TIJUANA — The shooting death of a municipal police officer fleeing his assailants was one of eight homicides registered in Tijuana in less than 24 hours, authorities reported Thursday.
Ricardo
Salgado Hernández, 36, had finished his shift and was heading home in
his personal vehicle about 7 a.m. Thursday when he was attacked in the
Colonia Leandro Valle neighborhood of southern Tijuana, authorities
said.
The assailants' green
Ford Explorer struck the policeman’s white Honda, according to the Baja
California Attorney General’s Office. The officer ran but was unable to
escape.
Salgado had worked
for the Tijuana municipal police since 1998. His fellow officers
detained one suspect Thursday, but authorities did not discuss a
possible motive for the shooting.
The
most recent killings marked an unusually violent stretch in Tijuana,
which has seen a drop in violent crime. Last year’s homicide total of
364 was the lowest since 2007.
The most recent killings, which occurred between 10 a.m. Wednesday and 7 a.m. Thursday, brought this year’s death toll to 14.
Tijuana
police said the crimes follow a pattern of post-holiday spikes in
violence in the city that occur early in the new year. “We’ve felt felt
that the return of some criminals from their home states could lead to
an increase,” Tijuana Police Chief Alberto Capella told reporters
Thursday. He said his department is taking additional measures in
high-crime areas.
The
majority of the killings were related to disputes between neighborhood
drug dealers, said Jorge Aguirre Carbajal, a coordinator in the
organized crime unit of the state attorney general’s office.
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