Taxes would be placed on the sale of drugs and an anti-drug campaign would be implemented in schools. There would be a spike initially but then drugs will be used only recreationally the same as now.
this is turning to be crazy....
good thing im 3,000 miles up north...
Imagine if drugs could be purchased and consumed everywhere, now imagine bus drivers, train conductor and/or drivers on cocaine, marijuana, heroin, speeders etc...its a massacre waiting to happen...modesty has almost disappeared thanks to alcohol and drugs. Parents who use drugs have kids who use drugs...its corroding our lives...our country...and gives us a bad name as a group.
From: Dominican Republic
Legalize drugs - the US was never able to stop liquid drugs, so tax the drugs. After the repeal of prohibition consumption declined.
Oh yeah, that really has worked with cigarettes in NYC, Not!!!
when you enter an office building in NYC or when you go out to lunch you are walking into a living walking ashtray. Not only that, the second hand smoking in NYC its so bad at times your clothing get stuck with that awful smell... : ( I want to kill them
the smokers are either on the side of the building or walking in front of you...they are unavoidable and cigarettes are taxed ...a pack of cigarettes runs (from what I have seen) about $10.00-$12.00 a pack after taxes...the consumption has not stopped nor declined...yet you don't get all those other incredible side effects like you do from drugs (some that lasts forever) like hallucinations, memory gaps, suicidal tendencies, promiscuity, to name a few.
a Dominican friend of mine once told me " No todo Dinero, se coje"