The Elvis sightings have begun anew; Honduras claims Joaquín “Shorty” Guzmán Loéra, Latin America’s most wanted man, is hiding out in that country. Earlier this week, it was the Guatemalans.
Shorty is worth $5 million, but the foreign aid packages in claiming his body are worth far, far more.
This time the president of Honduras suggests Shorty Guzmán, Latin America’s most wanted man, is hiding out in his country.
Earlier this week, the Guatemalans leaked to the media that the narco non grata may have been killed in a shootout in their country.
When the Shorty Visits Guatemala story broke, I speculated that it was Guatemala’s attempt to grab a slice of the security aid package the U.S. is giving Mexico. Now, the Hondurans are acting up – with the help of Arizona county Sheriff Joe Arpaio.
The Bush Administration’s been pushing its Merida Initiative, a $1.4 billion, three-year program to prop up Mexico’s security forces against the cartels who’ve gone absolutely apeshit.
This fiscal year, Guatemala received $21 million.
Honduras received $47 million in foreign aid in fiscal 2007 and $43 million this fiscal year.
But I’m just some back-cactus country boy; of course there is no way a Latin American country would be so unsophisticated as to invent tales of mythical narcos using their country as a hide-out in order to draw some U.S. funding their way. Right? Of course not.
Or, and this is Saturday Morning Rambling Thought Number Two, maybe Sheriff Joe Arpaio had it right about Honduras and spent $157,000 training its police force for a really, really good reason. Like the capture of Shorty Guzmán.
Now wouldn’t that be a kick in the shorts of his biggest critic, the Phoenix New Times?
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